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Youth Plenary
Friday the 27th, 17:00

Introduction by
Peter Sajda, Moderator of the Youth Plenary

1st Youth Voice:
Christian Roar Pedersen, Youth Ecumenical Bodies and Reconciliation in Europe

Music: Jaromir Nohavica, Tesinska
Pictures: The Old versus the New?

2nd Youth Voice:
Nadzeya Cherkas, Christian Communities as a Starting Point for Reconciliation and Unity.
Live Music: Siri Gjaere, voice
Pictures: The Broad versus the Narrow?

3rd Youth Voice:
Daniela Rapisarda  Zsuzsa Rihay, Ecumenism and the issue of the One and Many

Symbolic action: Enlightening the logo of the XII KEK Assembly

Music: Niccolo Paganini, Capriccio number 24
Pictures: One or Many?

4th Youth Voice:
Gyrid Gunnes, Gender and Reconciliation

Live Music: Carl Petter Opsahl, clarinett
Pictures: Man versus Woman?

5th Youth Voice:
Kaisa Aitlahti, Churches as a bridge towards reconciliation – an example from history

Music: Goran Bregovic, Ederlezi
Pictures: Wounding without Healing?

6th Youth Voice:
Michel Charbonnier – Dirk Thesenwitz, Being healed as a community

Live Music: Siri Gjaere, voice, Carl Petter Opsahl, clarinett
Pictures: Stagnation or the Way?
Responses from the audience:

Bishop Bärbel Wartenberg-Potter
His Beatitude Archbishop Anastasios of Albania


Closing words by
Daniela Rapisarda,

Peter Sajda, Slovakia
World Student Christian Federation

* * *

Peter Sajda

Introduction of the Youth Plenary


Dear Sisters and Brothers in Christ,

Let me welcome you cordially to the Plenary of Youth.

This Plenary has been prepared by members of three youth organisations – the Ecumenical Youth Council in Europe (EYCE), Syndesmos and World Student Christian Federation, Europe Region (WSCF-E).

Before I introduce to you the structure and the aims of the Youth Plenary in brief, let me share with you a couple of thoughts that crossed my mind while preparing this Plenary.

In the time when we were collecting the materials for the Youth Plenary I was reading a book on Philosophy of Law written in the 1930s by a Slovak philosopher who is today unknown even in Slovakia. In his book I stumbled across a statement about youth, which caught my attention and made me think. The statement said:
Youth is an ”eternal beginner”:  An eternal beginner.
To be completely honest with you I was not sure whether I should agree or disagree, so I just kept the statement as a subject for contemplation.

I was trying to imagine what that forgotten philosopher could mean? Did he mean that youth has no expertise, that it just believes to have something to say, but in fact all that it wants to say has already been said? And the inexperienced youth just doesn’t know?

As I meditated over the sentence, the connection between
eternity and time came to my mind. It seems we can look at the period of youth from at least two perspectives of time.
From the perspective of
Chronos  - the linear time of events: and then being young is just a transitory stage in one’s life.

Or from the perspective of
Kairos - the time of Divine visitation, in which God discloses to us our vocation in Life: and then youth is a time when God speaks to us in a special way.

In these consideration an image from Paulo Coelho’s book
The Alchymist came to my mind:
A young person is someone who gets a teaspoon filled with precious liquid. This person is supposed to walk through a beautiful garden, while holding the spoon between his/her
teeth trying not to spill the precious liquid. Again a double perspective, a double task appears: The person with the spoon is called not only to avoid spilling the precious liquid in the teaspoon, but he/she is also called to perceive all the beauties around while walking through the garden.

From the mentioned perspectives youth appears to be an interesting and blessed time, and potentially an interesting and blessed beginner. But let me make the statement even more colourful.

Seneca says that even a beginner can be a
very wise person. A wise beginner is the beginner that realises and admits that he or she is a beginner. Such a person is authentic because he or she does not lie to him/herself about his/her inner development.

A
wise beginner, then… sounds like a paradox. A beginner being one from whom you should teach, a beginner who has the vocation to teach.

Once a friend of mine told me that he doesn’t understand how somebody can write a biography of a person he or she doesn’t like… Ha said he cannot understand why somebody spends years in archives just to find out things that don’t appeal to him/her.

