WCC Welcomes Church Reconciliation

World Council of Churches (WCC) General Secretary Rev Dr Samuel Kobia has welcomed a historic achievement, as he testified the successfully culminated "process of healing and reconciliation" that involved two of the Council's founding members.

Through an agreement signed on Friday 13 July 2007 in Cairo, Egypt, and announced this week by the press office of the Armenian Catholicosate of Cilicia, the Coptic Orthodox Church and the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church have "solemnly declared their unity of faith, their commitment to common witness and their readiness to deepen and expand collaboration, leaving behind more than two decades of tensions," Kobia wrote.

Kobia affirmed that the event confirms that "true reconciliation among churches is possible".

He sent the letter to the heads of both churches, Pope Shenouda III, Pope of Alexandria and Patriarch of All Africa and Abune Paulos, Patriarch and Catholicos of Ethiopia and Archbishop of Axum, as well as to Catholicos Aram I, Catholicos of the Armenian Apostolic Church (See of Cilicia), who played an instrumental role as mediator.

The three church heads involved are "well known to the WCC fellowship of member churches as outstanding ecumenical leaders", the letter from Kobia says.

Pope Shenouda III served as one of the WCC presidents from 1991-1998; Abune Paulos currently serves as one of the WCC presidents, having been elected in 2006. And Catholicos Aram I served as the WCC central committee moderator for two terms from 1991-2006.

The three churches belong to the Oriental Orthodox family, which also includes the Syrian, Indian and Eritrean churches. These churches have worldwide diaspora and are active in the ecumenical movement.