NEWS – European Methodists Call for Vaccine Equity

As members of the European Commission on Mission* and the European Methodist Council **, we stand in united solidarity to call for Vaccine Equity in the global response to Covid-19. As leaders, and representatives of Church mission boards and development agencies, our focus is to serve, learn from and support partners – churches, organisations and individuals who live and work in communities most affected by poverty in lower-income countries around the world. We passionately believe that it is imperative that governments, pharmaceutical companies, global and local health authorities take tangible action to more equitably distribute, and give access to, COVID-19 vaccinations and the supplies needed to distribute them.

It is vital that the richest countries in the world end any vaccine hoarding and nationalism that is limiting supplies to majority world countries. Whilst initial commitments are a good start, there is much more we can do and give to share essential resources for effective response with the wider world, in the midst of this pandemic and in the years to come as we learn to live with this virus. This equitable distribution needs to be immediate to ensure that lives are saved in every country of the world and to remove the delays and obstructions that are preventing roll out in lower-income countries.

This commitment to equity and shared resource is necessary and relevant not only for this moment in time, but for all health and economic crises. Far too often, we see that the poorest are at the ‘back of the line’ in our global health priorities. The end of this injustice is long overdue and this pandemic gives us an opportunity to chart a new and just path, as we navigate the crises of the days and years to come.

We call on all churches and faith groups, supporters and friends of our organisations to continue to help spread factual and evidenced based messaging, to do our part to stem the prolific and harmful impact of vaccine avoidance and hesitancy caused by misinformation. It is for all of us to not only do our part in receiving the gift of this vaccine, but also to help build confidence in, and ensure access to the vaccine for every one of our neighbours around the globe.

We call for Vaccine Equity now, and for every person, leader and organisation to do their part to ensure that access for all becomes a reality in our world today.

*The European Commission on Mission is (ECOM) is a fellowship of leaders and representatives of Methodist mission boards, mission agencies and task forces, or their equivalent in Europe, as well as the General Board of Global Ministries (GBGM). ECOM is regarded as a related organisation within the European Methodist Council (EMC), and thereby reports to EMC annually.

**The European Methodist Council is a membership body for Methodist, Wesleyan and Uniting Churches across Europe who work together to develop a greater understanding of our shared challenges so that we can all be more effective in God’s mission. Read more here.

WEBINAR – Working Together in Mission – Webinar on Methodist-Salvation Army Dialogue on 22 November

The webinar is Monday, 22 November 2021 at 18:00 GMT/19:00 Rome.

Ten years after the second Salvation Army-World Methodist Council Dialogue ended, the webinar will look back to a journey of joint witness and service and explore further possibilities to be in mission together at a local, regional, national, and international level.

The webinar will feature participants from Australia, Mexico and United Kingdom who are working together in education, refugee issues, Recovery Church, and church partnerships.

The webinar will be introduced by Bishop Ivan Abrahams and General Brian Peddle and moderated by Commissioner E. Jane Paone and Bishop Rosemarie Wenner.

Key speakers are:

  • The Reverend Dr Paul Chilcote
    Director of Global Wesleyan Theology, Wesley House, Cambridge UK
  • Lt Colonel Dr Karen Shakespeare
    Chair of The Salvation Army’s International Theological Council

The webinar will be conducted in English and Spanish.

Register for the webinar at sar.my/wtim.

Download the event flyer (712 KB).

NEWS – MEOR Oversight Committee Meets, Approves Plans for 2021-2022

The oversight committee of the Methodist Ecumenical Office Rome—the MEOR Forum—met online on Monday, 25 October 2021 to review the work of the Methodist Ecumenical Office Rome in 2020-2021 and discuss plans and finances for the coming year. The meeting was planned to take place in-person in Rome, but COVID-19 pandemic travel restrictions made it impossible for all the Forum members to attend an in-person gathering.

During the director’s report, MEOR director the Reverend Matthew A. Laferty shared about the challenges and the opportunities of the COVID-19 pandemic on MEOR’s programs. He noted that the pandemic created opportunities to deepen relationships with local partners through more frequent contact due to reduced travel and less crowded schedules. The pandemic forced the director and the Forum to reimagine MEOR’s work by adding online programming like webinars.  Director Laferty also presented a work plan for 2021-2022 which focuses on developing stronger relationships with partners in Rome through relational ecumenism, increased usage of digital spaces for MEOR’s programs, and designing new seminars for 2023 when more international travel is likely to resume.