Following the spirit of the statement of my friend, I believe that the speeches you will hear from young people in this Plenary will not witness about the youth that is indifferent, superficial or too radical without a sufficient basis of experience and knowledge.

I rather believe that they will witness about youth that is full of energy, ideas, inspiration and self-criticism. And last but not least – that it is a wise and interesting beginner, from in whose experience you will be able to find seeds of inspiration.

One last thing, I believe that in a way all of us try to remain
young in spirit and heart. Therefore we might be able to admit to ourselves, that in spite of all our experience and knowledge (which anyway remain partial and incomplete), we are eternal beginners through all our life.

Before I finish just a few words about the structure of the plenary.
You will hear six inputs of young people from all over Europe coming from the networks of WSCF, Syndesmos and EYCE. They will share with you their views on various kinds of reconciliation and healing: Stories that focus on a variety of topics and cover very different backgrounds.

After each story we invite you for a short meditation.

There will be music from the Czech republic, Italy, Serbia and live music by two Norwegian artists: Siri Gjaere and Carl Petter Opsahl.

The music will be accompanied by a slideshow which we have composed in the form of short
Socratic dialogues. The pictures you will see are in dialogue with each other – they show series of opposites but in the end focus on wholeness and integrity.

In the middle of the plenary there will be a symbolic action of young people combined with 12 violin variations on the same theme (Capriccio nr. 24) by Niccolo Paganini.

At the end we will invite two renowned church leaders and a representative of the stewards to join us with their message….

Christian Roar Pedersen, Denmark

Ecumenical Youth Council in Europe

Youth Ecumenical Bodies and Reconciliation in Europe


Dear brothers and sisters in Christ,

In my presentation I will focus on the role of young people in the reconciliation process in Europe and the importance of ecumenical youth bodies in that process.

With regard to the ecumenical youth organisations I see one of their primary roles as being bridge builders and facilitating young people in the reconciling process of tearing down the walls that separate us today. The organisations are to be meeting places between young Christian people that would not normally meet. And the organisations are to give them tools so that they are able to meet each other on equal ground. The latter would include both language and theological skills – if we are not able to talk to each other or do not know whom we are talking to it all does not make any sense.

The Ecumenical Youth Council in Europe started 35 years ago in the middle of the Cold War. One of its primary tasks was to function as a bridge builder between young Christian people of the east block and the west block. This was done by arranging seminars on different topics, having exchange programs, and by holding common work camps, where young people entered into a learning process while doing practical work.

I remember one of my first ecumenical meetings in 1997. One day we were on an excursion to Berlin and I had the pleasure to walk the streets of the city with young man who had now grown old. This man had been actively involved in exchange programs during the Cold War - and suddenly, as he told the stories from back then, history was made alive. Berlin is today one city and no longer divided, but in the words of this man the Iron Curtain was up again and we were followed by the secret police. Very vividly I saw before my eyes the importance of ecumenical youth work back then: to build bridges and to tear down the image of the people on the other side as being enemies.

Even though it is hard to measure these things I think that the work done by the ecumenical youth organisations, such as EYCE and WSCF, had an important role to play in preparing for the events of 1989 – when the wall came down. And just as important: when the wall came down the young people were more prepared to meet the other side because of the ecumenical work that had been done. They had been trained and acquired skills in meeting “the other side”. And suddenly they found themselves in a Europe where “the other side” was not behind a wall, but to an increasing degree a close neighbour.

Today a visible wall no longer divides Europe and the reconciliation and healing process between east and west has begun. The skills in the field of intercultural and interdenominational meeting and learning that the young persons have acquired are more needed now than ever - in order to be able to meet the new challenges we face today.

In a Europe where xenophobia is rising - in a Europe where Christians see each other as competitors and opponents - in a Europe that has enough in its own culture and people – there are still many walls we have to bridge - until one day they too come down.
I will focus on 3 of the walls that we need to bridge today.

1. Denominations
: The fact alone that when we talk about churches we still tend to use the political terminology of the cold war and talk about east and west as two blocks over and against each other, tells us that there is still a long way to go. The reality of Europe today is quite different than that picture. East is no longer east and west is no longer west! We have Orthodox churches in the west and we have Protestant and Catholic churches in the east. With the problems and joys that it causes!

