SINS BEFORE OUR EYES: Opening Address By His All-Holiness Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew
OPENING ADDRESS
By His All-Holiness
Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew
By His All-Holiness
Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew
SINS BEFORE OUR EYES
A Forum on Modern Slavery
(Istanbul, February 7, 2017)
Your Grace,
Your Eminences and Excellencies,
Dear representatives of the Presidency of Religious Affairs of Turkey and of the Mufti of Istanbul,
Dear friends,
Your Eminences and Excellencies,
Dear representatives of the Presidency of Religious Affairs of Turkey and of the Mufti of Istanbul,
Dear friends,
It is with great joy that we welcome you
as guests and as participants at this Forum on Modern Slavery, here to
Istanbul, to the Polis, the City of Constantine, the Holy See of the Ecumenical Patriarchate, a historical crossroad of cultures and religions.
We would like to express a warm welcome
to His Grace the Archbishop of Canterbury, our beloved brother in
Christ, Justin, for his presence. We appreciate his ecumenical spirit,
his sensitivity to the signs of the times and his sense of solidarity.
We also take this opportunity to express our gratitude for his warm
interest in the Holy and Great Council of the Orthodox Church that
convened in Crete this past June and for sending an official observer on
that occasion.
An encounter and face-to-face
interaction, as well as the warmth of being together for personal
exchange, are all of great value, inasmuch as they are the foundation of
strong relationships and bonds. We are relational beings; we really
need one another. Truth is communion, life is sharing, existence is
coexistence, logos is dia-logos, freedom is common freedom. Our God is a
communion of Persons, and for us Christians “to be a person means to
exist in the way God exists,” as the Metropolitan of Pergamon John
Zizioulas states. He also adds to this an important question: “Can there
be a higher view of the human being than this?” (“The Meaning of Being
Human – A Theological Approach,” Science, Technology and Human Values,
International Symposium Proceedings, The Academy of Athens, May 2-4,
2007, 302).
We live in a world full of
contradictions. Prosperity grows amidst poverty and famine; the struggle
for peace and reconciliation is confronted with terrorism and the
spread of hatred and religious fundamentalism; ecological movements
coexist with technocracy and the deification of economic growth; the
protection of human rights is confronted with the lack of respect for
human dignity, with social injustice, as well as the phenomenon of
modern slavery.
This is precisely why we are convinced
that responding to the problem of modern slavery is directly and
inseparably linked to creation care, which has been at the very center
of our patriarchal ministry over the last quarter of a century. The
entire world is the body of Christ; just as human beings are the very
body of Christ. The whole planet bears the traces of God, just as every
person is created in the image of God. The way we respect creation
reflects the way that we respond to our fellow human beings. The scars
that we inflict on our environment reveal our willingness to exploit our
brother and sister.
How then can we face this crisis? How
can we attempt to heal the wounds of our divided world? It is obvious
that such a problem demands from us all immense mobilization, common
action, common goals, strength and responsibility. Nobody – no state, no
church, no religion, neither science nor technology – can face the
current challenges alone. We regard the worldwide crisis as an
opportunity for building bridges, for openness and mutual trust. Our
future is common and the way towards it is a common journey.
In our Forum today, we will discuss the
challenging issue of modern slavery, an evil that destroys communion,
solidarity, and dignity. Our approach is a reflection on the
contribution of the common struggle of both the human rights movements
and the Christian churches against slavery.
Speaking about human rights today means
referring to human dignity, the protection of freedom and justice, open
society and international peace. Indeed, human rights are the core
values of humanism in the modern world. From their two classical
Declarations in the second half of the 18th century, up until today,
human rights movements have proved capable of responding to new
challenges, unknown threats to human dignity, as well as new forms of
oppression and exploitation. They are surely not a panacea for the
treatment of all problems and injustices in our societies, but they are
an essential and effective tool for the foundation and protection of
freedom and justice. The Universal Declaration of Human Rights (10
December 1948) was a “manifesto of humanism” and emerged from the most
terrible explosion of inhumanity in the history of mankind, claiming 55
million lives during the Second World War and the Holocaust.
If invoking human rights is the
normative response to various challenges in the modern world, they must
also be used to confront modern slavery, one of the most extreme
violations of human dignity. Countless children, women and men around
the world are currently suffering through a form of human trafficking:
forced labor for children and adults, sex trafficking of men, women and
children, forced prostitution, forced and early marriage, recruitment of
child soldiers, exploitation of migrants and refugees, organ
trafficking, and so on. The endless caravans of people forced by open
violence to leave their homes, seeking protection and security, as well
as the victims of structural violence, poverty and famine, are
vulnerable groups, from which organized criminals easily find their
victims.
A strong point against the power of
human rights and “one of the biggest scandals, which from the beginning
has overshadowed the idea of human rights,” was, according to Prof.
