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HIV/AIDSThe SituationUN AIDS and World Health Organisation day that today there are 46 million in the world who have AIDS or are HIV positive. Others estimate 67 million in the world. This is more than a disaster, because disasters come to an end. There seems to be no foreseeable end. "No war is more destructive than AIDS," says Colin Powell. There simply is no precedent in history for this crisis. AIDS has rewritten the rules. Sub-Saharan Africa is the hardest hit, with 75% of the worlds region. There is reported decline in Kenya, Uganda and other areas. If nothing happens in Swaziland, this nation will be extinct. In Botswana, 34% are HIV positive. We are talking about households losing their breadwinners, mothers fathers, children, cousins, neighbours. AIDS has killed more people than all the wars in history. AIDS goes against God's people, God's program for humanity. Because of AIDS we have child-headed households, we have widows. Loss of immunity to disease. Early death. It knows no boundaries. A second cycle is babies that are having AIDS. Global spending on AIDS has increased to 5 billion US$ in 2005. The need is for $20 billion in 2007. How Should the Church Respond?False responses
Theological Basis for a Response
Opportunities in response
There is not enough resources for Africa, apart from the church. Clinically there is no cure for AIDS, but as the church, we have the vaccine for AIDS in teaching people faithfulness and forgiveness in the cross. In Kenya and Uganda the church has made a difference. |
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© Viv Grigg & Urban Leadership Foundationand other materials © by various contributors & Urban Leadership Foundation, for The Encarnacao Training Commission. Last modified: July 2010 |