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St. Paul’s Joins National Week of Prayer for Healing of AIDS

Logo: NWPHA(Richmond, VA)-- St. Paul's Episcopal Church in Capitol Square is now a partner in the National Week of Prayer for the Healing of AIDS (March 7 - 13, 2010), which is organized by "The Balm in Gilead," a Richmond-based national effort to mobilize faith communities to focus on HIV/AIDS. On Sunday, March 7, worship services at St. Paul's, along with other parishes in the Richmond area, will focus on the healing of AIDS. As the site of Homeward's Point-In-Time Count twice a year, St. Paul's also hosts free, confidential screening for HIV/AIDS along with information tables about Sexually Transmitted Diseases that offer free condoms.

Below is the statement of support for this effort by the Rev. Wallace Adams-Riley, Rector of St. Paul's Church, which is also published to the recently-launched Web site: http://www.nationalweekofprayerforthehealingofaids.org.

"Archbishop Desmond Tutu says, ‘if it's not political, it's not Christianity.' The Balm In Gilead has mobilized the Black Church Week of Prayer for the Healing of AIDS for nearly two decades. Those joining the movement begin with prayer, then - as founder Pernessa Seele explains - somewhere along the way the Spirit stirs and often compels a faith community to go still deeper into action.

"As the Balm in Gilead seeks to broaden the week of prayer, it is my honor to join the movement. I encourage my brothers and sisters in Richmond and beyond to also sign on for this year's week of prayer if they haven't already. The deadly virus that causes HIV is color blind. It doesn't care if we're in a so-called red state or blue state or purple state. It doesn't worry if we've been kind and generous or cruel and greedy. It knows no mercy.

"People of faith (and those who have not yet found faith) must offer a united front against HIV/AIDS, help those living with it, and together combat the systemic injustices that stand in the way of access to preventative education and care. The Balm In Gilead exemplifies God's mercy, justice, and hope. May many more answer Pernessa's call - and, yes, God's call - to see the suffering and end it."

The 2010 National Week of Prayer for the Healing of AIDS is the inclusive, expansion of the highly successful Black Church Week of Prayer for the Healing of AIDS, which concluded its 20th year anniversary in 2009. The Black Church Week of Prayer for the Healing of AIDS was the nation's FIRST national mobilization campaign that specifically focused on HIV/AIDS. The campaign has provided AIDS information to well-over 5 million African Americans through the engagement of Black congregations of every sector across the United States.

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Posted: February 3, 2010

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