World
Council of Churches Releases
Messages
of Peace
"God weeps over God's world, aching because of conflict in Darfur,
in Beslan, in Harare, in Colombia, in Jerusalem, in Belfast," says
Nobel Peace Prize laureate Archbishop Desmond Tutu in his message for
the International Day of Prayer for Peace, to be observed on 21 September.
And he adds: "God - Emmanuel, God with us, with you - has no one
but you to help God make this world hospitable to peace
and justice."
Although, as Greek Orthodox Patriarch Bartholomew I
affirms in his message, "violence and war are considered by many
as ways of improvement for the world's situation," the truth is
that "all of the ideologies and convictions on the necessity and
effectiveness of violence are wrong and are to be condemned."
Recalling the experience of Germany, where a nonviolent
Christian movement contributed to the fall of the Berlin
Wall 15 years ago, the chairman of the council of the Evangelical Church
in Germany
Bishop Wolfgang Huber states that "wherever people trust in the
spirit of peace in the name of Jesus Christ, they experience
that it is a realistic force to be reckoned with, and that possibilities
open
up."
These are among the peace messages delivered by more
than a dozen well-known Christian leaders and peace-makers from all over
the world who support the initiative called by for the World Council
of Churches (WCC) in the frame of its Decade to Overcome Violence. The
inspiring two-minute video messages are also an affirmation of the churches'
and faith communities' work for peace and justice.
This WCC initiative links to the International Day
of Peace declared by the United Nations General Assembly, a world-wide
effort intended as a day of global cease-fire and nonviolence, and as
an opportunity for education and raising public awareness.
The video messages in both webcast and broadcast quality
are already available at
http://www.overcomingviolence.org/peace2004Additional
information: Juan Michel,+41 22 791 6153 +41 79 507
6363 media@wcc-coe.org <mailto:media@wcc-coe.org>
The World Council of Churches is a fellowship of churches,
now 342, 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.