AUGUST 23, 2023
Religious Liberty Event Pays Tribute to 130 Years of Advocacy
IRLA 9th World Congress encourages participants to reflect and act for the good of all people.
Marcos Paseggi, Adventist Review
Attendees of the IRLA’s 9th World Congress follow the proceedings in Silver Spring, Maryland, on August 21. [Photo: Marcos Paseggi, Adventist Review]
Nearly 150 religious liberty leaders, scholars, and advocates from around the world met for the 9th World Congress of the International Religious Liberty Association (IRLA) in Silver Spring, Maryland, United States, August 21-23.
The international event invited attendees to discuss “a wholistic understanding of freedom of religion or belief as a pivotal human right,” organizers said.
In his remarks on August 21, Ted N. C. Wilson, president of the General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists, welcomed attendees, reminding them of the historical focus of the denomination on the topic.
“Adventist pioneers … saw in religious liberty an incontrovertible value without which our very humanity could be at risk of being diminished and impaired,” thus embracing “the priceless value of religious freedom, and the foundation of freedom itself,” Wilson said.
Wilson shared how Adventist pioneers fought against oppression of others, against slavery, and against early attempts at Sunday laws. “Adventist leaders officially adopted a solidarity with the whole human family through the advocacy of religious liberty,” he reminded attendees.
The IRLA registration table on August 21. Leaders and advocates come from dozens of organizations and every major Adventist Church region of the world. [Photo: Marcos Paseggi, Adventist Review]
In 2023, the International Religious Liberty Association is celebrating 130 years of religious freedom and freedom of conscience advocacy. [Photo: Marcos Paseggi, Adventist Review]
General Conference treasurer Paul Douglas welcomes participants to the IRLA’s 9th World Congress in Silver Spring, Maryland United States, on August 21. [Photo: Marcos Paseggi, Adventist Review]
General Conference president Ted N. C. Wilson reminds participants about the Seventh-day Adventist Church’s longstanding defense of religious freedom and freedom of conscience. [Photo: Marcos Paseggi, Adventist Review]
Simultaneous interpreters provided translation of the IRLA proceedings into several languages for those who don’t understand English. [Photo: Marcos Paseggi, Adventist Review]
Do We Really Believe It?
The opening program included words by IRLA’s president, Ambassador John Nay, who reflected on the implications of supporting religious liberty. “We say we believe in religious freedom for all people,” he said. “But do we really believe it in our hearts?” Nay called his audience to move past supporting religious freedom just for their own group, religious or otherwise, and embrace an advocacy that takes every human being into account.
At the same time, Nay emphasized, accepting religious freedom for all people — for those who believe and for those who don’t believe — may lead us to question our behaviors toward other groups. He explained that while we are within our rights to question a law for purely secular reasons, we should be very careful when using religious arguments to oppose a particular bill.
“The question is, to what extent is permissible, even equitable, to limit other people’s civil rights based on our religious views?” he said. “I suggest it is inconsistent, and some would even say hypocritical, to advocate for religious liberty but oppose granting rights and freedoms to others who are not believers and using religious reasons for taking that stand.”
A Moral Imperative
After Nay’s presentation, IRLA secretary general Ganoune Diop discussed a comprehensive faith-based understanding of religious freedom, which he defined as “the right to profess, practice, and propagate one’s beliefs without coercion, intimidation, or manipulation.” Religious freedom is “freedom from being forced to do something that is against one’s deeply held convictions or against one’s conscience,” Diop said. “[It] is a centerpiece which occupies a pivotal position among freedom and rights.”
Diop emphasized that the creation of the IRLA 130 years ago “is connected to the conviction that religious freedom is a moral imperative” which “is part of God’s image in humans.” He emphasized, “Freedom is constitutive to who we are meant to be. Without freedom, we are incomplete.… [And] the determination to spread the awareness of freedom of thought, conscience, and belief is necessary to what it means to be a human being.
On August 21, attendees follow the proceedings on the opening night of the IRLA’s 9th World Congress in Silver Spring, Maryland United States. [Photo: Marcos Paseggi, Adventist Review]
IRLA’s president, Ambassador John Nay, called event attendees to reflect on the implications of supporting religious liberty for all people. [Photo: Marcos Paseggi, Adventist Review]
As part of the opening program, IRLA secretary general Ganoune Diop discussed a comprehensive faith-based understanding of religious freedom. [Photo: Marcos Paseggi, Adventist Review]
His Excellency Adama Dieng, former U.N. under-secretary general, was the keynote speaker on the opening night of the IRLA’s 9th World Congress on August 21. [Photo: Marcos Paseggi, Adventist Review]
Participants enjoy dinner together after the opening proceedings of the IRLA’s 9th World Congress on August 21. [Photo: Marcos Paseggi, Adventist Review]
An Ongoing Enterprise
The keynote speaker for the opening program was His Excellency Adama Dieng, former U.N. under-secretary general and special adviser of the U.N. secretary general on the prevention of genocide, discussed a wholistic understanding of religious freedom in an increasingly polarized world. Dieng, who took part in the trials of the leaders responsible for the Rwandan genocide, reminded attendees of all that has been accomplished in the field of human rights and specifically religious freedom.
At the same time, Dieng pointed out all the challenges that remain to tackle ongoing violations to the dignity of people around the world. “Unfortunately, these rights [to religious freedom] are constantly violated by state and non-state actors,” he acknowledged, citing contemporary examples in several places in the world. He then called for action to face the ongoing challenges.
Dieng added, however, that intolerance and discrimination “cannot simply be prevented or eliminated by strategic measures alone. Reflection and elimination of intolerance based on attitudes and practices requires ongoing education and interfaith dialogue,” he said.
Other keynote speakers during the event included Ambassador Sam Brownback, former U.S. ambassador-at-large for International Religious Freedom, and Knox Thames, former special adviser for religious minorities at the U.S. State Department.
Breakout sessions invited attendees to reflect on the history, current challenges, and opportunities for religious freedom advocates. It included discussions on religious nationalism, attitudes to religious minorities, and ideas for action. Attendees will also participate in a visit to the U.S. National Archives in Washington, D.C., and a closing banquet and award ceremony at a venue close to the White House.
About the IRLA
The IRLA was founded in 1893 by a group of Seventh-day Adventists who were concerned about religious persecution and discrimination. The organization was created to advocate for the religious freedom of all people, regardless of their faith and background. “The IRLA addresses religious freedom issues and provides support and resources to individuals and communities facing persecution,” organization leaders said. “[It also] fosters dialogue and cooperation among people of various faiths and philosophical persuasions.”
The article was updated on August 28, 2023.
Marcos Paseggi, Adventist Review
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About two KEYNOTE SPEAKERS at IRLA's 9th World Congress and 130th Anniversary:
ReplyDelete1. Sam Brownback
A former evangelical Christian, Brownback converted to Catholicism[106] in 2002 and is associated with the conservative denominational organization, Opus Dei.[263] In 2017, Brownback stated that he sometimes attends an evangelical church with his family.[264]
Source: Wikipedia
2. Adama Dieng
Dieng, a Muslim, strongly criticized the Cairo Declaration on Human Rights in Islam, saying, among other things, that it introduced "intolerable discrimination against both non-Muslims and women".[3]
Source: Wikipedia
So, any simple search of information on those two KEYNOTE SPEAKERS reveals peculiar characteristics about them that would question how they could represent Religious Liberty when it relates to Adventistism, and its God given mission to preach the Three Angels' Messages to the world and Jesus's impending Second Advent.