1. Revelation and Authority
                
                  
                    It may well be asked why participants in a dialogue 
                on mission should spend time debating theological questions concerned 
                with divine revelation, the Scriptures, the formulation of truth, 
                principles of biblical interpretation, and the church's magisterium 
                or teaching authority. For these topics may not appear to be directly 
                related to our Christian mission in the world. Yet we judged a 
                discussion of them to be indispensable to our task, for two main 
                reasons. The first and historical reason is that the issue of 
                authority in general and of the relation between Scripture and 
                tradition in particular, was one of the really major points at 
                issue in the 16th century. Indeed, the evangelical emphasis on 
                sola Scriptura has always been known as the "formal" 
                principle of the Reformation. So Roman Catholics and Evangelicals 
                will not come to closer understanding or agreement on any topic 
                if they cannot do so on this tonic. Indeed, in every branch of 
                the Christian Church the old question "by what authority?" 
                (Mark 11:28) remains fundamental to ecumenical discussion. Our 
                second reason for including this subject on our agenda was that 
                it has a greater relevance to mission than may at first appear. 
                For there can be no mission without a message, no message without 
                a definition of it, and no definition without agreement as to 
                how, or on what basis, it shall be defined.
              2) 
                Revelation, the Bible and the Formulation of Truth
                
                      Roman Catholics and Evangelicals are entirely 
                agreed on the necessity of revelation, if human beings are ever 
                to know God. For he is infinite in his perfections, while we are 
                both finite creatures and fallen sinners. His thoughts and ways 
                are as much higher than ours as the heavens are higher than the 
                earth (Is 55:9). He is beyond us, utterly unknowable unless he 
                should choose to make himself known, and utterly unreachable unless 
                he should put himself within our reach. And this is what together 
                we believe he has done. He has revealed the glory of his power 
                in the created universe10 
                and the glory of his grace in his Son Jesus Christ, and in the 
                Scriptures which he said bear witness to him (e.g. John 5:39).
                      This process of special revelation began 
                in the Old Testament era. "God spoke of old to our fathers 
                by the prophets" (Heb l:1). He fashioned Israel to be his 
                people and taught them by his law and prophets. Old Testament 
                Scripture records this history and this teaching. Then the Father 
                sent his Son, who claimed to be the fulfilment of prophecy, himself 
                proclaimed the good news of salvation, chose the twelve apostles 
                to be his special witnesses, and promised them the inspiration 
                of his Spirit. After Pentecost they went everywhere preaching 
                the gospel. Through their word Christian communities came into 
                being, nourished by the Old Testament and the gospel. The apostles' 
                teaching was embodied in hymns, confessions of faith and particularly 
                their letters. In due time the Church came to recognize their 
                writings as possessing unique authority and as handing down the 
                authentic gospel of Jesus Christ. In this way the canon of the 
                New Testament was constituted, which with the Old Testament comprise 
                the Christian Scriptures.
                      We all recognize that in the Scriptures God 
                has used human words as the vehicle of his communication. The 
                Spirit's work of inspiration is such, however, that what the human 
                authors wrote is what God intended should be revealed, and thus 
                that Scripture is without error. Because it is God's Word, its 
                divine authority and unite must be recognized, and because he 
                spoke through human beings, its original human context must also 
                be taken into account in the work of interpretation.
                      But are human words adequate to describe 
                God fully, even if they are inspired? No. The infinite reality 
                of the living God is a mystery which cannot be fully communicated 
                in words or fully comprehended by human minds. No verbal formulation 
                can be co-extensive with the truth as it is in him. Nevertheless, 
                God has condescended to use words as well as deeds as appropriate 
                media of his self-disclosure, and we must struggle to understand 
                them. We do so in the confidence, however, that though they do 
                not reveal God fully, they do reveal him truly.
                      Roman Catholics and Evangelicals differ slightly, 
                in their understandings of the nature of Scripture, and even more 
                on what the proper process of interpreting this Word should be. 
                Both groups recognize that God spoke through the human authors, 
                whose words belonged to particular cultures.
