"No amount of talking about ideals makes this any easier," Dr Rowan Williams told mourners
|
The full text of Dr Rowan Williams' address at the St Paul's Cathedral service of remembrance for those who died in the Iraq war.
Not long before the World War I, a French poet, who was to be one of the
earliest casualties of the conflict, wrote that 'everything begins with
mysticism and ends with politics'.
People have argued a good deal over what he meant. Is he saying that every
human story starts with vision and hope and love and deteriorates into conflicts
and compromises?
Or that you have to move on from fine words and ideals and make
things change for the better in the 'real' world?
Quite likely he meant a bit of both; and both meanings are sure to be around
in our thoughts whenever we think about war and its aftermath.
When wars begin, it's often said that it's no good raising abstract
objections.
 |
Those of you who watched and waited here, in agonies of anxiety
over loved ones serving abroad, will have known something of the conflicting
emotions that all this involves
|
If you care about justice and security, you have a duty to do all
you can to advance or protect them by any legitimate means - to be ready to pay
the price of your fine words.
Then, as wars develop and when wars end, it's often said that what happens
shows how bright ideals get tarnished as the fight against injustice breeds its
own new problems.
Certainly, those of you who watched and waited here, in agonies of anxiety
over loved ones serving abroad, will have known something of the conflicting
emotions that all this involves.
Fierce loyalty to those actually putting their
lives on the line, pride in their personal commitment, courage and skill, anger
at those who seem to undermine them as they face the terrible risks of war.
But
also pain and bewilderment at the confusions of war itself, the shocking
photographs of the innocent dead, the media experts with their daily questioning
of how things are being run.
And for some - for many here today - the final and
awful reality of a tragedy involving a son or daughter, a spouse, a parent.
'Uncertain landscape'
No
amount of talking about ideals makes this easier; you know the cost in a unique
way.
In this service today, we are bound to face these contradictory feelings,
and we shouldn't be afraid to do so.
 |
Whatever the different judgments about the decision to go to war, we have to
recognise the moral seriousness of this, and the dedication of those who carry
out the decision
|
Those who defended the action in Iraq
rightly reminded us that while we talk people are suffering appallingly; while
we try to keep our hands clean, atrocity and oppression reign unchecked.
Whatever the different judgments about the decision to go to war, we have to
recognise the moral seriousness of this, and the dedication of those who carry
out the decision.
But as we look out at a still uncertain and dangerous landscape, as we
recall the soldiers and civilians killed since the direct military campaign
ended, as we think of the UN personnel and the relief workers who have died, we
have to acknowledge that moral vision is harder to convert into reality than we
should like.
We never know in advance quite what price will have to be paid in
human lives, civilian and military, local and foreign, young and old.
There are two responses that won't do. We can't just say 'We have no
responsibilities, we'll stick to the mysticism and let the politics look after
itself'.
Learning lessons
It is worth working at what changes the world into a less unbearable place.
But equally, we can't say 'Spare us the mysticism'.
 |
We have to find out what we have learned, what now looks different,
where our integrity has been stretched or challenged
|
We have to go back and test what has happened in the light of the original
vision; we have to find out what we have learned, what now looks different,
where our integrity has been stretched or challenged.
We don't just put this
complicated and tragic history aside without asking if our values and
commitments are still intact.
Today our main task is simply to pause in the presence of God.
We give
thanks for many lives of skill and bravery and patience - the lives of the
servicemen and women whom we mourn together on this occasion.
Pause before God
And the lives too
of peacemakers and community builders of all kinds; and those who bore the cost
without choosing or volunteering, those swept up in the unplanned death and
terror that all conflict brings.
 |
We pray for all those who,
as we meet here, are working to renew a ravaged country
|
But we can use this pause in God's presence to think a little about what it
means to turn vision into reality.
This is part of what we owe to the dead, the
honour we give to those who struggled and sacrificed.
We pray for all those who,
as we meet here, are working to renew a ravaged country - our own servicemen and
women, all those who are labouring to bring together the Iraqi people in new
political projects for restoring common life.
The countless ordinary Iraqis who
contribute to the restoration of order and justice simply by getting on with
their lives, patiently doing those ordinary things without which no society
flourishes, which become so difficult and extraordinary in a climate of tyranny
and oppression.
Rebuilding ahead
We should pray too for those who have to keep on at the task of rebuilding
when the dramas of conflict have faded - for our leaders, here and in the US,
whose commitment to remaking a deeply traumatised nation has been clearly and
repeatedly expressed.
Today is an opportunity for leaders and people alike to
renew their promises about this; we have made ourselves accountable for peace
and justice in Iraq, and leaders and people alike will indeed be called to
account for it.
 |
We should pray for our leaders, here and in the US,
whose commitment to remaking a deeply traumatised nation has been clearly and
repeatedly expressed
|
The beautiful and sombre words of St Paul in today's second lesson tell us
what can be expected by those who keep their eyes on justice and do their work
for God with faith and steady patience.
They are not promised safety or peace,
they are not promised an easy conscience or a comfortably limited horizon.
What
they are promised is an anchorage in the living Truth in person, Jesus Christ.
Nothing can break this; there may be terrible risk and suffering; there may
be the sense of failure; there may be immense personal grief and loss.
Confidence in God
But the
relationship remains, silently feeding us so that we are able to go on putting
one foot in front of the other, finding what needs to be done and doing it.
What we are given isn't confidence in our own purity of motive, not even
unquestioning faith in what people tell us is the righteousness of our cause,
but confidence in a God who is able to use whatever we do and suffer in good
faith.
So as we bring ourselves before God quietly, thoughtfully, hopefully, we give
what we say and do now, as well as all that has been said and done over these
months into God's hands.
We give our memories of risk and pain to him, we give
our anxieties and bereavements to him; and we ask that he will use them all to
bring reconciliation and renewal for us and for all the nations of the earth.
