Head of WCC: Pope comes to affirm
70 years of ecumenical growth
Rev. Dr Olaf Fykse Tveit, General Secretary of the World Council of Churches.- AFP |
The Secretary General of the World Council of Churches
speaks of the importance of Pope Francis' apostolic journey to Geneva to mark
the 70th anniversary of the WCC saying that not only does it affirm the work
done so far, but it is an important sign for churches and members of the WCC
across the globe and another step forward in the journey towards full Christian
Unity.
By Linda Bordoni
The General Secretary of the World Council of
Churches said Pope Francis’ visit is “a very strong
recognition of the work done in the past 70 years”.
Pope Francis travels to Geneva on Thursday
21 June on a visit that is being dubbed an “ecumenical pilgrimage” during which
he will mark the 70th anniversary from the foundation of the WCC.
During his day in Geneva the Pope will participate in an
ecumenical encounter at WCC headquarters, he will lead an ecumenical prayer
service and he will lunch at the WCC’s Bossey Ecumenical Institute, as well as
meet privately with the President of the Swiss Confederation and l celebrate
Holy Mass at the Palaexpo convention center before departing for Rome.
The WCC is the broadest and most inclusive among the many
organized expressions of the modern ecumenical movement, a movement whose goal
is Christian unity.
It brings together churches, denominations and church
fellowships in more than 110 countries and territories throughout the world,
representing over 500 million Christians and including most of the world's
Orthodox churches, scores of Anglican, Baptist, Lutheran, Methodist and
Reformed churches, as well as many United and Independent churches. Today it
includes 350 member churches.
Speaking to Vatican News, Rev. Dr. Olaf Fykse Tveit,
General Secretary of the World Council of Churches said the Pope’s desire to
mark the Council’s 70th anniversary in person is a powerful sign of his
consideration for the work being done by the churches to achieve full Christian
Unity.
Rev. Dr. Tveit said that by accepting the WCC’s invitation,
not only is Pope Francis recognizing the work the WCC has achieved during the
past 70 years, he is also highlighting the value of the Catholic Church’s
relationship with the Council.
“We have had a joint working group and we have worked in
many ways together but now he affirms it with his own presence” he said.
This, he said, is seen and recognized and appreciated very
much by the WCC, but also by member churches around the world. And this visit,
he added, will certainly have a very positive effect also on relationships both
on the local and national level in many different contexts around the world.
“It’s not just about Geneva and the Vatican . This is about
how we are Church together in many places. If the Pope can come and visit the
WCC, why cannot our member churches and the Catholic Church be together in many
places in the world?” he said.
Regarding the journey accomplished by the WCC in the 70
years since its foundation, Tveit said “we are definitely in another place than
we were 70 years ago”.
“What they could hardly even imagine then, is almost taken
for granted now” he said.
And this, he explained, regards the type of relationship
that exists between the churches today, how many have found common ground and
expressed their unity in many ways.
“I think we also can see that these 70 years have been a
long pilgrimage during which we have learnt a lot about what it means to live
with diversity, with differences, but still have a strong common calling and
common vision, and some very important common experiences” he said.
We have learnt from our experiences, Tveit concluded, how to
reconcile but also how to speak the truth to one another: “and in this the
fellowship has grown”
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