World Council of Churches - News Release
Contact: +41 22 791 6153 +41 79 507 6363 media@wcc-coe.org
For immediate release - 30/07/2007 10:00:00 AM
CHRISTIANS AROUND THE WORLD TO PRAY FOR PEACE ON 21 SEPTEMBER
This coming 21 September Christians from
Congo to the US, and from Colombia to Switzerland to South Korea will join in
prayers during the International Day of Prayer for Peace.
On that day, women at the Socopao Limete
Presbyterian Church in the Democratic Republic of Congo - a country where a
five-year war has claimed an estimated three million lives - will meet for
fasting and prayer. They will not be alone. The congregation of the First
Christian Church in Shelbyville, Indiana, US, will, too, pray for peace on that
day.
In Colombia, the Ecumenical Network and the
Evangelical Council of Colombia are planning to participate in the initiative.
So do a small ecumenical prayer community of sisters in Switzerland and congregations belonging to the peace fellowship of the Presbyterian Church of the Republic of Korea.
These are but a few examples of how Christian
communities worldwide are responding to the WCC's invitation to celebrate an
International Day of Prayer for Peace on 21 September or the Sunday preceding
or following it.
For 2007, the WCC office for the Decade to
Overcome Violence (DOV) has made available prayer and
liturgical resources developed in the
context of this year's DOV focus on Europe and its theme "Make me an
instrument of your peace".
The initiative was first proposed at a 2004
meeting between WCC general secretary Rev. Dr Samuel Kobia and the then UN
secretary general Kofi Annan. The WCC's invitation to pray for peace on 21
September coincides with the United Nations International Day of Peace.
Resources and more information on the
International Day of Prayer for Peace are available on the DOV website:
http://overcomingviolence.org/en/about-dov/international-day-of-prayer-for-peace.html
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 347 Protestant, Orthodox, Anglican and other churches
representing more than 560 million Christians in over 110 countries, and works
cooperatively with the Roman Catholic Church. The WCC general secretary is Rev.
Dr Samuel Kobia, from the Methodist Church in Kenya. Headquarters: Geneva, Switzerland.