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July 2024 FFL

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First Friday Letter The World Methodist Council

July 2024

Greetings from the General Secretary Dear Friends, Greetings in the name of our risen Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ! I write to you amidst the hustle and bustle in our preparation for Conference22 from the World Methodist Council headquarters in Waynesville, North Carolina. Last month I participated in the African Methodist Council, Heads of Conference Summit and African Women’s Conference in Lagos, Nigeria. (see excerpts of the Summit Communique on page 7) In my address entitled; “Leadership in a Volatile, Uncertain, Complex and ambiguous World,” I stressed that some of the words to describe the past decade have been chaos, anxiety, crisis, dislocation, alienation, loneliness, uncertainty, and longing. I hear some people refer to our current generation as the “cut flower generation” meaning a generation severed from their cultural, spiritual, and moral roots. I am confident that at Conference22 in Gothenburg, we will draw from the deep wells of experience and drink from the calabash of collective wisdom within the Methodist family. The keynote speakers and seminar leaders will also help us reconnect to our Wesleyan spiritual moorings and challenged us to renew our commitment to discipleship. I was filled with joy to see how many of our churches celebrated anniversaries of women’s ordination in ministry. Since its inception in 1970, the Church of North India reached an historic moment on 21 May 2024 when it welcomed its first woman bishop, the Right Reverend Violet Nayak. As our team completes our preparation for Conference22 – On the Move: Migration, Pilgrimage and Guiding Lights and has an opportunity to share in the July 4, Independence Day celebration, I am very conscious that America was built on the blood, sweat, tears and hard labour of immigrants. Affirming diversity is at the heart of the nation’s ideals of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. Does the words on the Statue of Liberty that welcomed our forebears still ring true for the modern pilgrim seeking freedom; “Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free. The wretched refuge of your teeming shore. Send these homeless tempest tossed to me. I lift my lamp beside the golden door.” Do the words inscribed on the Liberty Bell eight days after the signing of the Declaration of Independence still have meaning? Not surprisingly, it is a quote from Leviticus 25:10, which reads: “Proclaim liberty throughout the land unto all the inhabitants thereof” May our readers who are on summer break and vacation enjoy the time with family and friends. Shalom, Ivan Photo 136007839 © Kabayanmark | Dreamstime.com

World Methodist Council

First Friday Letter page 1


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