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There is hope & healing in the face of all want & injury

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  • There is hope & healing in the face of all want & injury

    Asia Pulse
    PacNews
    February 16, 2005

    THERE IS HOPE AND HEALING IN THE FACE OF ALL WANT AND INJURY


    GENEVA, SWITZERLAND 16 FEBRUARY 2005 SAIPAN (Pacnews) - "Ask the
    questions that have no answers. Invest in the millennium. Plant
    sequoias. Say that your main crop is the forest that you did not
    plant it and will not live to harvest. Practice resurrection." This
    is a religious poem that would seek to foster some sort of renewed
    faith for people who call themselves Christians. It is also one of
    many simple and spiritually stirring phrases and expressions of faith
    that don the walls of employees of the World Council of Churches
    (WCC) in Geneva, Switzerland.

    And everyone talks to PACNEWS about a growing anxiety and uncertainty
    marking the dawn of the 21st Century in the world today and how the
    Church has had a renewed concern and awareness towards healing as a
    major component of its fundamental theological, missiological,
    ethical and pastoral duty to humanity.

    It's snowing in Europe, providing a white fleecy blanket over living
    and non-living things. It grey and cold and the trees are bare.
    Sunshine comes in little rays once in a while. Everyone freezes over
    and as one speaks, vapour shoots out of the mouth. There are endless
    cups of coffee to keep warm.

    At the WCC Geneva headquarters, however, the corridors are abuzz with
    fellowship as the annual Central Committee Meeting, a gathering of
    150 church leaders from all over the world, commences with a
    conviction that the Church in the world today must rediscover its
    ministry of healing.

    The Central Committee serves as the WCC's chief governing body
    between its assemblies. Meeting every 12 to 18 months, it is
    responsible for carrying out policies adopted by the assembly,
    reviewing and supervising WCC programmes and adopting the Council's
    budget. The overall theme of this meeting is healing and
    reconciliation. It will discuss a range of key ecumenical and public
    issues of much concern to the Church today. Opening the meeting at
    the WCC Ecumenical Centre on Tuesday morning (local time), Meeting
    Moderator, His Holyness Aram I, of the Catholicos of Cilicia,
    Armenia, said church leaders all over the world today must discuss
    healing as the "transforming, empowering and reconciling missionary
    action of the Church".

    "The world in which we live in is broken, a world dominated by evil
    forces that are generating a culture of violence and hopelessness,"
    he said. "The signs of the times are clear, the HIV/AIDS pandemic,
    the genocide in Sudan, the Tsunami disaster in Southeast Asia - to
    give a few examples".

    "Conflict, poverty and injustice have deepened the anguish and
    despair of many societies. The world is in desperate need of healing
    in almost all spheres of human life," Aram I said.

    And using the painful experience of Armenians, Aram I called on the
    Church world wide to rediscover healing as a comprehensive ministry
    that "transforms, empowers and reconciles", saying that God's mission
    calls for a healing church in the midst of a broken, fragmented and
    alienated world".

    Ninety years ago, the Ottoman Empire killed Armenians within its
    borders. Systematic genocide took up to a million and a half Armenian
    lives. By 1923, almost the whole Armenian population of Anatolian
    Turkey had disappeared. This year's meeting sees the Pacific
    represented fully in a Pacific plenary on critical emerging issues in
    the Pacific Islands today.

    At the WCC, the Pacific is represented by at least 17 major church
    organisations from all over the region, including Cook Islands. The
    Pacific delegation, at this level of consultation at the Central
    Committee Meeting, will highlight the work of Pacific churches on
    critical issues such as the nuclear compensation for those seriously
    affected by the bombings on Northern Pacific territories in the
    1940s, climate change and its serious implications on the region's
    smaller atolls, HIV/AIDS, globalisation and trade, women and children
    and Pacific concerns in general.

    "When the Church speaks in the Pacific, basically everyone listens,"
    says Feiloakitau Tevi, executive secretary of the Fiji-based WCC
    Pacific Office. "These critical issues are being addressed by the
    Church in our region and the Church, with all its widely experienced
    leaders throughout the region, is in some ways, drawing us together
    as never before to highlight human commonality." "It is a calling to
    everyone involved in trying to control some of the world's more
    keenly fought issues and ills that we all work towards a common goal
    - to work together and bringing our faith together for the good of
    all." Speaking at the opening later, Rev. Sam Kobia, WCC general
    secretary, called on Christians to be authentic in their spirituality
    because it connects them to humanity.

    He called on church leaders to address young people's issues fully,
    saying he has heard "over and over again" questions by young people
    on morality and spirituality.

    Rev Kobia, of the Methodist Church of Kenya, said Christians ought to
    have a basic desire to relate and share with one another who they are
    as human beings because this would prove sense for Christianity.

    "If post-modernity is threatening to rob us of our capacity to be
    human, then how can we even claim to be Christians?" he asked. Both
    leaders expressed a hope that the Church would maintain its work in
    reaching a common understanding of what it means to be human, and
    from there move towards consensus on ethical issues.

    The WCC's Mission and Evangelism Programme, one of five main themes
    of the organisation, is one great example of the work of the Church
    today, and prepares church leaders from throughout the world for a
    major "reconciliation and healing conference in Greece in May 2005.

    Preparations for the conference include a study of what constitutes
    an ecumenical healing and reconciling ministry today, helping
    churches to reflect on the way they do evangelism, networks with
    evangelicals, Pentecostals and others involved in the evangelistic
    aspect of mission, helping poor and marginalised communities to
    reflect on reconciling mission and share their insights with churches
    and also enabling churches to address the challenge of HIV/AIDS as
    part of holistic approach to health and healing.

    The Central Committee Meeting ends on Friday.

    The WCC is a fellowship and community of churches that brings
    together more than 340 churches, denominations and church fellowships
    in over 100 countries and territories throughout the world,
    representing some 400 million Christians and including most of the
    world's Orthodox churches, scores of denominations from historic
    traditions of the Protestant Reformation as Anglican, Baptist,
    Lutheran, Methodist and Reformed, as well as many united and
    independent churches.

    While most of the WCC's founding churches were European and North
    American, most are today in Africa, Asia, the Caribbean, Latin
    America, the Middle East and the Pacific. (ENDS) (THROUGH ASIA PULSE)
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