Churches Together in Britain and Wales (CTBI) has launched resources for next years Week of Prayer for Christian Unity, aimed at bringing churches around the globe closer together through mutual prayer for each other and for AIDS-afflicted individuals and communities.
Tuesdays launch was headed by Rev Bob Fyffe, the recently appointed general secretary of CTBI. He said at the launch that the weekly prayer of Christians should be that “the church should be one just as Jesus prayed that the church should be one” and that the resources come at an “incredibly important time for the Christian church”.
“And at a time when in some respects the whole ecumenical movement is reconfiguring itself, is looking for fresh ecumenical vision, it seems appropriate to me that we should pray harder and harder that we might be one,” said Rev Fyffe.
The general secretary of CTBI was joined by members of the writing group involved in adapting the materials for the UK, including Rev Mary Hunter, representative of the Irish Inter-church Meeting for the last four years; Bede Gerrard, County Ecumenical Officer for Oxfordshire and a Reader in the Orthodox Church in Oxford; Rev Andrew Scobie, Parish Minister at Cardross in Dunbartonshire (Church of Scotland).
The material for the Week of Prayer 2007 is drawn from the experience of Christian communities in the South African region of Umlazi, near Durban, and has been internationalised by a team of Christians from around the world to make the issues accessible to all participating churches regardless of which country they are in.
The community of Umlazi, like so many others, has been ravaged by HIV and AIDS, with an estimated 50 percent of the residents infected with the virus. And the suffering from the widespread prevalence of the virus has only been aggravated by the stigma attached to issues of sexuality within the communities which keeps sufferers from speaking out on their condition.
“Disunity is a scandal both to the church and to the world and only when and if we can think of it as a scandal will we be able to renew the unity of all Christians in the world.”
He added, “Unity does not mean uniformity but it does mean moving and working together for the glory of God, one God…and thats what we need to see locally in our churches together, during the Week of Prayer, during the whole of the year.”
The distinctive cover of the resource materials shows four hands – Christs and ours – and are inspired by the British Sign Language sign for speak out.
The resources include prayers, activities, songs, hymns and litanies. They also direct users to further resources available on the issues highlighted by the materials, including DVD films and CDs as well as organisations in the UK which work in the HIV/AIDS field.
Preparations are also underway for the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity 2008 which will mark the centenary of the event. The 2008 event will be based on the command in 1 Thessalonians 5.17 – 18 to pray without ceasing and John 17.31, Christs prayer that all may be one.
Rev Fyffe expressed his hope that, “the way in which the resources for the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity are picked up will not simply be something that is an intellectual exercise but is a movement of the heart as well, a movement into the heart of God as we pray to be one with God.”
The Week of Prayer for Christian Unity 2007 will take place from 18 to 25 January next year in churches across the globe and throughout all mainstream denominations.