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There are ten bursaries of $150 each available for Catholic lay people attending the 2013 Summer Ecumenical Institute, June 10-13, offered by the Diocese of Saskatoon.
Information about the 2013 SEI entitled "Reconciling Churches, Reconciling People" is available here or at the PCE website pcecumenism.ca.
Le Centre canadien d’œcuménisme est à la recherche d’un directeur général. Situé au centre-ville de Montréal, le Centre, à caractère national, a pour mission de promouvoir l’œcuménisme et les relations interreligieuses au Canada par l’éducation, le dialogue et la spiritualité.
Le-la candidat-e doit être de foi chrétienne, bilingue, en plus de posséder les compétences suivantes : •une formation théologique de niveau universitaire ; •une excellente connaissance et expérience de l’œcuménisme; •une bonne expérience de gestion d’un organisme à but non lucratif, notamment la capacité avérée de générer des fonds.
De concert avec le conseil d’administration et l’équipe du Centre, le directeur aura comme tâche, entre autres, de concrétiser le mandat et le rôle du Centre. À suivre …
30 days + 30 amazing United Church leaders and over a dozen posts by special guests (Shane Claiborne, Lois Wilson, Dennis Gruending, Donna Sinclair, Fulata Lusungu Moyo, Gary Paterson (the UCC Moderator) and more…) = one of the coolest, free (yep-free) social media based Bible studies ever.
For the whole month of June, join spiritual seekers coast to coast to rock the Bible from various perspectives and have a rockin’ time doing it. Get ready! Join the Facebook Group “Rock The Bible” today.
Summer Ecumenical Institute 2013: An ecumenical education event presented by the Prairie Centre for Ecumenism
Monday, June 10 (evening) to Thursday, June 13 (noon) at the Cathedral of the Holy Family, 123 Nelson Rd, Saskatoon
Speaker: Bishop Mark MacDonald, Canada's first Indigenous bishop; Worship Leader & Chaplain: Paul Sartison, Evangelical Lutheran pastor and campus chaplain at the U of S.
The Rev. Dr. Grace Ji-Sun Kim will give a talk entitled "Global Spirit" on Monday, June 17 at 7:30pm in room 332, St. Andrew's College. Wine & Cheese to follow. All are welcome, free of charge.
Grace Ji-Sun Kim is a Korean-Canadian, Presbyterian, and feminist theologian. Her academic work focuses on feminist and post-colonial theology, and the experience of Asian-North Americans.
The 2013 conference of the North American Academy of Ecumenists will be held September 27-29 in Chicago, Illinois
The Emerging Face of Being One: Exploring Various Models of Christian Unity
• Meeting at the Churchwide Office of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America • Lodging at the Chicago Marriott O'Hare Airport • More information will be forthcoming
Recently, Jonathan Dudley has argued that Creationists have “abandoned a central commitment of orthodox Christianity.” You can read Dudley’s commentary on Huffington Post. Raised in Evangelicalism, Dudley is the author of Broken Words: The Abuse of Science and Faith in American Politics. He is a graduate of Yale Divinity School and currently an MD student at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine. In addition to the Huffington Post, he has also written for CNN, Salon.com, Religion Dispatches, AlterNet, and the Yale Daily News.
Dudley’s argument is simple. Until the modern controversy among Fundamentalist Evangelicals over creation and evolution, Christianity has always held to a belief that the natural world is a revelation of God. Implicit in the doctrine of creation is the understanding that God is revealed by God’s works. Good science is that which seeks knowledge from the natural world encountered by humanity. As Dudley reminds us: “Augustine castigated those who made the Bible teach bad science, John Calvin argued that Genesis reflects a commoner’s view of the physical world, and the Belgic confession likened scripture and nature to two books written by the same author.” Christians are therefore bound to accept the best science of our day. Charles Hodge, one of the greatest Evangelical theologians, insisted “Nature is as truly a revelation of God as the Bible; and we only interpret the Word of God by the Word of God when we interpret the Bible by science.” In other words, the use of reason is essential to make sense of God’s revelation, whether in scripture or the natural world. Pope John Paul II said as much in his encyclical Fides et Ratio. Dudley’s conclusion, however, is somewhat more pointed: “Christians must accept sound science, not because they don’t believe God created the world, but precisely because they do.”
Dudley argues that those who reject modern scientific study of biology and human evolution “might as well rip dozens of pages out of their Bibles.” If nature is God’s revelation, then rejecting the evidence from the study of nature is akin to ignoring the study of scripture. It is for this reason that Dudley argues that Creationists have led us “astray on questions ranging from the value of stem cell research to the etiology of homosexuality to the causes of global warming. They’ve also abandoned a central commitment of orthodox Christianity.”
Buddhist-Christian encounter to explore new mode of dialogue
May 21, 2013
An upcoming World Council of Churches (WCC) consultation in Bangkok will attempt a distinctive mode of inter-religious dialogue.