Heiner Bielefeldt, an esteemed specialist on this issue, the
continuation of slavery after the classical Declarations of human rights
(Philosophie der Menschenrechte. Grundlagen eines weltweiten
Freiheitsethos, Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft, Darmstadt 1998,
181). In truth, the abolition of slavery was potentially included, both
in the American Declaration of Independence (1776) and in the French
Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen (1789). The
development of the idea of human rights and social struggles in the 19th
and the 20th centuries led to an extension of their radius, revealing
their original orientation. Consequently, the Universal Declaration of
Human Rights states in its 4th article: “No one shall be held in slavery
or servitude; slavery and the slave trade shall be prohibited in all
their forms.”
In our view, the future of human rights
and their effective realization is to a large extent connected to the
attitude of religions towards them, to the common struggle of both the
human rights movements and religions for human dignity, freedom, justice
and peace.
In this field, tensions are inevitable,
even in the cooperation of Christian Churches with human rights
movements. Although human rights bear the stamp of Christianity, it
would be incorrect to assume that these rights also have a Christian
origin. Christian freedom is accused of being “internal” and
“incomplete,” without any interest for the social dimension, and even “a
rejection of the significance of external freedom” (Herbert Marcuse,
Ideen zu einer kritischen Theorie der Gesellschaft, Suhrkamp, Frankfurt
a.M. 1976, 60). The Apostle Paul attributes Christian freedom to
Christian slaves, without questioning the institution of external
slavery. It is a fact that Saint Paul urged Christianized slaves to
remain in their position (1 Cor 7.20-24) and that he sent back the slave
Onesimus, who ran away from his master, urging the latter to accept the
former in the spirit of Christian brotherhood and not to punish him.
For the Apostle Paul, the decisive issue is not social status, though,
but the reality of being released by Christ into real freedom (Gal 5.1).
Before God, social differences lose their importance and all faithful
are allowed to participate in the Holy Eucharist. There are “no slaves
or free people … you are all one in Jesus Christ” (Gal 3.28). “The
Church does not accept a difference between master (δεσπότης) and
servant (οἰκέτης)” (John Chrysostom, Commentary on the Letter to
Philemon, PG 62, 705). In overcoming slavery on the level of Christian
life, the Church made slavery visible as a social problem. The tension
between this equality before God and the inequality in the social sphere
affected important changes in the treatment of slaves, but Christianity
did not directly support a violent overthrow of slavery as an
institution.
The Church Fathers paid great attention
to individual behavior, without separating it from institutions and
society. Their criticism addressed to those in power caused changes to
the institutions and strengthened the struggle for social justice
against social evil. Christian faith does not transform its faithful
into passive, inactive beings, but mobilizes inexhaustible powers of
love and solidarity. The history of social movements cannot be written
without reference to Christianity, as the Holy and Great Council
affirmed in its Encyclical last June: “At no time was the Church’s
philanthropic work limited merely to circumstantial good deeds toward
the needy and suffering, but rather it sought to eradicate the causes
which create social problems. The Church’s ‘work of service’ (ἔργον
διακονίας) (Eph 4.12) is recognized by everyone” (§19, June 2016).
Unfortunately, the Orthodox Church is
often accused of neglecting the world for the sake of liturgical worship
and spiritual life, turning primarily toward the Kingdom of God to
come, disregarding challenges of the present. In fact, however, whatever
the Church says, whatever the Church does, is done in the Name of God
and for the sake of human dignity and the eternal destiny of the human
being. It is impossible for the Church to close its eyes to evil, to be
indifferent to the cry of the needy, oppressed and exploited. True Faith
is a source of permanent struggle against the powers of inhumanity. As
the Holy and Great Council of the Orthodox Church stated, the Church
offers to the world “the hope and assurance that evil, no matter its
form, does not have the last word in history and must not be allowed to
dictate its course” (The Mission of the Orthodox Church in the
Contemporary World, Introduction).
A key notion of Orthodoxy is the
conception of the human person, which is directly related to the
patristic tradition, for which the notion of personhood (πρόσωπον)
properly expresses the meaning of the creation of the human being in
God’s image and likeness (Gen 1.26). The foundation of human dignity
provides the human being with the highest value.
In this spirit, and in the face of the
contemporary multifaceted crisis, the Ecumenical Patriarchate declared
2013 as “a year of global solidarity.” The aim of our Patriarchal
Encyclical (Christmas 2012) was to sensitize people to the lack of
solidarity, to the poverty and great inequalities in our world. We
underscored the necessity of common initiatives to relieve needy people
and to ensure the right of every human being to enjoy essential goods of
life. We asked “for the support of all persons and governments of good
will in order that we may realize the Lord’s peace on Earth.”