                Roman Catholics speak of this relationship between the divine 
                and the human in Scripture as being analogous to the divine and 
                the human in Christ. As the Second Vatican Council put it, " 
                indeed the words of God, expressed in the words of men, are in 
                every way like human language, just as the Word of the eternal 
                Father, when he took on himself the flesh of human weakness, became 
                like man11." 
                Thus the written testimony of the biblical authors is inscribed 
                within the logic of the Incarnation.
                      Evangelicals also sometimes use this analogy, 
                but they are not altogether comfortable with it. Although it has 
                some validity, they do not believe it is exact, since there is 
                no hypostatic union between the human and the divine in Scripture. 
                They usually emphasize instead the model of God's providence, 
                namely that he is able even through fallen human beings to accomplish 
                his perfect will. So he has spoken through the human authors of 
                the Bible in such a way that neither did he suppress their personality 
                nor did they distort his revelation.
                      Thus together we affirm that the written 
                Word of God is the work of both God and human beings. The divine 
                and the human elements form a unity which cannot be torn asunder. 
                It excludes all confusion and all separation between them.
                      With respect to the process of interpretation, 
                Roman Catholics affirm that Scripture must be seen as having been 
                produced by and within the Church. It is mediated to us by the 
                inspired witness of the first Christians. The proper process of 
                interpretation is determined by the process of Scripture's creation. 
                We cannot understand it in its truth unless we receive it in the 
                living faith of the Church which, assisted by the Holy Spirit 
                keeps us in obedience to the Word of God.
                      Evangelicals acknowledge the wisdom of listening 
                to the Church and its teachers, past and present, as they seek 
                to understand God's Word, but they insist that each believer must 
                be free to exercise his or her personal responsibility before 
                God, in hearing and obeying his Word. While the Church's interpretations 
                are often helpful, they are not finally necessary because Scripture, 
                under the Spirit's illumination, is self-interpreting and perspicuous 
                (clear).
                      Thus, contemporaneity has come to mean different 
                things in our two communities. Each recognizes that the Word of 
                God must be heard for and in our world today. For Roman Catholics 
                God's Word is contemporary in the sense that it is heard and interpreted 
                within the living Church. For Evangelicals it is contemporary 
                in the sense that its truth has to be applied, by the illumination 
                of the Holy Spirit, to the modern world.
                      Despite these differences we are agreed that 
                since the biblical texts have been inspired by God, they remain 
                the ultimate, permanent and normative reference of the revelation 
                of God. To them the Church must continually return, in order to 
                discern more clearly what they mean, and so receive fresh insight, 
                challenge and reformation. They themselves do not need to be reformed, 
                although they do need constantly to be interpreted, especially 
                in circumstances in which the Church encounters new problems or 
                different cultures. Roman Catholics hold that "the task of 
                giving an authentic interpretation of the Word of God whether 
                in its written form or in the form of Tradition has been entrusted 
                to the living, teaching office of the Church alone."12 
                This seems to Evangelicals to derogate from Scripture as "the 
                ultimate, permanent and normative reference." Nevertheless, 
                both sides strongly affirm the divine inspiration of Scripture.
              2) 
                Principles of Biblical Interpretation
                
                      Our understanding of the nature of the Bible 
                determines our interpretation of it. Because it is the Word of 
                God, we shall approach it in one way; and because it is also the 
                words of men, in another.
              a) 
                Humble dependence on the Holy Spirit
                
                      Because the Bible is the Word of God, we 
                must approach it with reverence and humility. We cannot understand 
                God's revelation by ourselves, because it is "spiritually 
                discerned" (1 Cor 2:14). Only he who spoke through the prophets 
                and apostles can interpret to us his own message. Only the Spirit 
                of truth can open our hearts to, understand, to believe and to 
                obey. This is "wisdom," and the Holy Spirit is the "Spirit 
                of wisdom and of revelation" in our knowledge of God (Eph 
                1:17). Moreover, the Spirit operates within the Body of Christ, 
                as we shall elaborate later.
              b) 
                The unity of Scripture
                
