We Remember Them
5 Year Anniversary of 9/11/06

A Litany of Remembrance, Penitence and Hope
One: When we remember the stockbrokers,
office workers, maintenance workers, bystanders, window-washers and
all the others who worked together so valiantly to help each other,
we can say together,
All: We remember great courage.
One: When we recall the firefighters
who rushed upstairs as most everyone else was racing out, we can say
together,
All: We remember selfless
service.
One: When we recall the police officers
who stood to protect and defend the people and performed their duties
until the towers came crashing down on top of them, we can say
together,
All: We remember selfless sacrifice for
the safety of others.
One: When we recall the thousands of
workers, women and men and, old and young, single and married,
American-born and those born in countries around the world who did
not escape the buildings, we can say together,
All: We remember the loss of human
life.
One: When we recall those citizens who
rushed to help, did all they could to help, we can say
together,
All: We remember and give thanks for
dutiful commitment to those in distress.
One: When we recall the people who
stood in line at the nation's blood banks to make living donations
from their very bodies, we can say together,
All: We give thanks for those who live
on to pass on life and love.
One: When we remember the millions of
Americans who gave so generously of their life and labor to endow
funds to help the survivors and their families recover from their
losses, we can say together,
All: We are grateful for
generosity.
Remembrance begins with deep, personal identification. It
begins with remembering the affliction of our brothers and sisters,
and marking their pain as our own. Remembrance is a sacred moment
when we raise up and hold to the light of the eternal moment, the
good who have passed.
We light a candle, in penitence, recognizing that we have
not done enough to address the sources of anger, hate,
dehumanization, rage and indignation that lead to acts of
violence
One: In our sadness, horror and shock
we acknowledge that our own fears turned murderous and we have sought
revenge, sometimes against even the innocent.
All: We confess and regret our own
anger and recognize its dangers to our spirits, our health, our
community, and others.
One: In the midst of the aftermath of
the events of September 11th, 2001 we have been tempted to seek only
our own good, hear only our own truth, acknowledge only our own
suffering
All: We know that peace will come to us
and to our children only when the concerns of justice anywhere become
the subject of political and social will everywhere, and that no
justice leads to no peace
One: In striving for national security
and domestic peace we run the risk of confusing might for right and
participating in the very behaviors we condemn
All: Guard and guide our country that
in our search for security we may not trample the rights of the
innocent nor disregard the rule of law. Let us not confuse leadership
within the global community as the voice for the whole
community.
Repentance means to turn away from wrong deeds.
Repentance means choosing instead deeds which require moral
restraint, and are more beneficial to all persons who
suffer.
We light a candle to light the way to a better world for
our children and our children's children, and all the children of
God.
One: We recall with joy the unity we
felt in the outpouring of help, kindness, thoughtful words and deeds
from at home and around the world.
All: We must hold firmly to our unity,
borne forward now not of tragedy but of loving
kindness.
One: We place fresh confidence in
international organizations and conversations that bring the diverse
gifts of the world to the problems of poverty, injustice, terror and
strife
All: We long for wise policies that
forego short term gain for long term stability, justice and
peace.
One: In a year filled with tragedy
we dare to hope for an era yet to come in which the slaughter of
innocents, greed, the ambitions of power, and cultural, racial and
religious bigotries are but memories of a dim and unenlightened
past.
Unison Prayer:
God of the ages, before your eyes all empires rise and fall yet
you are changeless. Be near us in this age of terror and in these
moments of remembrance. Uphold those who work and watch and wait and
weep and love. By your Spirit give rise in us to broad sympathy for
all the peoples of your earth. Strengthen us to comfort those who
mourn and work in large ways and small for those things that make for
peace. Bless the people and leaders of this nation and all nations so
that warfare, like slavery before it, may become only a historic
memory. We pray in the strong name of the Prince of Peace.
Amen.
______________
Liturgy by Rev. Eileen W. Lindner and Rev. Marcel A. Welty,
National Council of Churches
Source:http://www.ncccusa.org/interfaith/sept-11-litany.html