After the end of the...
Illustration
After the end of the Falkland Islands war, British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher asked Robert Runcie, the Archbishop of Canterbury, to organize at St. Paul's Cathedral a great service of national thanksgiving for the victory. What she wanted was not what she got.
Archbishop Runcie approached the occasion not as a time of self-congratulation, but as a day to repent, and to move ahead into peace. The prayers that day confessed the sin of warfare, asked God's forgiveness for the carnage, and pleaded for a lasting peace between Britain and Argentina. Prayers and thanksgivings were made for the defeated enemy leaders, and for the people of both nations.
--Walker
Archbishop Runcie approached the occasion not as a time of self-congratulation, but as a day to repent, and to move ahead into peace. The prayers that day confessed the sin of warfare, asked God's forgiveness for the carnage, and pleaded for a lasting peace between Britain and Argentina. Prayers and thanksgivings were made for the defeated enemy leaders, and for the people of both nations.
--Walker
