His Excellency the Right Honourable
David Johnston:
The 52nd National Prayer Breakfast May 17-18, 2017.
I would like to
address three interrelated topics today-faith, service and love-and I will do
so in the context of my own faith as well as of my role as representative of
our head of state, Queen Elizabeth II, who also serves as defender of the
faith.
In my own case
the Christian faith has been my rock. I grew up in Northern Ontario in the
Anglican tradition. While at university in Boston, I took the short course at
the Episcopal Theological College to become a lay reader.
Among other
things, it opened a whole new window in my life because for several summers I
filled in Sundays for the Anglican ministers serving the First Nations reserves
and other rural parishes near my hometown of Sault Ste. Marie. It was my first
in-depth encounter with First Nations people both on- and off-reserve.
Throughout her
65 years as the longest-reigning British monarch of all time, Her Majesty has
stood for stability, steadfastness and stewardship. I am much inspired by her
life of service. Today I am drawing from a book about her faith that was
published in honour of her 90th birthday, entitled "The Servant Queen -
and the King she serves".
1. Faith
Let me begin
with faith.
The Queen's
public demonstration of trust in faith began early in her life. Here is the story.
In the foreword
The Queen wrote to this little book she referred to a poem quoted by her father
George VI in his Christmas broadcast in 1939. Remember the time. Europe again
found itself at war. The invasion of Britain was an imminent peril. The King,
who had to work to overcome a debilitating stammer, had been thrust onto the
Throne only two years earlier, surprised and unprepared after the abdication of
Edward VIII.
Here is the
poem which he read without a stammer:
"I said to the man who stood at the
Gate of the Year. Give me a light that I may tread safely into the
unknown. And he replied, "Go out into the darkness, and put your hand
into the hand of God". That shall be to you better than light, and
safer than a known way"
What is less
known-and a less known way-is who gave that poem to King George. It was
the future Queen, Princess Elizabeth, his 13 year old daughter. Typical of Her Majesty's lifelong tendency to
understate and depersonalize, that information is not contained in her
foreword. It is only disclosed later in the book by others.
The Queen's
faith is robustly rooted and ever-present. In her annual Christmas broadcasts,
she always refers to Jesus Christ and his teachings.
In 1984, she
said: "For me, the life of Jesus
Christ, the Prince of Peace whose birth we celebrate today is an
inspiration and an anchor in my life. A role-model of reconciliation and
forgiveness, he stretched out his hands in love, acceptance and healing. Christ's
example has taught me to seek respect and value all people of whatever faith or
none".
The Queen's
strong Christian faith does not lead her to exclude other faiths or minorities
but rather to embrace them, to accord them the same respect and dignity she
does to those who share her beliefs. This is an important lesson as we consider
the ecumenical nature of this prayer breakfast which brings us all together-so
inclusively-this morning.
Former Chief
Rabbi Jonathan Sacks of the United Kingdom recently said: "We do not
always appreciate the role the Queen has played in one of the most significant
changes in the past sixty years: the transformation of Britain into
a multi-ethnic, multi-faith society.
No one does interfaith better than the Royal family, and it starts with
the Queen herself". "Her
presence and her family role as the human face of national identity is one of
the great unifying forces in Britain, a unity we need all the more, the more
diverse religiously and culturally we become".
Rabbi Sacks'
observations apply equally well to Canada.
2. Service
Let me turn to
service.
The Queen sees
service as a lifetime commitment. In her 21st birthday address delivered five
years before her own accession to the Throne, Her Majesty anticipated her
lifetime of service when she said:
"I declare
before you all that my whole life whether it be long or short shall be devoted
to your service and the service of our great imperial family to which we all
belong."
And then
reaching out for the compass for that life, she added: "God help me to
make my vow, and God bless all of you who are willing to share in it".
Sixty-one years
later, in her 2008 Christmas broadcast, she said: "I hope that, like me, you will be comforted by the example of
Jesus of Nazareth who, often in circumstances of great adversity, managed to
live an outgoing, unselfish and sacrificial life. He makes clear that genuine
human happiness and satisfaction lie more in giving than receiving; more in
serving than in being served. We can surely be grateful that, two thousand
years after the birth of Jesus, so many of us are able to draw inspiration from
his life and message, and to find in him a source of strength and
courage".
What is the
secret of The Queen's remarkable consistency of service? In 2002 she said:
"I know just how much I rely on my
faith to guide me through the good times and the bad. Each day is a new
beginning. I know that the only way to live my life is to try to do what is
right, to take the long view, to give of my best in all that the day brings,
and to put my trust in God... I draw strength from the message of hope in the
Christian gospel."
As we reflect
on The Queen's 91 years of life and 65 years on the Throne, again and again we
see the theme of steadfast service persists.
3. Love
Let me turn to
love.
My wife often
says service is love made real. I speak of that love which St. Paul says in
1Corinthians 13: "Faith, hope and love and the greatest of these is
love."
