Communicators who worked for the World Council of Churches Assembly in 2022 met online recently and discussed the impact of artificial intelligence on their work, asserting that if they work hard, AI's obstacles can be countered.
The alarming number of government-alleged civilian casualties in Nicaragua raises "deep concern for the weakening of human rights and the fragility of the state of law," says World Council of Churches general secretary Rev. Olav Fykse Tveit.
Nicaraguan authorities have arrested six priests over the past two days, bringing to 11 the number of clergy members detained since December 20, opposition figures in a year of attacks on the Catholic Church by President Daniel Ortega and his wife, "co-president" Rosario Murillo.
The UN climate change conference, COP26, from Nov. 1-12 in Scotland is around the corner and churches are strengthening their collective calls for climate action and justice with a group of young people saying the climate crisis is as much a spiritual crisis as an existential one.