World Student Christian Federation
The World Student Christian Federation (WSCF) is a federation of autonomous national Student Christian Movements (SCM) forming the youth and student arm of the global ecumenical movement. The Federation includes Orthodox, Protestant, Catholic, and Anglican students.
Together with the YMCA and the YWCA, WSCF has as a foundational document, the Paris Basis. WSCF's aims include "to call members of the academic community to faith in God, to discipleship within the life and mission of the Church and to help them strive for peace and justice in and among nations." At one point "the evangelisation of the world in this generation" was seen as the main aim. Throughout its history the Federation has brought students together across theological and cultural boundaries and provided training and opportunities. For over a century WSCF has supplied leaders to the Church, the ecumenical movement and the Christian left, governments and social movements.
Together the WSCF and SCM provide a context for young Christians from all churches and nations to meet. The motto of the WSCF is "Ut Omnes Unum Sint"—"that they all may be one" (John 17:21).
History
WSCF was formed at a meeting of student leaders from ten North American and European countries in 1895 at Vadstena Castle, Sweden. The founders included John R. Mott (U.S.), J.Rutter Williamson (U.K.), Martin Eckhoff (Norway), Luther D. Wishard (U.S.), Johannes Siemsen (Germany) and Karl Fries (Sweden).
WSCF was the first international student organisation. Together with YMCA and YWCA, it is among the oldest extant youth movements. WSCF is known in French as FUACE—Fédération Universelle des Associations Chrétiennes d'Étudiants—and in Spanish as FUMEC—Federacion Universal de Movimientos Estudiantiles Cristianos.
Forces affecting WSCF have been:
- the rise of the ecumenical movement,
- the turbulence of the 1960s student movements,
- the mid-twentieth century shift in balance of power from liberal to evangelical Christianity,
- the shift in balance of influence within Christianity between the developed and the developing world,
- the pressures of maintaining unity across the spectrum of Christianity
Notable leaders of the WSCF have included:
The WSCF newsletter Federation News started in 1921 and is published twice a year. The WSCF journal Student World was begun in 1908. In 2004 it was re-started after a hiatus of several years; both these publications are available on the WSCF website.
Purpose
The mission and vision statement of the WSCF is:
- The WSCF is a global community of Student Christian Movements committed to dialogue, ecumenism, social justice and peace.
- the mission is to empower students in critical thinking and constructive transformation of our world by being a space for:
- Prayer and celebration
- Theological reflection
- Study and analysis of social and cultural processes and
- Solidarity and action across boundaries of culture, gender and ethnicity.
- Through the work of the Holy Spirit, the WSCF is called to be a prophetic witness in church and society. This vision is nurtured by a radical hope for God’s Reign in history.
WSCF's founder, the Methodist layman and YMCA worker John R. Mott (1865-1955), promoted Protestant unity in 1895 as an organization joining youth from all Protestant churches to dedicate themselves to the 'evangelization of the world in this generation.'" [1]
Structure and activities
WSCF globally
The General Assembly (GA) is the highest decision making body of the Federation. WSCF's GA is held approximately every four years. Recent assemblies have been held in Montreal, Canada, Chiang Mai, Thailand, Beirut, Lebanon, and Yamoussoukro, Côte d'Ivoire.
The GA is made up of representatives from all affiliated and associated movements. The GA reviews the previous four years, plans for the next four years and elects the Executive Committee, Chairperson, Vice-Chairpersons, Treasurer and General Secretary.
The 35th GA was held in Bogota, Colombia from February 27 to March 5, 2015.
The Executive Committee and staff (General Secretary and Regional Secretaries) co-ordinate the Federation's activities between General Assemblies. The Executive Committee has met in Chiang Mai, Thailand, Porto Alegre, Brazil and Alexandria, Egypt.
The General Secretary is based in the Inter-Regional Office (IRO) in Geneva, Switzerland. The IRO is in the Ecumenical Centre which also houses the World Council of Churches, the World Alliance of Reformed Churches, the Lutheran World Federation, the Ecumenical Advocacy Alliance, the Conference of European Churches, Ecumenical News International, Action by Churches Together International, and many other organisations.
The IRO organises the General Assembly and Executive Committee, the IRO staff is the secretariat for WSCF's endowment The Centennial Fund. The IRO administers WSCF's income, salaries and fundraising and co-ordinates global WSCF programmes, the IRO administers the Ecumenical Assistance Programme, the Universal Day of Prayer for Students, produces Federation News and Student World maintains contact with national movements and Senior Friends and organises WSCF representation at meetings of the United Nations, UNESCO, World Council of Churches and other organisations.
