Thursday, July 16, 2026

Action Alert - Call on Congress to Reject Deepening US-Israel Military Coordination

This month marks 1,000 days since the October 2023 attack on Israel and the assault on Gaza that has followed.  Marking the anniversary, the Palestinian Christian group Kairos Palestine issued a statement calling on the world to "act with faith and courage," urging governments to halt the arms and military support that enables the violence.  Last month the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.)'s General Assembly voted to recognize Israel's war in Gaza as a genocide, and the United Church of Christ's General Synod has passed a similar declaration.  This follows previous declarations from human rights groups, including B'Tselem, Human Rights Watch, and Amnesty International.

The human cost of the war has been staggering. Over the past 1,000 days, over seventy thousand Palestinians have been killed, and much of Gaza, including schools, hospitals, churches, and mosques, lies in ruins. This has also been the deadliest period for Palestinian children in the West Bank since Israel's occupation began in 1967. And even since a ceasefire agreement took effect in Gaza, Israeli attacks have killed more than 1,100 Palestinians.

Israel has also continued to restrict what the outside world can see and deliver. It has banned dozens of international aid organizations, including Doctors Without Borders, from operating in Gaza, and it has barred international journalists from entering and reporting independently from Gaza.

Since Israel's founding, the US has given it more military support than any other country in the world. That includes more than $300 billion in aid overall, plus $16.3 billion in direct military aid since October 2023, with tens of billions more in committed military sales still to come. A 10-year agreement guaranteeing $3.8 billion a year in military aid is set to expire in 2028.

Congress could soon lock in a permanent expansion of US-Israel military ties. It is preparing to pass the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA), the annual bill that funds the military, and this year's House and Senate versions both include provisions that would tie the US and Israeli defense industries together like never before.

This isn't about more or less aid. It's about a deeper, harder-to-reverse form of support: joint weapons development, shared production, and long-term defense contracts that would tie the two countries' militaries together in ways that would be nearly impossible to undo once Congress passes them.

This is a serious and dangerous shift in US-Israel military cooperation, and it is happening now, with consequences that could last for generations. There is bipartisan opposition to these provisions, but time is short. Contact your Senators and Representative now and urge them to oppose this legislation. The US must not continue arming, selling weapons to, or deepening military ties with Israel while it continues killing Palestinians; illegally occupying Gaza, the West Bank, southern Lebanon, and parts of Syria; and violating international humanitarian law.

SojoMail - Pete Hegseth’s high testosterone holy war

Wednesday, July 15, 2026

WCC news: WCC to lead solidarity delegation to Zimbabwe

World Council of Churches (WCC) general secretary Rev. Prof. Dr Jerry Pillay will lead an ecumenical solidarity delegation to the Zimbabwe Council of Churches General Assembly, which is convening 22-24 July under the theme “Breaking Walls: Discerning the Signs of the Times.”
Photo: Albin Hillert/WCC 
15 July 2026

Accompanying Pillay, the delegation will include Rev. Dr Suzanne Matale from Zambia, representing the All Africa Conference of Churches general secretary; Rev. Dr Hanns Lessing, Executive Secretary for Theology, Communion and Ecumenical Relations of the World Communion of Reformed Churches; Rev. Mzwandile Molo, South African Council of Churches general secretary and current chair of the Fellowship of Church Councils in Southern Africa, and Dr Masiiwa Gunda, WCC programme executive and Ecumenical Institute at Bossey adjunct professor.

Pillay will deliver the assembly’s opening address, “The Church's Prophetic Responsibility in Promoting Peace, Social Cohesion, Justice, and Sustainable Development,” on 22 July. On 24 July, he will preach at the morning service under the theme “Envisioning the Future.”

Molo will deliver a public lecture "From Conflict to Cohesion: Churches as Agents of National Healing" on 21 July. Lessing will speak on 22 July on "The Church's Prophetic Voice in a Broken Society" during the Theology Conference component of the assembly. Matale will preach during the morning service on 23 July. 

The delegation is scheduled to meet other church and community leaders during their four-day stay in Harare.

WCC member churches in Zimbabwe

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The World Council of Churches promotes Christian unity in faith, witness and service for a just and peaceful world. An ecumenical fellowship of churches founded in 1948, today the WCC brings together 356 Protestant, Orthodox, Anglican and other churches representing more than 580 million Christians in over 120 countries, and works cooperatively with the Roman Catholic Church. The WCC general secretary is Rev. Prof. Dr Jerry Pillay from the Uniting Presbyterian Church in Southern Africa.

