A two-day historic meeting involving church leaders from both the North and South of the Korean Peninsula has ended in Geneva with the Ecumenical Forum for Peace, Reunification and Development Cooperation on the Korean Peninsula (EFK) issuing a call to "Seek Peace and Pursue It."
"In order to enhance the political environment for realization of the commitments made at the Panmunjom Summit and the subsequent DPRK-US Singapore Summit, we appeal for all countries to refrain from the confrontation and militarization in the region," the EFK said in its statement at the end of the June 23 meeting.
"In addition, in order to remove obstacles to development cooperation in the spirit of the Panmunjom Declaration, we call for the economic sanctions against the DPRK (Democratic People's Republic of Korea) to be lifted immediately," the EFK said.
Members of the Korean Christian Federation (KCF) from the DPRK and the National Council of Churches of Korea, from the Republic of Korea, sat at the same table during the meeting.
The EFK met in the Swiss city on June 22-23, in the year of the 70th anniversary of the World Council of Churches (WCC) which convened the meeting the day after Pope Francis visited the council and met North and South Koreans at the Ecumenical Center in the e.
The statement noted that the delegations from the KCF from North Korea and the NCCK from South Korea were accompanied by participants representing churches and ecumenical organizations from different countries in "celebration and gratitude for the recent progress for peace on the Korean Peninsula as God's precious gift and a response to prayer."
"In particular, we celebrate and affirm the Panmunjom Declaration as a transformational expression of inter-Korean leadership for peace, prosperity, and reunification of the divided Korean people," said the statement.
The Panmunjom Declaration for Peace, Prosperity and Unification of the Korean Peninsula was adopted between North Korea and South Korea on April 27l during the 2018 inter-Korean Summit.
"We commit ourselves to the 'Panmunjom Process', a new phase in the history of ecumenical engagement for peace and reunification on the Korean Peninsula, taking the heritage of the 'Tozanso Process' and building on it in the framework of the Panmunjom Declaration," they said.
The statement called on all churches and all people of good will around the world to join with the EFK in efforts for the realization of the objectives of the Panmunjom Declaration.
"We extend an invitation to all churches and ecumenical organizations to consider joining future discussions, initiatives, and meetings of the EFK, in order to promote strengthened ecumenical solidarity and support for the people of Korea in the realization of their hopes for peaceful coexistence, reunification, development, and co-prosperity," they said.
The EFK envisaged and proposed that its next meeting should take the form of a peace convocation on the Korean Peninsula.
Source: ecumenicalnews