So the denominational wall has moved closer to many of us than it was before. Old problems see the light in a new setting. This makes the role of the ecumenical youth organisations bigger because they can offer young people experience and skills in the field of ecumenical meeting that they cannot get anywhere else. To be able to build the bridges on the local level we need the expertise of the European organisations!

2. Young and old
: in society a wall has risen between young and old. Young is good and young is beautiful, we are taught - in commercials and in lifestyle magazines. Old means decay and old people are often seen as a burden for society. The result is fear of death and a desperate clinging to youth.

A frightening thing is that in our Christian organisations we have to some degree taken over this pattern of separation between young and old! Among us as Christians there is a tendency look at young people as a special group. Young people should not be treated like that - as a minority that has to be dealt with. Instead young people should be treated as an integrated part of the church and the ecumenical bodies! The story I told you from Berlin were about a young person and an old person meeting. It was the story of how generations can learn from each other. A task for both the youth organisations and organisations like CEC is to examine how we can involve the young people more in “the big league” and the mature church leaders more in the “little league” – to speak in the language of sports.

3. Religions
: Europe has become increasingly multi-religious in the last decade. Today most children have classmates who are Muslim or come from a non-Christian religion. In our work it is important that we do not confuse ecumenical work with inter-religious work, but at the same time we need to be able as Christians to relate to the reality in which we live - a reality where people of different faiths live together. So when we train young people in building those reconciling bridges it is important that we do not build a new wall around us toward other religions. We need to learn how we as Christians relate to people of other faiths.

To conclude: I hope that I have made it clear that the challenges of ecumenical youth work are different today than they were before. But the principles of that work remain the same: to build reconciling bridges. Maybe one day the young people of today will walk the streets of their home town and inspire a young person by telling him or her about the bridges they helped to build.

Thank you for your attention!

This presentation is an extract of a longer paper, which is available upon request. pedersen@myrealbox.com

Nadzeya Cherkas, Belarus

Syndesmos

Christian Communities as a Starting Point for Reconciliation and Unity


One of my first impressions when getting involved in youth ecumenical work was a feeling joy, joy of being together, despite having different experiences of faith, ways of understanding spirituality, coming from practices in churches that had lived for centuries in isolation and even hostility towards one another.

At our youth ecumenical events, we challenge and are challenged by many questions we disagree upon, but we commit to show tolerance, humility, wisdom and care during discussions and common prayers, which make us, experience what is reconciliation in Christ. By no means do we accept everything uncritically or ignore differences; we acknowledge them honestly.

The ecumenical experience is enriching for all the participating parties, as I have noticed. For me as an Eastern Orthodox, it was inspiring to learn from Protestants a lively non-regulated prayer and address God directly with the needs of the day and the present moment. And my Protestant friends were intrigued by the Trinity concept, Orthodox saints and tradition and by the liturgical richness in which all the senses and the whole of the body are involved. It has happened that when an event came to an end we felt so close to each other that the departure was even painful. We were healed from hostility by God’s grace. I was eager to have this ‘being in a Christian community’ experience every day in my life. So I started deepening my spiritual life and began to learn to discover God’s will.

It is there in that depth that I was able to understand that to be a Christian means to pray to the Heavenly Father, and, receiving the Holy Spirit, confess love, tolerance, wisdom, knowledge and fear of God. It was there in that depth that I was able to recognise our unity in Christ and the Holy Spirit. It was the deepening of my spiritual life that helped me to better understand the extent of the Church. The activity of the Holy Spirit is not limited to the canonical boundaries of churches, and it rejoices in seeing anything that is true, that is of Christ, wherever it is to be found.

In the depth I also discovered that Christianity is not only about individual self perfection, improving one’s behaviour and character, but more about being a Church, a chosen people, a holy nation, a people belonging to God, according to the apostle Peter’s words (I Peter, 2.9). This can be realised only in a communal way of life, given as a gift from God. It is the Christian community that is the starting point for the uniting of souls in oneness and love. Here started my service of a Christian, my taking responsibility for the church, accepting that my sins are the reasons for its troubles. Unity cannot be brought about if we just come to church on Sundays, pray on our own and depart. Unity by God and with God and each other is built only if we come to church to pray, and, serving together, receive Holy Communion and the Holy Spirit, and then witness faith to the world.

