More on KentOnline
Home Canterbury News Article
Those suffering “immense anxiety and hardship” amid the cost-of-living crisis in the UK were remembered by the Archbishop of Canterbury in a Christmas sermon which also paid tribute to the late Queen.
Justin Welby also referenced the “desperate struggles of hospital wards” as well as those people who make perilous journeys in small boats, when he delivered his annual Christmas message today.
At 11am at Canterbury Cathedral, Mr Welby told those listening that despite war and conflicts around the world and financial pressures on people closer to home, there is “unconquerable hope” in the birth of Jesus Christ.
In his first Christmas message since the death of Queen Elizabeth II, Mr Welby praised the example set by the late monarch, who he said “in obedience to the Christ-child lived a life of service and put her interest after those of the people she served”.
The Archbishop, who visited a church-run food bank in Canterbury in recent days, expressed his concern for those struggling in a cost-of-living crisis which he says is causing “immense anxiety and hardship” for many people across the UK.
He said: "In Jesus Christ, God reaches out to each one of us here; to those who like his family have no resources, into the dark cells of prisons, into the desperate struggles of hospital wards, to those on small boats, to the despairing...and says: 'Take me into your heart and life, let me set you free from the darkness that surrounds and fills you, for I too have been there.
"And God says in me there is forgiveness, hope, life and joy, whoever and wherever you are, whatever you have done."
Referring to suffering of millions facing famine amid fighting in South Sudan and the ongoing war in Ukraine, Mr Welby appealed to the leaders of both countries to bring an end to violence and in turn “bring hope to millions”.
He said: "Even where the world forgetfully turns a blind eye to injustice and suffering, pays no attention to a war, God is present through Jesus in the world... God does not give up on us."
"We are conscious of darkness" he said as he recalled standing next to a mass grave in a church yard in Bucha, Ukraine in the spring.
"Even in Bucha, among all the horror, the darkness does not overcome the light."