Thursday, November 28, 2024

Today in the Mission Yearbook - Thanksgiving

Witness, Share and Evangelize: Today in the Mission Yearbook - Thanksgiving: The goal is year-round gratitude. The main task is noticing November 28, 2024 Photo by Diliara Garifullina via Unsplash Deadlines being what...

WCC NEWS: Webinar will explore path “Toward Love and Justice in Reproductive Health”

A World Council of Churches (WCC) webinar on 5 December, “Toward Love and Justice in Reproductive Health,” will debut the publication “Love, Justice, and Reproductive Health: A Framework for Churches.”
Photo: Paul Jeffrey/Life on Earth
28 November 2024

Recognizing that reproductive health is a concern for all people, not just women, the webinar is purposefully held on 5 December as part of 16 Days of Activism Against Gender-Based Violence which culminates on Human Rights Day.

The webinar will feature a range of panelists whose work in this area is rooted in Christ’s love and justice.

Topics will include family planning, maternal and child health, and faith-based adolescent sexual education. While perspectives on these matters vary from one context to another, churches’ shared commitment to loving our neighbours as ourselves compels us to ensure that dignity, health, and wellbeing are prioritized in our ministry.

The webinar will bring awareness to the new resource for churches, and will highlight ways faith communities are already alleviating reproductive health barriers, showing how  churches, communities, and individuals might discern for themselves the best path toward centering love and justice in reproductive health.

Register here

Event page

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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 352 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 executive committee radiates hope amid world’s darkness

The World Council of Churches (WCC) executive committee concluded its meeting in Cyprus with inspiration and practical plans for a way forward with hope, even in a challenging world. 

WCC executive committee members gathered for morning prayer at the Church of the Transfiguration of Christ, Sotira, Cyprus. Photo: WCC

28 November 2024

The governing body met in Paralimni, Cyprus, from 21-26 November to focus on planning for 2025, including the budget and implementation of WCC strategies. The thematic focus of the gathering was on peace-building in the context of occupation, war, and conflicts.

“At our meeting in Cyprus, I felt the heartbeat of the World Council of Churches,” said WCC moderator Bishop Dr Heinrich Bedford-Strohm. “The members of our executive committee come from all continents of the world.”

Many of them, he added, come from countries where violent conflicts, occupation, or other forms of injustice dominate everyday life and weigh heavily on people's lives. “They brought all these backgrounds into our consultations,” he said.

And yet it was a session that gave him hope, Bedford-Strohm added, “because people who shaped it radiated hope, and because the heartbeat of the World Council of Churches is the God who showed himself in Jesus Christ, who died and rose again and who is with us always, until the end of the world.”

The executive committee met in Cyprus at the invitation of the Church of Cyprus, Holy Metropolis of Constantia and Ammochostos, extended by Metropolitan Prof. Dr Vasilios, WCC president. Like the meetings in Abuja and Bogota, the meeting in Paralimini was a significant encounter on the Pilgrimage of Justice, Reconciliation, and Unity. 

The governing body paid particular attention to the experience of 50 years of Turkish occupation and division of Cyprus and the impact on the people and churches. 

The spiritual life included daily Orthodox prayers each morning with a different parish. The meeting took place on the premises of the Holy Diocese of Constantia and Ammochostos. 

The business agenda also included preparations for the central committee, which will meet 18-24 June 2025 in Johannesburg, as well as an update on the Green Village property development project. The executive committee also issued statements on public issues affecting the life and witness of the churches. 

Metropolitan Prof. Dr Vasilios, WCC president Photo: WCC

Moderator reflects on power of prophetic speech

Bedford-Strohm, in his report to the WCC executive committee, posed complex questions and reasons for hope. 

“Should we act as prophets or as pastors?” he asked “And what do we mean when we talk about prophetically speaking truth to power?”

He also underscored aspects of the Pilgrimage of Justice, Reconciliation, and Unity.

"How can the churches critically accompany political processes?” he asked. “When should they speak up to power in ways which are more shocking than comforting and sustaining?”

