Christian Leaders Present Communiqué
on Poverty Reduction Action to United Action Leaders
For immediate release
Sept. 13, 2005
Contact Information:
Sylvia Soon, Communications Coordinator
E-mail: ssoon@worldevangelical.org
Direct Line: 604.838-3922
WEA Administrative Office Mail:
MIP Box 3740 Markham, Ontario L3R 5J1 Canada
Telephone: 905.752.2164
Toll-free North America: 1.866.823.3073
Fax: 905.479.4742
Email: info@worldevangelical.org
Website: http://worldevangelicalalliance.com
Ahead of the historic United Nations
World Summit, senior leaders of the World Evangelical
Alliance met with top representatives from other Christian
communions at the national cathedral in Washington
D.C.
“The two main goals of the consultation
were to develop a communiqué from the broadest
Christian representation in history on the issue of
poverty and to deepen the understating of how the
Christian community can be more actively involved
in halving poverty by 2015,” said Geoff Tunnicliffe,
International Director of the World Evangelical Alliance.
Tunnicliffe, along with Michael Smitheram,
International Coordinator of the Micah Challenge,
and Ndaba Mazabane, the Chair of the WEA International
Council, joined other senior church officials for
the “Consultation of Religious Leaders on Global
Poverty,” Monday, Sept. 12, during which they
drafted the “Call to Partnership” communiqué.
“We believe that God calls us
to place people struggling with poverty at the center
of our concern,” the statement notes.
The communiqué also took note
of the “urgency of the needs of the most vulnerable,”
and called upon government to: create a just society,
build partnerships, promote accountability and transparency,
cancel debt, increase development assistance, promote
trade justice, and strengthen security, in keeping
with the U.N.’s Millennium Development Goals.
“We believe the Millennium Development
Goals can be achieved by 2015,” it states. “We
commit ourselves to work as partners with all who
work to achieve a more just and peaceful world.”
The representatives then traveled
to New York to present their communiqué to
the U.N. General Assembly the day before the World
Leadership Summit.
“It was warmly received by top
officials,” said Rev. Njongonkulu Ndungane,
one of the conveners of the consultation.
However, the delegates recognized
that it is not the sole responsibility of governments
to respond to the needs of the poor.
“We as the church must go beyond
words to action and fulfill the biblical mandate of
taking poverty seriously,” said Mazabane.
Tunnicliffe agreed: “If our
vast network of three million churches around the
world embraced this urgent call, we can achieve a
more just and peaceful world.”
The following is the full text of the “Call
to Partnership” communiqué:
A CALL TO PARTNERSHIP
COMMUNIQUE FROM THE CONSULTATION
OF RELIGIOUS LEADERS ON GLOBAL POVERTY
September 13, 2005
PREAMBLE
At the urgent call of Church leaders
in the southern hemisphere, we came together at Washington
National Cathedral as Christian leaders from diverse
traditions and places, both rich and poor, South and
North, united in a common concern for those of us
living in poverty. We see their faces; we hear their
voices; they are a part of us, and we are a part of
them.
As the United Nations reaches its
60th anniversary, we give thanks for its work in peacemaking
and global reconciliation, particularly the historic
commitment to eradicate poverty in the Millennium
Declaration of 2000. Five years have passed, and despite
this triumph of principle, there has been a failure
in practice. In this communiqué, we offer our
partnership to the leaders gathered at the World Summit
at the United Nations in building a global movement
to make real the promises of the Millennium Development
Goals (MDGs) as a crucial step toward a more just
world for all God’s children.
DECLARATION
We believe that God calls us to place
people struggling with poverty at the center of our
concern. Globalization has brought unprecedented economic
growth. At the same time, one-sixth of the world’s
people still fight daily for survival under the crushing
burden of extreme poverty. The increasing concentration
of wealth in our world, while so many suffer, is a
scandal that impoverishes us all.
We believe that the spirit of partnership
between rich and poor, exemplified in the MDGs, is
a way the world can address poverty in all its dimensions.
In particular, we support the Goal of a “global
partnership for development” and believe that
the Churches can make a unique contribution to that
partnership.
We believe that our communities of
faith, representing millions of people and sponsoring
numerous human-development initiatives, can provide
new models for advancing a global movement against
poverty. The Churches have a vast network of institutions,
trusted relationships with millions of people, and
access to countless local communities, all rich resources
for development.
CALL TO GOVERNMENTS
In light of the urgency of the needs
of the most vulnerable, we call upon governments to
take the following actions:
1. Create a Just Society: We recognize
that poverty cannot be uncoupled from structures of
injustice in the world. We call upon governments to
protect human life, defend human rights, foster just
economies, and create conditions in which all people
can fulfill their human potential.
1. Build Partnerships: In many countries
productive partnerships have been established between
government and Churches, but more possibilities lie
ahead. We call on governments to facilitate partnerships
with Churches and religious organizations so that
the poor become protagonists in their own destinies.
1. Promote accountability and transparency:
Corruption and a lack of transparency and accountability
rob the poor of significant resources and pose an
obstacle to development in many countries. We know
that nations and international institutions have undertaken
anti-corruption initiatives; we commend these and
urge that far greater resources be devoted to their
implementation.
