Category Archives: World Council of Churches
Most diverse movement for global Christian unity
Dismantling the Empire of Oil

An old man walks miles to the grave of his wife daily. His village in Fiji has been forced to relocate and leave the ancestors’ remains behind. They are now expected to be safely above the rising waters on their island. What kind of flowers does the old man leave on the grave? The question still occurs to the lead attorney on the court case charging fossil fuel advocates with endangering our life on Earth.
The old man’s story impelled Julian Aguon, the attorney from Guam, to spend five years preparing the case against all who profit from continued extraction and distribution of the source of 80-85% of carbon emissions. The Pacific island nation of Vanuatu stepped forward to present the case to the International Court of Justice. The Court’s findings issued in July of last year were summarized by the International Center for Environmental Law, “the Court recognized fossil fuels as the root cause of the crisis, that certain sectors, like oil and gas, play an outsized role in generating planet-warming emissions, and that States must regulate and hold those corporate polluters to account”. In a document supporting the case the World Health Organization (WHO) stated, “[O]nly a rapid and equitable phase-out of fossil fuels can protect the health of both people and the planet from the climate crisis.”
Vanuatu provides compelling evidence of the climate catastrophe largely due to fossil fuel combustion. Half its Gross Domestic Product was destroyed in a cyclone and its islands continue to be rocked by one extreme weather event after another. Vanuatu was joined by the youth of all Pacific Island nations in charging those UN members which are “proactively expanding their fossil fuel production and consumption, paying lip service to their climate commitments” and ignoring the “due diligence that was and is required from them.”
Vanuatu along with Ireland will serve as co-host of next spring’s second International Conference on Transitioning Away From Fossil Fuels. In spite of the challenges in getting to the Vanuatu site of the Conference, the July 2025 Court “advisory opinion” will likely lead many more nations to attend than the 57 participating in the first Conference in Colombia. The Conference will serve as another venue to organize support for the Fossil Fuel Non-Proliferation Treaty initiated by the indigenous peoples of Pacific Island nations. In a growing split from the U.S. response, European signators of the Treaty now include Germany and the U.K.

Progressive Christian faith communities in the U.S. and world-wide have strongly supported these initiatives to suppport nations’ freedom from fossil fuel reliance and grow the renewable energy infrastructure. The World Council of Churches (WCC) staff member for Climate Justice declared, ““Churches [and people of good will] are called to rise with prophetic urgency, speak with a voice of moral clarity, and embody a new Exodus – an exodus from the captivity of greed, a departure from an extractive economy, and a journey toward the freedom of a restored creation.” The WCC represents 356 church bodies in 120 countries. They joined leaders of Earth’s indigenous faith communities in submitting to the first Conference their agreement that “the transition away from fossil fuels is not a matter of ideology. It is a matter of survival, of justice, of fidelity to the very ground of our being.”
Julian Aguon may never learn what kind of flowers the old man leaves every day on that grave in Fiji. The impact on Julian of the man’s daily trek is, however, shared through the attorney’s work on behalf of the transition away from fossil fuels in Fiji and around the world.
Global Christians’ Appeal for Reconciliation and Unity

A “Call to Act Together” for reconciliation and unity concluded the recent Assembly of the World Council of Churches. Charged with sharing the message of “a unity founded in God’s love” the 4000 Assembly delegates cited the scripture “the love of Christ urges us on”. The delegates represented many of the World Council’s 325 Orthodox and other church bodies active in 120 nations. There were also 160 Roman Catholic observers attending the most diverse gathering of Christians held every seven years. Jewish and Muslim observers also attended the 11th Assembly.
Since the founding Assembly in 1948, Council membership has shifted from a majority European and North American body to a gathering which reflects the growing number of Christians in the global South. Summarizing the experience of living and listening together for 11 days, the delegates celebrated that “amid all our diversity, we have relearned in our assembly that there is a pilgrimage of justice, reconciliation, and unity to be undertaken together. ”

The Assembly experience and its “Call to Act” stands in contrast to the current trend of political leaders worldwide to foment division and distrust. Its call should be taken as a response to the use of division and disinformation to gain unfettered power. Voters in the U.S. would do well to consider the language and aims of their preferred candidates as the Republican Party sows distrust, antipathy and scorn of others. Over 150 Republican candidates in this week’s U.S. midterm election reject the 2020 presidential election of Joe Biden.
The Republican candidate for Governor in Wisconsin, construction company owner Tim Michels, promised that were he elected his Party will never again lose an election in Wisconsin. (as reported by Martin Pengelly of The Guardian, Nov. 2, 2022) Republican candidate for Governor of Arizona, former Fox News anchor Kerri Lake, was asked if she would accept defeat in the election. Appearing prepared to challenge such a result, Lake responded she would not lose.
The U.S. election featured the former President Trump campaigning for midterm candidates backing his “Stop the Steal” denial of results of the 2020 election. No one doubts he will again run for President in 2024 particularly should his Party seize control of Congress in the midterms. His campaigning takes place following dismissal of dozens of court cases in which his backers advanced claims of election malpractice and fraud. In the cases where a ruling called for an audit, no evidence was found of malfeasance.
In an era when the global economic order is incapable of effectively responding to the climate crisis, increasing inequality, and unprecedented migration of people, the World Council Assembly’s reminder of God’s vision of unity is especially timely. “As reconciliation brings us closer to God and each other, it opens the way toward a unity founded in God’s love.”







See all the photo galleries from the Assembly at:
https://oikoumene.photoshelter.com/galleries/C0000VFYoZ6eMlZc/WCC-11th-Assembly-Karlsruhe-Germany
The thirteen points of the Assembly’s Call to Act Together can be found at:
file:///C:/Users/User/Desktop/ADOPTED-MC01rev-Message-of-the-11th-Assembly.pdf