"Do not be afraid; for see - I am bringing you good news of great joy for all the people..." (Luke 2.10)
St Luke recounts the story of the heavenly host of angels who announced the birth of Jesus to shepherds in the fields near Bethlehem; it was to this group of people sleeping rough with the animals that the angels of light, joy and beauty first announced the frightening but great and good news: "A saviour is born..., rejoice, rejoice!".So the shepherds left the hillside and visited the baby born amongst the animals in a stable.
And then, Luke tells us, they made known to others what they had seen, and all who heard them were amazed at what the shepherds said. Amazed, no doubt, because it was shepherds, very ordinary folk, bringing this good news; shepherds, despised and excluded by their own society because they looked after animals and slept rough in the fields.
But the shepherds have been transformed; they become messengers, they become "angels", for the original meaning of the word "angel" is messenger.
Excluded by that ancient society, the shepherds in Luke's Gospel speak to us across the centuries and into our own time of the many people we exclude in our societies today.
The shepherds do not change their appearance but they do become angels. Their encounter with Jesus profoundly transformed them. They were filled with a message of hope and joy and truth. These excluded, impure shepherds are truly transformed into angels. They shared their news, people in the town listened to them, heard the message and knew that things had changed ... and that ancient society in Bethlehem and the whole of human history were transformed by the encounter of the shepherds.
"God, in your grace, transform the world" was the prayerful theme of the WCC Assembly that took place this year in Porto Alegre in Brazil. Gathered together from across the world, people from the WCC's 348 member churches shared their stories - in the plenaries, at the assembly Mutirão, in the theological café, through music, dance, encounter and prayer.
The Assembly heard powerful stories from many different messengers. Many spoke of the hope but also the challenges of peace. It heard a challenging presentation on the tragic and violent situation in Northern Uganda. The Assembly heard how difficult and yet essential it is to protect children from the scourge of war. Essential because ensuring protection for children and investing in their education and development is among the most important and effective means for building durable peace and justice in society.
As we left Porto Alegre, so our prayers for the transformation of the world through God's grace have continued, as has the witness of churches in situations of conflict. An ecumenical delegation visited Lebanon, Palestine and Israel in August to show solidarity with the churches and people during the armed conflict in that region. The WCC continues to support the African churches' long-term commitment to peace in Sudan and to bring the situation of the peoples there, especially in Darfur, to the attention of our constituency and the world media. At our recent central committee meeting in Geneva, we again expressed concern at the extra-judicial killings in the Philippines of church leaders who speak out for justice.