In other news, the MEOR Forum

  • Welcomed the Revd Michaela Youngson, assistant conference secretary and connexional ecumenical officer of the Methodist Church in Britain, who succeeded the Revd Ruth Gee as a new Forum member.
  • Formally removed TheWesley hospitality group from the MEOR partnership due to the closure and sale of their Rome operations.
  • Re-elected Bishop Ivan Abrahams, general secretary of the World Methodist Council, and elected the Revd Michaela Youngson as the Forum co-chairs.
  • Reviewed the 2021-2022 budget of approximately €145,000 and discussed MEOR’s long-term financial sustainability.
  • Authorized a plan which will eventually lead to the formation of a new legal non-profit corporation in Italy to better facilitate MEOR’s business and financial transactions.
  • Postponed discussion of proposals for more relational governance to the Forum’s next meeting in the spring.

The Forum plans to meet in the spring with an in-person gathering in Rome.

The Methodist Ecumenical Office Rome is the presence of the World Methodist Council in Rome to promote ecumenical dialogue, joint action for peace and justice, payer and reflection, and hospitality. MEOR is a unique partnership of the World Methodist Council with the European Methodist Council, the Methodist Church in Britain, the Methodist Churches in Italy, and The United Methodist Church.

DIALOGUE – MEOR Director Participates in Opening of Synod on Synodality

The Rev. Matthew A. Laferty, director of the Methodist Ecumenical Office Rome, was one of three fraternal delegates (i.e., delegates from non-Catholic churches) to participate in the opening of the Synod of Bishops on 9-10 October in the Vatican City State. In this historic moment, Pope Francis is leading an intentional, worldwide effort to reshape the Roman Catholic Church into a listening church which is discerning the Holy Spirit’s leading for the future.

According to prepartory documents:

‘Synod’ is an ancient and venerable word in the Tradition of the Church, whose meaning draws on the deepest themes of Revelation […] It indicates the path along which the People of God walk together. Equally, it refers to the Lord Jesus, who presents Himself as ‘the way, the truth and the life’ (Jn 14,6), and to the fact that Christians, His followers, were originally called ‘followers of the Way’ (cf. Acts 9,2; 19,9.23; 22,4; 24,14.22).

First and foremost, synodality denotes the particular style that qualifies the life and mission of the Church, expressing her nature as the People of God journeying together and gathering in assembly, summoned by the Lord Jesus in the power of the Holy Spirit to proclaim the Gospel. Synodality ought to be expressed in the Church’s ordinary way of living and working.

Vademecum for the Synod on Synodality, §1.2

The opening of the synod launches a two-year process to cultivate a synodal church that “walks forward in communion to pursue a common mission through the participation of each and every one of her members. The objective of this Synodal Process is not to provide a temporary or one-time experience of synodality, but rather to provide an opportunity for the entire People of God to discern together how to move forward on the path towards being a more synodal Church in the long-term” (§1.3).

During the small group meetings, Rev. Laferty was able to share about Methodist theologies of the Holy Spirit, priesthood of all believers, Christian conferencing, and the role of laity.

Pope Francis in his homily for the Mass opening the synodal process called the Catholic church to encounter, listen, and discern. He said, “Celebrating a Synod means walking on the same road, walking together.  Let us look at Jesus.  First, he encounters the rich man on the road; he then listens to his questions, and finally he helps him discern what he must do to inherit eternal life.  Encounter, listen and discern.” He went on to say, “The Spirit asks us to listen to the questions, concerns and hopes of every Church, people and nation.  And to listen to the world, to the challenges and changes that it sets before us.  Let us not soundproof our hearts; let us not remain barricaded in our certainties.  So often our certainties can make us closed.  Let us listen to one another.” In further reflection, he said, “[the word of God] summons us to discernment and it brings light to that process.  It guides the Synod, preventing it from becoming a Church convention, a study group or a political gathering, a parliament, but rather a grace-filled event, a process of healing guided by the Spirit.”

Go to www.synod.va to learn about the synodal process.

Photo credit: Matthew Laferty, 9 October 2021