He acknowledged that the answers to these questions are highly contextual. “But it is helpful to ask these questions no matter what our context is,” he said. "The way we speak to people in power as churches must take different dimensions into account.”

General secretary: WCC proclaims God’s justice in the world

In his report, WCC general secretary Rev. Prof. Dr Jerry Pillay reflected that, particularly during the past several months, his focus has been to lift the profile of the WCC. “I believe that this is being achieved in major proportions,” he said. “I am also grateful that many of the invitations that come my way are also graciously funded by the inviters and this certainly helps our budget constraints, especially when the requests for the general secretary’s presence are so numerous.”

He also reported on the Working Group on Palestine and Israel and, offering an overview of WCC programmes, Pillay highlighted some of the activities and events undertaken in the WCC’s programme areas since the last executive committee meeting in June.

“It is important to note that the programmes are aligned to the WCC objectives and priorities,” he said. “Moreover, they communicate how the WCC continues to witness within the fellowship and beyond as we encourage transforming discipleship.”

Pillay described preparations underway for Ecumenical Year 2025, as well highlights under the WCC’s Public Witness and Diakonia area. 

“Efforts have intensified to support churches in engaging with UN human rights mechanisms,” he said. “Marking ten years of partnership with UNICEF, the WCC has worked with various partners to address climate justice, violence against children, and rights protection.”

The leadership of the WCC central committee and the WCC general secretary during the meeting in Cyprus. Photo: WCC

Addressing the world’s issues

The WCC executive committee released seven statements, including:

Overcoming Fifty Years of Division—Seeking Justice, Reconciliation and Unity in Cyprus. The statement expresses deep concern over the scars of division, dispossession, and displacement that remain unhealed.

Statement on the War in Gaza, Lebanon, and the Wider Middle East. The governing body expressed deep concern over ongoing and widespread Israeli attacks on civilian populations and infrastructure in occupied Gaza, the West Bank, and Lebanon, spilling over into neighbouring Syria and beyond. 

Yearning for Just Peace in Europe. The statement recalls with heavy hearts that the war in Ukraine has now passed 1,000 days.

Outcomes of Climate COP29 and Biodiversity COP16: Confronting Threats to the Living Planet. The statement addresses the intensifying environmental crisis and its humanitarian impacts.

Statement on Haiti. The text focuses on the people of Haiti, suffering under severe economic and political crises.

Appeal for the People of Sudan. The WCC denounced continued fighting in Sudan, and urged solidarity and assistance to people and churches.

Recommitting to Multilateral Cooperation. The statement expresses the WCC’s fundamental commitment, shared with the United Nations, to cooperation across boundaries and lines of division, as well as shared purposes for peace, human rights, justice, protection of the environment, and sustainable development.

H E Bishop Porphyriis of Neapolis at the St George Church in Famagusta, Cyprus. Photo: WCC

Business agenda

Midterm Evaluation Working Group

In response to the WCC 11th Assembly, the WCC strategic plan, approved by the central committee in June 2023, offers a common direction to guide the work of the WCC as a fellowship of churches until the next assembly. The strategic plan stipulates that “a midterm evaluation will be conducted in 2027 to assess progress with the first four-year period (2023-2026).” The working group will be elected by the central committee in June 2025.

Governance Review Working Group

Between assemblies, the WCC central committee undertakes a review of the WCC Constitution and Rules. Past central committees have elected a working group of four to six central committee members with relevant experience and expertise. The executive committee will present a proposal to the central committee in June.

Membership Contributions Working Group

At its meeting in Geneva, June 2022, the central committee approved an integrated income development strategy, while taking note of particular steps with regard to the membership contribution plan, including the formation of a working group, which was delegated to the executive committee. The proposed working group will review the membership contributions plan, seeking to incorporate values of fairness and transparency, size, and financial capacity; as well as its continued implementation through dialogue and negotiation, in the spirit of companionship and fellowship.

