Week of Prayer focuses on commonalities of faith.The annual Week of Prayer for Christian Unity The Week of Prayer for Christian Unity is an international Christian ecumenical observance kept annually between 18 January and 25 January. It is actually an octave, that is, an observance lasting eight days. is fast approaching and Canadian parishes of all denominations have no shortage of resources to help them celebrate. The Canadian week (each country is invited to set its own dates), Jan. 23 - 30, has as its theme Gathered in Christ/Rassembles dans le Christ. As it has done for about 20 years, the Years, The the seven decades of Eleanor Pargiter’s life. [Br. Lit.: Benét, 1109] See : Time Canadian Council of Churches The Canadian Council of Churches/Le conseil canadien des églises is an ecumenical Christian forum of churches in Canada. It was founded on 27 September 1944 at Yorkminster Baptist Church in Toronto, Ontario. is offering a resource kit to individuals and parishes. A CCC CCC A very speculative grade assigned to a debt obligation by a rating agency. Such a rating indicates default or considerable doubt that interest will be paid or principal repaid. Also called Caa. background information Web page (<http://www.web.net/~ccchurch/cfw-week2000.html>) explains that the excerpt from Ephesians "encourages us to reflect on the very heart of our faith, on all that we have in common notwithstanding our divisions. Eileen Scully, associate secretary for faith and witness for the CCC and an Anglican, said a working group began developing its own resource kit years ago at the suggestion of the World Council of Churches, which backs the worldwide celebration and provides resources. "What this working group in Canada does is wildly expand those resources. We have some additional materials; for example, the WCC WCC n abbr (= World Council of Churches) → COE m (Conseil œcuménique des Églises) WCC n abbr (= World Council of Churches) → Weltkirchenrat m doesn't have anything for youth or any intergenerational in·ter·gen·er·a·tion·al adj. Being or occurring between generations: "These social-insurance programs are intergenerational and all stuff, so we provide some of that." A worldwide, ecumenical event, the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity began on a smaller scale in 1908 in an Episcopal church in Graymoor, N.Y. Originally christened the Church Unity Week, it was one priest's attempt at Anglican and Roman Catholic reunion. In 1926 it was proposed that more Christian churches pray together for unity. Nine years later, a Roman Catholic priest in France campaigned for a Universal Week of Prayer for Christian Unity; in the mid-1960s, the Second Vatican Council Noun 1. Second Vatican Council - the Vatican Council in 1962-1965 that abandoned the universal Latin liturgy and acknowledged ecumenism and made other reforms Vatican II Vatican Council - each of two councils of the Roman Catholic Church declared prayer the "soul of the ecumenical movement" and encouraged the observance of the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity. Canadians have recognized the week in various ways, including churches taking turns holding an ecumenical service each night of the week. In one testimonial on the CCC's Web site, an Edmontonian says the activities have brought the denominations there closer. "We have gone beyond doing ecumenical things to being ecumenical people." |
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