1. Cancel Debt: We commend this summer’s
debt cancellation agreement of the G-8 as a significant
advance, and urge world leaders to build upon this
agreement. Too many nations still labor under a burden
of debt that does not allow them to invest in the
health, education, and economic development of their
peoples. We call upon creditor nations and international
institutions to cancel the remaining debt of all nations
struggling with extreme poverty.
1. Increase Development Assistance:
We commend those countries that have increased development
assistance in response to the Millennium Declaration
and the Monterrey Consensus. We challenge all nations
to fulfill the commitments they have made to increase
development assistance dramatically.
1. Promote Trade Justice: Too little
progress has been made in making the world’s
trade systems fair and just for developing countries
and peoples. We call upon the nations of the world
to level the playing field for trade.
1. Security: In too many regions and
countries, armed conflict exacerbates extreme poverty,
which in turn sows the seeds of future conflicts.
We call upon the leaders of nations to protect innocent
populations, reduce the flow of arms, and support
peace building.
A CALL TO THE CHURCH
In making these calls to governments,
we know that the Churches themselves must be active
partners in the work of development and building a
just world economy. We affirm the work of countless
Church communities and faith-based relief and development
agencies that work for and with those living in extreme
poverty. At its best, this work acknowledges the leadership
of persons in poverty, engages poor communities as
partners in human development, moves us to work across
denominational and faith lines, and brings us into
productive partnerships with governments and the private
sector.
Our call to the churches builds upon
our strengths. At the same time, we humbly recognize
our weaknesses. As Christian leaders we challenge
our own Churches to pursue partnerships with governments,
international organizations, civil society, and across
confessional lines. Without new strategic partnerships,
the world will fail to fulfill the aspirations of
the Millennium Declaration.
We encourage the Churches to deepen
and intensify efforts to promote transparency and
accountability, both in their own development work
and in the work of their governments. Locally rooted
church communities, in collaboration with civil society,
can help governments monitor distribution of resources
and evaluate results.
OUR HOPE AND COMMITMENT
In faith and obedience to God, and
in humility, we are compelled to be agents of hope,
doers of justice, and lovers of kindness. We believe
the Millennium Development Goals can be achieved by
2015. These targets of basic material well-being can
only be reached in the context of peace, human rights,
environmental sustainability, and gender equity.
Building a just society involves costs
and risks. We will stand with courageous political,
religious, and community leaders. We commit ourselves
to work as partners with all who work to achieve a
more just and peaceful world.
Signers of the Communique from Participants
in the Consultation of Religious Leaders on Global
Poverty
The Rt. Rev. George Leonard Carey
The Rt. Rev. John Bryson Chane
Retired Archbishop of Canterbury
Bishop of Washington
The Rev. Dr. John Chryssavgis
The Rev. Rajmund Dabrowski
Theological Advisor to the Ecumenical Patriarch on
Environmental Issues, Greek Orthodox Church
Communication Director, Seventh-Day Adventist Church
The Rev. Randolph Dales
Ms. Marie Dennis
Chairman of the Standing Commission on Anglican &
International Peace with Justice Concerns
Director, Maryknoll Office of Global Concerns
The Rev. George Freeman
The Rt. Rev. Angel Furlan
General Secretary of the World Methodist Council
Former President of Iglesia Evangelica Luterana Unida
The Rev. Canon Brian Grieves
The Most Rev. Frank Griswold
Director of Peace and Justice Ministries, ECUSA
Presiding Bishop of the Episcopal Church, USA
The Rt. Rev. Tord Harlin
The Most Rev. Andrew Hutchison
Bishop of Uppsala
Primate of the Anglican Church of Canada
Ms. Wahu Kaara
The Rev. Canon Kenneth Kearon
Ecumenical Millenium Development Goal Programme Coordinator,
AACC
Secretary General of the Anglican Communion Consultative
Council
The Very Rev. Samuel T. Lloyd
The Rev. Ndaba Mazabane
Dean of Washington National Cathedral
Chair of the World Evangelical Alliance
Dr. Esther Mombo
The Rt. Rev. Trevor Mwamba
Dean of St Paul's United Theological Seminary
Bishop of Botswana
The Most Rev. Njongonkulu Ndungane
The Rev. Canon Livingstone Ngewu
Archbishop of the Church of the Province of Southern
Africa
Rector of the College of the Transfiguration
The Rev. Dr. Ishmael Noko
The Rev. Dr. Setri Nyomi
General Secretary of the Lutheran World Federation
General Secretary of the World Alliance of Reformed
Churches
The Most Rev. Raphael S. Ndingi Mwana'a Nzeki
Dr. Jenny Te Paa
Archbishop of Nairobi
Principal of the College of Saint John the Evangelist
The Rev. Michael Perry
The Rev. Canon John L. Peterson
Consultant for Africa, Franciscans International
Director of the Center for Global Justice & Reconciliation,
Washington National Cathedral
The Rt. Rev. Luis Prado
Dr. Robert Radtke
Dean of the Theological Provincial Seminary in Porto
Alegre
President of Episcopal Relief and Development
The Rt. Rev. Theodore F. Schneider
Archdeacon Tuatagaloa-Matalavea Tai
Bishop, Evangelical Lutheran Church of America
Anglican Observer at the United Nations
Mr. Geoff Tunicliffe
International Director, World Evangelical Alliance

|