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WCC Head Testifies China's Contribution to Ecumenism as Tour Commences

The contribution of Chinese Christians to the worldwide ecumenical movement was highlighted yesterday in Shanghai, as the General Secretary of the World Council of Churches (WCC), Rev Dr Samuel Kobia, commenced a weeklong visit to China.

by Jennifer Gold
Posted: Friday, November 17, 2006, 7:26 (GMT)
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The contribution of Chinese Christians to the worldwide ecumenical movement was highlighted yesterday in Shanghai, as the General Secretary of the World Council of Churches (WCC), Rev Dr Samuel Kobia, commenced a weeklong visit to China.

"Without the involvement of the Chinese church in the ecumenical movement and the WCC in particular, we would be a much poorer fellowship. This is because you represent something unique that is very much needed in the ecumenical movement today. As a post-denominational church, you are in a class of your own, and we want to learn more from you," Kobia said.

"In the past, the Chinese Church was called a foreign religion. Since the 1950s, however, we have adopted the 'three-self' principle of self-support, self-government and self-propagation. But this does not mean we want to be self-isolated," said the Rev. Cao Shengjie, president of the China Christian Council (CCC), in welcoming the WCC's delegation.

In his address, Kobia praised the involvement of the Chinese church in the ecumenical movement long before the WCC was founded, recalling that the president of Nanjing Seminary, C. Y. Cheng, spoke at the Edinburgh mission conference in 1910.

In addition, one of the first WCC presidents elected in 1948 at the founding Amsterdam assembly was J. C. Chao.

"Though the Chinese culture is renowned for its ancient history, now when we think about Chinese Christians, we think about the future, because more and more Christians are realising that if we are to live the prayer of Jesus Christ that all should be one, then we need to be post-denominational in character," he stated.

Presbyter Ji Jianhong, chairperson of the National Committee of Three-Self Patriotic Movement of the Protestant Churches in China, expressed appreciation for Kobia's "recognition of the Three-Self principle that characterises the way Christians relate in China".

"It is not anything Chinese Christians found through their own abilities, but rather we believe this way of being in fellowship with one another was given to us as a gift of God, inspired by the Holy Spirit. It is now for us to be obedient to the guidance of the Holy Spirit as we go forward together, working towards the unity which is the gift of being one in Christ while also recognising our diversity," Ji Jianhong said.

The festive reception and dinner offered to the WCC delegation included a welcoming party of thirty-five distinguished leaders and staff of the CCC and the TSPM, which took place at their new headquarters at the historic "Red Brick" Holy Trinity Church on Shanghai's Jinjiang Road.



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