Asian Churches Consult on HIV Ministry. 18/4/10
They listened to each others’ experiences and identified the need for Churches to engage in further reflection and develop a theological perspective on “healing.”
An Asian Christian meeting held here April 11-15 has urged Churches to be “centers of healing” for people living with HIV and AIDS.
Fifty-five participants, including people with HIV/AIDS, pastors, theologians, medical professionals and social workers, attended the consultation organized by the Christian Conference of Asia (CCA).
They listened to each others’ experiences and identified the need for Churches to engage in further reflection and develop a theological perspective on “healing.”
Stories from Myanmar, Thailand, Malaysia and India were shared during the discussion.
In a statement, participants noted there are approximately 1.7 million people in Asia living with HIV and AIDS.
The consultation took place prior to the general assembly of the CCA, which started April 15 and is due to end April 22. The intention of the consultation was to enable the Churches to be “HIV competent,” CCA general secretary Prawate Khid-arn told UCA News.
The participants described HIV as a problem intensified by poverty, gender inequality, migration, human trafficking, conflicts and discrimination, and in Asia it is “becoming an increasing concern for women, children and young people.”
They called on Churches to be inclusive, engage in creative listening, and share the people’s life journeys with love and respect, so that “all people feel safe and valued as being made in the image of God.”
The participants pledged to continue to work “collaboratively with other faiths and civil societies to overcome the influence of HIV and AIDS in Asian society.” They also called on Churches to develop a “holistic HIV and AIDS Christian ministry” and to develop and promote more resources and liturgies with an Asian theological perspective on HIV and AIDS.
CCA consultant Erlinda Senturia told UCA News that the presence of some 20 people with HIV/AIDS giving their testimonies was the most important achievement of the consultation.
The CCA comprises more than 100 Protestant and Orthodox Churches in New Zealand, Australia, Bangladesh, Cambodia, Hong Kong, India, Indonesia, Laos, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, Myanmar, Nepal, Pakistan, the Philippines, Sri Lanka, Taiwan and Timor Leste.




