World council seeks new vision for new century Feb. 24, 2005
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Photo courtesy of the World Council of Churches The Rev. Samuel Kobia addresses the World Council of Churches� Central Committee.
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Rev. Samuel Kobia, a Methodist pastor from Kenya and chief executive of
the World Council of Churches, speaks during the council's central
committee meeting in Geneva, Switzerland. A UMNS photo courtesy of the
World Council of Churches. Photo #05-181. Accompanies UMNS story #115,
2/24/05. |
A UMNS Report By Linda Bloom* Members of the World Council of Churches’ Central Committee want a new vision for a new century. Efforts
to shape a new ecumenical vision, as well as confront the world’s
continuing crises, topped the agenda when the council’s decision-making
body met Feb. 15-22 in Geneva, Switzerland. It was the committee’s last
gathering before the World Council of Churches’ 9th Assembly, set for
Feb. 14-23, 2006, in Porto Alegre, Brazil. Retooling
the ecumenical vision for the new century is not only “a matter of
structures” but also “a process of transformation,” the Rev. Samuel
Kobia, a Methodist pastor from Kenya, told the 150-member central
committee in his first report as the organization’s top executive. Such
transformation, he added, “must be rooted in the conversion to the
source of our lives and the life of all creation, the Triune God whom we
confess together.” Shaping
a new vision also means streamlining the council’s activities to better
deal with new patterns of church life and an ever-changing world
context. The central committee did significant work on this
“reconfiguration” process, according to the Rev. Larry Pickens, chief
executive, United Methodist Commission on Christian Unity and
Interreligious Concerns. Part of the process is affirming
the role of the Roman Catholic Church and the Pentecostal movement “at
the forefront of the ecumenical movement in the 21st century,” he said.
“We also learned of significant work that is taking place with respect
to engaging Pentecostals in dialogue.” Committee
members adopted the consensus approach as a decision-making model in an
effort to strengthen participation and commitment of member churches. The
Rev. Bruce Robbins – a United Methodist pastor and committee member
from Minneapolis who has been involved with the council for years –
considers the shift to a consensus model “historic.”
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The Rev. Bruce Robbins |
“I hope it will lead to new levels of listening and seeking to one
another in the council,” he told United Methodist News Service. “All of
us in the council knew that it was important to change the ways in which
we inter-related and that we needed to seek to be in fellowship in new
ways.”With
a theme of “healing and reconciliation” for the central committee
meeting, delegates listened to concerns about conflicts and injustices
in regions such as Africa and the Pacific. “We
have heard the voices of those who live in war-torn nations in Africa,
seeking a peaceful end to the conflict in settings such as Burundi and
Sudan,” Pickens said. “The World Council of Churches has played a
significant role in these trouble spots, addressing poverty in these and
other countries.” Richard
Grounds, a United Methodist and central committee member from Tulsa,
Okla., called the committee’s adoption of a formal statement on
indigenous peoples a “significant move forward.” The
“Statement on Human Rights and Languages of Indigenous Peoples” calls
upon member churches to urge establishment of a U.N. International Year
of Indigenous Languages; appeal to their governments to remove
discriminatory laws against indigenous languages; consider practical
ways to respond to the issue of language loss and continue support of
other issues regarding indigenous rights and languages. “This
statement should serve both to raise awareness and as a rallying point
for those churches and agencies wanting to support indigenous peoples on
this urgent matter of keeping alive the richness of our cultural
heritage through our languages,” Grounds said. “The
urgency of this task cannot be overemphasized. According to the chair
of the U.N. Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues, half of the world’s
linguistic diversity will be lost in the next 20 years.” Grounds
noted the lack of diversity of delegates to the council’s 2006
assembly, but hopes the setback in representation is temporary. “The
reduction in numbers of delegates over the financial stress of the WCC
has had unfortunate consequences for the diversity of representation
that so many have worked toward over many years,” he said. “As compared
to the last assembly in Harare, we have seen a significant decline in
the percentages of delegates representing women, youth and indigenous
peoples.” The WCC’s last assembly was held in Zimbabwe’s capital city in 1998. Considering
issues of international conflict, the central committee discussed using
economic measures to pursue peace in the Israeli/Palestinian conflict.
In an informational statement on the issue, delegates reminded member
churches that “with investment funds, they have an opportunity to use
those funds responsibly in support of peaceful solutions.” The
“process of phased, selective divestment from multinational
corporations involved in the occupation” approved in 2004 by the
Presbyterian Church (USA) was cited as an example. That divestment
process also has raised considerable criticism, especially from American
Jewish groups. Responding
to the crisis in Iraq, the central committee recommended a debate in
appropriate international forums about “a timetable for the reduction
and termination of the U.S.-led coalition’s military presence in Iraq
and for the removal of its military bases there.” The
statement calls both governments and intergovernmental bodies “to
greater accountability under the rule of international law both for the
causes of peace in Iraq and for more effective management of such crises
in the future,” and it insists on a greater role for the United Nations
in helping Iraqis gain control of their country. In other action, central committee members: • Called
on churches to urge implementation of International Criminal Court by
governments that already have ratified the Rome Statute on which the
court is based, as well as ratification of the statute in countries,
such as the United States, that have yet to approve it. • Expressed
prayers, condolences and concerns for the Dec. 26 tsunami victims and
survivors, and called upon churches to provide long-term spiritual
accompaniment and trauma counseling in those South Asian countries. • Appealed
to the U.S. government to let the U.S. National Council of Churches
“fulfill its pastoral and humanitarian responsibilities” by visiting
detainees at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. • Made
17 recommendations in a memorandum on “uprooted people” and other new
patterns of migration resulting from globalization and other factors. With
new members joining the fellowship, council membership has increased
from 342 to 347 churches. The Methodist Church of Indonesia was among
those welcomed into membership, and the Methodist Church of Puerto Rico
was received as a new associate member. In
addition to Pickens, Robbins and Grounds, the United Methodist Church
was represented at the meeting by Lois Dauway of New York. *Bloom is a United Methodist News Service news writer based in New York. News media contact: Linda Bloom, New York, (646) 369-3759 or newsdesk@umcom.org.
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