From the Worldwide Faith News archives www.wfn.org


WCC FEATURE First World Mission Conference in the 21st century


From "WCC Media" <Media@wcc-coe.org>
Date Wed, 13 Apr 2005 11:58:38 +0200

World Council of Churches - Feature
Contact: + 41 22 791 6153 +41 79 507 6363 media@wcc-coe.org
For immediate release - 13/04/2005

EVERYTHING READY FOR FIRST WORLD MISSION CONFERENCE IN THE 21ST CENTURY

By Juan Michel (*)

Free photos and other feature stories
on CWME topics are available - see below

On the morning of 10 May, a large wooden cross sent from Jerusalem will
arrive by boat at the beach of the Agios Andreas recreational centre on
the outskirts of Athens, thus marking the beginning of the first Conference on World Mission and Evangelism to be held in the 21st century.

Summoned by the sound of African talking drums, nearly 500 conference
participants and over 100 local representatives, guests and stewards will
gather on the beach to receive the cross and pray together. This will be
the beginning of an event whose spiritual and liturgical life is expected
to be particularly rich.

The 4-metre-high cross was made of Olive wood by a Jerusalem craftsman.
Brought from the Middle East and received by representatives from the
other regions of the world, it is intended as a symbol of reconciliation
and healing as well as of churches standing in solidarity with Christians
in the Middle East.

> Broad participation and in-depth discussions

Convened by the World Council of Churches (WCC), the conference will
gather around the theme "Come, Holy Spirit, heal and reconcile" and the
sub-theme "Called in Christ to be reconciling and healing communities." It
will offer, right at the outset of the 21st century, a unique opportunity
for Christians from all continents and the largest confessional families
to exchange experiences and to reflect on the priorities for mission and
the future of Christian witness.

"In our globalized and fragmented world, filled with much division and
conflict, the gospel message of healing and reconciliation is vital," says
Rev. Ruth Bottoms, a Baptist pastor from the United Kingdom who will
moderate the conference.

The multiple dimensions of this message will be addressed in daily plenary
sessions that will focus on the central elements of the theme and
sub-theme: reconciliation, healing, the Holy Spirit and the Christian
community. Moreover, given that the conference coincides with the
mid-point of the WCC Decade to Overcome Violence (2001-2010), one of the
plenary sessions will be dedicated to the complex relationship between
mission and violence.

Aside from the plenary sessions which, for the first time ever, will be
broadcast live via the internet, about 70 workshops will offer participants opportunities to discuss a wide variety of issues in depth. These range
from experiences of multi-dimensional healing to mission in war and
conflict situations; from the role of women in mission to the relationship
between healing, salvation and conversion; from the missionary challenge
that people living with HIV/AIDS pose, to the way that indigenous people
approach reconciliation and healing.

Specific case studies on, for example, the reconciliation process in
Rwanda, joint mission experiences in Germany or Christian witness in
China, will also form part of the workshops programme. This also includes
a series of workshops about counseling in specific situations such as
terminal illness, violence and abuse, among others.

Prior to the conference, youth delegates, who represent nearly a tenth of
the total, along with young people who will work as stewards, will
participate in a five-day youth event. Ecumenical learning experiences and
a series of visits to projects being carried out by local churches are on
the agenda.

Given that nearly a quarter of its participants are from Evangelical,
Pentecostal and Roman Catholic traditions, the confessional universe
represented at the conference will extend well beyond the membership of
the convening World Council of Churches. It will also be the most
inclusive in the long tradition of world mission conferences that began in
Edinburgh, Scotland, in 1910.

The unprecedented breadth of the spectrum of participants offers unusual
opportunities. Depending on whether a new convergence becomes possible and
new efforts towards common witness are released, says Georges Lemopoulos,
WCC deputy general secretary, the World Mission Conference in Athens "may
become a new turning point in the history of both the missionary and the
ecumenical movements".