In collaboration with the Christian Conference of Asia and organized by the WCC unit on Inter-religious Dialogue and Cooperation an “interface” of 25 Buddhists and Christians will take place 27 to 31 May in Bangkok, Thailand, and center on themes of life, justice and peace, central elements in the WCC 10th Assembly theme.
“Today’s multi-religious environment does not just provide Christians with the ‘context for’ engaging in the pursuit of life, justice and peace; rather it opens the possibility of ‘collaboration with’ people from other faiths who are already engaged in such pursuits,” said Peniel Rajkumar, programme executive in the WCC’s inter-religious dialogue unit.
Read more ...À suivre ...
Churches from Lutheran and Reformed traditions unite
May 14, 2013
Two member churches of the World Council of Churches (WCC) from Reformed and Lutheran traditions have united to become the United Protestant Church of France (L’Église Protestante Unie de France). The merger of the Reformed Church of France (L’Église Réformée de France) and the Evangelical Lutheran Church of France (L’Église Évangélique Luthérienne de France) was celebrated at a joint national synod from 8 to 12 May in Lyon, France. The synod adopted revised texts for the constitution and rules of the new church. The revisions reflect inputs gathered from parishes in 2011. Public education and a communication campaign have been accompanying the merger process. WCC general secretary Rev. Dr Olav Fykse Tveit, who attended the celebration in Lyon, praised the efforts of both churches in creating one transformative structure. He said that this undertaking “reminds us that the unity to which we are called in Christ can be hard work as well as joyful. For many of us in places far away from France your union gives hope that our own work may also bear fruit.”
Read more ...À suivre ...
Rock the Bible for 30 days in June
May 11, 2013
30 days + 30 amazing United Church leaders and over a dozen posts by special guests (Shane Claiborne, Lois Wilson, Dennis Gruending, Donna Sinclair, Fulata Lusungu Moyo, Gary Paterson (the UCC Moderator) and more…) = one of the coolest, free (yep-free) social media based Bible studies ever. For the whole month of June, join spiritual seekers coast to coast to rock the Bible from various perspectives and have a rockin’ time doing it. Get ready! Join the Facebook Group “Rock The Bible” today.
Read more ...À suivre ...
Pope Tawadros II and Pope Francis meet in Rome
May 10, 2013
The visit of Tawadros II, Pope of Alexandria and Patriarch of the See of St. Mark, “strengthens the bonds of friendship and brotherhood that already exist between the See of Peter and the See of Mark, heir to an inestimable heritage of martyrs, theologians, holy monks, and faithful disciples of Christ, who have borne witness to the Gospel from generation to generation, often in situations of great adversity,” said Pope Francis on receiving the head of the Coptic Orthodox Church of Egypt this morning. The pontiff remarked on the memorable meeting that took place, 40 years ago, between the predecessors of both, Pope Paul VI and Pope Shenouda III, which united them “in an embrace of peace and fraternity, after centuries of mutual distance.”
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Lutherans and Roman Catholics jointly tell the Reformation story
May 8, 2013
For the first time, Lutherans and Roman Catholics at the global level have worked together to tell the story of the Reformation as part of their commitment to deepen Christian unity.
The publication From Conflict to Communion will be published this month by the Lutheran – Roman Catholic Commission on Unity. The commission is mandated by The Lutheran World Federation (LWF) and the Vatican’s Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity (PCPCU) to facilitate the global ecumenical dialogue between the two Christian World Communions.
LWF Assistant General Secretary for Ecumenical Relations Rev. Dr Kaisamari Hintikka said the publication From Conflict to Communion: Lutheran–Roman Catholic Common Commemoration of the Reformation in 2017 contributes to strengthening the commitment to work for the visible unity of the Church. It will be presented to the LWF Council at its meeting this June.
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ARCIC meeting in Brazil makes progress on joint statement
May 8, 2013
Catholic and Anglican ecumenical experts meeting in Rio de Janeiro have made progress towards their goal of a common statement on relations between the local and universal Church. This third meeting of the Anglican-Roman Catholic International Commission (ARCIC III) has also been exploring the ways in which both communities make decisions regarding moral and ethical issues. During the week-long meeting which concluded on Monday, participants met with local Anglican and Catholic leaders to find out about local ecumenical initiatives. They spent a day in the ‘Cidade de Deus’ or City of God, one of the many slum areas around Rio de Janeiro, where the churches are working closely with police and other civic authorities to provide services and support community development.Members of the Commission described the meeting as a hope filled encounter and plan to hold the next ARCIC III session from May 12th to 20th, 2014.
Ecumenical bookstore Suggestions for your ecumenical & interreligious libraryLibrairie œcuménique Suggestions pour votre bibliothèque œcuménique et interreligieux
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