Media contact: +41 79 507 6363; www.oikoumene.org/press
Our visiting address is:
World Council of Churches
Chemin du Pommier 42
Kyoto Building
Le Grand-Saconnex CH-1218
Switzerland

Tuesday, July 14, 2026

WCC news: Webinar will explore relevance of international law in Cuba, Venezuela

The Peace and Security Working Group of the World Council of Churches (WCC) Commission of the Churches on International Affairs (CCIA) will present, on 16 July, a webinar on “The relevance of international law in today's world: untangling the situation in Cuba and Venezuela.”
A magazine seller on a street in Santiago de Cuba, on the eastern end of the Caribbean island of Cuba. Photo: Paul Jeffrey/Life on Earth
14 July 2026

In addition to offering perspectives from Cuba and Venezuela, the webinar will explore how the ecumenical movement can make a renewed commitment to international law mechanisms.

For Peter Prove, director of the WCC's CCIA, Latin America is, once again, the focus of great power politics. "US intervention in Venezuela, the ongoing blockade and escalating threats against Cuba, and political changes in Colombia, among others, signal a shift in the terrain of hemispheric hegemony", he said. "What role does international law play in this context, what impact might these events have on the rules-based order internationally, and what do they portend for the future of the region? These questions set the stage for this webinar, with perspectives from representatives of WCC member churches and partners from the region, and from a leading expert in international law”, added Prove.

The webinar is second in a series on regional trends with global impact and perspectives in the ecumenical movement.

Webinar discussions will serve as inputs for the upcoming Joint Biennial Conference of the WCC Commissions and Reference Groups for Life, Justice, and Peace, to be held in Chiang Mai, Thailand from 4-10 October.

To register for this webinar

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The World Council of Churches' website
The World Council of Churches promotes Christian unity in faith, witness and service for a just and peaceful world. An ecumenical fellowship of churches founded in 1948, today the WCC brings together 356 Protestant, Orthodox, Anglican and other churches representing more than 580 million Christians in over 120 countries, and works cooperatively with the Roman Catholic Church. The WCC general secretary is Rev. Prof. Dr Jerry Pillay from the Uniting Presbyterian Church in Southern Africa.

Media contact: +41 79 507 6363; www.oikoumene.org/press
Our visiting address is:
World Council of Churches
Chemin du Pommier 42
Kyoto Building
Le Grand-Saconnex CH-1218
Switzerland

WCC news: WCC speaks out against systemic, structural injustices in the context of xenophobia in South Africa

World Council of Churches (WCC) general secretary Rev. Prof. Dr Jerry Pillay expressed grave concern about the developments of violence in South Africa targeting migrants from other African countries.
Photo: Paul Jeffrey/WCC
14 July 2026

“The WCC recognizes that the violence experienced by African migrants in South Africa is instigated and perpetrated by a minority of South Africans, who are misdirecting their anger and frustration or are hijacking and misdirecting legitimate public frustrations by the majority of ordinary South Africans,” said Pillay. “The WCC refuses to erase the diverse people of South Africa by erasing their good deeds and radical hospitality toward siblings from across the continent.”

Pillay acknowledged and lamented the fact that South Africa remains one of the most unequal societies in the world. “Yet the sources of this suffering are too often obscured,” he said. “Through intentional and rigorous processes of moral discernment, we in the WCC name the situation in South Africa as one of the continuing legacies of apartheid and colonization.”

The central concern, Pillay said, is one of justice rather than merely compassion.

"Sociologically and politically, xenophobia functions as misdirected anger,” he said. “Xenophobia performs an ideological function, redirecting legitimate frustrations from power structures toward vulnerable communities with limited protection.”

Pillay calls on the government, member churches, ecumenical partners, and all people of goodwill to protect the rights and human dignity of all migrants in the country.

He also urged people to “name xenophobia and Afrophobia as sins against God and crime against humanity” and to move beyond “charitable responses to active justice work.”

Pillay concluded: “Churches must challenge narratives criminalizing migrants, expose structural factors behind migration and xenophobia, and stand publicly with targeted communities.”

The statement was issued by Pillay in consultation with the WCC Reference Group on Overcoming Racism, Xenophobia, Casteism, and all other forms of Discrimination.

Read the full statement

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The World Council of Churches' website
The World Council of Churches promotes Christian unity in faith, witness and service for a just and peaceful world. An ecumenical fellowship of churches founded in 1948, today the WCC brings together 356 Protestant, Orthodox, Anglican and other churches representing more than 580 million Christians in over 120 countries, and works cooperatively with the Roman Catholic Church. The WCC general secretary is Rev. Prof. Dr Jerry Pillay from the Uniting Presbyterian Church in Southern Africa.

Media contact: +41 79 507 6363; www.oikoumene.org/press
Our visiting address is:
World Council of Churches
Chemin du Pommier 42
Kyoto Building
Le Grand-Saconnex CH-1218
Switzerland

Action Alert - Call on Congress to Reject Deepening US-Israel Military Coordination

This month marks 1,000 days since the October 2023 attack on Israel and the assault on Gaza that has followed.  Marking the anniversary, th...