                      Because the Bible is the Word of God, it 
                has a fundamental unity. This is a unity of origin, since he who 
                has revealed himself does not contradict himself. It is also a 
                unite of message and aim. For our Lord said the Scriptures "bear 
                witness to me" (John 5:39; cf. Luke 24:25-27). Similarly, 
                we read that "the sacred writings... are able to instruct 
                you for salvation through faith in Christ Jesus" (2 Tim 3:15). 
                Thus God's purpose through Scripture is to bear testimony to Christ 
                as Savior, to persuade all men and women to come to him for salvation, 
                to lead them into maturity in Christ, and to send them into the 
                world with the same good news.
                      In the midst of great diversity of content, 
                therefore, Scripture has a single meaning, which permeates and 
                illuminates all the partial meanings. We renounce every attempt 
                to impose on Scripture an artificial unity, or even to insist 
                on a single overarching concept. Instead, we discover in Scripture 
                a God-given unity, which focuses on the Christ who died and rose 
                again for us and who offers to all his people his own new life, 
                which is the same in every age and culture. This centrality of 
                Christ in the Scriptures is a fundamental hermeneutical key.
              c) 
                Biblical criticism
                
                      Since the Bible is God's Word through human 
                words, therefore under the guidance of the Holy Spirit, who is 
                the only one who leads us into the understanding of Scripture, 
                we must use scientific critical tools for its elucidation, and 
                we appreciate the positive gains of modern biblical scholarship. 
                Human criticism and the Spirit of God are not mutually exclusive. 
                By "criticism" we do not mean that we stand in judgment 
                upon God's Word, but rather that we must investigate the historical, 
                cultural and literary background of the biblical books.
                      We must also try to be aware of the presuppositions 
                we bring to our study of the text. For none of us lives in a religionor 
                culture-free vacuum. What we must seek to ensure is that our presuppositions 
                are Christian rather than secular. Some of the presuppositions 
                of secular philosophy which have vitiated the critical study of 
                the Bible are (a) evolutionary (that religion developed from below 
                instead of being revealed from above), (b) anti-supernatural (that 
                miracles cannot happen and that therefore the biblical miracles 
                are legendary), and (c) demythologizing (that the thought world 
                in which the biblical message was given is entirely incompatible 
                with the modern age and must be discarded). Sociological presuppositions 
                are equally dangerous, as when we read into Scripture the particular 
                economic system we favor whether capitalist or communist, or any 
                other.
                      One test by which our critical methodology 
                may be assessed is whether or not it enables people to hear the 
                biblical message as good news of God revealing and giving himself 
                in the historic death and resurrection of Christ.
              d) 
                The "literal" sense
                
                      The first task of all critical study is to 
                help us discover the original intention of the authors. What is 
                the literary genre in which they wrote? What did they intend to 
                say? What did they intend us to understand? For this is the "literal" 
                sense of Scripture, and the search for it is one of the most ancient 
                principles which the Church affirmed. We must never divorce a 
                text from its biblical or cultural context, but rather think ourselves 
                back into the situation in which the word was first spoken and 
                heard.
              e) 
                A contemporary message
                
                      To concentrate entirely on the ancient text, 
                however, would lead us into an unpractical antiquarianism. We 
                have to go beyond the original meaning to the contemporary message. 
                Indeed, there is an urgent need for the Church to apply the teaching 
                of Scripture creatively to the complex questions of today. Yet 
                in seeking for relevance, we must not renounce faithfulness. The 
                ancient and the modern, the original and the contemporary, always 
                belong together. A text still means what its writer meant.
                      In this dialectic between the old and the 
                new, we often become conscious of a clash of cultures, which calls 
                for great spiritual sensitivity. On the one hand, we must be aware 
                of the ancient cultural terms in which God spoke his word, so 
                that we may discern between his eternal truth and its transient 
                setting. On the other, we must be aware of the modern cultures 
                and world views which condition us, some of whose values can make 
                us blind and deaf to what God wants to say to us.
              3) 
                The Church's Teaching Authority
                
                      It is one thing to have a set of principles 
                for biblical interpretation; it is another to know how to use 
                them. How are these principles to be applied, and who is responsible 
                for applying them?
              a) 
                The individual and the community
                
