Christian Leaders Resolve to Work Together to Foster Unity in India
ICC Note:
Christian leaders in India have resolved to work together to foster greater unity. In recent years, attacks on Christians and their places of worship has increased significantly. Many cite the rise of the Hindu nationalist BJP to the government’s center as a big reason for this increase. In an effort to counter this violence, Christians in India from all denominational backgrounds are calling for unity and resource sharing. Will this unity help curb the increasing persecution felt by India’s Christians?
01/17/2017 India (Vatican Radio) – Catholic and Protestant leaders from India and abroad have resolved to share resources and cooperate in evangelization work in a bid to foster ecumenism and counter anti-Christian harassment in the country. Some 3,600 leaders from India and another 260 from abroad on Sunday concluded a 4-day meeting in Damoh, a town in central India’s Madhya Pradesh state, ahead of the worldwide Week of Prayer for Christian Unity, Jan. 18-25.
The annual gathering, 19th in a series, was jointly organized by a collection of groups called the International Conference on Missions and Global Gathering. It assumes significance in the background of increasing anti-Christian incidents in the country from Hindu nationalist groups. Over the last several years, Christian leaders across India have been reporting of their churches being attacked, pastors beaten up and Christian villages threatened with social boycott to force them to abandon their faith.
Ajai Lall, president of the India Christian Mission, and chief organizer of the program said delegates have agreed to “share our resources and talents” and “it will not only multiply but also fetch greater good to the suffering humanity” and to create a just society to exploitation.
Church leaders speaking in a special session agreed to forge greater unity among churches in Asia by bridging their differences and together facing challenges, he said. Anti-Christian incidents have increased ever since the pro-Hindu nationalist party Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) came to power in New Delhi two years ago as extremist Hindu groups took the victory as a mandate to press for a Hindu-only India.
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