La séptima y última reflexión de las Siete Semanas por el Agua 2022 de la Red Ecuménica del Agua del CMI fue escrita por la Prof. Dra. Isabel Apawo Phiri*. En la siguiente reflexión, ella, como coordinadora del personal de la Peregrinación de Justicia y Paz del CMI, hace un análisis exhaustivo de cómo la peregrinación del CMI y la peregrinación por la justicia del agua se interrelacionan, complementan y fortalecen mutuamente, en particular en Europa.
La septième et dernière réflexion des Sept semaines pour l’eau 2022 du Réseau œcuménique de l’eau du COE est rédigée par Isabel Apawo Phiri*. Dans la réflexion suivante, en tant que référente du personnel pour Le Pèlerinage de justice et de paix du COE, elle fait une analyse convaincante de la façon dont le pèlerinage du COE et le Pèlerinage pour la justice de l’eau sont liés, se complètent et se renforcent mutuellement, en faisant particulièrement référence à l’Europe.
World Council of Churches (WCC) acting general secretary Rev. Prof. Dr Ioan Sauca reflected on the link between climate and justice as he commented on the 6th Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change focusing on “Climate Change 2022: Impacts, Adaptation and Vulnerability.”
Como parte de una serie de estudios bíblicos en preparación para la XI Asamblea del CMI, este sexto texto fue escrito por Janet Corlett, presbítero de la Iglesia Metodista en Gran Bretaña.
El Comité Ejecutivo del Consejo Mundial de Iglesias (CMI) concluyó su reunión celebrada del 12 al 17 de noviembre con un sentimiento de esperanza, aunque expresando públicamente su profunda preocupación por las numerosas injusticias globales a las que se enfrenta el mundo actual.
Der Exekutivausschuss des Ökumenischen Rates der Kirchen (ÖRK) schloss seine Tagung vom 12. bis 17. November mit einem Gefühl der Hoffnung ab, auch wenn er sich öffentlich zutiefst besorgt zeigte in Bezug auf viele globale Ungerechtigkeiten, vor denen die heutige Welt steht.
Le Comité exécutif du Conseil œcuménique des Églises (COE) s’est réuni du 12 au 17 novembre et a achevé sa session avec un sentiment d’espoir, malgré l’expression de ses vives inquiétudes pour les nombreuses injustices auxquelles le monde est actuellement confronté.
The World Council of Churches (WCC) executive committee closed its meeting after convening from 12-17 November, leaving with a sense of hope, even while publicly expressing grave concern over many global injustices facing the world today.
Participating in the COP26 in Glasgow resembled a reunion of sorts. After the pandemic cancelled meetings of the World Council of Churches (WCC) Working Group on Climate Change and led to the rescheduling COP26, it was wonderful to catch up with my ecumenical friends who are devoted to the work of climate justice.
At an event called “Ecumenical Continuing Formation: Youth, Transformative Masculinity
and Femininity,” young people from the Pacific gathered from 15-19 November, both online and in-person, to express their honest feelings about the issues most important to them.
A Scottish Episcopal Church has become one of the first churches in Scotland to obtain planning permission for the installation of solar panels on a listed building situated in a conservation area.
The World Student Christian Federation, already with a history of calling for climate justice, continues to urge action and commitment from world leaders.
If you try hard and believe in the power of positive thinking, you may be able to take comfort that COP26 provided some hope. But if you remove the rose-colored spectacles, it becomes clear that we should abandon the sentiment of hope and commit to lives of faithful resistance.
Walk the Path of the New Commandment: Keynote speech of Peter Prove, director of the WCC's Commission of the Churches on International Affairs at the 70th General Assembly of the National Council of Churches in Korea, 22 November 2021.
After nearly two years of preparations and two weeks of physical meeting, COP26 is over. People from all over the world came together to a major in-person meeting on a global level.
A group of intern ministers from the Presbyterian Church of Trinidad and Tobago (PCTT)—including Cynara Dube-Sookoo, Bjorn Warde, and Robert Dinnoo—worked with PCTT synod moderator Rt. Rev. Joy E. Abdul-Mohan to produce a video about how young people and churches can lead the way toward climate justice.
H.E. Metropolitan Serafim Kykotis, a member of the World Council of Churches Working Group on Climate Change, participated in COP26. Following is a conversation about “ecological metanoia,” a concept about which the metropolitan has been praying and thinking.