This revelation of serving in the community, and learning God’s will through it, has made me feel acutely the pain of divided Christendom. I have met people living in Christ’s true Spirit whose hearts cannot but be filled with tears because of the present disunity. We learn that Christian division is a sin before God for Jesus prayed for us: “…that they all may be one, as You, Father, are in Me, and I in You; that also may be one in Us, that the world may believe that You sent Me” ”(John. 17:20-21); Christian division is also a sin before the Church because we divide and destroy it, ignoring Jesus’ words that there should be one herd and One Shepherd. It is also a sin before the world, because it expects us to be fully credible messengers of love, faith, hope and reconciliation, but we lose this chance, being spread in several thousand different Christian groups and having been often hostile to each other.

We should be sincere and admit that many modern believers have lost community spirit. We declare that we are members of the Church, that is, of a living body, while our situation is such that we live today on the basis of the rights of the individual. And so even theology has become an academic knowledge about something. We are filled with information about God. But what defines theology in the Church is concrete knowledge and experience of God Himself, personal encounter with Him, personal experience of faith. To have faith means to give oneself, to offer oneself with an absolute trust in God to those whom we love.

So, in most churches sobornost’ (which is a Slavonic term, encompassing both catholicity and conciliarity) is much endangered. Most people are strangers in their parishes, not reconciled and not united. So how can they care seriously about other Christians? I experienced it almost impossible to talk about faith and its gifts with those who do not live in faith, love and serving, discovering God’s will and fulfilling it. Is it reasonable, is it possible, to strive for the unity with other Churches without leading community life of unity, love, self-sacrifice and mutual responsibility in one’s own parish? No, I do not think so. That is why, I believe, ecumenical movement has not reached the expected results. Attempts of reconciliation and unity have been made mostly on the official level.

Pharisaic arrogance, xenophobic “island mentality” and non-Christian fanaticism (where faith is separated from love) is possibly the sign of the fact that many believers have departed from the true faith in God, in Christ, and in the Church. Some would claim their church possesses the only truth. The more a church is conscious of this, and remains faithful to the word of Christ, so much more it should feel the obligation to enter into dialogue and discussion with other Christian churches, in a spirit of love and humility. For the richer we become spiritually, the more we learn, the greater is the wish to share. To share the truth revealed to us in our faith. Where there’s a continuous intensive church life, there is understanding of the sin and the wish for repentance, there’s real interest and will for strengthening common Christian witness in the world. There’s a struggle to fulfil God’s will and search for the Trinitarian life, in which the Divine Persons live together without separation and isolation, without confusion and uniformity.

The true spirit of ecumenism is faith, love and hope, humility and service. These are the fruits of revival and awakening of true Christian consciousness first within Christian denominations and then among them, reconciling with each other and together looking for real answers to the “dead ends” of the civilisation we live today.

Yes, these are difficult issues and we, as humans, can not give direct answers to them. But those walking on the path of faith and love, being open and faithful, testify that the Holy Spirit of Christ tears out old “wineskins” (Luke5:37) of denominations, goes over their boundaries, announcing New Time in Church life according to the New Testament words from Revelation “Behold, I make all things new” (Rev. 21:5). And we only have to be able to feel His Action and with all our heart, deeds and works say: “Amen, Let it be Your Will, oh God”.

Daniela Rapisarda, Italy – Zsuzsa Rihay, Hungary

World Student Christian Federation

Ecumenism and the issue of the One and the Many


1.The relation between Unity and Diversity, between being One and being Many seems to be a fundamental issue for Ecumenism.

2.I agree with you, it is a fundamental issue.

1.I also have the impression that between Unity and Diversity is not only stated a difference, I feel that to Unity and to Diversity are attributed very different values.

2.What do you mean?

1.I mean, to Unity is attached a highly positive value, Unity is our highest goal, while Diversity, the being Many, is seen more as a regrettable, unlucky condition that needs to be overcome as soon as possible. Why do you think it is so? Why is Unity considered more valuable than Diversity, why is being One considered a far better status than being Many?

