iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
Pernessa Seele

Pernessa Seele

GET UPDATES FROM Pernessa Seele
 

A Call To Spiritual Arms: The Faith Community's Global Response to AIDS

Posted: 11/30/10 04:54 PM ET

In my work as founder and director of The Balm In Gilead I have been honored and humbled to walk among holy men and women from diverse backgrounds and faiths throughout our world. Regardless of their geographical location or if they are Christians, Muslims, Jews or members of other great spiritual paths, I have found that they all have a few things in common: They believe in a God who loves unconditionally, a God who forgives sin and a God who heals the sick, regardless of the origin of the disease. They all believe in the power of prayer.

Unfortunately, there is a colorful, dark side that continues to be at war within the hearts and minds of many believers. Too often our faith leaders ignore their fundamental belief in a God that loves, forgives and heals when it comes to those affected by the Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV). The faith communities' response to the AIDS epidemic overall has unveiled a deep, dark evil that exists within the spiritual society of holiness.

Still there are many spiritual leaders of diverse faiths who are standing tall on this World AIDS Day and declaring God's unconditional love for all people, including those living with HIV, who might be gay, straight, addicted, obese, sex workers, transgender or diabetic. Christian and Muslim leaders are working together, defying those who hate unity or peace, to educate their communities about HIV prevention. They are speaking out on behalf of abstinence, condom use, needle exchange and HIV testing. These spiritual leaders have decided that God's unconditional love mandates them to save a life and then a soul.

Leaders and members of faith communities who have freed themselves from the dark side of holy actions of hate, must now rise up as public health advocates. These courageous holy men and women must shout from their holy places that the world is experiencing a public health crisis. AIDS is not the devil. It is a disease that is caused by a virus. The virus is not deterred or killed by one's belief in God or the number of times one makes prayers per day. HIV can be stopped by the implementation of proven public health prevention strategies and the daily actions of unconditional love and service. Faith leaders and members must work with local governments, public health departments and ministries of health to ensure that the spread of HIV is stopped in their local communities and in the world. This is an on-going process and requires daily focus.

The role of faith communities is critical to conquering the global AIDS pandemic. Stigma and discrimination remain the leading causes of death worldwide among people affected by HIV, and by those who are afraid to take the HIV test because someone might find out their truth. Stigma and discrimination can and must be dismantled by the believing members of our society.

Today, more than 33.4 million members of planet earth are living with HIV, many of them are believers who are afraid of a God they believe loves unconditionally but hates them for contracting HIV. Self-hatred and pity often propel the spread of the virus to others. Faith communities must speak out against HIV stigma and discrimination. More importantly, the actions of faith communities must exemplify inclusiveness, service and love for all people living with all diseases, including HIV/AIDS.

On this World AIDS Day 2010, there is still no cure for AIDS. Prevention is still our best bet for saving lives. The majority of people living on our planet belong to a faith community and look up to their leaders for daily guidance and direction. Women and girls are the fastest growing segment of those contracting and living with HIV worldwide. Women and girls, often times, make up the majority of persons in our temples of faith where the leadership is still male-dominated. AIDS prevention is everybody's responsibility. AIDS prevention includes more than encouraging the use of a condom among all sexually active individuals. For the faith community, it must include incorporating AIDS prevention in ceremonial preparedness, such as weddings, rites of passages, baptism, bar mitzvah, etc.; it must include openly discussing sexual abuse of women, men, boys and girls of all ages and the prevention there of. The unconditional love of God includes homosexuals. The lingering myth that homosexuality causes AIDS continues to mislead and misguide people to their death or destruction. Loyal believers in a God that is described as both omni-spirit and truth must become leaders of every effort to unite all people -- to educate the young and old, the gay and the straight, the addicted and the sober about the facts and methods of HIV prevention. All methods.

World AIDS Day is the official launch of The Balm In Gilead's mobilization efforts for the 2011 National Week of Prayer for the Healing of AIDS, March 6-12, 2011. Now in its 21st year, The Balm In Gilead's Week of Prayer for the Healing of AIDS calls upon all faiths to join in prayer and education for the healing of AIDS. The silence of life's realities is as harmful as the detonation of a nuclear bomb. Conquering AIDS globally will begin and end with the faith communities' worldwide commitment to provide prayer, truth, prevention, service and care to all people.

The guiding principles of The Balm In Gilead, Inc. provide the daily focus of our work. They include: Belief that all people facing HIV/AIDS are welcome at the table of grace by the unconditional love of God and that their voices must be heard and respected, and belief that faith leaders are a powerful voice for change and must be intentionally at the forefront of addressing the health challenges of the people they serve.

To all faith leaders and members around the world who join The Balm In Gilead in prayer, education and service for the healing of AIDS, I thank you on behalf of the millions of people to whom you provide service and care everyday. You are God's unconditional love!

The mission of The Balm In Gilead, Inc. is to prevent diseases and to improve the health status of people of the African Diaspora by providing support to faith institutions in areas of program design, implementation and evaluation which strengthens their capacity to deliver programs and services that contribute to the elimination of health disparities. The Balm In Gilead offices are located in Richmond, Va., and Dar es Salaam, Tanzania.

