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Globaler Dialog in Südafrika: Krise als Chance für eine Bewegung für soziale Gerechtigkeit
Mohau Pheko: current crisis is ''a spectacular failure'' of the current system
“We have to smash the current paradigm so that it does not have roots and legs to rise again,” Pheko told the group of nearly 60 people from 23 countries who are meeting to focus on what churches can do to address inequalities in the global economic system.
The event, which organizers call a global dialogue, focuses on economic justice and concern for the earth’s ecology. Organized by the World Alliance of Reformed Churches, the consultation builds on the organization’s statement on global economic justice, known as the Accra Confession.
The statement, issued in 2004 during WARC’s global assembly in Accra, Ghana, declares “economic systems are a matter of life or death” and says “the policy of unlimited growth among industrialized countries and the drive for profit of transnational corporations have plundered the earth and severely damaged the environment”.
Pheko, an advisor to governments and trade organizations, told delegates the need for change is urgent, especially in Africa where there is not the money to weather the ill effects of the crisis due to cuts made as part of austerity programmes imposed by the International Monetary Fund.
Saying it is time to act now, Pheko calls for advocates of change to “crystallize” forms of protest already underway such as service delivery protests in South Africa and food protests elsewhere: “The streets already know the issues; we have to listen to the streets.”
The Accra Confession continues to spur action and debate among churches on how they can interpret and respond to the impact of the current global economic model. The dialogue in Johannesburg brings together churches whose understandings differ in order to seek their input in charting how the organization can continue to address economic and environmental issues in the future.
In addressing those currents of concern, WARC has published a guide to the Accra Confession that points to the declaration’s importance to Christian ethics in the contemporary world.
Choose Life, Act in Hope, authored by Puleng LenkaBula, a South African academic from the University of South Africa (UNISA), was launched Friday as part of the programme of the Global Dialogue.
Clifton Kirkpatrick, WARC’s president, calls the book “a wake-up call to Christians not only in Africa, but also around the world, to the fundamental ethical calling of the Christian faith in our time.”
Describing it as “part history, part theological vision, and part a call for action,” Kirkpatrick says, “Puleng LenkaBula articulately expresses why this covenant for justice in the economy and the earth is the central commitment of the World Alliance of Reformed Churches.
The study resource offers questions for discussion at the end of each chapter and encourages WARC members to popularize the Accra Confession and find ways to apply it in daily life.
“I enthusiastically recommend this book to every Christian who seeks to faithfully follow Christ in our world today,” says Kirkpatrick.
In her comments about the book, LenkaBula compares the current situation with that of the
“The lived reality for many African peoples and effects of the empire are still evident in structures and or relationships between
LenkaBula, who teaches courses on social, political, feminist and economic in the Department of Systematic Theology and Ethics at UNISA, focuses her research on economy, ecology and ethics, particularly the areas of the land, property, and intellectual property rights.
The Global Dialogue event concludes today (7. September).
For more information on the Accra Confession, including the full text, see:
http://www.warc.ch/documents/ACCRA_Pamphlet.pdf
Barbara Schenck
Der GEKE focus 6 (2/09) jetzt im Internet
Thomas Flügge, GEKE
CH/Graubünden: Ein Prozent Kirchensteuern gegen die Armut
19.06.2009 RNA/comm. / GEKE-Newsletter
Erklärung der GEKE: Freiheit verantworten. Europa und die Kirchen 20 Jahre nach dem Fall des Eisernen Vorhangs
Wien/Bern, 24. Juni 2009 / Thomas Flügge (Pressesprecher)
Moderator der Presbyterian Church of Korea (PCK) für Abgabe eines ökumenischen Zehnten
Pressemitteilung des Reformierten Weltbundes, 5. Juni 2009
Südafrika begrüßt Entscheidung der Reformed Church of America Rassismus als Sünde zu bekennen und das Belhar Bekenntnis anzuerkennen
WARC, 9. Juni 2009
Neue Reformierte Bewegung will Ortsgemeinden für weltweite Verbindungen öffnen
WARC, 4. Juni 2009
Rechtsradikale im Europaparlament schaden den Menschen in Europa
Pressemitteilung der GEKE, Thomas Flügge, Wien/Bern, 9. Juni 2009
Reformierter Weltbund: Barmer Theologische Erklärung weltweit maßgebendes Beispiel
Pressemitteilung des Reformierten Weltbundes
Reformierte Christen weltweit prägen Genfs Stadtbild anlässlich der Calvinfeiern
Pressemitteilung des Reformierten Weltbundes (RWB)
Reformed church Christians propose sacramental union
Pressemitteilung des Reformierten Weltbundes (RWB) / WARC