2.Well, I could start by saying that the issue of the relation between the One and the Many is a rather fundamental concept in Greek Philosophy. A philosopher called Plotinus used to say that Oneness – the One – is the source of all beings. The One Plotinus talks about the highest being, beyond the world of ideas. From this Being the whole cosmos emanates. Plotinus says that the One is the true reality, while the Many are imperfect and disconnected, lacking harmony and unity. The Many tend to the One.

1.Do you think what you have just said is relevant in relation to ecumenism?

2.Well, I would say so. Plotinus’ thought had quite an impact on the development of Christian theology. But I must also say that the God, the One, Plotinus talks about is not exactly the same as the Christian God. The God of Plotinus is One, and only One, the Christian God is One and triune, is One and three at the same time. Diversity becomes part of God. Unity and Diversity, the One and the Many have both place in God.

1.I like what you say. I would like to add more: you just said that in the thought of Plotinus the Many tend towards the One. But we know that the Incarnation means that God becomes man, God meets us where we are, on the level of human history, or on the level of the Many. God loves the world, human history, the Many. Shouldn’t we also love the Many?

2.Surely the idea Plotinus had of the world as imperfect, disharmonious reality is different from what we learn in the bible of the world as creation of God, as the good creation of God. But we also have to say that harmony is the status human beings enjoy in the garden of Eden. The story of Adam and Eve in the garden tells us that the will of God for the world is harmony.

1.Yes, but Adam and Eve are two, and not one. And they are two even before the fall. This must tell us something about human reality being many and not one from the very beginning, even before sin.

2.I think we need to distinguish between unity and uniformity. Unity can be a very dynamic concept that includes diversity, still keeping the positive value of Unity as to harmony and integrity. In the ecumenical movement we strive for unity because we believe we are called to Unity God. You will remember the prayer of Jesus in John.

1.Do you think the church is one or many today? Is the church more One or more Many?

2. I believe, that in more than a century of ecumenical work, we have learned to recognise that Christian families have a lot in common. We share a great part of fundamental believes, and of theological interpretation, we have similar rites. What we have in common needs to be acknowledged and celebrated, valued and nurtured. But we don’t share all, we don’t agree on all. We could say, Churches are at the same time One and Many. There is still a long way to go to achieve Unity.

1.What do you mean then by Unity of the Church?

2.I mean structural unity.

1.while listening to you, I realise that I have a different idea of Unity. For me the event of Pentecost, the beginning of the history of the church, is the miracle of understanding diverse languages, is the miracle of understanding in diversity. For me, at the beginning of church history there is diversity.

2.I can see that we have different ideas of Unity. We could say that there is not Unity in the way we understand unity. But don’t you think that churches and Christians should at least make an effort to really become One? To achieve visible unity?

1.Honestly, I wonder if that is possible at all. Human history is many, and it is many from the very beginning, how can we possibly manage to become One?

2.But there was a time were the Church was One. If you think of the first five centuries of Christian history, then the church was one.

1.In what sense was then the church One?

2.They managed to agree on the content of their faith, on fundamental theological statements. It was the result of a long battle against heresies. In the end the battle was won and orthodoxy triumphed.

1.Yes, I remember Arius and the others. I know that it was important to define what was the right doctrine, but people like Arius were imprisoned and killed. The definition of one doctrine, of the right doctrine has caused quite a number of human lives. Those people considered “heretics” within different groups and at different times have been tortured and massacred. And this is all part of the history of the Church. There are very few Christian denominations that in their history have never persecuted others, and they were themselves victims of heavy persecutions. If this is the way Unity has been achieved in the history of the Church, then I think we have to question that way and see if there are not other ways to strive for unity.

2.Well, I think we should not exaggerate now. What you just said is true, but it is something that belongs to the past. Today, Christians don’t kill each other. Today they meet in ecumenical gatherings, like this one. I think the church has found better ways to strive for unity.

1.Yes, you are right, to have a different opinion within the church, an opinion different from the main one, the dominant one, doesn’t cost human lives today. Still, you cannot deny that those who think differently from the mainstream are still silenced. ….

2.If unity is our main goal, then it might have its costs. Then we need to define a hierarchy of ideas, some are more biblical than others, some more consonant with tradition than others, some will be better then others. Some will find space and some others will need to be silenced.

