In the continuing
journey toward full communion, the Roman Catholic Church and the
Churches of the Anglican Communion have for many years prayerfully
considered a number of questions concerning the faith we share and
the way we articulate it in the life and worship of our two households
of faith. We have submitted Agreed Statements to the Holy See and
to the Anglican Communion for comment, further clarification if
necessary, and conjoint acceptance as congruent with the faith of
Anglicans and Roman Catholics.
In framing this Agreed Statement,
we have drawn on the Scriptures and the common tradition which
predates the Reformation and the Counter Reformation. As in previous
Anglican - Roman Catholic International Commission (ARCIC) documents,
we have attempted to use language that reflects what we hold in
common and transcends the controversies of the past. At the same
time, in this statement we have had to face squarely dogmatic
definitions which are integral to the faith of Roman Catholics
but largely foreign to the faith of Anglicans. The members of
ARCIC, over time, have sought to embrace one another's ways of
doing theology and have considered together the historical context
in which certain doctrines developed. In so doing, we have learned
to receive anew our own traditions, illumined and deepened by
the understanding of and appreciation for each other's tradition.
Our Agreed Statement concerning
the Blessed Virgin Mary as pattern of grace and hope is a powerful
reflection of our efforts to seek out what we hold in common and
celebrates important aspects of our common heritage. Mary, the
mother of our Lord Jesus Christ, stands before us as an exemplar
of faithful obedience, and her "Be it to me according to
your word" is the grace-filled response each of us is called
to make to God, both personally and communally, as the Church,
the body of Christ. It is as figure of the Church, her arms uplifted
in prayer and praise, her hands open in receptivity and availability
to the outpouring of the Holy Spirit, that we are one with Mary
as she magnifies the Lord. "Surely," Mary declares in
her song recorded in the Gospel of Luke, "from this day all
generations will call me blessed."
Our two traditions share many of
the same feasts associated with Mary. From our experience we have
found that it is in the realm of worship that we realize our deepest
convergence as we give thanks to God for the Mother of the Lord
who is one with us in that vast community of love and prayer we
call the communion of saints.
Alexander J. Brunett
Peter F. Carnley
Seattle
Feast of the Presentation
February 2, 2004
The Status of the Document
The document published here is
the work of the Anglican - Roman Catholic International Commission
(ARCIC). It is a joint statement of the Commission. The authorities
who appointed the Commission have allowed the statement to be
published so that it may be widely discussed. It is not an authoritative
declaration by the Roman Catholic Church or by the Anglican Communion,
who will study and evaluate the document in due course.
Citations from Scripture are normally
taken from the New Revised Standard Version. In some cases the Commission
has offered its own translation.