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Showing posts with label Week of Prayer for Christian Unity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Week of Prayer for Christian Unity. Show all posts

Friday, 2 September 2011

We Will All be Changed

The theme for next year's Week of Prayer for Christian Unity, Jnauary 2012 has been announced.  Details can be found on the Churches Together in Britain and Ireland website. 

The theme for the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity 2012 comes to us from the churches in Poland, who have reflected upon their own experience as a nation, and in particular how, as a nation, they have been changed and transformed by the many upheavals of their history, and sustained by their faith.


Change is also at the heart of the ecumenical movement. When we pray for the unity of the church we are praying that the churches that we know and which are so familiar to us will change as they conform more closely to Christ. This is an exciting vision, but also a challenging one. Furthermore, when we pray for this transforming unity we are also praying for change in the world.

This is the first year Christian Aid has assisted in preparation of the resources.  They are available to download now and they will be available in paper copies soon.  Downloads are free although CTBI would appreciate a donation to cover costs.

Monday, 28 February 2011

Action for Churches Together in Scotland Networks 2010

The Holy and Undivided TrinityImage by Lawrence OP via Flickr
In the Methodist report on Ecumenical Relations in Scotland 2010, there is a long section about Action for Churches Together in Scotland (ACTS).  This post is devoted to its networks.

ACTS Mission Network

During 2010 the Mission Network published its review titled "Through the Keyhole" which focused on the state of our churches and their place in our communities both through the eyes of church goers but also of the "unchurched".  The report highlighted some interesting observations although most reflect other studies.  "Being Church in Areas of New Development" has continued to be a major focus of the ACTS Mission Network's activities through 2010.  New work being undertaken includes: "Mission Shaped Church" with a specific initiative being "Cafe Church" on which a couple of courses have been run and an embryo network of those interested established.  This Network is also starting to take an interest in "More than Gold" the Churches response to the 2012 Olympic Games in preparation for the Glasgow Commonwealth Games in 2014.

ACTS Church and Society Network

The ACTS C and S Network continues to cover a very broad agenda.  The Network continues to service and support a wide range of Associated Ecumenical groups and Bodies in Association.  Significant areas of work during 2010 have included:
  • A group looking at issues that the Scottish Gypsy "Travellers" have with the Church
  • A group looking at the War in Afghanistan - through concepts of "Just War"
  • The launch of the "Minority Ethnic Christians Together in Scotland" as a grouping of around 50 existing minority ethnic Christian groups
  • A conference on "Spiritual Care in Higher Education"
  • An exploration of Chaplaincy in the National Health Service
  • Material for the 2011 Scottish Parliamentary Elections.  This includes guidance on how to handle extremist groups (specifically those deemed to be racist) based on Methodist material.
ACTS Faith Studies Network

A booklet on the Holy Trinity which the Faith Studies Network endorsed and published and placed on the website raised significant discussion during the year.  While the members of the Network (including Roman Catholics) hope that it will be used by ecumenical and other groups to explore the issues and to improve their understanding of the place which the Trinity holds in their Churches' worship and doctrine the text has led to much anguish especially with the Roman Catholics.  This issue illustrated the difficulty in ACTS speaking with one mind on any particular issue and while generally accepted that debate is healthy it can add some tensions between denominations on specific issues.

ACTS Church Life Network

In 2010 the Methodist Church through Rev John Butterfield took on the Convenorship of the Church Life Network.  The "Back to Church Sunday" initiative continues to be one aspect of this Network's work as does the material on the ACTS website for "A Quiet Day for Scotland" 2010.  The Week of Prayer for Christian Unity took as a theme for 2010 the centenary of the 1910 World Missionary Conference and this Network engaged in the production of this material.  A new Associated Ecumenical Group to this network is the "Scottish Churches Disability Action Group" which had its launch in 2010 and is starting to develop an agenda for greater involvement of disabled people in Scottish Church.  John Butterfield has also been instrumental in producing through this group the Easter 2011 worship material for ACTS.
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Wednesday, 19 January 2011

Churches Together Connect

A social network diagramImage via Wikipedia
News this week of a new development from Churches Together in Britain and Ireland to mark the Week of Prayer for Christian UnityChurches Together Connect is a new social network primarily for Churches Together groups, launched on Monday 17 January 2011.  Here is their press release:

Churches Together in Britain and Ireland (CTBI) has today launched a new social networking site called CT Connect. Launched to coincide with the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity, it will offer a free website to local Churches Together groups with direct links to CTBI’s online resources.