Report from the working group on Palestine and Israel

The executive committee discussed the Report of the WCC Working Group on Palestine and Israel, and asked the general secretary to initiate a study and educational process on distortions of theology (in coherence with already existing programmes and with member churches) towards dismantling the political ideological motivations.

The final report from the work will be presented to the central committee in June.

Plans and budget for 2025 approved

The executive committee received an update on programmatic work conducted since the executive committee last met in June 2024. The update is a regular item on the programme agenda to help monitor the implementation of the WCC strategic plan.

The executive committee discussed and approved programme plans for 2025. The umbrella of all programmatic work remains the  Pilgrimage of Justice, Reconciliation, and Unity.

The year ahead includes significant anniversaries, namely, 1700 years since the Ecumenical Council at Nicaea and the centennial of the Universal Christian Conference of Life and Work in Sweden. These are two foundational historical highlights for the ecumenical movement, particularly in the areas of ecclesiology and ecumenical social thought and action. Year 2025 will be a special Ecumenical Year, providing an opportunity for WCC member churches to reaffirm together our common apostolic faith. The executive committee also decided to launch the Ecumenical Decade for Climate Justice during the central committee meeting in June 2025.

In addition, member churches and ecumenical partners will observe, during 2025, a number of additional milestones that have marked the life and witness of the churches, including the 140th anniversary of the Berlin Conference regulating the colonization of Africa; and the 30th anniversary of the Fourth World Conference on Women and the Beijing Declaration.

Commissions and reference groups

The executive committee received an update on commissions and reference groups that took place since the executive committee last met in June 2024. The update is a regular item on the programme agenda to help monitor the implementation of the WCC strategic plan.

Financial overview

The executive committee received a financial monitoring report, and an update on the Green Village property development project.  

Renaming Public Witness and Diakonia to Life, Justice, and Peace

The executive committee decided to rename the programme Public Witness and Diakonia to Life, Justice, and Peace, with the goal of honouring the WCC’s historic roots in the Life and Work movement, reaffirming its theological and ethical commitments, and signalling a more integrated approach to the ecumenical movement’s calling in our time.

Faith and Order Sixth World Conference

The executive committee received a report on the planning for the Faith and Order Sixth World Conference in October 2025. The governing body also reviewed the nomination process for the conference, which will take place in Egypt under the theme “Where now for visible unity?” The conference aims to integrate outcomes from global discussions on the First Ecumenical Council occurring within churches and academic institutions, focusing on how to live the apostolic faith together today.

Communications

As the WCC  will continue to address the most pressing concerns and deepest aspirations of our one human family, the main focus of the special Ecumenical Year with pilgrim-related communication in 2025 will be to invite, to inspire, and to be a catalyst for change – fostering a world with justice, reconciliation, and unity at its heart. WCC communication will reflect the most pressing concerns and deepest aspirations of people in the churches and beyond.

Meetings in 2025

The WCC executive committee and central committee will meet in Johannesburg in South Africa in June. The executive committee will meet in November 2025 in China.

WCC executive committee members, staff and local hosts at the Panagia Panagiotissa Church, Protaras, Cyprus. Photo: WCC

Experience of Orthodox spirituality

The WCC executive committee experienced the profound depth of Orthodox spirituality during its visit to Cyprus, participating in the Liturgy of St John Chrysostom on two occasions. This liturgy, celebrated across the entire Eastern Orthodox tradition, powerfully demonstrates the unity of the Orthodox church despite current tensions, embodying the spiritual oneness to which we all aspire.

Visits to ancient churches, such as Ayia Napa Monastery, St Anna Church in Paralimni, the Church of the Transfiguration of Christ in Sotira, and St George Church in Famagusta, offered a vivid connection to the rich history and spirituality of Orthodox liturgical spaces. Some of these churches, dating back to the 5th and 6th centuries, revealed the enduring faith of the Christian community. Renovations of ancient frescoes and icons allowed the group to witness the reverence with which these sacred spaces are preserved, celebrating both their historical and spiritual significance.