It is
interesting to me-but not surprising- that love, especially the commandment to
"love thy neighbor," is at the core not only of Christian religion
but of so many other great faiths around the world. It is universal and the
most basic of all values.
In another
Christmas message, The Queen showed her understanding of the practicality of
this commandment. She said: "Many
will have been inspired by Jesus' simple but powerful teaching: love God and
love thy neighbour as thyself - in other words, treat others as you would
like them to treat you. His great emphasis was to give spirituality a
practical purpose".
And which
parable of Jesus does she most often quote?
It is the story
of the good Samaritan, which tells of a Hebrew man beaten by robbers and left
wounded by the roadside. He was bypassed by his well-placed kinsmen, first a
priest and then a Levite. Then along came the Samaritan, who was from a
different tribe -not a friend or kin -who took him up and restored him as a
simple act of compassion.
For Her
Majesty, another of the essential guideposts of love is forgiveness.
In her 2013
Christmas broadcast, she said: "Although
we are capable of great acts of kindness, history teaches us that we sometimes
need saving from ourselves-from our recklessness or our greed. God sent
into the world a unique person - neither a philosopher nor a general (important
though they are) - but a Saviour with the power to forgive. Forgiveness
lies at the heart of the Christian faith. It can heal broken families, it
can restore friendships and it can reconcile divided communities. It is in
forgiveness that we feel the power of God's love".
For me, perhaps
the most powerful of her lessons is the one from her 1975 Christmas message,
which speaks of this fundamental truth of love and its impact throughout our
society.
She said: "Christ's simple message of love has
been turning the world upside down ever since his birth. He showed that what people are and what they
do, does matter and does make all the difference. He commanded us to love
our neighbours as we love ourselves but what exactly is meant by loving
ourselves? I believe it means trying to make the most of the abilities we have
been given, it means caring for our talents. It is a matter of making the
best of ourselves, not just doing the best for ourselves."
Impact
I want to end
this brief journey through the The Queen's inspiring dedication to faith,
service and love by appraising the impact of her observations and her life.
The title of my
installation address delivered just less than seven years ago when I began this
job was "A smart and caring nation - a call to service." This was
about the good society, about calling on our better angels. And so much of what
I have tried to do since has been influenced by Christian faith as illuminated
by The Queen's messages. So let me end
with a final quote from her 1975 Christmas message where she spoke of the
impact and the legacy of love.
"We are all different, but each of
us has his own best to offer. The
responsibility for the way we live life with all its challenges, sadness and
joy is ours alone. If we do this well, it will also be good for our neighbours.
If you throw a stone into a pool, the
ripples go on spreading outwards. A big
stone can cause waves, but even the smallest pebble changes the whole pattern
of the water. Our daily actions are like
those ripples, each one makes a difference, even the smallest. It does matter therefore what each individual
does each day. Kindness, sympathy,
resolution and courteous behaviour are infectious. Acts of courage and self-sacrifice, like those
of the people who refuse to be terrorized by kidnappers or hijackers, or who
defuse bombs, are an inspiration to others.
And the combined effect can be enormous. If enough grains of sand are dropped into one
side of a pair of scales they will, in the end, tip it against a lump of lead. We may feel powerless alone but the joint
efforts of individuals can defeat the evils of our time Together they can create a stable, free and
considerate society."
My final words
are a personal story of another prayer breakfast, which took place about 30
years ago, in Montréal, when Mother Teresa came to town.
One of our
neighbours, moved by her work with the poor in Calcutta, asked Mother Teresa
how she could help. She replied:
"Just look around you. In your own neighbourhood,
there is a family who needs your care and love."
Shortly
afterward, I read a criticism of Mother Teresa's work. Her shelter in Calcutta gave succour to
perhaps 200 people in a city where millions lived in abject poverty. Her work was described as one small drop in an
ocean.
A few weeks
later, I realized the shortcomings of this criticism. It was looking at her work from the point of
view of physics, rather than chemistry. I
came to this realization in an unusual way. At that time, my children were aged
2 to 9, and they were unsatisfied with the entertainment I was providing at their
birthday parties. They would ask me,
"Why can't you do a magic show like Dean MacFarlane instead of telling us
ghost stories that no one believes?"
In those days,
Andy MacFarlane was the Dean of Journalism at the University of Western Ontario,
where I was the Dean of Law. Being quite
competitive, I attended the next birthday party at the MacFarlane home, where
Andy was dressed as a magician, with a long cape and flowing sleeves. He was performing a magic trick, turning water
into wine. He took a glass of clear water, raised it in the air, and uttered
that magic phrase, "Abracadabra!"
He then swept the glass into his sleeves while whirling 360 degrees,
surreptitiously adding a few drops of red vegetable dye into the glass, and
emerged with a glass of a lovely rose-hued liquid.
At that moment,
I realized that the work Mother Teresa was doing was changing the culture of
Calcutta, and indeed that of the world. It was the transformation of the water-not the
addition to it -that was improving the lives of so many families.
Thank you.
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