General Secretaries of WSCF
- John R. Mott (USA)1895
- Risto Lehtonen (Finland)
- Christine Ledger (Australia)and Manuel Quintero(Cuba)
- Clarissa Balan (Philippines) and Jean-Claude Deteil (France)
- Clarissa Balan (Philippines) and (Zambia) -2000
- Beate Fagerli (Norway) and Lawrence Nana Brew (Ghana)2000-2004
- Michael Wallace (New Zealand) 2004-2010
- Christine Housel (USA) 2011-2015
- Necta Rocas Montes (Philippines) 2015-
WSCF Regions
Since 1968, the Federation has included six regional committees in its structure. Each region has a regional secretary, officers and a committee made up of representatives from the national movements in the region. Each region has its own programmes and publications. The regions nominate students to participate in global WSCF programmes and other activities. Each region has two representatives on WSCF's global Executive Committee. The six regions are Africa, Asia-Pacific, Europe, Latin America and Caribbean, Middle East, and North America. The regional offices are in Nairobi, Hong Kong, Berlin, Buenos Aires, Beirut and New York.
National Student Christian Movements
In each country, the Student Christian Movement (SCM) represents the ecumenical movement at work with university and secondary school students. SCMs have ties to the ecumenical bodies where it is located (such as the National Council of Churches in Australia and the Christian Conference of Asia) and to the World Council of Churches. There is at times conflict with conservative evangelical Christian groups on campus, such as those affiliated to the parachurch International Fellowship of Evangelical Students.
Whilst national SCMs vary considerably, they have tended to foster liberal and progressive religious and social views amongst university students. SCM has generally been associated with the Christian left and such issues as:
- the social gospel
- Liberation theology
- Christian anarchism and Christian pacifism
- interfaith dialogue
- Christian socialism
- environmentalist movements
- HIV/AIDS awareness
- debt relief and Jubilee 2000
- Christian feminism
See below for a partial list of countries where national movements operate.
Some national WSCF-affiliated groups
- New Zealand – http://www.scm.org.nz
- Austria – http://www.ehg-online.at/
- Australia – Australian Student Christian Movement
- Bangladesh – http://scmbangladesh.googlepages.com
- Canada – Student Christian Movement of Canada – http://www.scmcanada.org
- Denmark
- France – fr:Fédération française des associations chrétiennes d'étudiants
- Germany – http://www.bundes-esg.de and de:Evangelische Studentengemeinde
- Hong Kong – http://www.scm.org.hk/
- India – http://www.scmindia.org
- Indonesia – http://www.gmki.or.id/
- Italy – http://www.fgei.org/
- Japan – http://www.jca.apc.org/ymca-s/index-j.html
- Korea – http://kscf.or.kr/
- Norway – http://www.forbundet.no/
- Philippines – http://web.archive.org/web/20091027045640/http://geocities.com/scmphil/
- Singapore – http://scmsing.atspace.com
- Sri Lanka - http://daga.dhs.org/scmsl
- Sweden – http://www.kriss.se
- United Kingdom – http://www.movement.org.uk – Student Christian Movement of the United Kingdom
- United States –http://scm-usa.org/
Related organisations
Notable members of WSCF
- Bishop George Bell
- Steve Biko
- Dietrich Bonhöffer
- Bishop Charles Brent
- Feliciano Carino (General Secretary of the Christian Conference of Asia)
- Inga-Brita Castrén (Finnish theologian, Secretary to Africa 1959-1962)
- Willem Visser 't Hooft (First General Secretary of the World Council of Churches)
- Bishop Penny Jamieson
- Samuel Kobia (Sixth General Secretary of the World Council of Churches)
- Jürgen Moltmann
- Edouard Chivambo Mondlane (President of FRELIMO)
- John R. Mott (Nobel Peace Prize 1946)
- Bishop Lesslie Newbigin
- Kwame Nkrumah
- Mwalimu Julius Nyerere
- Mercy Oduyoye (African theologian)
- Joseph Oldham
- Philip Potter (Third General Secretary of the World Council of Churches)
- Dr.Radius Prawiro (Minister of Finance of Indonesia)
- Frère Roger of the Taizé community
- Nancy Ruth Canadian Senator
- Archbishop Ted Scott
- Ellen Johnson Sirleaf President of Liberia
- Amir Sjarifuddin (Former Prime Minister of Indonesia)
- Archbishop Nathan Söderblom (Nobel Peace Prize 1930)
- Oliver Tambo
- William Temple
- M. M. Thomas (Indian theologian)
- Bishop K. H. Ting (Chinese Bishop)
- Archbishop Anders Wejryd
- Lois Miriam Wilson (Canadian Senator)
References
- ↑ J. William Frost, "Part V: Christianity and Culture in America," Christianity: A Social and Cultural History, 2nd Edition, (Upper Saddle River: Prentice Hall, 1998), 476.
External links
- WSCF/FUMEC/FUACE global website – http://www.wscfglobal.org