A visit to the Church of the Tomb of Apostle Barnabas, though marked by sorrow over the neglect of Christian heritage in the occupied northern Cyprus, was a solemn reminder of the cost of division and the need for reconciliation. Fellowship with His Beatitude Archbishop George of Cyprus, alongside prayer and reflection in churches like Panagia Panagiotissa and St Epiphanios, deepened the group’s spiritual engagement.

The liturgy's deep theological and mystical dimensions were a profound expression of unity and divine communion. This spiritual journey culminated in an ecumenical closing prayer in St George church, uniting the committee in shared intercession for the many troubles in the world and reaffirming the hope for greater Christian unity. 

Photo gallery of the WCC executive committee meeting in Cyprus

WCC releases statement on “confronting threats to the living planet” (WCC news release, 26 November 2024) 

Prayer and Christian solidarity with people of Haiti focus of WCC statement (WCC news release, 25 November 2024)

WCC demands end to violence in Sudan, urges support for churches (WCC news release, 25 November 2024)

WCC reiterates vital importance of multilateral cooperation (WCC news release, 25 November 2024)

WCC urges peaceful end to division of Cyprus (WCC news release, 25 November 2024)

WCC: “We yearn for peace in Ukraine, in Russia and throughout the region” (WCC news release, 25 November 2024)

WCC moderator: “What do we mean when we talk about speaking truth to power?” (WCC news release, 21 November 2024)

WCC general secretary highlights how WCC proclaims God’s justice in the world (WCC news release, 21 November 2024)

WCC executive committee convenes in Cyprus with focus on peace-building (18 November 2024)

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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 352 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 gives thanks for the life of Choan-Seng Song

The general secretary of the World Council of Churches (WCC), Rev. Prof. Dr Jerry Pillay, has given thanks for the creative and inspiring work of Rev. Prof. Dr Choan-Seng Song, former WCC associate director for Faith and Order, who has died at the age of 95.
Photo: Taiwanese American Archives
28 November 2024

“Choan-Seng Song’s pioneering theological work continues to inspire ecumenists and missiologists alike to give witness to the compassion of Christ who stands with the oppressed,” Pillay in wrote in a letter of condolence to the heads of the two institutions most recently associated with Song, the Pacific School of Religion and at the South East Asia Graduate School of Theology.

“With his emphasis on challenging the Western-centric theological framework and his articulation of an Asian Christian theology, Choan-Seng Song can be said to have inspired the notion of ‘broadening the table,’ which is so vital for our current ecumenical work,” said Pillay.

After graduating in philosophy at the University of Taiwan and theology at the University of Edinburgh, and having obtained his PhD at Union Theological Seminary in New York, Song was elected president of Tainan Theological Seminary. 

He served from 1970 to 1973 as secretary for Asian ministries of the Reformed Church in America before becoming WCC associate secretary for Faith and Order from 1973 to 1982.

Among his many activities for Faith and Order and the WCC, Song edited the Faith and Order papers Giving Account of the Hope Today (1976); Growing Together into Unity (1978); and Confessing our Faith Around the World (1980). 

“As he wrote in Growing Together in Unity, Choan-Seng Song reminds us that ‘issues such as liberation, racism, feminism, cultural and religious pluralism put the problem of the unity of the church on a very different level,’” said Pillay.

“As an advocate of human freedom, social justice, and contextualization, Choan-Seng Song developed an inclusive vision for theologizing,” Pillay added. 

Letter from WCC general secretary Rev. Prof. Dr Jerry Pillay, to Rev. Prof Dr David Vásquez-Levy, President, Pacific School of Religion, and Rev. Dr Sientje Merentek-Abram, Dean, South East Asia Graduate School of Theology

Faith and Order Papers edited by Choan-Seng Song:

Giving Account of the Hope Today

Growing Together into Unity: Texts of Faith and Order Commission on Conciliar Fellowship

Confessing our Faith around the World

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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 352 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: Interfaith collaboration drives WCC’s climate justice efforts at COP29