> A first of its kind

The conference will be richly liturgical and spiritual. Each morning, the
participants, gathering in small ecumenical, multi-cultural "home groups",
will begin the day with a meditation on biblical texts in the Lectio
Divina tradition. Later, there will be a common prayer open to everyone.
The "home groups" will meet again in the evening to share their experiences and prepare for the next day.

Five different healing services will be conducted according to different
confessional traditions. A chapel, open nearly all the time, will offer a
space for individual or group prayer. A team of counselors will be
permanently available for pastoral care and spiritual orientation. On the
last day, participants will attend worship services in local congregations.
This conference will be the first of its kind to take place in a country
where the majority of believers come from the Orthodox tradition. The
invitation to hold the conference came from the Church of Greece, whose
head, Archbishop Christodoulos, affirmed it as "an historic event both for
the Orthodox participation in the ecumenical movement and for the
missionary movement".

Among the first ecumenical fruits of the conference at the local level has
been the creation of a host committee in which the Church of Greece is
joined by four other churches: Roman Catholic, Evangelical Church of
Greece, Armenian Evangelical and Armenian Apostolic Church.

In the afternoon on Sunday 15 May, the same cross whose reception marked
the beginning of the conference will lead participants and members of
Greek congregations in a procession to the Areopagos, on Mars Hill.

There, on the very spot where the apostle Paul preached to the Athenians
nearly two thousand years ago, an open-air worship service will close the
conference and send participants out into the world, to fulfill Jesus'
command to proclaim the good news of God's kingdom as a testimony to all
nations. [950 words]

(*) Juan Michel is WCC media relations officer.

Other feature stories and free photos are available at:
http://cwme.wcc-coe.org/News_-_Media.548.0.html

[Sidebar]

The Conference on World Mission and Evangelism

To be held in Athens at the invitation of the Church of Greece, this is a
major international meeting of more than 500 representatives from all
continents and all major churches and denominations. Scheduled to take
place from 9-16 May 2005, the conference is being organized by the World
Council of Churches (WCC).

The main aim of the conference is to provide a space for Christians and
churches to exchange their experience and think together about priorities
in mission and the future of Christian witness. The conference seeks to
empower participants to continue to form healing communities in celebration and witness, reconciliation and forgiveness.

The theme of the conference "Come Holy Spirit, heal and reconcile!" is a
reminder that this mission does not belong to us, but is the mission of
God, who is present and active as Holy Spirit in church and world.

Coming from WCC member churches and the Roman Catholic Church as well as
Pentecostal and Evangelical churches and bodies, the participants include
young people, women and men working at the frontiers of Christian witness,
church and mission leaders, theologians and missiologists.

There have been 12 such ecumenical mission conferences since 1910. This
will be the first time such a conference is held in a predominantly
Orthodox context. This is also the first time ever that the conference
plenaries will be broadcast live via the internet; see the schedule on the
conference's website: www.mission2005.org

[213 words]

Opinions expressed in WCC Features do not necessarily reflect WCC policy.
This material may be reprinted freely, providing credit is given to the
author.

Additional information: Juan Michel,+41 22 791 6153 +41 79 507 6363
media@wcc-coe.org

Sign up for WCC press releases at
http://onlineservices.wcc-coe.org/pressnames.nsf

The World Council of Churches is a fellowship of churches, now 347, in
more than 120 countries in all continents from virtually all Christian
traditions. The Roman Catholic Church is not a member church but works
cooperatively with the WCC. The highest governing body is the assembly,
which meets approximately every seven years. The WCC was formally
inaugurated in 1948 in Amsterdam, Netherlands. Its staff is headed by
general secretary Samuel Kobia from the Methodist church in Kenya.

You receive this message as a subscriber to the WCC information service
for media. To unsubscribe or change your settings, click here.


Browse month . . . Browse month (sort by Source) . . . Advanced Search & Browse . . . WFN Home