The event that stood out from all the others in his colourful programme, Kobia said, was the 112th Maramon Convention in Kerala. For the WCC general secretary, the nearly three days in Maramon were "a unique experience that will remain in my memory for a long time. I had never seen anything like this before," Kobia said of the event organized annually by the Mission and Evangelism wing of the Mar Thoma Syrian Church of Malabar, one of the WCC's member churches in India.
In fact, moved by the rapt attention paid by the 100,000 Christians and others patiently squatting under a pandal of coconut leaves on the dry sandbed of the river Pampa near the village of Maramon, Kobia discarded the scholarly sermon he had prepared for the convention's valedictory session on Sunday 18 February. "They were looking for a pastoral message. So I decided to address them in a pastoral manner," he said.
Kobia preached to the gathering about encountering Jesus. "One who has not encountered Jesus will look at the cross as a mark of disgrace, but when one encounters him, the cross becomes a symbol of salvation," he pointed out.
Kobia compared the world - where "hatred is preached in the name of religion", violence against women and children is rampant, people living with HIV and AIDS are discriminated against, and there is "mountain of wealth amid poverty" - with a house in flames. "The world is burning," Kobia said, "and God is looking for those who can save it."
After Maramon, Kobia travelled on 19 February to Kottayam, home to one of the broadest ranges of Christian traditions in India, where he was welcomed at an ecumenical reception by the Kerala Council of Churches (KCC), a forum of 13 Orthodox and Protestant churches chaired by Mar Thoma Bishop Isaac Mar Philoxinos.
Among the bishops and lay Christian leaders of various denominations present, Roman Catholic Archbishop Mathew Moolakkat, who heads the Nilackal Ecumenical Trust, remarked that "We are all called to work together, and when we work together, it will move us towards greater unity.
A common refrain in Kobia's addresses at the Church of South India, at the Lutheran Gurukul theological College in Chennai and at the SCM assembly and CISRS golden jubilee in Bangalore was the continued discrimination against Dalits - the members of India's lower castes, formerly known as "untouchables".
"South Africa has abolished apartheid, and it is a sin to practise it in India in the 21st century," exclaimed Kobia in his address at the CISRS, referring to the plight of the Dalits in India's caste-ridden society.
Earlier on, Kobia had expressed his concern for the ostracized Dalits in his address at the Lutheran Gurukul Theological College, also attended by officials of the National Council of Churches in India, grouping together 29 Orthodox and Protestant churches.
"Oikoumene is a movement for the affirmation of life - a movement to uphold the sanctity, integrity and dignity of all God's people," he pointed out. "The ecumenical movement must therefore embrace the identity of the excluded and despised."
Though churches have been instrumental in bringing about positive changes in India, Kobia suggested that they "need to be constantly on the move, open to change, and play a creative part in shaping the world in ways that make sense to the last and the least".













