February 2, 2007 By Neill Caldwell WASHINGTON
– While waiting for worship to begin at the National Cathedral, United Methodist
Bishop Charlene Kammerer surprised Archbishop Vicken Aykazian of the Armenian
Church in America by showing him the Armenian cross around her neck. Kammerer,
bishop of the Richmond, Va., Episcopal Area, also dazzled the archbishop with
her knowledge of Armenian geography. She had visited Armenia a few years ago to
get a first-hand experience of Project Agape, a partnership of United Methodists
in the North Carolina Conference and the Western North Carolina Conference and
the Armenian Apostolic Church. Such informal ecumenical
exchanges were commonplace during the National Workshop for Christian Unity, held
Jan. 29-Feb. 1 in Rosslyn, Va., and the nation's capital. The
United Methodist Church was well represented at the gathering, which brought together
hundreds of pastors and laypersons from many Protestant denominations, Roman Catholic
and Orthodox traditions. In his sermon during the opening
worship service, Aykazian noted that the loud and the powerful seem to get the
most attention in today's world. "We must give voice
to the needs and suffering of those who have no voice," said Aykazian, president-elect
of the National Council of Churches. "Our Lord and Savior has shown us the way,
but there are too many distractions in this information-overloaded world that
draw us away from Christ's teachings." Participants in
the four-day conference attended workshops, participated in a variety of worship
styles and celebrated with a concert at the U.S. Senate office building. Linda
Bales, an executive with the United Methodist Board of Church and Society, participated
in a panel discussion on advocacy with representatives from the Episcopal and
Evangelical Lutheran churches. She explained to non-Methodists that her agency
bases its advocacy positions on the denomination's Social Principles, which outline
the church's position on social and economic concerns and other human issues based
on a "sound biblical and theological foundation." "We're
not lobbyists," said Bales, "but we do mobilize people to be a prophetic voice.
We play the United Methodist card whenever we can, reminding politicians that
there are 8 million United Methodists in the U.S. Of course, not all agree with
every position we take. Our General Secretary, Jim Winkler, regularly speaks out
against the war in Iraq and gets numerous pieces of hate mail because of that."
The Rev. Larry Pickens, chief executive of the United
Methodist Commission on Christian Unity and Interreligious Concerns, said such
ecumenical gatherings are a great opportunity to network with Christians from
other faith traditions. "The National Workshop on Christian
Unity is unique because it brings together Catholics, Episcopalians and other
communions around issues we don't always get an opportunity to talk about," he
said. "It gives United Methodists exposure to what issues are important to the
other faith communities." Pickens cited ecumenical concerns
such as poverty, evangelism, global health issues and leadership training. "I'd
include ‘how to live in an interfaith world,' because these are not just United
Methodist issues," he said. "We are a really key point in the lives of our churches,
and this kind of discussion helps provide vision and hope as to how we go forward
in ministry." Bishop Ted Schneider, of the Metropolitan
Washington Synod of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, presented the
ecumenical idea in physical terms: "Like the human body – where if one part is
not working ‘up to code' then the entire body suffers – we must work together
smoothly or the entire church body will suffer. We have to catch the vision of
wholeness for Christ's church." As Aykazian reminded
participants, Scripture does not say "blessed are the peaceful, but ‘blessed are
the peacemakers.' Our faith should not be passive, but instead a call to action
to respond to a suffering world." United Methodist
News Service Neill Caldwell is the editor of The Virginia United Methodist
Advocate magazine. |