The World Communion of Reformed Churches (WCRC) condemns the destructive Israeli air strikes that hit Beirut and various parts of Lebanon on 8 April 2026, standing together with the worldwide ecumenical community in condemning this attack on civilians.
Just hours after a two-week US-Iran ceasefire was announced on April 8, Israel launched its heaviest wave of bombing on Lebanon, killing more than 250 people in what became the bloodiest day of the nearly six-week-old war. The US and Israel have since disputed the scope of the deal, with President Trump calling Lebanon “a separate skirmish” and Prime Minister Netanyahu declaring the ceasefire “does not bind Israel in Lebanon.”
In less than ten minutes, the Israeli military struck over 100 locations across Beirut and the surrounding regions. The Lebanese health ministry reports that these strikes have killed at least 254 people and wounded over 800 others, making it the single deadliest day for Lebanon since the beginning of the US-Israel War on Iran and the region. The targets were residential neighborhoods—homes, civilian infrastructure, and the very fabric of daily life.
But we must speak not only of this day. We must speak of the pattern.
For the past three years, the world has watched the destruction of Gaza. We have witnessed the killing of tens of thousands, the displacement of nearly two million, the starvation of children, and the systematic erasure of the conditions for life itself. And yet, the machinery of global commerce has continued to turn.
We cannot allow this to be the norm.
We reject this normalization of mass death in the region and in our world. We reject the idea that we can consume images of bombed apartment buildings and wounded children as background noise to our daily lives. The bombing of Beirut does not merely inflict physical destruction; it deepens the enmity and division that denies the reconciling work of Christ. We reject any theology or political strategy that uses overwhelming military force to enforce separation and hatred, thereby obstructing the visible unity of humanity for which Christ prayed.
What we have witnessed over the past month is a grotesque manipulation of diplomacy: a ceasefire was announced between the US and Iran, yet immediately afterward, the bombs fell on Lebanon. This is not peacemaking; it is a betrayal. The Belhar confession calls us to reject any “ideology and false doctrine” that uses the language of security to legitimate the indiscriminate killing of civilians.
And in the words of the Belhar Declaration, “God, in a world full of injustice and enmity, is in a special way the God of the destitute, the poor and the wronged”. Therefore, the church must stand against injustice. The 254 dead are not statistics or mere numbers; they are the “wronged” with whom God stands. The 800 wounded are the “destitute” to whom we are bound. Consequently, we must witness “against all the powerful and privileged who selfishly seek their own interests and thus control and harm others”.
The Reformed tradition has always insisted that the Word of God is not a distant abstraction but a living critique of every power that claims absolute loyalty. The Reformed family has long stood for the cause of justice, peace, and the integrity of creation. In this hour, we reaffirm that no religious or political claim justifies the obliteration of neighbourhoods and the killing of hundreds in a single day. We pray for the wounded, we mourn the dead, and we raise our voice until the bombing stops.