CTBI General Secretary Revd Bob Fyffe said “This is about resourcing and developing a new space to work on our agenda for unity. It’s about building an on-line community. Significantly, it will allow Christians at a local level to engage directly with each other and with the many organisations in the ecumenical family. It will also be an interactive space that will resource and strengthen the work of local Churches Together groups. It’s a good example of our being ‘More Together, Less Apart.’”

CT Connect will also offer a quality space for Christians to seek and share information and best practice. It will facilitate groups sharing resources for worship and spirituality, publicising events, and most importantly to engaging, interacting and discussing current issues locally, nationally and internationally.

CT Connect will build a community online.  It will be a place to:
  • learn from each other and to explore what it means to be a Church united in Christ
  • Generate ideas
  • Share resources for worship, liturgy and spirituality.
  • Engage and discuss current issues with people from diverse backgrounds.
  • Publicise community and Churches Together events and get ideas from others about how to organise particular events and use the best resources
(This list is from the January edition of CTE News.)

I welcome this development as I welcome any initiative which, like this blog, increases the presence of ecumenism on the internet.  However, these initiatives work only if they are supported, so please follow and comment on this blog and also join CT Connect. 
 
Finally, Church Mouse has commented on this new development in a post yesterday.
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Monday, 17 January 2011

Promoting Prayer for Unity

One of the topics that came up for discussion at the recent meeting of National Ecumenical Officers was prayer for unity. 

The Catholic Church has introduced a moment of prayer for unity, once a month.  So, it may be worth exploring whether this could be broadened into an ecumenical observance.  This might be a prayer to be said during services.  Some places might observe this through a monthly special service, especially where a suitable service already exists.

The aim would be to remind ourselves once a month of the continuing call to unity.  In the light of talk of  an ecumenical winter, such a shared prayer might help us remember, desire for unity is still very much with us.

If such a prayer were possible, there is the possibility of linking it with the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity.  The annual theme could be picked up through the monthly prayers. 

There is another possibility, as some churches are starting to celebrate mid-week festivals on the preceding Sundays.  It seems Catholic Churches in England and Wales were asked to celebrate Epiphany on 2 January this year and this may be a trend in the Church of England too.  Methodists have done this for many years.

So, if there is a trend to do this, how about developing mid-week festivals, such as Epiphany and Ascension, as opportunities for ecumenical prayer and celebration?

So, what do you think?  Is this something your church, Churches Together group or other group of local churches might welcome?  Is it already happening anywhere?  How would you set about it locally?  What resources would you need?  Are there any prayers you would recommend?

Oh yes!  One suggestion for a short monthly prayer was the Pilgrim Prayer:

Lord God we thank you
For calling us into the company
Of those who trust in Christ
And seek to obey his will.
May your Spirit guide and strengthen us
In mission and service to your world;
For we are strangers no longer
But pilgrims together on the way to your Kingdom.
Amen
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Friday, 12 November 2010

All Things in Common

Today, a brief visit to the Churches Together in Britain and Ireland (CTBI) website, for details of 2011's Week of Prayer for Christian Unity, 18 - 25 January 2011.  The theme is 'All Things on Common' and materials can be found here on the CTBI website.

There is a pamphlet and this can be ordered from the webpage or downloaded.  A small donation is requested for downloads.

Here are some excerpts form the flyer for the week and the website, which explain the theme:

This year an ecumenical group in Jerusalem were the originators of the material. Amidst all the turmoil, danger, injustice and fragility of the Middle East, the Churches in Jerusalem challenge the whole Church to remain faithful to the vocation to be one, and to recommit ourselves to pray for the unity of the church that world might believe.

The Christians of Jerusalem and indeed much of the Middle East are living under tremendous pressure and we are all too aware of the difficulties they experience both in terms of the political and religious situation and their dwindling numbers. However they are also communities of faith that worship, pray and study together, who work for the good of their society and pray for unity of the Church and the coming of the Kingdom of God. In 2011 they invite the world-wide Church to pray with them for the unity of the Church and justice and peace in the Holy Land and through the world.

The material was developed by the International Committee for the Week of Prayer composed of members of the Faith and Order Commission of the World Council of Churches and the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity, and adapted into its present form by writers from England, Ireland, Scotland and Wales on behalf of Churches Together in Britain and Ireland.

The Britain and Ireland Writers Group are pleased to commend the worship materials for 2011 and have written some additional material to complement the liturgies from the churches of Jerusalem.

The aims of the week are:
  • To pray as Christ prayed “That they may be one”.
  • To pray for the unity of all Christian people as we share in Christ’s ministry The Week of Prayer offers opportunities to meet and pray with fellow-Christians of different denominations in your locality. Often new local initiatives emerge out of such meeting and praying together.
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