Religion should unify, not divide, says Albright
Friday,
February 25, 2005
[Episcopal
News Service] The people of the world can longer afford to
allow religion and religious leaders to divide them, former Secretary
of State and U.N. Representative Madeleine Korbel Albright told the annual
gathering of the Consortium of Endowed Episcopal Parishes February 25.
"Religion is not the problem," she told a packed conference room at
the Waldorf-Astoria hotel in New York City, but religion has always tended
to fuel partisan strife. What is different now is the extent of the damage
that can result. It is one thing to go after each other with clubs, she
said, but another thing to be able to go after your perceived enemies
with today's high-tech weapons.
The underlying problem is how to harness religion's unifying potential
and block its tendency to divide people and nations against themselves
and others. She compared the challenge to that of doing brain surgery:
"It is a necessary task but it can be fatal if not done well."
The attacks of September 11 forced the world to look at the role that
religion plays in politics, foreign policy and everyday life, Albright
said. It is a "trend that was lying in plain sight" that we can no longer
ignore.
Albright called for all religions and nations to live and set their
domestic and foreign policies from the basic principles of valuing individual
life and seeking justice for all which she argued are at the heart of
all religious belief. She politely termed as "balderdash" the ay some
religious leaders, fundamentalist Islamic ones in particular, each that
"the individual is a disposable pawn" who is in the hands of "an insecure
and vengeful God" who wants killing to be done in his name.
Instead, Albright argued for a foreign policy that values the individual.
A nation with such a priority will not allow torture even out of fear
for its safety or the knowledge that it is easy to get away. Such a policy
would do much more to help other human beings. Albright noted that the
United States is last among developed nations in foreign aid giving. She
argued that more avoidable deaths happen in the world from causes other
than terrorism but that strengthening the divide between "people of plenty
and people with plenty of loss of hope" is a way to breed terrorism.
Nations ought to fight terrorism from a stance both does not ignore
the influence of religion and does not set it up as a battle between good
and evil, Albright said. We must realize that all of our efforts to be
good are partial and incomplete, and that it is tempting to misuse the
power given to us. If we must make it an either-or choice, Albright suggested
"evil and pretty good, evil and not bad, evil and doing the best we can."
Perhaps, she suggested, we might consider the divide as evil and, in Abraham
Lincoln's words, "right as God gives us to see the right."
Leaders must stand for something but not believe that they have the
sole claim on all truth, she said. Later, during a question and answer
session, Albright drew loud applause when she argued that it is hard for
the U.S. to claim to be a unifying force across the religious divide these
days "when the president believes that God talks to him and not to the
rest of us . . . we believe that God is on our side when in fact we ought
to be on God's side."
She also agreed with a questioner who asked her if "fervent moderation"
ought to be the religious person's stance in the world. People of faith
cannot base their belief on what they don't like in someone else, she
said, lest "your pride in yourself curdles into hate of someone else."
Albright, noting her party affiliation, said she was sad that words
like "democracy" and "freedom" that the Clinton administration had used
with hope are now interpreted as imperialistic. "I really do believe that
the United States is an exceptional country but we can't expect the world
to make exceptions for us," she said. Americans have the right to live
as we believe but we cannot expect everyone else to live like us. "You
cannot impose democracy and you cannot impose religious faith," she said.
Albright was asked about the suggestion from the Anglican Communion
primates that the Episcopal Church voluntarily absent itself for a time
from the Anglican Consultative Council. She said she didn't want to wade
into international Anglican politics but Albright noted that her diplomatic
stance has always been one of engagement. "You cannot get your point across
if you are not there," she said.
The Consortium of Endowed Episcopal Parishes is a group of more than
100 parishes, each with an endowment of more than $1 million. The Consortium's
goal is to foster the development and use of endowments for mission and
ministry.
Albright became the first female U.S. Secretary of State in 1997, serving
in President Bill Clinton's administration. She was also the U.S. representative
to the United Nations and a member of Clinton's National Security Council.
She has served on the National Cathedral Chapter in Washington, DC, and
the Board of Directors of the College of Preachers. She now teaches at
Georgetown University, where she taught before her appointment as Secretary
of State, and heads The Albright Group in Washington, DC. Her autobiography,
"Madame Secretary," has become a bestseller. She is currently writing
a book about the intersection of religion and politics. Its working title
is "The Mighty and the Almighty: God in American Politics."
Mary
Frances Schjonberg is the assistant rector of Christ Church in
Short Hills, New Jersey.
Copyright © by the author
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