LONDON – Global church leaders gave their New Year messages as the world greeted 2007.
Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams greets young children at Displaced Persons Camp near Khartoum during his 8-day pastoral visit to the Province of the Episcopal Church of the Sudan in March 2006.
The spiritual head of the 77-million member worldwide Anglican Communion, Dr Rowan Williams, said Christians need to feel the same hunger for justice that ended the slave trade if the world is to be changed for the better. The head of the 1.1-billion member Roman Catholic Church, Pope Benedict XVI, similarly said that world peace can only be achieved if individuals' human rights are given full respect. Pope Benedict stressed that there can be no excuse for treating people as "objects".
Two days following the hanging of former Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein – an event the Vatican condemned as "tragic" – the pope said Monday that human rights must be put at the center of the global struggle to end war.
In a homily at St Peter’s Basilica, the pope said, “It is because every human individual, without distinction of race, culture or religion, is created in the image and likeness of God, that he is filled with the same dignity of person.”
"That is why he must be respected," he added. “No reason can ever justify doing with him whatever one pleases, as if he is an object.”
Marking his second New Year since succeeding John Paul II, the 79-year-old pontiff said: “Today people speak a lot about human rights, but it is often forgotten that these need a stable base, not one that is relative or a matter of opinion."
http://www.christianpost.com/article/20070101/24711.htm