Rev. Romeu Martini from the Evangelical Church of the Lutheran Confession in Brazil, welcomed the participants, followed by a panel that brought together WCC central committee moderator Bishop Prof. Dr Heinrich Bedford-Strohm, Lindsey Fielder Cook from the Quaker United Nations Office, and Nonie Reaño from Brahma Kumaris. Bedford-Strohm explained the ethical and theological foundations of climate justice action and recalled that the WCC central committee launched the Ecumenical Decade of Climate Justice Action in June. "We are promoting climate justice action, because we firmly believe these are not only political questions; they are inseparably linked to our faith in God the Creator, in Christ, and in the Holy Spirit," he said. "When we say God created us, we also affirm that God created us together with nonhuman creation. That gives us a sister- and brother-relationship with the whole of nonhuman creation." He also explained why storytelling matters in climate advocacy. "We must tell the stories of the people we met - our brothers and sisters, including Indigenous Peoples - who have shared how they are often the first victims of climate change, despite having contributed the least to it." After the panel, participants split into small Talanoa discussion groups in English, Spanish, and Portuguese, reflecting on the questions: Where are we now? Where do we want to go? And how do we get there? In these discussions, people of faith shared their initiatives, concerns, and hopes—connecting their faith to climate action and keeping vulnerable communities at the centre. The Talanoa methodology, rooted in Fijian Indigenous practices, uses storytelling and collaborative reflection rather than debate to build understanding and find common ground. The gathering closed with an interfaith spiritual moment and a shared meal for in-person attendees, demonstrating how faith traditions build community around climate advocacy. Over the next two weeks at COP30, faith communities will continue their ethical dialogue and advocacy through several events: an Interfaith Vigil on 13 November at the Anglican Cathedral, an Ecumenical Service on 16 November, and coordinated work on key negotiation points including climate finance, adaptation, and Indigenous rights. COP30 is a critical moment for global climate action. It takes place in the Amazon region for the first time in three years. The conference focuses on implementing the outcomes of the first Global Stocktake, preparing more ambitious Nationally Determined Contributions for 2025, and advancing the Global Goal on Adaptation. For faith communities, COP30 is a chance to show how teachings from different spiritual traditions can rebuild the trust and cooperation needed for real climate action.
Talanoa Dialogue photo gallery
Follow WCC's COP30 coverage at www.oikoumene.org/cop30 Click here to join the WhatsApp channel Interfaith gathering opens Zoom doors worldwide for COP30 ethical dialogue in Belém (News Release, 6 November) Churches called to lead climate action as world leaders gather for COP30 (Feature Story, 6 November) Daily COP30 updates connect churches to climate negotiations (News Release, 5 November) WCC calls COP30 a "kairos moment" for climate transformation (News Release, 4 November |
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