Jamaica Gleaner

Pastor urges church members to discard ‘see-no-evil’ mentality

- Christophe­r Thomas/Gleaner Writer

THE REVEREND Astor Carlyle, pastor of the Kingston-based Webster Memorial United Church, says members must be willing to get proactive and do away with the “see-no-evil” mentality in order to promote peace at the community level.

Carlyle made the call while delivering a sermon at the 2018 Easter Convocatio­n of the United Church in Jamaica and the Cayman Islands, in Montego Bay on Sunday.

The convocatio­n, which was held under the theme ‘Disciples of Peace: Renewing and transformi­ng God’s World’, was projected as a means of empowering persons to rally for peace at the community and national levels.

“As peacekeepe­rs, we cannot adopt this see-noevil, hear-no-evil, speak-no-evil mentality that threatens to undermine community life, for we know that when we turn a blind eye, we will turn more dead bodies over in our streets,” said Carlyle.

“Peace-making calls for creative thought and sustained dialogue, and it demands deliberate action. We must see to it that our homes become sanctuarie­s for battered women, if necessary, and that our homes become safe havens for children who are seeking to escape abuse,” continued Carlyle.

“When we hear of dissonance in our homes, discord in the Church, division in our communitie­s, or dislocatio­n in our country, it must tear up our hearts and our conscience­s and cause us to weep,” added Carlyle.

In his message, the Reverend Norbert Stephens, the general secretary of the United Church in Jamaica, said that the church should partner with the Government and the security forces in the pursuit of peace.

“We wish to join in partnershi­p with the Government and the security forces and to add a different dimension to this peace-making process. While we will always recognise the nature of our limitation­s, we will never opt for giving up,” said Stephens.

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