1.But what if God is trying to speak through those voices that have been silenced. Then the church will have missed that voice. I have the impression that the ideal of unity among human beings, the ideal of unity on the level of history and of the many, has as a necessary complement the definition of what is right and what is wrong, of what is in and what is out. I can see the need of making distinctions, but you will agree with me that if you and I will be in or out, right or wrong, will depend to a very great extent on the opinion of who is defining rules. I believe the ideal of One in human terms becomes a very exclusive principle, stating quite clearly that some are in and some are out, that some have a greater right to speak while others should better keep silent, that some are more suitable for specific tasks than others. I am not sure this is the Church I dream about.

2.What do you dream about?

1.I dream of an inclusive Church. A church where voices are listened to, where every human being is taken care of, where gifts are received and empowered. I dream of a church open to the voice and the contribution of all believers. I believe that we need to be open to the Many, to diversity, if we want to create sufficient space for all.

2.But then you will run the great risk of living in a church of Many that has lost the dimension of the One, that has lost the relation to the One.

1.I don’t think so. I believe the relation to the One is given by our reference to Christ, our relating and following Christ. I believe Christ is the principle of unity among the many that we are. In this sense for me ecumenism is about witness to Jesus Christ Healer and Reconciler. In our common reference to Christ we discover our Unity in Diversity.

2.I agree with many of the things you say; I don’t agree with all you say. Still I believe it has been interesting to talk to you. Goodbye.

1.Goodbye.

Gyrid Gunnes, Norway

student of theology in Oslo, WSCF-E

Gender and Reconciliation


To speak about reconciliation and gender is a challenging task because one speaks on a deeply structural and personal level at the same time. Most women and men live together happily, as friends, as fathers and mothers, as spouses, as children. We love and respect each other and are thankful for the great gift of caring for and learning from each other.

But this is not the whole picture. Countless human beings throughout Europe and the world are victims of violence. The majority of them are women, victimised because of their gender in domestic violence, prostitution and trafficking. Men beat, buy and victimise women physically and symbolically. This happens both on a structural and on a personal level.

The first step in reconciliation is to dare to speak truthfully about these problems. This truthfulness may lead to a commitment to act justly. No reconciliation can happen before we dare to speak truthfully and act justly. The slogan of the women’s protest in Graz in 1997 was exactly this: no reconciliation before justice. I believe that it is still true and valid now, 5 years later. Justice in this context means to speak openly about the oppressive character of what gender implies in church, and to see what secular gender roles churches support and legitimise.

I invite you all to consider the parallels between the situation in the former apartheid regime of South Africa and the meaning of gender in our churches today.  The churches and secular societies of the world condemned the churches in the apartheid regime for using the Bible and the Christian faith as an ideological legitimisation of a regime that made colour the only significant factor for determining a person’s life.

On this background, I see a paradox in the fact that church is a context where gender to a great extent will limit and extend the possibilities of your life. If you are a man, you may become a priest and through that you are given access to a powerful theological and liturgical tradition. As a priest you are part of the church hierarchy and the decision-making forum of your church. If you are a male, God is talked about in your gender. If you are a male, your experiences are the context for doing and thinking theology. If you are woman, you are, in many churches, deprived of access to the priesthood. If you are a woman, using your gender as a metaphor for speaking about God is seen as controversial. If you are woman, many churches set moral standards on your reproductive rights. These are grave limitations of the autonomy of a human being.

The comparison between racism and sexism is indeed a provocative one, even within the Norwegian Lutheran context. Nevertheless, I believe it is an important one. We are so good at naming difficulties and knowing what should be done when the problem is far away from us, like the case with racism in South Africa. But when discrimination happens due to a factor just as arbitrary as skin colour, for example gender, the situation is suddenly very different. Even in Norway, faith communities are not bound by the law to enforce equal rights for men and women in the workplace. Faith communities are given this exemption in the name of freedom of faith. Freedom to do what? Freedom for whom? The consequence of such an exemption would imply also the acceptance of faith communities` refusal to employ coloured people in the name of freedom of faith. Public opinion would never allow this.

As a white person, I would feel extremely uncomfortable with living and working within the framework of racist theology and praxis. Thus I am puzzled by the fact that, over and over again, men in clerical positions often are my opponents. If I was male, I would be the first to warm-heartedly support women’s ordination and gender inclusive language. I invite men in the assembly today to become uneasy and ambivalent to a sexist church-praxis and God-language. I challenge all men in the assembly to be just as uncomfortable and embarrassed as you would be as whites in a racist church.

