Vision
We,
the Anglican Communion across Africa,
pledge
ourselves to
The promise that future generations will
be
born and live in a world
Free from AIDS.
God’s
call to transformation
We are living with AIDS.
As the body of Christ, confronted by a disaster unprecedented in
human history, we share the pain of all who suffer as a result of
AIDS. Faced by this crisis, we hear God’s call to be transformed.
We confess our sins of judgement, ignorance, silence, indifference
and denial.
Repenting of our sin,
we commit ourselves to:
• Breaking the
silence in order to end all new infections
• Educating ourselves at every level within the Church
• Confronting poverty, conflict and gender inequalities
• Ending stigma and judgement, and
• Holding ourselves accountable before God and the world.
Only then can we live
out the Good News of the all-embracing love of Christ.
3. Our Mission
Our mission is to respect
the dignity of all people by:
• Securing the
human rights of those infected by HIV/AIDS, and giving unconditional
support
• Improving the health and prolonging the lives of infected
people
• Accompanying the dying, those who mourn and those who live
on
• Celebrating life
• Nurturing community, and
• Advocating for justice.
We acknowledge that we
cannot do this alone. We are sustained by the love of God and emboldened
by the Holy Spirit. We are inspired by the compassionate efforts
of the faithful in attending to those affected by HIV/AIDS. We accept
the responsibility of our leadership. We invite the wider community
into creative, life-giving partnership.
4.
Our commission in the context of AIDS
We believe we are created,
in the image of God, as physical and spiritual beings. We are created
to be in relationship to God, the community and ourselves. We believe
that we are given the freedom to make choices, to love, to celebrate,
to live in dignity and to delight in God’s creation. We believe
that suffering and death are neither punishment from God nor the
end of life and that we are called to an eternal union with God.
Stigma is a denial that
we are created in the image of God. It destroys self-esteem, decimates
families, disrupts communities and annihilates hope for future generations.
We commit in all our efforts - personal and corporate, programmatic
and liturgical - to confront it as sin and work for its end.
Given who we are, and
who we are called to be by God, we have defined and embraced a six-fold
commission of ministry in response to AIDS.
These calls in our commission
are:
4.1
Prevention
The Church’s commitment to prevention recognises that all
life is sacred. Because we love our children, we speak and act to
protect them from infection. Sex is a gift from God. We are accountable
to God and one another for our sexual behaviour. Christian communities
have a special responsibility and capacity for encouraging and supporting
loving, just, honest relationships.
4.2
Pastoral Care
Pastoral care supports spiritual growth with the aim of sustaining
whole and holy relationships with God, each other and community.
This is achieved by affirming the dignity and worth of each human
being and making clear the claim of God in our lives.
4.3
Counselling
Christian counselling equips people to live into God’s invitation
to wholeness, freed of the burdens of the past, and capable of moving
in freedom toward the perfection promised in Christ’s example
with confidence and determination.
4.4
Care
In caring for all who suffer, we fulfill God’s purpose by
restoring dignity and purpose to people’s lives. Christian
care, therefore, seeks the fullness of life, in the context of the
community, by restoration of body, mind and spirit.
4.5
Death and dying
Death is a rite of passage in our spiritual journey and into eternal
life. The call of all Christians is to uphold the dying by our love,
as well as those who live on and those who mourn.
While death brings suffering
and loss, our faith can make it a time of enhanced relationship
and growth for individuals and communities. We are a resurrection
people and our relationship with God does not end with the death
of physical bodies.
4.6
Leadership
All authority is accountable before God. All people of the church
are stewards of God’s creation. We have a unique responsibility
to speak truth to power, to act without fear, and to embody Christian
values of love, compassion and justice.
5. Our Response
5.1
Prevention
Out of love for our children, one another and our communities, we
commit to speak openly and with moral authority about responsible
sexual behaviour, and to support one another, embracing and adopting
behaviours that avoid the transmission of HIV.
5.2
Pastoral Care
As the embodiment of the merciful Christ in a suffering world, we
commit to equip our clergy and laity to support all people, especially
those living with HIV, in life sustaining relationships with their
God and their community.
5.3
Counselling
We commit to promote voluntary counselling and testing for HIV by
our own examples and as a ministry of the Church. We call for the
establishment of support groups and other counselling services for
those who are orphaned, ill, afraid, dying or bereaved.
5.4
HIV Care
We commit to being central to networks of community support, to
meet the health care and basic needs of those who are orphaned,
ill or excluded due to HIV, freeing them to productive life as long
as their health permits.
5.5
Death and Dying
As death transforms the body, AIDS calls us to transform those traditions
and practices, by which we care for the dying and honor our dead,
that consume scarce resources and contribute to denial.
We
commit to:
• Training the Church to provide holistic care for the dying
and prepare families for living on
• Offering rituals that honor the dead and promote the well-being
of those who survive
• Training the clergy to counsel and protect the rights of
those who survive especially women and children.
5.6
Leadership
Silence permits inaction and is the breeding ground of stigma. We
call for bold, compassionate community and institutional leadership
at every level, to prevent infection and care for the ill and dying.
We invite similar leadership by government, and all sections of
society and international partners.
Because leadership must
address power, culture and morality, we call on our government leaders
to be accountable for health expenditures and to declare an ‘HIV
state of emergency’, in order to combat IDS and mobilize resources.
We further declare that all people have the right to health, which
includes access to basic health care.
HIV calls for bold and
creative approaches by our leaders, which recognizes the reality
of power and gender patterns at community levels, and mobilize resources
and facilitate development of new models of leadership, particularly
amount laity and women.
5.7
Education and training
Nothing in our educational systems equips us to deal with this catastrophe.
In achieving the strategies outlined in this document, it is essential
to assess needs and establish education and training capacity, in
order to assure that sufficient numbers of clergy and laity:
• Have current
and accurate basic information on the science of HIV, standards
of home-based care, and the rudiments of treatment
• Have both the technical information and the interpersonal
communication skills to effectively teach and counsel regarding
human sexuality
• Are knowledgeable of local laws and practices regarding
inheritance and equipped to impart that information
• Receive practical training in community organization and
development, so that they may assist in establishing care and support
which is needed
• Are trained and available to meet exploding demands for
pastoral care necessitated by HIV/AIDS
5.8
Theological reflection
As the Church, it is uniquely our task to gather for study, for
prayer and for worship. Therefore we must engage inconstant theological
reflection, seeking discernment on the issues of sin, guilt, grace,
judgement and forgiveness. To this we commit ourselves, our families
and our friends.
Amen!