Anglican and Lutheran leaders will travel to Jerusalem May 15 to 21: (L-R) Archbishop Fred Hiltz, the Very Rev. Peter Wall, Bishop Michael Pryse, and Bishop Susan C. Johnson. They will be joined by Vianney (Sam) Carriere, General Synod's director of Resources for Mission and Communications and Information Resources.

Anglican, Lutheran leaders visit Jerusalem

National leaders of the Anglican Church of Canada and the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Canada will visit their counterparts in Jerusalem May 15 to 21 to discuss the development of full communion ministry in the Middle East.

Anglican and Lutheran leaders will travel to Jerusalem May 15 to 21: (L-R) Archbishop Fred Hiltz, the Very Rev. Peter Wall, Bishop Michael Pryse, and Bishop Susan C. Johnson. They will be joined by Vianney (Sam) Carriere, General Synod's director of Resources for Mission and Communications and Information Resources.
Anglican and Lutheran leaders will travel to Jerusalem May 15 to 21: (L-R) Archbishop Fred Hiltz, the Very Rev. Peter Wall, Bishop Michael Pryse, and Bishop Susan C. Johnson. They will be joined by Vianney (Sam) Carriere, General Synod’s director of Resources for Mission and Communications and Information Resources.

Archbishop Fred Hiltz (ACC) and National Bishop Susan C. Johnson (ELCIC) will describe how the Anglican-Lutheran partnership evolved in Canada and encourage Bishop Suheil Dawani (Episcopal Diocese of Jerusalem) and Bishop Munib Younan (Evangelical Lutheran Church in Jordan and the Holy Land) as they take their own steps towards a similar relationship.

The trip was first suggested by leaders of their respective international bodies, the Anglican Communion and the Lutheran World Federation.

“We know the benefit both personally and as churches of this form of deeper partnership and are excited about sharing our experiences as we have travelled this road together,” said Bishop Johnson.

“It is especially important that in Jerusalem, the birthplace of Christianity, we do all that we can to support and encourage the remaining Christian population.”

Christians are a minority in the Jerusalem region. They struggle to work towards peace with justice in Palestine and Israel. They also struggle with declining numbers as Christians emigrate elsewhere.

Joint mission work is one way to respond to their challenges. In Canada, Anglicans and Lutherans have been in a full communion partnership since 2001. This means mutual recognition of baptisms, interchangeability of clergy, and many areas of cooperative mission work, including joint advocacy against homelessness and global poverty.

In 2013 the denominations will hold their first joint national assembly in Ottawa.

Episcopalians (Anglicans) and Lutherans in the Middle East are just starting to explore the potential of such joint work. Bishop Dawani and Bishop Younan worked alongside each other as local ministers in Ramallah, Palestine. Now they have started to chart steps for larger-scale cooperation. Recently they appointed co-chairs of a joint Anglican-Lutheran Commission for their regions: the Rev. Canon John L. Peterson (Anglican) and the Rev. Sven Oppegaard (Lutheran).

Canadian Anglicans and Lutherans have longstanding, deep ties to the Middle East. Archbishop Hiltz and Bishop Johnson have both visited Jerusalem and their denominations have passed national resolutions that pledged to journey with Christians in that region through prayer and other means of support.

Recently Canadian Anglicans have started the Companions of the Diocese of Jerusalem group to raise awareness and funds for the diocese, which extends over Israel, Jordan, Lebanon, Palestine, and Syria. A companion diocese relationship is also emerging between Ottawa and Jerusalem.

Canadian Lutherans are active in the region through their partners, Canadian Lutheran World Relief and the Lutheran World Federation (LWF), which support a hospital and a vocational training centre in East Jerusalem. Bishop Younan has served as president of LWF since 2010.

With such rich and complex histories undergirding the trip, the Canadian delegation hopes that this visit will deepen a sense of joint mission for all involved.

“We’re really going there not to tell them how to do it,” said Archbishop Hiltz. “We want simply to share the Canadian story—the significant moments in our journey, some of the high points, the challenges, and the realities of what it’s like to live in full communion.”

The Canadian delegation also includes the co-chairs of the Joint Anglican Lutheran Commission the Very Rev. Peter Wall (Anglican) and Bishop Michael Pryse (Lutheran) as well as the Anglican Church of Canada’s Director of Resources for Mission and Communications and Information Resources Vianney (Sam) Carriere.


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