Challenge of the pandemic "On the way from the last assembly in Windhoek to the upcoming one in Krakow, we faced numerous challenges. One of the biggest was the COVID-19 pandemic. I would say that one of the successes was how we could bring the communion closer together during that time when we had to use various virtual meeting spaces rather than being together in person," said the LWF general secretary. "Our member church in Poland, in addition to preparing the assembly, is also undertaking a big operation to support refugees fleeing the war in Ukraine," said Rev. Árni Svanur Daníelsson, the LWF's head of communication during an interview. "LWF has also opened a country programme in Poland and in Ukraine, so we are very active in responding to the war." The Polish Lutheran church has around 60,000 members in a mainly Roman Catholic country. Its members have worked hard for the assembly in addition to the added diaconal work brought on by the war in Ukraine, working on the old Lutheran maxim that no church is too small to have something to give. "We have been working with the churches, in the neighbouring countries, as well as the church in Estonia, in supporting refugees and people in need. And the local church (in Poland) has really scaled up its diaconal work, working very hard." The Department of World Service, the LWF's humanitarian and development arm, supports refugees from Ukraine and supports more than 3 million people directly worldwide, said Daníelsson. "It has programmes and activities in Latin America, the Caribbean, Africa, Asia, and Europe, that will all be reviewed at the Krakow assembly.” The LWF has shown a steady increase in membership, counting 149 churches and 77 million people in its communion, which shares its headquarters at the Ecumenical Centre with the World Council of Churches in Geneva. |
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