The World Council of Churches (WCC) collaborated with interfaith partners at COP29 in Baku, Azerbaijan, to amplify faith communities’ moral and ethical advocacy for climate justice. This included participation in the Interfaith Talanoa Dialogue, support for the Interfaith Call to Action, moderating side events, and cohosting press conferences.
During COP29, the World Council of Churches (WCC) and the Interfaith Liaison Committee (ILC) hold a significant press conference titled ‘Interfaith Presence and Call to Action.’ Faith leaders from various traditions unite to emphasize the moral and ethical responsibilities in addressing the climate crisis. They urge global policymakers to commit to just and sustainable climate actions, highlighting the power of interfaith collaboration in driving meaningful change. Photo: © Valter Hugo Muniz/WCC
27 November 2024

Interfaith Talanoa Dialogue: A Call to Action

WCC actively participates in the Interfaith Talanoa Dialogue annually. In 2024, the event was held online a week before COP29. The COP29 Interfaith Call to Action was developed transparently by members of the Interfaith Liaison Committee (ILC) and finalized a month before the conference. It was later endorsed by 61 organizations.

The statement, urging leaders to prioritize climate finance, address loss and damage, and phase out fossil fuels, was delivered to the COP29 high-level ministerial meeting by Jamie Williams of Islamic Relief, representing the unified voice of faith communities.

“The urgency to act on the climate emergency cannot be overstated. As people of faith, we are called to confront the interconnected crises of climate breakdown, biodiversity loss, and land degradation with moral clarity and bold ambition,” said Williams during his presentation at the ministerial meeting.

“This means phasing out fossil fuels, adopting a Fossil Fuel Non-Proliferation Treaty, ensuring climate finance meets real needs, and addressing economic and noneconomic loss and damage. By fostering a spirit of solidarity, compassion, and justice, we can create ripples of positive change and give the world a reason to feel hopeful about our shared future.”

COP29 Faith and Science side event. Photo: Valter Hugo Muniz/WCC

Side events highlight faith and climate dialogue

As part of the ILC, WCC co-convened several discussions at the Faith and Cryosphere Pavilions. These events explored the intersection of faith and science at climate negotiations, conducted an interfaith stocktake of COP29, and examined the values underpinning the climate crisis and its solutions.

At the faith and science dialogue, Ramon Pichs-Madruga, vice-chair of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), presented findings from the 6th IPCC Assessment Report, emphasizing the role of faith groups in addressing equity issues.

Right Rev. Lydia Neshangwe, president of the All Africa Conference of Churches, noted that although faith and science are sometimes seen as incompatible, they bring together moral clarity and facts that can shift climate negotiations for the common good.

Photo: © Valter Hugo Muniz/WCC

Press conferences amplify interfaith message

The WCC and the ILC jointly hosted two press conferences at COP29. The first focused on mobilizing faith-based organizations to confront climate change through ambitious action and accountability. The second emphasized the work behind the COP29 Interfaith Call to Action and its unified message.

Valerianne Bernard, representing the Brahma Kumaris, noted, “The partnership with WCC and the ILC exemplifies how faith traditions, when united, can inspire unprecedented action towards ecological justice and planetary care.”

“COP29 took place in a world where conflicts, national, and business interests overshadow the urgent need to protect the most vulnerable, including ecosystems,” said Rev. Henrik Grape, WCC senior advisor on Care for Creation, Sustainability, and Climate Justice. “At this time, interfaith collaboration adds a vital moral and faith-based perspective, proclaiming the human right to a safer and more sustainable world. This is pivotal in changing the path to our common future.”

COP29 Interfaith Call to Action

Interfaith Dialogue on Climate urges action, compassion, and resilience ahead of COP29 (News Release, 07 November 2024)

COP29 photo gallery

COP29 videos 

Learn more about WCC advocacy at the Triple COPs

See more
The World Council of Churches on Facebook
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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 352 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: Voices from Asia: faith, justice, and the struggle against plastic pollution

Plastic pollution continues to threaten creation, human dignity, and the wellbeing of communities across the globe—especially in Asia, where...