Saddleback Church's Aids summit kicked off Wednesday with hopes to "disturb" the hearts of those in attendance and mobilise congregations around the world to defeat the global pandemic.
The third annual Global Summit on AIDS and the Church has attracted about 1,000 people to the megachurch in Lake Forest, southern California, to learn how churches and individuals can help fight the deadly virus.
"This is the one place you can talk about Aids to your heart's content," said Kay Warren, co-host of the November 28-30 summit, according to the Orange County Register. "You're going to hear things you don't agree with and you may find you're at polar opposites with a speaker ... but we can't stop Aids unless we come together."
Warren, who founded the Aids ministry at Saddleback Church, added: "I have a goal to mess with your comfortable world. I want your heart to be seriously disturbed."
Kay Warren, wife of Saddleback's founding pastor Rick Warren, was disturbed five years ago from her comfortable life as a "white suburban mum with a minivan" when she read a magazine article that stated that more than 12 million children in Africa had been orphaned by Aids, according to Reuters.
Since then, the Warrens have launched what is thought to be the only global HIV and Aids conference built entirely around a grassroots church-based strategy.
"The Bible commands the church to care for widows and orphans," Rick Warren said Wednesday at the summit. "With 143 million orphans in the world, I'd say that we have plenty of opportunity to make good on that mandate and demonstrate the love of Christ to children who have nothing to lose but hope. And we should never discount the power of hope."
The HIV and Aids initiative at Saddleback is a key part of Rick Warren's P.E.A.C.E. plan, a humanitarian strategy launched three years ago. The goal of the worldwide effort is to mobilise one billion church members to Promote reconciliation, Equip servant leaders, Assist the poor, Care for the sick and Educate the next generation.
A session at the summit will feature a report about the P.E.A.C.E. plan progress and the lessons learned over the past three years after sending out more than 7,500 members to test the plan in 69 countries.
"One of the most exciting things about this third conference is that we actually have progress to report," Kay Warren said, according to a summit report. "The first conference was about casting a vision; the second conference was about gaining momentum; and this conference is about reporting what has worked, what has really worked well, and what still needs to be done."
During a summit press conference, Rick Warren was questioned on whether working alongside groups that oppose Christian moral values on Aids issues might require compromise.













