How We Work

The NCCA gathers together Churches and Christian communities which confess the Lord Jesus Christ as God and Saviour according to the Scriptures. We commit to deepen our relationship with each other and to work together towards the fulfilment of common witness, proclamation and service, to the glory of the one God, Father, Son and Holy Spirit.

When Maya* fled Syria with her children, she arrived in Jordan carrying more than a few belongings. She carried uncertainty. Fear. And the overwhelming responsibility of trying to rebuild a life from nothing.

Like many refugees, Maya wanted what every parent wants: safety, stability, and opportunity for her children’s future. But starting again in a new country with limited opportunities made that feel almost impossible.

Then something changed. Through the FORSA project, supported by Act for Peace and local partners, Maya joined vocational training in food preparation and productive kitchens. She gained practical skills, confidence, and eventually a small start-up grant to launch her own home-based catering business.

Slowly, life began to shift. Her income increased. She was able to repay debts that had weighed heavily on her family. For the first time in years, she could begin saving and planning for the future again.

Today, Maya is one of the most successful participants in the program. “The FORSA program completely changed my life and helped me reach where I am today,” she says.

Stories like Maya’s remind us that refugees are not defined by what they have lost.

They are people with skills, resilience, leadership, and dreams for the future—people rebuilding their lives with dignity when given the opportunity and support to do so.

In the lead-up to Refugee Week, Act for Peace is inviting Australians and churches to look beyond the headlines and see both the realities and possibilities facing displaced communities around the world.

Because displacement does not begin at a border. Often, it begins much earlier.

Right now, more than 123 million people around the world have been forced from their homes by conflict, disaster, and climate change. But Refugee Week reminds us that people who have experienced displacement are not strangers to fear, hope, grief, or courage. They are our global neighbours.

For generations, churches across Australia have responded through prayer, hospitality, advocacy, and practical support. Through Act for Peace, that legacy continues today alongside trusted local partners supporting refugees and displaced communities to find safety, rebuild livelihoods, strengthen resilience, andrestore dignity and belonging.

Refugee Week is about pausing to listen to stories like Maya’s and recognising that transformation is possible when communities stand alongside one another with compassion and consistency.

And perhaps most importantly, it is a reminder that welcoming the stranger begins long before someone reaches our shores. It begins whenever we choose not to look away.

Refugee Sunday takes place during Refugee Week on 14 June 2026, and offers a moment for churches to pause, reflect and respond together to the reality of global displacement. Explore the resources Act for Peace has created online to help your congregation take part.

*Maya’s name has been changed for safety reasons.