Showing posts with label Communion of Protestant Churches in Europe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Communion of Protestant Churches in Europe. Show all posts

Thursday, August 29, 2024

WCC news: WCC moderator delivers greeting to Communion of Protestant Churches in Europe assembly

World Council of Churches (WCC) moderator Bishop Dr Heinrich Bedford-Strohm delivered greetings at the Communion of Protestant Churches in Europe assembly, being held 28 August through 1 September, in Sibiu, Romania.
Sibiu, Romania. Photo: Albin Hillert/WCC
28 August 2024

The assembly theme is “Time of hope: Churches as actors in overcoming war and conflict.” 

Bedford-Strohm’s greeting addressed the persistent barriers to peace, and how prayer is the most powerful force to widen empathy. 

“I welcome very much that you have chosen for this meeting to focus especially on war and violent conflict,” he said. “The most persistent barrier against ways to peace are the walls we build to limit our empathy to our own reference group.”

Bedford-Strohm put further prayer as a most powerful force to widen our empathy. 

“As Christians and as churches, we present a credible witness to the world only when we are also willing simultaneously to face and address our own shortcomings, failings, and patterns of inauthenticity,” he said. “Addressing the conflict, coercion, and violence implicit in ourselves, our relationships, our churches, and our institutions is a catalyst for addressing the overt violence and war around us.”

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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.

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Saturday, August 1, 2020

WCC NEWS: Rev. Dr Mario Fischer reflects on “a communion of witness and service in the Europe of today"

Rev. Dr Mario Fischer reflects on “a communion of witness and service in the Europe of today“
Rev. Dr Mario Fischer, general secretary of the Communion of Protestant
Churches in Europe, Photo: CPCE
Rev. Dr Mario Fischer is general secretary of the Communion of Protestant Churches in Europe (CPCE). He shared reflections on the interconnectedness of churches, the World Council of Churches (WCC) 11th Assembly, and what challenges and inspires him the most.

In today’s world, why do you think it so important for all of us to “be the church together?”

Rev. Dr Fischer: As churches we are interconnected in manifold ways. Public actions of one church affect other churches too, since many people do not differentiate in their perception between different denominations and churches. A self-sufficing church that wants to live for itself doesn’t meet the demands and the mission of Christ. As CPCE we understand church communion as an adequate model of church unity. By declaring church communion the “participating churches are convinced that together they participate in the on Church of Jesus Christ and that the Lord frees them for and calls them to common service”. (Leuenberg Agreement 34) Church communion wants to be realized in the life of the churches and congregations and looks beyond itself. The church is communion and a communion of churches is an expression of the church. The term “being church together” does not only underline the fact that church communion expressed in practice has organizational implications, and implications for church law, but the fact that churches find various ways to demonstrate the visibility of their unity.

Now that the new date for the WCC 11th Assembly has been announced, would you like to offer your perspective on what you most look forward to in this global convening?

Rev. Dr Fischer: I am very glad that the 11th Assembly of the World Council of Churches will take place for the third time in Europe and for the first time in Germany. I hope that the delegates and guests will not only encounter among themselves but also with people and churches in the region and in Europe. I am proud that the CPCE regional group “Conference of the Churches on the Rhine” is engaged in hosting the assembly too. In this particular border area along the River Rhine where people have a long history of armed conflicts, the churches contributed to a way of overcoming hatred and violence and bear witness to reconciliation. Therefore, the assembly theme “Christ’s love moves the world to reconciliation and unity” is well chosen. The theme meets a church situation in Germany where even the biggest church meeting, the Kirchentag, doesn’t use explicit Christian vocabulary for its themes anymore. I hope that the ease of speaking about God’s love and Christian message as it is experienced in ecumenical gatherings sends out rays to the regional context. As CPCE we like to carry our model of unity in reconciled diversity and almost 50 years’ experience of living church communion into the assembly in Karlsruhe.

What has been the biggest challenge for the CPCE during this unprecedented time? And what inspires you most these days?

Rev. Dr Fischer: As many ecumenical bodies even the CPCE lives from personal encounters. That has changed during the last months when we were only able to meet online. Our understanding of personal interaction and presence has altered. The COVID-19 crisis has also raised the issue of celebrating the Lord’s Supper online and at home. A CPCE study process on the “Practice and Theology of the Lord’s Supper” will address this topic. If the commission of Christians is well summarized as commission to worship (leiturgia), to witness (martyria), to serve (diakonia) and to life in community (koinonia) then we can observe that the CPCE emphasized right from the outset the dimensions of leiturgia in worship, of martyria in theological discussion and witness, and of koinonia in the living together of churches and its ecclesiological reflection. The aspect of diakonia was underdeveloped in the history of the CPCE. During the COVID-19 crisis the CPCE for the first time launched an appeal for an Easter collection to consider and help those particularly at risk from the pandemic on the outskirts of Europe. I hope that our church communion becomes more and more a communion of witness and service in the Europe of today. I wish that our churches live their “being church together” based on the principle of mutual solidarity and reflect together what it means to be diaconal church and what shall be the diaconal aspect of our church communion.