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Associated Press, May 9, 2005
Conference brings
Christian leaders to weigh global challenges
Author : Brian Murphy
DATELINE: ATHENS, Greece
Christian leaders, theologians and religious
activists from around the world gathered Monday
for a meeting to assess some of the most serious
challenges for the faith, such as growing rifts
between churches and African congregations
ravaged by AIDS.
The last time the World Council of Churches staged
such a conference was in Brazil nine years
ago, when the agenda was heavy with issues
about preserving cultural identity and Christian
missionary expansion in the former East Bloc.
Now - in one of the ancient sites of Christianity
- the planned discussions highlight some new
concerns, including growing rifts among Christians
over issues such as same-sex unions, the role
of gay pastors and women's contributions to
worship. Also high on the list: ways to control
AIDS and HIV in Africa and promoting interfaith
dialogue with mainstream Muslims to offset
the influence of Islamic extremists.
"This conference has the feeling of a journey,
not an arrival," said the Rev. Ruth Bottoms,
a Baptist minister from Britain who is overseeing
the weeklong series of workshops and speeches
that officially opens Tuesday. "We don't
want to hide our differences."
The conference is expected to draw more than
500 participants representing nearly every
corner of Christianity from evangelical movements
to mainline Protestant groups to Orthodox and
Roman Catholic envoys.
Some leaders, such as the late Pope John Paul
II, made historic overtures to Orthodox churches
to end a nearly 1,000-year estrangement over
disputes centering on papal authority and,
in recent years, the Vatican's reach in traditional
Orthodox lands. Some Protestant churches, meanwhile,
have moved toward consolidation to counter
shrinking congregations and resources.
But the conference may spend much of its energy
on political and health problems outside doctrine.
Last month, the World Evangelical Alliance presented
the U.N. Commission on Human Rights with an
appeal claiming more than 200 million Christians
worldwide are being denied religious liberty.
The document listed more than a dozen countries,
including China and several nations in Africa
and central Asia.
Members of the alliance, which represents conservative
Protestant denominations, are expected at the
conference, which is being held at a seaside
venue about 18 miles northeast of Athens. Also
participating are top-level delegates from
the Vatican, whose anti-condom stance may put
it at odds with other religious leaders.
AIDS and HIV issues have become priorities for
the WCC, a Geneva-based group with more than
350 member Christian churches. The Vatican
is not a full member, but collaborates on many
WCC panels and initiatives.
"AIDS and HIV is a major human tragedy,"
said Alexander Belopopsky, a WCC spokesman.
The WCC also serves as one of the top forums
for inter-religious dialogue and other ecumenical
efforts. But the conference is not expected
to bring any landmark shifts.
Its chief goal, according to organizers, is to
advance discussions on ways to reach greater
common ground.
"This conference brings together the widest
possible constituency," Bottoms said.
Other topics that could be raised at the conference
include whether new Pope Benedict XVI will
seek even more substantial contacts with other
Christian churches, and ways to energize mainstream
churches in the West facing shrinking congregations
and competition from non-denominational movements.
In central Athens, about 500 supporters of a
hard-line Orthodox movement staged a protest
to denounce the conference and other initiatives,
such as Greek government plans to build Athens'
first mosque in more than 170 years.
The Greek Orthodox Movement for Salvation saw
the WCC gathering as an affront to Orthodoxy's
role as one of the most visible links to early
Christian worship.
Banners read: "No to the pan-religious heretical
congress" and "The Church is Orthodox:
Every other church and religion are machinations
of the devil."
<< Assoicated Press -- 5/9/05 >>
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