In recent months, many Christians in Canada have been seeking space to reflect more deeply on the theological frameworks that shape Christian understanding of Israel and Palestine. In light of the war in Gaza and ongoing tensions in the region, Canadian Baptist Ministries invites you into a gentle, thoughtful, and biblically grounded space for listening, learning, and reflection.
Join us for The Living Stones, a three-part webinar series offered as an open invitation to engage these complex realities with humility, curiosity, and theological integrity.
In addition to other speakers, in our time together we will hear from Rev. Dr. Yohanna Katanacho. Rev. Katanacho is a Palestinian Israeli Evangelical and professor of Biblical Studies. He serves as Academic Dean at Nazareth Evangelical College and has authored numerous books in both English and Arabic, including The Land of Christ: A Palestinian Cry (Pickwick, 2013) and Reading the Gospel of John through Palestinian Eyes (Langham Partnership International, 2020). His scholarship and pastoral experience offer a deeply rooted biblical and local perspective on the complexities of the land.

Webinar Dates & Titles
February 25, 2026
Voices from the Land
(Hearing from the Church in the Region)
March 25, 2026
Theology, Land, and Promise
(Biblical Context)
April 29, 2026
Seeds of Peace
(Practical Action and Advocacy)
Next Steps
If the webinar series has compelled you to consider next steps, we would invite you to consider financially supporting the work of CBM’s partners.
Peacemaking in Post-October 7th Realities: A Dialogue Initiative is a project led by Nazareth Evangelical College (NEC), aimed at addressing the deep social and religious polarization in the Galilee and surrounding regions following the events of October 7, 2023 attacks.
The project seeks to foster social cohesion by bringing together 60 influential leaders from Christian, Muslim, and Jewish communities in equal representation. Through structured dialogue, participants will move beyond political divisions and engage directly with one another to better understand shared challenges. A central focus is equipping the local church and its partners, referred to as “living stones”, with both theological grounding and practical tools for just peacemaking, embedding reconciliation as a core aspect of their identity and mission.
Participants include pastors, church leaders, theology students, and community activists, all positioned to influence their communities. The initiative places particular emphasis on empowering church leaders, men and women, to guide their congregations in pursuing justice, reconciliation, and peaceful coexistence.
Key activities include expert-led lectures by NEC faculty on the theology and ethics of peacemaking, thematic workshops offering practical reconciliation tools, and small-group listening circles that create safe spaces for sharing perspectives. Dialogue and encounter sessions, will further support relationship-building and collaborative strategy development.
Local churches play a vital role by actively participating in the initiative, integrating its insights into their ministries, and serving as agents of reconciliation within their communities. Ultimately, the project aims to move from dialogue to action by developing shared, contextually relevant strategies that promote peace, justice, and long-term social healing in a deeply divided context.

