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It is a disease that calls upon Christians to demonstrate
compassion, love, and personal acceptance.
AIDS is not the sort of thing we want to talk about at
the table over supper. We don't want to admit that this kind of thing
affects us as Christians. But it does affect us. and we must talk about
it.
The bad news is that HIV/AIDS is an equal
opportunity pandemic. The HIV virus does not ask questions about our
religion, age, sex, life-style, or sexual preference. It crosses all
social, political, and economic lines. The good news is that AIDS
can be avoided. But we must begin by not avoiding it. That is, we must
face it, and talk about it. We must talk about it at church, at our
schools. and in our homes. We cannot close our eyes and ears hoping that
it will go away. It won't! We cannot assume that our children and youth
are Immune. They are not!
A number of Adventists have been doing battle with
this infection for a number of years. The church has not been silent,
but the voices of those who have spoken have been partially muted by
widespread denial. In the past year a number of these people, including
some of the authors in this issue, have formed the Adventist AIDS
Network. This is a network of Adventists who are concerned about and
involved in a compassionate response to HIV/ AIDS, and the prevention of
its spread. For further information about this network please contact
the Adventist AIDS Network, Sutherland House, Andrews University,
Berrien Springs, Michigan 49103. The network can be reached on
CompuServe at 74617,2465.
The articles in this issue have been carefully and
prayerfully written and call for a new and clarion realization that we
are dealing with a pandemic that has infected and is terrorizing
millions of men, women, and children in every part of the world. This is
a disease that easily has the potential of eclipsing the Black Death of
Europe.
AIDS has been called, by some, the leprosy of the late
twentieth century. It is a disease that calls upon Christians to
demonstrate compassion, love, and personal acceptance. It calls us to
reach out, as Jesus did, to the lepers of His day, touching people with
healing, forgiveness and practical demonstrations of compassionate
ministry and inclusiveness.
-- Bruce Moyer, S.T.D., is the associate director of
the Institute of World Mission, Andrews University, Berrien Springs,
Michigan. He formerly worked as the Senior Advisor of AIDS for ADRA
International.
This article was published in the July
1996 issue of Ministry magazine,
the international journal of the Seventh-day Adventist Ministerial
Association,
published by the Review & Herald Publishing Association at 55 W Oak
Ridge Drive, Hagerstown MD 21740.
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