The Holy and Great Council of the
Orthodox Church courageously declared the central place of solidarity
and philanthropic action in the life and witness of Orthodoxy, also
addressing people “affected by human trafficking and modern forms of
slavery.” I quote from the text on the Mission of the Orthodox Church in
the Contemporary World: “In fulfilling her salvific mission in the
world, the Orthodox Church actively cares for all people in need,
including the hungry, the poor, the sick, the disabled, the elderly, the
persecuted, those in captivity and prison, the homeless, the orphans,
the victims of destruction and military conflict, those affected by
human trafficking and modern forms of slavery. The Orthodox Church’s
efforts to confront destitution and social injustice are an expression
of her faith and service to the Lord, Who identifies Himself with every
person and especially with those in need: “Inasmuch as you did it to one
of the least of these my brethren, you did it to me (Mt 25.40)” (The
Mission of the Orthodox Church in the Contemporary World, F,1). This
echoes the words of Saint Gregory the Theologian: “While there is time,
let us visit Christ, let us heal Christ, let us nourish Christ, let us
clothe Christ, let us welcome Christ, let us honor Christ” (On Love of
the Poor, PG 35, 909). In this spirit the Holy and Great Council
especially highlights “the tragedy of the trade of humans” (§18
Encyclical), while condemning “the trafficking of refugees,” appealing
for cooperation “so that peace and justice may prevail in the countries
of origin of the refugees” (§4 Message).
Last but not least, in facing
contemporary threats against children, in our 2016 Patriarchal
Encyclical for Christmas, we declared 2017 as “the Year of the
Protection of the Sacredness of Childhood.” In that Encyclical, we
observed: “We appeal to all of you to respect the identity and
sacredness of childhood. In light of the global refugee crisis that
especially affects the rights of children; in light of the plague of
child mortality, hunger and child labor, child abuse and psychological
violence, as well as the dangers of altering children’s souls through
their uncontrolled exposure to the influence of contemporary electronic
means of communication and their subjection to consumerism, we declare
2017 as the Year of Protection of the Sacredness of Childhood, inviting
everyone to recognize and respect the rights and integrity of children.”
The point of convergence of the Orthodox
Church and the human rights movements is the concern for human dignity,
freedom and justice. The existing tensions between Orthodoxy and modern
human rights are not primarily rooted in “principle,” but rather in
historical contexts. Surely Christian and autonomous modern freedom are
different. Tensions between theonomous and autonomous-secular
orientation are inevitable. It is not by chance that Christian Churches
and the human rights movement initially saw each other as adversaries.
It was only after many disasters, and mainly after the barbarism of the
Second World War, that both the Catholic Church and Protestants changed
their attitude towards human rights.
The main point here, we reiterate, is
that Churches and human rights movements both struggle to protect human
dignity even if they have a different theoretical foundation for this
dignity. Accordingly, then, the Holy and Great Council of the Orthodox
Church stated “that the Orthodox ideal in respect of man transcends the
horizon of established human rights and that the ‘greatest of all is
love’, as Christ revealed and as all of the faithful who follow him have
experienced” (Message, §10). For Orthodox theology, human rights do not
represent the “supreme ethos.” They can never reach the depth of
Christian love. The highest form of freedom for Orthodoxy is not the
claim of our individual rights but their free sacrifice for the sake of
love. “Love radiates beyond legal constructs” as Archbishop Anastasios
of Albania states (Facing the World: Orthodox Christian Essays in Global
Concerns, WCC Publications, Geneva 2003, 71). Our world needs this
precious gift of God’s grace, of freedom in Christ, which creates in us
the immense power of diakonia, an endless spiritual strength.
We unite our efforts to eradicate modern
slavery in all its forms, across the world and for all times. We affirm
that which we signed in the Declaration of Religious Leaders against
Modern Slavery (2 December 2014), namely that slavery is “a crime
against humanity.” We are committed “to do all in our power, within our
faith communities and beyond, to work together for the freedom of all
those who are enslaved and trafficked so that their future may be
restored.” On the way to achieve this categorical imperative, our
adversary is not simply modern slavery, but also the spirit that
nourishes it, the deification of profit, consumerism, discrimination,
racism, sexism, and egocentrism.
Against this spirit, we must work for
the promotion of a culture of solidarity, respect for others, and
dialogue. Together with the sensitization of consciences, we must
participate in concrete initiatives and actions. We need a stronger
mobilization on the level of action. We pray that our Forum today will
sow the seed for an ongoing commitment and common action of our churches
and communities in this vital matter.
With these reflections, we warmly greet
your presence at the Center of World Orthodoxy and we pray for the
successful deliberations and results of this Forum in the sacred
struggle against modern slavery. Finally, we express our gratitude to
those responsible for the organization of this Forum. God bless you all!