The confession of the Presbyterian Church as adopted by the General Assembly, June 9th, 1994
The Holy Spirit, speaking in and through Scripture, calls The Presbyterian Church in
Canada to confession. This confession is our response to the word of God. We understand
our mission and ministry in new ways in part because of the testimony of Aboriginal
peoples.
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We, the 120th General Assembly of The Presbyterian Church in Canada, seeking
the guidance of the Spirit of God, and aware of our own sin and shortcomings, are
called to speak to the Church we love. We do this, out of new understandings of
our past not out of any sense of being superior to those who have gone before us,
nor out of any sense that we would have done things differently in the same con
text. It is with humility and in great sorrow that we come before God and our
Aboriginal brothers and sisters with our confession.
- We acknowledge that the stated policy of The Government of Canada was to
assimilate Aboriginal peoples to the dominant culture, and that The Presbyterian
Church in Canada co-operated in this policy. We acknowledge that the roots of the
harm we have done are found in the attitudes and values of western European
colonialism, and the assumption that what was not yet molded in our image was to
be discovered and exploited. As part of that policy we, with other churches,
encouraged the Government to ban some important spiritual practices through
which Aboriginal peoples experienced the presence of the creator God. For the
Church’s complicity in this policy we ask forgiveness.
- We recognize that there were many members of The Presbyterian Church in
Canada who, in good faith, gave unstintingly of themselves in love and
compassion for their aboriginal brothers and sisters. We acknowledge their
devotion and commend them for their work. We recognize that there were some
who, with prophetic insight, were aware of the damage that was being done and
protested, but their efforts were thwarted. We acknowledge their insight. For the
times we did not support them adequately nor hear their cries for justice, we ask
forgiveness.
- We confess that The Presbyterian Church in Canada presumed to know better than
Aboriginal peoples what was needed for life. The Church said of our Aboriginal
brothers and sisters, “If they could be like us, if they could think like us, talk like
us, worship like us, sing like us, and work like us, they would know God and
therefore would have life abundant”. In our cultural arrogance we have been blind
to the ways in which our own understanding of the Gospel has been culturally
conditioned, and because of our insensitivity to aboriginal cultures, we have
demanded more of the Aboriginal people than the gospel requires, and have thus
misrepresented Jesus Christ who loves all peoples with compassionate, suffering
love that all may come to God through him. For the Church’s presumption we ask
forgiveness.
- We confess that, with the encouragement and assistance of the Government of
Canada, The Presbyterian Church in Canada agreed to take the children of
Aboriginal peoples from their own homes and place them in Residential Schools.
In these schools, children were deprived of their traditional ways, which were
replaced with Euro-Canadian customs that were helpful in the process of
assimilation. To carry out this process, The Presbyterian Church in Canada used
disciplinary practices which were foreign to Aboriginal peoples, and open to
exploitation in physical and psychological punishment beyond any Christian
maxim of care and discipline. In a setting of obedience and acquiescence there was
opportunity for sexual abuse, and some were so abused. The effect of all this, for
Aboriginal peoples, was the loss of cultural identity and the loss of a secure sense
of self. For the Church’s insensitivity we ask forgiveness.
- We regret that there are those whose lives have been deeply scarred by the effects
of the mission and ministry of The Presbyterian Church in Canada. For our
Church we ask forgiveness of God. It is our prayer that God, who is merciful, will
guide us in compassionate ways towards helping them to heal.
- We ask, also, for forgiveness from Aboriginal peoples. What we have heard we
acknowledge. It is our hope that those whom we have wronged with a hurt too
deep for telling will accept what we have to say. With God’s guidance our Church
will seek opportunities to walk with Aboriginal peoples to find healing and
wholeness together as God’s people.