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Cross from El Salvador that is Christian sign of unity is dedicated at Ecumenical Centre

Cardinal Koch speaks of reconciliation and unity at the Ecumenical Centre chapel Photo Ivars Kupcis WCC18 January 2018    -   A Salvadoran Cross that is a now an icon of Christian unity was dedicated and placed in the World Council of Churches’ Chapel in Geneva, Switzerland on the first day of the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity.

The 2-metre high cross from Salvador has become known as the Lund Cross from the Swedish city where Lutherans and Roman Catholics met at the end of 2016 to commemorate the 500th Reformation anniversary.

“On behalf of the World Council of Churches, we receive this cross as a gift of communion,” said World Council of Churches (WCC) general secretary, Rev. Dr Olav Fykse Tveit at the ceremony.

“May the historical step that it symbolizes reminds us that Christ’s cross transforms our conflict into communion, and we are reconciled as one creation, joined by the one sprit of God and Creator. Behold the life-giving cross.”

A sign of continuous commitment with the one ecumenical movement the Lund Cross was created for that joint Catholic-Lutheran Commemoration of the Reformation in Lund and Malmö, Sweden, on 31 October 2016.

The week of prayer for its part is traditionally celebrated between 18-25 January, between the feasts of St Peter and St Paul.

In the southern hemisphere, where January is often a vacation time, churches often find other days to celebrate it, for example around Pentecost, which is also a symbolic date for unity.

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18.1.2018