Christian Aid talk, by Angela Lascelles, Sunday 17th April 2016, at St George’s Campden Hill and St John the Baptist, Holland Road

Christian Aid talk, by Angela Lascelles, Sunday 17th April 2016, at St George’s Campden Hill and St John the Baptist, Holland Road

By way of introduction I can explain why I am standing here. Last year, while putting together the church’s MAP, the PCC decided to form sub-committees to deal with various aspects of our overall mission of serving God and our Neighbour. St Gs has for many years actively supported charities both here in London and overseas and the formation of a charity subcommittee formalised what we were doing already and continue to do. At the moment I am chairing that committee.
One of our charities, CA has long been supported by the congregations of St G, especially in Christian Aid week, and I have become closely involved with part of its work in Africa and visited it 3 times so far, so I have first-hand experience of the poverty, need and injustice it grapples with in so many areas of our world.
So what does it do, and why should we support it? Its mission statement is simple and clear – ‘we believe in life before death’ – and so many of our brothers and sisters in this world live in conditions of extreme deprivation, so different from our comfortable lives here. Christian Aid’s funds are provided by Christians in Britain but it works to support and transform the lives of all people of faith, or none, in the areas of the world where it works. These are Africa, South America, Asia, and the Middle East. It works to provide longer term support to help communities to become independent – work such as I have been involved with – and it also responds to large scale disaster emergencies, as part of the DEC, the committee which comes into operation when there is an earthquake, flood or other natural disaster. I will briefly describe the work I have witnessed in rural Angola.
After the end of the civil war which had lasted for 27 years the country was devastated and destitute, especially in the country areas where there was no food, no water, no schools, no health care, just a load of land mines waiting to blow up those who returned to the villages. It was a place which had been the bread basket of Africa, but was now a desolate place where there was not enough food even to feed a wild animal, let alone a human being. A group of villages in one of the most isolated parts of the world was chosen and a project began, to help the people help themselves and rebuild their lives. They were given seeds and tools to grow maize, they were given materials to build schools and they were helped to unblock the water wells. It was a long and twisting journey till their lives began to rebuild, and the additional hazard along the way has been climate volatility, which either drowned the seeds or starved them of water – no good seed on the land, fed and watered by God’s almighty hand. Ten years on, they have just enough to eat to survive and a little left over in the seed bank to plant next season, the schools are there, though the teachers may be in short supply, and they have a few goats and chickens.
Of current interest of course is the way CA is responding to the civil war in Syria and the tide of refugees from that desperate country. Christian Aid works everywhere with local partners who are carefully selected and then monitored. Their work amongst Syrian refugees, which is based in Lebanon and Northern Iraq, involves supporting several organisations which provide food and fuel for families, education for their children, and counselling support for the many who have been psychologically affected by the horrors they have witnessed, or indeed experienced themselves. They particularly focus on the women and children. This is not out of some gender awareness programme, such as might be the case in this country these days, but out of recognition that the women bear the brunt of the family responsibilities, in societies where the men are still the hunter gatherers, though more the former than the latter. I have seen it in remotest Angola, seen the need to give the women knowledge, skills and awareness to protect their families from starvation and death.
On the CA website they ask us to donate for the Syrian refugees - £20 for a pack of rice and vegetables, or £40 for a hygiene kit, or £60 for a mattress, blanket, pillow and cooking set. Again, I’ve seen it first hand in Angola, the difference between having nothing, yes nothing at all, in their mud hut, to having the basic tools they can use to keep out the cold, and grow food. It gives them hope, where before there was none.
As well as practical help via donations, they ask us to pray for them. We have included their prayer for Syria as an insert with our weekly service sheets. Please do look at the CA website and you will find so many stories of tragedy affecting so many people - resulting from violence, natural disasters, especially the recent floods in Pakistan, injustice and poverty, and their response to the tragedies. As they say in their vision statement, ‘we work globally for profound change that eradicates the causes of poverty, striving to achieve equality, dignity and freedom for all, regardless of faith or nationality.’ Whose teaching does that statement remind us of?
Jesus said ‘in my father’s house are many mansions’ – I’ve seen some of these mansions. Returning from Angola three times now, with a fourth due later this year, I have found the difference between their mud huts and our mansions overwhelming. I have come straight from the returning plane into this church on a Sunday morning and seen us all in our Sunday best – and cried my way through the whole service. What we worry about, the trivial things which upset us, the things we aspire to, are so completely irrelevant in the lives of our brothers and sisters who live without food, water, healthcare or education. Jesus said ‘love God and love your neighbour’. I pray that we learn to love our neighbours prayerfully and generously.
Amen