We are now in the middle of the Decade against Violence initiated by the World Council of Churches. If we wish to take seriously the spirit of the decade, I believe we need to see that violence - personal and structural - has a gender dimension. In Norway, no statistic is as gender divided as the criminal statistics of whom violently victimises whom. Deep in my heart I want all churches to become truthful and credible witnesses in the struggle against violence. Before this is possible, I believe that churches have to look on their own sexist praxis and theology.

Jesus was a man who challenged the religious authorities of his day. He broke down boundaries of who could commune with whom. As a Jew, he befriended Samaritans and Romans. As a man, he spoke to and respected women. He came to tell us a story about liberation – for all. I believe that truthfulness, justice and reconciliation are different stages on the path to liberation. Therefore I believe that accepting or tolerating any kind of discrimination in ecumenical discourse is a betrayal of that liberation which is our common goal.

Thank you

Kaisa Aitlahti, Finland

EYCE

Churches as a Bridge towards Reconciliation – an example from the history




My name is Kaisa Aitlahti. I came to this assembly through the Ecumenical Youth Council in Europe and work here as a steward. I came from Helsinki in Finland. For the last year I have been writing my Master’s Thesis in church history. As many times in the research, I also faced some painful and difficult developments in the history. In my case, that was confronting the history of the island of Cyprus. We have heard and read a lot about the developments on the island in the past months, but I am not going to talk about that. I just pick one small example from the history to help us think weather churches and religions can have an effect on achieving reconciliation or not.


Cyprus has not had an easy way to go during its over 40 years of independence. In 1974 there was a grave war, of which some of you know the reasons much better than I do. Since that particular year, 1974, Cyprus has been divided into two parts: Greek Cypriots, who to the biggest part are Greek Orthodox, living in the south and Turkish Cypriots, who are Muslims, living in the north. The war led to a serious refugee problem and hundreds of thousands of people had to leave their homes to go to their “own” side of the boarder between the two national groups.


In the politics there didn’t seem to be much hope left. The boarder, the so-called Green Line between the Greek Cypriots and the Turkish Cypriots was, and still is clearly also the boarder between two world religions: Christianity and Islam. Changes in the traditional population areas of the Orthodox and the Muslims were dramatic. Many Muslim mosques ended up in the hands of the Christians and the opposite happened to the Christian churches. People on both sides were furious because of the various misuses of their holy buildings. Many charges were raised because of the dishonour of them.


But the leaders of the religious groups were not satisfied. On both sides there was at least one spiritual leader who promised to interfere in the situation. They promised to stop the misuse of the churches and mosques, to clean them to the pre-war condition and to let surveyors testify the actions approved. The leaders stated that neither propaganda nor national fanatics’ order to deepen the tension between the Greek and the Turkish should manipulate the religions. In their opinion the mission of the religions on Cyprus was to build a bridge of peace and tolerance. They wished that both religions could help building the spirit of love between the national groups. The religions didn’t have to adapt the political way of thinking and emphasise the boarder between the groups. At least for me as a young person it is easy to say that as equal images of God, it should be a natural aim of us not to separate but to bring together and unite.


Of course I am not an expert in things concerning Cyprus and I can’t tell to which extension the situation there, in an extreme need for reconciliation, really was improved. But even in the far north, in Finland, the Christian newspapers were happy to tell that the churches were active peace builders on Cyprus.


As we all know, the argument between the Greek and the Turkish is still not totally settled. The same kind of division is visible and reconciliation needed in many places – different national groups are separated from each other by their religion as well as by their ethnic background. This is the case in Northern Ireland and former Yugoslavia, just to name two examples. We can ask weather religion has any effect on reconciliation at all in the world of politics, industry, information technology and profit-seeking, or if it is just another brick in the wall between communities. Did the spiritual leaders of Cyprus bring reconciliation any closer?


Well, they failed to achieve full reconciliation on the island at that time. But they show us an important tool to be used in the struggle for reconciliation, and that is respect. They were strong in what they believed in, but at the same time they let the others be true to themselves and their traditions as well. By building hierarchy, by placing religions and people on higher or lower levels, by subordination, there is no way to reconciliation. In my opinion the way to reconciliation is in living together: loving and not judging our neighbours, respecting them in what they are and not trying to change them, accepting the different colours of life that are there for us to enjoy.


So again, can the churches and their leaders bring reconciliation any closer? That is, can we bring reconciliation any closer? Scepticism is not the answer. Faith could be one. If we put small things together we can see how much difference they make. I think – and I hope that we can all believe in it – that the churches can and must have an effect on achieving reconciliation. And why? Simply because what religion gives us is hope. It makes us do small things for a better future. We pray, we discuss, we share, we understand, we learn, we respect. As long as we have faith and hope we also have a chance for reconciliation. It is a long process but as Christians we are definitely obliged to be a part of it whereever we live.

Michel Charbonnier, Italy - Dirk Thesenvitz, Germany

EYCE

Being healed as a community


Dear sisters and brothers of all ranks,


I have the pleasure to introduce to you Mr. Michel Charbonnier from Italy.

Here with me is Mr. Dirk Thesenvitz from Germany. We are representing the Ecumenical Youth Council in Europe in this Assembly.

We will share with you our vision of how the Churches of the past can have a future in Europe.

The first step into this future has to be that we all agree on one thing:
we as Churches need healing – healing of our witness.

Our societies in Europe consider us Churches as relicts from the past. Are they mistaken?

No, because we lost our capacity to be hear witness of the hope that is within us.

But: this is not yet the whole thing: the problem is even much bigger. This perception of Churches being relicts of the past, unable to communicate the Gospel to normal people in Europe, comes not only from outside, from society around us, but it is a perception of many people deep inside our Churches.


Whereas we see a small inner circle of self-satisfied men and women considering themselves to be ”The Church”, a growing majority of Christians in Europe find themselves outside the life of the Church. (This phenomenon can be observed from parish level up to CEC level.) This shows us  that as Churches, we do not only need healing in our relationships with society, but we also need healing inside.

We need healing like the man with the withered arm in the Gospel according to Mark 3, 1-5. As you know, at the end of the story, the man is healed. But it is more important for us to understand what is leading him to this end. Jesus doesn’t even touch this paralytic man. Jesus only calls him to three different actions: Stand up! Stand in the middle! And stretch out your hand!


In doing this the man is healed.

What can we learn from these three actions?

Stand up:

if you want to get healed you have to stand up – with all your body and with all your being.

If one part of the body is paralytic the whole body has to move to get healed.

Stand in the middle:

do not hide yourself and your weakness to yourself and to the others.

This way you can accept your own limitations and make yourself visible to everyone – for if you’re not visible, how could you be a witness?

Stretch out your hand:

if you stretch out your hand to get healed, you stretch it out to yourself, but at the same time, you stretch it out to the others

Getting healed and turning towards the others is happening in the same action.

Now, what do these reflections have to do with our healing and our witness as Churches?

If we want to get healed we have to stand up with our whole body. It is not helpful for the body of the Church to wave with one withered ecumenical arm while its feet are walking in at least two different ways.

If we want to be living witness we must also be ready to recognise our own weaknesses and stand up in the middle with all our parts – leaving no one behind

If we want to be a healed and a healing community of Churches in Europe we have to stretch out our hands

Towards ourselves – and towards the others
Towards the parts we are hiding - and towards those who are hiding from us

In the Ecumenical Youth Council in Europe, we have been trying for 35 years to build up a healing community across many borders, borders of culture, of denomination, of education, of language, economy and gender.

We have come here to stand up and give witness, also and strongly of our shortcomings on this way and our need for healing. It is here that we want to give thanks for the precious moments of success we have been granted. Moments of sharing on an equal level as sisters and brothers in Christ, blessed times of ecumenical prayer life and strong bonds of unity and friendship built beyond all borders.


We have come here as pilgrims to stretch out our hands – towards ourselves, to you all and to all the youth of your churches, no matter if they are Orthodox or Anglicans, farmers or theologians, Protestants or Catholics, workers or students: all of them are welcome in EYCE to stand up with us in the middle, to get healed and to bear witness of Christian hope in the future of Europe.

Thank you and may God bless you.