Irish Methodist pastor to receive peace award
By United Methodist News Service
Oct. 31, 2007
An
Irish Methodist pastor who spent years working to end sectarian
violence in Northern Ireland will receive the 2007 World Methodist Peace
Award.
The Rev. Harold Good, 70, will receive the award during a Dec. 8
ceremony at Knock Methodist Church in Belfast. The award is given by the
World Methodist Council to individuals or groups who have made
significant contributions to peace, justice and reconciliation.
A former president of the Methodist Church in Ireland, Good is being
honored for his role in working for stability and peace in Northern
Ireland, according to the Rev. George Freeman, the council’s executive
director.
Good was one of two witnesses, along with Catholic Priest Alec Reid,
to the de-commissioning of the Irish Republican Army’s arsenal of
weapons. On Sept. 26, 2005, they verified the conclusion of John de
Chastelain, a retired Canadian general, that the IRA’s weapons had been
destroyed.
"We have spent many long days watching the meticulous and painstaking
way in which General de Chastelain went about his task of
decommissioning huge amounts of explosives, arms and ammunition," Good
said in a statement at the time, adding that "beyond any shadow of
doubt, the arms of the IRA have now been decommissioned."
A ministry of peace
His ministry for peace began with his 1968 assignment to the Agnes
Street Church in the heart of Shankill, a Protestant stronghold in
Belfast. "Along with other clergy, he spent many nights on the streets,
dodging bullets, helping to calm people and attempting to make the
gospel of peace heard amidst sectarian hatred," the World Methodist
Council noted.
Good ministered both to innocent victims of the violence and, as
part-time chaplain to Her Majesty’s Prison at Crumlin Road, to
paramilitary members, exhibiting "great physical and spiritual courage
in his ministry."
From 1973-79, he served as director of the Corrymeel Centre for
Reconciliation at Ballycastle, where he brought together vulnerable
groups from both the Protestant/Unionist and the Catholic/Nationalist
communities.
As part of the Methodist Church in Ireland Council on Social
Responsibility, he worked actively behind the scenes for peace,
initiating conversations between parties involved as well as with the
Irish and British governments. "Harold’s listening and interpreting
skills, as well as his honesty and patience, evolved into a high level
of trust among all persons involved," the council said. "His ministry
has been marked by a passion for justice."
He also became a member of the first board of the Northern Ireland Human Rights Commission in 1999.
During his 2001-02 tenure as president of the Methodist Church in
Ireland, Good and Northern Ireland’s three other main church leaders
engaged in talks with British Prime Minister Tony Blair as part of their
quest for peace.
He has been awarded the title of Officer of the most excellent Order of the British Empire.
Blessed are the peacemakers
The World Methodist Council represents 75 member churches in the
Methodist/Wesleyan family around the world and annually honors
individuals or groups whose contributions to peace, justice and
reconciliation have been marked by courage, creativity and consistency.
The first World Methodist Peace Award recipient, in 1977, was Sadie
Patterson, a trade union and peace movement activist in Northern
Ireland. Other previous recipients include Nelson Mandela, Jimmy Carter,
Kofi Annan, Boris Trajkovski, the late President of Macedonia, The
Community of St. Egidio in Rome and Habitat for Humanity.
More information about the award is available at http://worldmethodistcouncil.org/content/view/43/63/ on the council’s Web site.
News media contact: Linda Bloom, New York, (646) 369-3759 or newsdesk@umcom.org.
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Resources
Methodist Church in Ireland
World Methodist Council
BBC News: Northern Ireland |