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WCC FEATURE: Mission & violence: ambivalent relationship


From "WCC Media" <Media@wcc-coe.org>
Date Fri, 13 May 2005 11:05:53 +0200

World Council of Churches - Feature
Contact: + 41 22 791 6153 +41 79 507 6363 media@wcc-coe.org
For immediate release - 12/05/2005

MISSION AND VIOLENCE: AN AMBIVALENT RELATIONSHIP

(*) By Juan Michel

Free photos available at
www.mission2005.org

Moving away from cool images of violence conveyed by culture, participants
at the world mission conference in Athens took a hard look at the
ambivalent relationship between mission and violence. No easy answers
though.

"Violence is not cool, there is nothing glamorous in violence" said
Tinyiko Maluleke, a Presbyterian missiologist from South Africa, addressing a plenary session of the Conference on World Mission and Evangelism on
Thursday, 12 May. "We have to oppose the current trend in our culture
which portrays violence as fashionable and sexy," he added.

Maluleke's concern was with young people in particular. And it was young
participants who opened the session with a procession of symbols representing the omnipresence of violence: spreading alongside economic globalization or through the growing prevalence of arms, through damaging the environment or hurting women.

What does violence have to do with churches? A lot, according to Viola
Raheb, a Lutheran theologian from Palestine. "We can't close our eyes to
the violence that people suffer 24 hours a day, day after day," she
affirmed. Describing the situation of the occupied Palestinian territories, "It's not enough that the churches name the causes of violence, but they
have actively to address them with a nonviolent approach," she said.

A deeply-rooted ambivalence

Devoted to the complex issue of the ambivalent relationship between
mission and violence, the plenary session was also intended as a mid-term
celebration of the Decade to Overcome Violence: Churches seeking Reconciliation and Peace (2001-2010).

A short video-clip shown at the beginning of the session included the
moment when a young German delegate to the Harare assembly of the World
Council of Churches (WCC) in 1998 made the initial proposal for such a
Decade. Seven years later, Fernando Enns, a Mennonite pastor, stood again
in front of a WCC gathering and affirmed anew the need for churches to
commit themselves to the goal of overcoming violence in the midst of "a
truly violent world".

"This is also a time of honest confession," he said. "At times, our
churches have been tempted by power and they have justified injustice and
violence theologically. We have been misled in our respective traditions,
when the mission of the church has contributed to the violence in the
world."

For some, like Alix Lozano, a Mennonite pastor from Colombia, this is true
to the extent that mission and violence are words that are almost
interchangeable. "For us in Colombia [...] violence (or the sword) has
been a constant companion to mission (or the cross)," Lozano affirmed in a
testimony that had to be read in her absence since she was denied a visa
to attend the conference.

The acquaintance between Christian witness and violence is complex because
it can be traced to the very roots of the faith. "We have to take a
critical look even at biblical texts that speak of violence and portray an
image of God that has been used to legitimate it, and therefore challenges
us," said Raheb.

The importance of initiatives like the Decade is that by calling on them
to "relinquish any theological justification of violence," it challenges
churches to "wrestle with them and not to pretend that they are not
there," Maluleke said.

Fear and passion

Why would Christians succumb to the temptation of violence? The answer,
according to Janet Plenert, a Mennonite pastor from Canada who also took
part in the plenary, is fear. "Fear is the main and deepest motivation to
be involved in violence. It is fear that makes us listen to the voices of
self-preservation, race superiority, national security."

Fear works differently in different contexts. "In Palestine, fear is a
psychological weapon," Raheb said. "I can tell you I haven't overcome fear
and I don't think I ever will, but I've learned to accept that it will be
always there."

As well as fear, other issues remained open as the plenary came to an end.
The session was not actually intended to respond to all the questions.
Ambiguity will remain. But in order to live with it, passion is needed.
"The Decade to Overcome Violence calls the churches to feel again, to
become passionate about the issue of violence," Maluleke told the
gathering.

He reminded participants that this passion is rooted in the fact that
"God's image is to be seen where humanity is most under attack". As
Lozano's written testimony had stated before: "The mission of God can be
lived out in a context of violence" when Christians align themselves with
"the intention of God, who always takes the side of the poor, the needy,
the persecuted, the marginalized".

As lighted candles were brought to the stage by the same young people who
first carried the symbols of violence, the gathering put the issue before
God in prayer, and sang the theme of the conference: "Come, Holy Spirit,
heal and reconcile". [803 words]

(*) Juan Michel, WCC media relations officer, is a member of the Evangelical Church of the River Plate in Buenos Aires, Argentina.

Conference website: www.mission2005.org

You can watch the full video recording of the DOV plenary on our website:
www.mission2005.org/webcast.html

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

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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.


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