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Rev. Margarithe Veen, Bishop Dr Heinrich Bedford-Strohm and Rev. Dr Olav Fykse Tveit in ecumenical prayer service at the Nieuwe Kerk in Amsterdam. Photo: Albin Hillert/WCC

Rev. Margarithe Veen, Bishop Dr Heinrich Bedford-Strohm and Rev. Dr Olav Fykse Tveit in ecumenical prayer service at the Nieuwe Kerk in Amsterdam. Photo: Albin Hillert/WCC

Hundreds of people gathered from across the world for an ecumenical prayer service at the Nieuwe Kerk, a 15th-century church in Amsterdam, to celebrate the 70th anniversary of the World Council of Churches (WCC) at the very spot in which the organization was founded.

Under the theme “Walking, Praying and Working Together,” the service featured special music, greetings from the Council of Churches in the Netherlands, and a procession of pilgrims from all over the world. WCC general secretary Rev. Dr Olav Fykse Tveit offered a sermon, and Dr Agnes Abuom, moderator of the WCC Central Committee, led the congregation in prayer.

A “Walk of Peace” through Amsterdam was also held beginning in the Hoftuin of the Protestant Church in Amsterdam and ending at Dam Square. During the week preceding the service, a Youth Pilgrimage gathered Dutch as well as international youth for an ecumenical experience.

Looking back - and forward

In his sermon, titled “The Love of Christ Compels Us,” Tveit looked back on the first WCC assembly in 1948 in Amsterdam, reflecting on the difficult questions the delegates were asking at the time.

“The assembly message from Amsterdam shows that the delegates were bold in speaking to the reality of the world,” he said. “Their faith was a hope, against the realities of many of their recent experiences.”

They believed together that God still loved the world, Tveit reflected. “We give thanks for contributions the churches could make together to peace,” he said. “They saw that they—themselves— were called to be a sign of the fulfilment of God’s promise.”

They knew that the need for reconciliation was urgent but difficult, he continued. “They knew they were called to be peacemakers,” he said. “They were convinced that overcoming the forces dividing humanity and also threatening relationships within and among the churches would require that they themselves had to be united in love.”

Opening hearts and doors

In a prayer, Abuom lamented the situation in much of the world today yet expressed confidence in the ability of the WCC fellowship to unite people in peace. “My eyes hurt when the creation you so love and cherish is abused and misused,” she prayed. “I hear the cries of the men and women; boys and girls in the slave markets, on the run from violence; shouting: ‘Where is God?’“

She asked for forgiveness for our refusal to see strangers as our neighbors. “Almighty God, help us to open our hearts and doors to share your love with the poor materially, to speak truth in humility to the poor rich; to be present with the elderly and lonely people,” she prayed. “God our creator, hear our prayer and have mercy.”

“The Love of Christ Compels Us”: Sermon of the WCC General Secretary in Nieuwe Kerk, Amsterdam

Relevance and Importance of WCC today: Reflection by Dr Agnes Abuom, moderator of the WCC central committee

70 years of the World Council of Churches

WCC 70th anniversary in Amsterdam

Walk of Peace draws hopeful - and young - crowd in Amsterdam (WCC press release of 23 August 2018)

“Love will find a way” (WCC press release of 23 August 2018)

70 years in, youth pilgrimage offers room for new visions (WCC press release of 22 August 2018)

Free photos from the WCC 70th anniversary in Amsterdam