We Are Church Zoom Liturgy - 12 July 2025
Reflections on the Readings from across the world
With a special thanks to Rachael, who took the notes:
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I grew up learning about the holocaust. - And now we are witnessing a total genocide in Palestine, even though all foreign media is not allowed to report it, thousands killed. Even the UN recognises it as a genocide. "We are in an economy of genocide." We recognise the contribution of western countries who are sending weapons. We had studied "Never Again." But it is happening now. We can never tell our children we didn't know because we DO know. Because we are complicit. Our state is complicit. Our media is complicit. I am watching on social media - the Palestinians say, "we are not numbers, we are PEOPLE." They think the world has forgotten them, and they are invisible. If our Christianity does not move us to help, then our faith is Dead. A Europe of Human Rights seems to have no concern for the rights of the Palestinians - it is just money that matters to them. I see... a lot of people don't want to say anything. Keep your head down, just keep your business. When we finish our summer holidays, what will be left of Gaza? Who will be left?
The Church itself has been established as a hierarchy, patriarchy, and a monarchy. It is sad that it is the Christian countries who are manufacturing, exporting, and making money on arms. So, how are we going to live our faith if the structure of our church doesn't facilitate us to live our faith. In the last 2 Sundays, in my parish, the sermons are horrendous. The priests focus on the bread and body turning into real bread and blood - and referred to a miracle somewhere in xxxxx, where the host is supposedly turned into flesh on the tongue of a woman, and the church has recognised it. If priests are going to talk such garbage on the pulpit, how are we going to live our faith? One priest said, we have become supermarket Catholics - we choose what blessings we want, what prayers we want, we choose gay marriage, but we don't choose pro-life. How are people going to live their faith, if such rubbish comes from the pulpit? The history of the Church has nothing to show us what we have been doing in the path of Jesus, other than Pope Francis. The Church has forgotten Jesus - they made him a king, and the priests are the princes. So what faith are we following? I really don't know.
While I share, I understand the angst of those who share around me. I still feel hope. Hope doesn't come from this institutional church, or the nations who are politically powerful, manipulators, the wicked. It is not the Christian Europe, but look at Asia. Our leaders are also manipulating the people for power. Listening to all of you, I feel - this is similar to the times of Jesus. He didn't have these numbers. He was one voice. I was listening to a journalist in Palestine, her lament. Her hope is in her resilience.
To forgive someone 70 times 7... I am reminded of the deep valley between the liberal and conservatives around the world. The rise of the conservatives is making us angry. Are we ready to forgive, and love those who don't agree with us? Are we willing to see these manipulative political leaders as the humans that Jesus wants us to love and connect with? Because without love, we cannot succeed and make change. Gandhi was inspired by this teaching of Jesus - to fight the colonisers, but with love and peace, and by invoking the humanity that exists within the persons who disagree with us.
I see a few key words - sharing, dignity of each other, mutual respect, dialogue, listening, forgiveness. These are some attitudes we must develop and share. I like to compare the attitude of Mandela and Netanyahu regarding internal war. Mandela worked towards forgiveness. And this makes possible a society after this. Netanyahu is evoking hate and drama. I think the Church is really more interested in orthodoxy than orthopraxy. More interested in the discourse of what we should believe rather than on what Christ asked us to do. The Gospel of Matthew is very important in this.
Orthodoxy makes us individuals, orthopraxy makes us work together and is more productive. We should focus on orthopraxis. Ask ourselves - does the Church organise us to follow Jesus?
A friend from Gaza says "Losing hope is to die. The only way to stay alive is to stay hopeful." These lines resonate. We are called to grow in ourselves. When we say Church and Christian, they are different. The Church is a state or a bureaucracy. So our expectations from the structured church are misplaced. It is only from people and communities and dialogue that we can have hope. Communication makes a community stronger. Not wanting discipleship liberates us from the structure of the Church, and makes us free to practice our faith.
In our country, people killed under false accusations of blasphemy - nearly 400 jailed for it. It is an organised crime against minorities. 70% of those men were Muslims, not even Christians.
Our international organisations are so weak and powerless. The UN is unable to do anything about the conflicts. Francesca Albinese wrote a powerful report about Gaza. Trump wants her removed. What we have to do is speak out, not lose hope, and reach out as best as we can.
The British Empire is at the root of very many of the conflicts around the world. An organisation that protested against the violence in Gaza is now being categorised as a terror organisation. It is difficult to get around it. This is deeply wrong. Prof John Dick from Louvain University writes about the history of the Church in the 4th century: at the beginning of the 4th century, there was an emperor who persecuted Christians. By the end of the 4th century, Christians were persecuting anybody who wasn't Christian. How do we change this system? Maybe the Holy Spirit will help us.
We need a solution, a sort of synod.
In the Scottish Laity network, we organise our Advent sessions: Small seeds of hope, inviting companions to talk about various things. Enabling people to have the confidence to do things actively, and making peace in the world. These sessions train us how to encourage, motivate and inspire the community to be peacemakers. A theologian will speak about synodality and how to promote synodality.
WAC has a meeting on Synodality in September. One speaker who helps parishes to get active. There can't be only dialogue and dialogue without action. We have another speaker who will show us how as a lay person, he leads 2 parishes. How Church dioceses elect the bishops in Germany - a form of democracy to make a Bishop representative of the diocese rather than a representative of the Vatican.
I strongly believe that we need to BE the Church we want to see. This Zoom Eucharist is part of that action.
Self-Synodal group at Augsburg that began Maria 2.0. Church-workers and lay people started their own assembly in their parish. Began to speak about what synodality means? To work actively in your community. Started 'making small steps'. The most important thing is to START. Look at the present as it is and find concrete solutions. In this community we collect experiences from different parishes and other documents and we make it available to other parishes who are part of this project. These steps invite people to participate. Even the 85-year old priest told us that if you want to connect with the young people, you need to connect via Social Media. In a region in Bavaria, a region where there was abuse in the parish, the people started an action of reconciliation and a week of Prevention. People who were abused and a few politicians came to speak and taught us to talk to people and look at the problems, and identify what you can do to change.
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Some talked about what they are doing to make living together more humane:
1. I am actively working with right-wing persons, who are misogynists. But we are connected on the issue of climate change and sustainable agriculture. We disagree politically, and on religion, but we connect as humans who desire survival of the planet and survival for our families and people. This is the beginning of building bridges between two sides.
2. It is important that while we criticise the wrongdoings of the Church, we should also show how much we are DOING to evolve into the Church that Jesus envisioned.
3. Constructively deconstruct.