 
In my work as founder and director of The Balm In Gilead I have been honored and humbled to walk among holy men and women from diverse backgrounds and faiths throughout our world. Regardless of their...
In my work as founder and director of The Balm In Gilead I have been honored and humbled to walk among holy men and women from diverse backgrounds and faiths throughout our world. Regardless of their...
 
 
  • Comments
  • 24
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Bloggers
Recency  | 
Popularity
08:33 PM on 12/08/2010
Sex is a gift from God to be shared by one man and one woman throughout their life.
photo
angrymanspokane
Just a regular guy
06:00 PM on 12/02/2010
This is terrifying - yet in our popular entertainment media, sex is still portrayed as innocent recreation without any consequences.
05:25 AM on 12/02/2010
The work of The Balm In Gilead speaks to the power of faith to transcend the barriers of denomination and culture to promote healing and wellness across the globe. The philosophy and mission of The Balm In Gilead are made manifest through it's initiatives. Christians, Jews and Muslims are siting at the same table together, arming themselves with HIV/AIDS knowledge, mobilizing their communities to provide essential HIV/AIDS education and testing and diminishing the tremendous stigma of HIV/AIDS. The mix of faith and activism anchored in a philosophy of unconditional love and inclusivity which distinguish The Balm In Gilead makes it a rare and powerful weapon in our global fight against HIV/AIDS. I thank God for Pernessa Seele and The Balm In Gilead and pray that her reach to faith communities here and abroad will continue to flourish.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
texlib2112
Arsenal - Gooners Forever
03:32 PM on 12/01/2010
I lost it this morning when I thought of my friends who have passed away with AIDS over 10 years ago. This is would be a good day to see the movie, "And The Band Plays On."
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Forester
Overeducated woods worker.
01:56 PM on 12/01/2010
They interviewed Ryan White's mother last night on the local (SF) news, and I lost it.
photo
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Weirdwriter
03:07 PM on 12/01/2010
For good reason.
01:45 PM on 12/01/2010
I think Magic Johnson is proof that science is the answer to messes like this... not prayer.

Education and to some degree condoms would also go a long way. Someone should tell the Pope and all the other religions that treat sex like its an evil or "too holy to talk about" subject.

Prayer has a place in my opinion but I wouldn't bet my life on it. Just like the parents of a girl who died in my school growing up because they thought that prayer was the answer to her cancer and did not get her treated medically. Their unwavering faith has them convinced that the outcome was still God's will.
photo
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Weirdwriter
03:15 PM on 12/01/2010
It is a small segment of the religious community that believes in prayer alone. That segment tends to put too much emphasis on certain Scriptures that say "God will answer all prayers" (which he does, but not always with the answers desired), as opposed to the ones that couple prayer AND taking the best action available.

Personally, I blame the leaders of these congregations who make it a point of personal vanity to keep people from following any common-sense procedures with their selective teachings. Then if the prayer alone method doesn't work, it's "God's will" or it must be the fault of the supplicants who "don't have enough faith."
photo
JJovana
Live & let live
12:41 PM on 12/01/2010
Praying does not STOP the epidemic. Sex education and condoms do. FACT.
photo
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Weirdwriter
01:40 PM on 12/01/2010
Nobody's disputing that, friend. This is in addition to activism.
02:39 PM on 12/01/2010
Shocker.
11:01 AM on 12/01/2010
its pretty!!!!:D
12:42 AM on 12/01/2010
Thank you for a well-written and thoughtful article. It's a bit surprising to see religious people be so compassionate and intelligent when it comes to an issue like AIDS, which brings up (in the minds of many religious people) the spectre of sex, homosexuality, and drug addiction. It's encouraging to see that people of different faith communities are banding together to promote love to these people suffering terribly, as well as life-saving policies like harm reduction. Keep up the great work.
photo
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Weirdwriter
01:46 PM on 12/01/2010
The public face of a religious stand on issues like this for too long has been co-opted by the Religious Right, which is far noisier, less scrupulous and surprisingly better funded than groups on the more progressive side of the faith community.

The Right even ignored for years the medical missionaries in Africa who kept clamoring for more and better assistance in combating the spread of AIDS, and its devastating social effects. The missionaries had to do an end run around religious/political leaders to reach congregations -- that's how George Bush Jr. finally got on board.

What we're finally seeing is people of all beliefs agreeing this is not a moral or political issue but an urgent health issue.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Forester
Overeducated woods worker.
02:18 PM on 12/01/2010
Well-said Weird. It is just heartbreaking that so many have suffered and died while simultaneously enduring the public enmity fueled by the so-called christians.

As silly as it sounds, if more average Americans would sit through Angel's In America, I think things would be very different.
04:27 PM on 12/01/2010
Thank you for your comment. I have issues with missionaries who go to countries like Africa and discourage use of condoms for religious reasons. I have great admiration for those of any belief who see it as you do - as an urgent health issue, not a moral or political one.
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]