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Trading, and possession, of nuclear weapons denounced by WCC head

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  • Trading, and possession, of nuclear weapons denounced by WCC head

    Ecumenical News International, Switzerland
    Sept 22 2004

    Trading, and possession, of nuclear weapons denounced by WCC head

    Peter Kenny

    Geneva (ENI). Revelations that nuclear weapons technology have been
    traded are a scandal, but it is equally disgraceful that countries
    possessing nuclear arsenals are unwilling to renounce their use and
    are even developing terrifying, new technologies, the head of the
    World Council of Churches, Samuel Kobia said on Tuesday.

    Kobia, who is general secretary of the world church grouping, said
    that the United Nations has called on all its member states to
    observe 21 September as the International Day of Peace and the WCC
    observed it in accordance with the International Day of Prayer for
    Peace.

    "Nuclear proliferation is an outrage to all humanity," said Kobia,
    noting that "violence as the opposite of peace, as a damage to the
    image of God in us, takes many forms, including poverty.

    "Poverty degrades human dignity and the human spirit," said Kobia.
    "Indifference to poverty and to the aspirations of those who have
    been subjected to historical humiliation is as big a threat to global
    peace as terrorism."

    Nobel Peace Prize laureate Archbishop Desmond Tutu, Orthodox
    Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomeos I of Constantinople, and the head
    of the Evangelical Church in Germany Bishop Wolfgang Huber were among
    more than a dozen Christian leaders and peace-makers from all over
    the world who affirmed churches' and faith communities' work for
    peace and justice in a series of messages broadcast and Web cast
    around the world.

    Tutu said: "God weeps over God's world, aching because of conflict in
    Darfur, in Beslan, in Harare, in Colombia, in Jerusalem, in Belfast."
    The retired Anglican Archbishop of Cape Town said, God depends on
    Christians to use their "influence on the powerful to use their power
    for justice, for peace, for compassion, for gentleness, for caring,
    for sharing".

    Patriarch Bartholomeos, who has spiritual authority over the world's
    300 million Orthodox Christians said in his message: "All of the
    ideologies and convictions on the necessity and effectiveness of
    violence are wrong and are to be condemned."

    His message was backed by Aram I, Catholicos of the Armenian
    Apostolic Church and WCC central committee moderator who said: "Peace
    is an essential dimension of our Christian life and witness. Peace is
    a gift of God given to humanity through the incarnation of our Lord
    Jesus Christ. Peace is also a God-given vocation that must be
    fulfilled in obedient response to the call of God."

    :: Peace messages of church leaders Web cast on:
    www.overcomingviolence.org/peace2004
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