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Dec 10, 2009:
The enthusiasm and modern worship styles of charismatic
churches are swaying away young Lutherans from parent
churches.
“Youth are drifting away from their parent churches to
charismatic churches,” as the latter offer worship
styles that fit the young generation, said Ms Sofia M.
Samuel from the India Evangelical Lutheran Church, at
the Asia Pre-Assembly Consultation of the Lutheran World
Federation.
Close to 100 delegates from many Asian countries have
convened for the 6-9 December Consultation in Bangkok,
Thailand, to deliberate on the theme - “Give us today
our daily bread".
In a plenary presentation apprising the urgent issues
that must be addressed for the inclusion and
participation of young people, Samuel urged for worship
and church life to be made more relevant to young
people's needs.
Says Samuel, young people are interested in being more
actively involved, but they lacked initiative and
encoura-gement from church leadership.
To tackle this, she called for orientation and training
in church administration and management to prepare them
for such responsibilities.
Meanwhile, presenting the LWF Asian region youth
response, Rev. Sekino Kazuhiro from the Japan
Evangelical Lutheran Church, stressed the need for
giving spiritual guidance to youths for helping them get
their daily material bread and meet their spiritual
needs.
“Today, many young people are crying of physical hunger
and of spiritual hunger,” said Kazuhiro, underlining the
importance of gainful employment.
“However, many young people cannot get a job; the
unemployment rate is too high,” he noted, citing the
unemployment crises in countries such as Hong Kong
(China), India, Indonesia, Philippines, Japan and
Thailand.
“Sometimes they have to choose a job that is lower than
what they are trained for and sometimes they don’t get a
job at all,” noted Kazuhiro, who is a member of the LWF
Council.
In his keynote address, LWF Vice President Bishop Dr
Munib A. Younan, called churches to speak out boldly
about the underlying causes of hunger.
The prayer for daily bread, he said, “speaks to a deep
existential fear that still plagues humanity today, as
millions of mothers and fathers do not know how they
will feed their children tomorrow.”
“It is a fear confirmed by the fact that 16,000 children
die of hunger every day,” he added.
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