Week of Prayer for Christian Unity

The Week of Prayer for Christian Unity (WPCU) is an ecumenical celebration held each year from January 18-25. Christians around the world are invited to pray for the unity of all Christians, to reflect on scripture together, to participate in ecumenical services and to share fellowship.

—from weekofprayer.ca

Theme for 2025

Based on John 11:26, the theme of this year’s WPCU reflects the 1,700th anniversary of the first Christian Ecumenical Council, held in Nicaea, near Constantinople in 325 AD. This week offers an invitation to draw on this shared heritage and to enter more deeply into the faith that unites all Christians.

Week of Prayer for Christian Unity 2025

Resources

Visit weekofprayer.ca for planning or hosting ecumenical worship services (including a downloadable Order of Service), hymn suggestions, campus ministry suggestions, children’s activities and a Bible study resource.

Our dialogues and partnerships with other Christian churches

Full communion partnerships

In a full communion partnership, each church maintains its own autonomy, while fully recognizing the catholicity and apostolicity of the other.

Anglican and Lutheran LogosWe have been in full communion with the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Canada (ELCIC) since 2001, with an even longer history preceding the full communion partnership. The website “In Full Communion: Anglicans and Lutherans working together in Canada” showcases our ongoing work and relationship with the ELCIC.

ELCIC ACC and MCC logos“One Flock, One Shepherd: Lutherans, Anglicans, and Moravians — Called to Walk Together in Full Communion” provides information about the full communion declaration between our church, the ELCIC and the Moravian Church in North America, which was inaugurated in 2023.

Globe logo of the ELCAWe have been in a full communion relationship with the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA) since 2018, through the Churches Beyond Borders (CBB) Memorandum on Mutual Recognition.

Dialogues

An ecumenical dialogue, as defined by the World Council of Churches Joint Working Group (1967), “concerns the Christian communions in their search for a more loyal vision of the Church’s mission to the world.” We are in dialogue with the following churches in Canada:

Working for unity on a broader level

Canadian Council of Churches logoWe are a founding member of the Canadian Council of Churches, an organization made up of more than 25 member churches, working to respond to Christ’s call for unity and peace, seek Christ’s truth with an affection for diversity and act in love through prayer, dialogue and witness to the gospel.

World Council of Churches logoOur Church is also a charter member of the World Council of Churches, a global fellowship of nearly 350 churches that is considered the privileged instrument of the worldwide ecumenical movement.