Steps on a healing path : Jubilee visions offer hope
https://archives.anglican.ca/link/article28521
- Author
- Morrison, Catherine
- Journal
- Ministry Matters
- Date
- 2000 Winter
- Volume
- 7
- Issue
- 1
- Page
- 11-12
- Notes
- "Our hope as church, society and Aboriginal peoples rests in establishing new relationships of trust and promise and working together for a better future. Jubilee with its three themes -- release from bondage, redistribution of wealth, and renewal of earth -- is a vision that speaks with potential and hope to Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal people alike. It is a vision that we have been living in the church for some time." Includes highlights of the new relationship between the Anglican Church and Aboriginal peoples, since 1969, such as the Hendry Report, Native Convocations, Council of Native Ministries and Aboriginal Covenant.
- "This article is adapted from a presentation Ms. Morrison made to the synod of the diocese of Cariboo."
- N.B. The story mistakenly says that "Then in 1995 the church agreed to support a National Native Convocation" (p. 11). This should say "in 1985 the church agreed". The first Native Convocation took place in Fort Qu'Appelle in Saskatchewan in 1988.
- This article was also reprinted `Open' vol. 47 no. 2, Summer 2001, pp. 9-10.
- Subjects
- Indians of North America - Canada - Anglican Church of Canada
- Native peoples - Canada - Anglican Church of Canada
- Jubilee (Christianity) - Anglican Church of Canada
- Anglican Church of Canada - Residential schools
- Hendry Report [Beyond Traplines: does the church really care ? 1979]
- Canada. Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples
- Anglican Church of Canada. Native Convocation (1st : 1988 : Fort Qu'Appelle, Sask.)
- Sacred Circle
- Anglican Church of Canada. Sacred Circle (1st : 1988 : Fort Qu'Appelle, Sask.)
- Native Covenant (1994)