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The WCC and Christian unity

The primary purpose of the fellowship of churches in the World Council of Churches is to call one another to visible unity in one faith and in one eucharistic fellowship, expressed in worship and common life in Christ, through witness and service to the world, and to advance towards that unity in order that the world may believe.

Almost from the beginning, divisions were present among the followers of Jesus Christ. So was, however, the vision of perfect unity, spelled out in the Nicene Creed as the "one, holy, catholic and apostolic church". That Christians should be divided by confessional lines and different understandings of the Scriptures is often referred to as the "scandal of division" because it contradicts Jesus' prayer for his disciples, recorded in the Gospel of John: "that they may all be one (…) so that the world may believe." While the unity of the church is a goal yet to be realized in history, it is already a God-given reality on the spiritual level. The ecumenical task, then, is to manifest this oneness, to make it visible and effective.

Read the article on "unity" from the Dictionary of the Ecumenical Movement

What does the WCC do for Christian unity?

The World Council of Churches encourages churches to pray for each other and with each other. It creates opportunities to learn from each other's traditions and insights, and to discuss differences.

The Message of the First Assembly in Amsterdam included this observation: "As we have talked with one another here, we have begun to understand how our separation has prevented us from receiving correction from one another in Christ. And because we lacked this correction, the world has often heard from us not the Word of God but the words of men." The church representatives pledged: "We intend to stay together."

Since its foundation in 1948 the WCC has helped churches to enter into radically changed relationships with each other, to reach agreements and convergences in basic issues of faith and ecclesiastical polity.

The constitutional commitment to unity finds its central expression in the work of the WCC Commission on Faith and Order. At the same time, all WCC activities should help the churches to effectively live out their existing fellowship and to move towards full visible unity.

Some examples:

What does the WCC say about Christian unity?

Since the early stages of the modern ecumenical movement, there was debate on how to realize visible unity; different concepts and models were discussed. WCC assemblies and meetings of the other governing bodies, as well as the Faith and Order Commission, provided a platform to advance this debate.

Some examples: