Representatives of Churches worldwide gathered at Geneva’s St Pierre Cathedral for a service of celebration to mark the 70th anniversary of the World Council of Churches (WCC), at which His All-Holiness Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew preached. The service was held in French and English, and included hymns and prayers in many languages and from many parts of the world. It was a joint celebration with the Protestant Church of Geneva.
In his homily, the Ecumenical Patriarch urged continued efforts for unity, justice and peace. “We celebrate a long common pilgrimage on the path to unity, Christian witness, and the commitment to justice, peace, and the preservation of creation.” The patriarch praised common efforts to respond to the major challenges of the age, as well as the “constructive cooperation” between the WCC and the Roman Catholic Church, which is not a WCC member but works with the council in various areas. “We are aware that the movement to restore the unity of Christianity is taking new forms in order to respond to new situations and to deal with the current challenges of the world,” said the Ecumenical Patriarch. He urged dialogue, patience and openness to overcome differences and difficulties that had arisen since the WCC was founded: “Let us have no illusions. The Churches have so far been unable to overcome their divisions and achieve the much-desired unity.” The main Christian traditions represented in the WCC – the Christian East and the churches of the Reformation – needed to redefine the nature of the institution and to mark the limits within which the WCC is called to bear witness and serve, said the patriarch. He noted how the Holy and Great Council of the Orthodox Church that convened in Crete in June 2016 had affirmed that local Orthodox churches that are members of the WCC “participate fully and equally in the bodies of this institution.”
Patriarch Bartholomew recalled that in 1920, the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople had issued an encyclical to the churches in the world to create a “League of Churches” on the model of the League of Nations created in the same year in Geneva. “The ‘League of Churches’ proposed by Constantinople finally took on flesh and bones 28 years later in 1948,” he said, when the WCC was created through the fusion of the Christian movement on “Faith and Order” and “Life and Work.”
The Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople was one of the founding members of the WCC, which was established with its headquarters in Geneva in 1948 to foster Christian unity. Today it brings together 350 Protestant, Orthodox, Anglican and other churches representing more than 550 million Christians in over 120 countries.
Before he became Ecumenical Patriarch in 1991, Bartholomew served on the WCC’s Faith and Order Commission and as a member of the WCC’s central and executive committees. He also studied at the WCC’s Ecumenical Institute in Bossey near Geneva.