Recommendations of the WCC Central Committee, Geneva, Switzerland, 12-20 September 1996
The WCC Central Committee adopted the following recommendations
and launched the campaign Peace to the City with its exciting
implications:
a) As stated by the Central Committee in 1995, the
focus of the Programme to Overcome Violence should be building a culture of
peace through practical means to overcome violence at different levels of
society, encouraging the churches to play a leading role in using non-violent
means such as prevention, mediation, intervention and education appropriate to
their particular contexts. We should however not refrain from looking at the
political, economic and social root causes of violence, including the problems
of structural violence;
b) Taking advantage of existing resources in institutes that
study issues of peace, justice and environmental sustainability as well as
theological schools and institutes, and regional ecumenical organizations, the
programme should include studies of the causes of violence. Particular attention
should be given to situations where churches or religious groups contribute to
these causes;
c) As requested by Central Committee in 1994 and 1995, the
Council should move urgently to offer reflection on the theological and
ecclesiological dimensions of violence as well as the powerful resources offered
by the Christian faith in building cultures of peace, as for example, in the
Bible, in stories of churches and other groups of Christians engaged in creating
cultures of peace with justice in their own place, and in work by theologians
directly engaged with these issues (including women theologians studying
violence against women, Historic Peace Churches, Evangelical and Pentecostal
churches rooted in poor communities permeated by violence and announcing the
Gospel, and others);
d) The WCC should call for the creation of a day of prayer and
fasting for peace;
e) As noted by Central Committees in 1994 and 1995, the POV
should be a clear emphasis in all units, with a specific programme being carried
out in Unit III. Thus, the POV should commend and highlight the on-going work of
the WCC in the General Secretariat, Unit I, II, and IV, where concrete
programmes and other efforts address issues related to violence and the means to
overcome it, including work in rural areas. Furthermore, the POV should embrace,
affirm and strengthen on-going work in Unit III, where many programmes and all
the related programme groups (ECOS, CCIA, PCR, Women, Youth, and Theology of
Life) offer considerable analysis, action, and constituencies deeply involved in
efforts to overcome violence;
f) To focus attention dramatically on the POV in the period up
to the VIIIth Assembly and to complement closely related on-going work in the
Council, the WCC should launch:
Peace to the City
A Global Initiative of the World
Council of Churches
Programme to Overcome Violence
This initiative provides a symbol to engage and encourage all
churches in every place to practise peace every day. The initiative should
include:
I. Choosing as many as seven cities that visibly
demonstrate both the destructive force of violence as well as significant
initiatives of building peace and justice. Churches and groups in various cities
across different regions of the world who participate in specific, substantial
work in peace-building and communities of justice may apply for their work to be
highlighted in this initiative. Church and/or ecumenical partners in as many as
seven cities should be contacted as soon as possible, to test the idea and their
willingness to participate in the initiative. The criteria developed by the
Board on International Affairs should be taken into account. Participants in the
POV Consultation established a tentative list of possible cities in eight
regions, to be narrowed to seven cities at the most.
II. Visiting each of the cities with teams of seven people each,
including at least three persons from other cities involved in the process,
those with experience in local arenas and with print or broadcast media, with
mediation techniques, and those with analytic skills. These team visits should
take place before the 1998 Assembly in order to give visibility to efforts to
overcome violence, to collect and reflect on experience and expertise, and to
share hope and a spirituality for life.
III. Developing video materials that vividly portray parts of
these visits to encourage groups and churches all over the world to join the
process.
IV. Encouraging and facilitating networks of mutual exchange
among those working in cities to overcome violence, emphasizing methods
discussed in more detail in the report of the Rio de Janeiro consultation.
V. Offering the 1998 Assembly as an opportunity for
representatives of the work in these seven (or fewer) cities to come together,
joined by others at the Assembly, to sign an agenda, a commitment, or a contract
publicly pledging to continue and strengthen these and other efforts toward
peace with justice.
VI. Offering opportunity at the Assembly for member churches to
reflect on how the World Council of Churches might facilitate their work on
overcoming violence in the period after the
Assembly.