Thursday, March 31, 2022

WCC NEWS: WCC convenes roundtable on Ukraine, calls for diplomacy instead of threats, dialogue instead of confrontation

The World Council of Churches (WCC) convened an ecumenical roundtable consultation on the situation in Ukraine, which took place 30 March at the Bossey Ecumenical Institute.

Senior representatives of WCC member churches from several European countries neighbouring and directly affected by the current conflict joined the WCC ecumenical round table consultation on the situation in Ukraine, on 30 March at the Bossey Ecumenical Institute, Switzerland. Photo: Marianne Ejdersten/WCC

30 March 2022

Those gathered included senior representatives of WCC member churches from several European countries neighbouring and directly affected by the current conflict. “We regret that it was not possible for the representatives from Russia and Ukraine to travel to join us for this consultation, though they had accepted the invitation to do so,” said WCC acting general secretary Rev. Prof. Dr Ioan Sauca, convener of the gathering. “This is one of several roundtables that will be convened.”

The purpose of this meeting was to consult, share perspectives on the conflict and its causes, and to discern possible paths forward for the churches together in working for peace in the midst of war.

“We denounce the military aggression launched by the leadership of the Russian Federation against the people of the sovereign nation of Ukraine,” the message reads. “We affirm the right of the people of Ukraine to defend themselves against this aggression.”

The message also expresses grief for all the precious lives already lost. 

“We lift up the compassionate care and support offered to the Ukrainian refugees by the authorities, local communities, churches and church-related organizations in neighbouring and other countries, as a good example of the care and support all refugees fleeing from every such threat to life and dignity should receive,” the message reads. “We join in calling for a cease-fire in Ukraine, for humanitarian corridors to be opened and respected, and for sustained negotiations for a secure and just peace, to bring an end to this suffering.”

The message also calls for recognition, respect and protection of the God-given human dignity of every human being in harm’s way due to this or any other armed conflict.

“All those responsible for violations of applicable laws and crimes against humanity must be held fully accountable for their actions,” reads the message. “Beyond the borders of Ukraine, and beyond the new diaspora of its displaced and suffering people, we are also gravely concerned about the even wider, longer-term consequences of this unjustifiable aggression.”

The message also mentions the wider consequences across the globe as the conflict continues, including food shortages.

“We share the strong conviction that there is no legitimate way in which this armed aggression and its terrible consequences can be justified or tolerated from the perspective of our most fundamental Christian faith principles,” the message reads. “Acutely conscious of the grave risks of further escalation of the violence in Ukraine, of wider and even more destructive conflict, and of the abhorrent threat of weapons of mass destruction, we appeal for diplomacy instead of threats, dialogue instead of confrontation and exclusion, truth instead of disinformation, and for the voice of conscience - inspired by God’s will for all the people of God and God’s unique creation - to be heard.”

The message concludes: “As leaders of Christian communities facing this conflict and its consequences, and aware that sister churches hold different perspectives on the conflict’s root causes, we stress the importance of the WCC as the ecumenical movement’s leading instrument for sharing divergent perspectives, struggling with our differences, and seeking reconciliation and unity in word and deed to which our faith calls us. We join in fervent prayer for peace in Ukraine, in Europe and in the whole world, for the transformation of hearts and minds presently fixated on confrontation and violence, and for a turning to the path of peace where our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ leads us.”

The message also affirms the role of the World Council of Churches as a platform for ecumenical dialogue. "We acknowledge the calling of churches and of the ecumenical movement to be peace-makers, and mutually commit to continuing to meet and to work together for justice and peace, counting on the good offices of the WCC to continue to convene us and enable our intent,” reads the conclusion. “We ask the WCC acting general secretary to renew his invitation to the WCC member churches in Russia and Ukraine to join us in another roundtable discussion as soon as possible.”

Read the full message from the WCC round table on Ukraine

Church response to refugees, “I’m seeing the image of God in you” (WCC news release 24 March 2022)

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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 349 Protestant, Orthodox, Anglican and other churches representing more than 550 million Christians in over 120 countries, and works cooperatively with the Roman Catholic Church. The WCC acting general secretary is Rev. Prof. Dr Ioan Sauca, from the Orthodox Church in Romania.

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