                      Evangelicals, who since the Reformation have 
                emphasized both "the priesthood of all believers" and 
                "the right of private judgment," insist on the duty 
                and value of personal Bible study. The Second Vatican Council 
                also urged that "easy access to sacred Scripture should be 
                provided for all the Christian faithful."13
                      Both Evangelicals and Roman Catholics, however, 
                recognize the dangers which arise from making Scripture available 
                to all Christian people and from exhorting them to read it. How 
                can they be protected from false interpretations? What safeguards 
                can be found? Whether we are Evangelicals or Roman Catholics, 
                our initial answer to these questions is the same: the major check 
                to individualistic exegesis is the Holy Spirit who dwells and 
                works in the Body of Christ, which is the Church. The Scriptures 
                must be interpreted within the Christian community. It is only 
                "with all the saints" that we can comprehend the full 
                dimensions of God's love (Eph 3:18).
                      Roman Catholics also say that Scripture is 
                interpreted by the Church. Yet the Church's task, paradoxically 
                speaking, is at one and the same time to submit totally to the 
                witness of Scripture in order to listen to God's Word, and to 
                interpret it with authority. The act of authority in interpreting 
                God's Word is an act of obedience to it.
                      But how in practice does the Christian community 
                help us towards truth and restrain us from error? We are agreed 
                that Christ has always intended his Church to have gifted and 
                authorized teachers, both scholars and pastors. When Philip asked 
                the Ethiopian whether he understood the Old Testament passage 
                he was reading, he replied, "how-can I, unless some one guides 
                me?" (Acts 8:31).
                      Many of our teachers belong to the past. 
                Both Evangelicals and Roman Catholics have inherited a rich legacy 
                of tradition. We cherish creeds, confessions and conciliar statements. 
                We peruse the writings of the Fathers of the Church. We read books 
                and commentaries.
                      Christ also gives his Church teachers in 
                the present (Eph 4:11), and it is the duty of Christian people 
                to listen to them respectfully. The regular context for this is 
                public worship in which the Word of God is read and expounded. 
                In addition, we attend Church Synods and Councils, and national, 
                regional and international conferences at which, after prayer 
                and debate, our Christian understanding increases.
                      Respectful listening and mutual discussion 
                are healthy; they are quite different from uncritical acquiescence. 
                Both Evangelicals and Roman Catholics are troubled by the authoritarian 
                influence which is being exerted by some strong, charismatic leaders 
                and teachers of different backgrounds. The kind of thoughtless 
                submission which is sometimes given to such was firmly discouraged 
                by the apostles. The people of Beroea were commended because they 
                examined the Scriptures to see whether Paul's preaching was true 
                (Acts 17:11). Paul urged the Thessalonians to "test everything," 
                and John to "test the spirits," i.e. teachers claiming 
                inspiration (1 Thess 5:21; 1 John 4:1). Moreover, the criterion 
                by which the apostles exhorted the people to evaluate all teachers 
                was the deposit of faith, the truths which they had heard "from 
                the beginning" (1 John 2:24; 2 John 9).
              b) 
                The regulation of Christian belief
                
                      We all agree that the fact of revelation 
                brings with it the need for interpretation. We also agree that 
                in the interpretative task both the believing community and the 
                individual believer must have a share. Our emphasis on these varies, 
                however, for the Evangelical fears lest God's Word be lost in 
                church traditions, while the Roman Catholic fears it will be lost 
                in a multiplicity of idiosyncratic interpretations.
                      This is why Roman Catholics emphasize the 
                necessary role of the magisterium, although Evangelicals believe 
                that in fact it has not delivered the Roman Catholic Church from 
                a diversity of viewpoints, while admittedly helping to discern 
                between them.
                      Evangelicals admit that in their case too 
                some congregations, denominations and institutions have a kind 
                of magisterium. For they elevate their particular creed or confession 
                to this level, since they use it as their official interpretation 
                of Scripture and for the exercise of discipline.
                      Both Roman Catholics and Evangelicals cherish 
                certain creeds and confessions which summarize their beliefs. 
                They also agree that new formulations of faith may be written 
                and affirmed for our times. Other doctrinal statements may be 
                either revised, or replaced by better statements, if this seems 
                to be required by a clearer proclamation of the good news. All 
                of us accept our responsibility to listen ever more attentively 
                to what the Spirit through the Word is saying to the churches, 
                so that we may grow in the knowledge of God, in the obedience 
                of faith and in a more faithful and relevant witness.
                      What, then, Evangelicals have asked, is the 
                status (and the authority for Roman Catholics) of the various 
                kinds of statement made by those in a ministry of official teaching? 
                In reply, Roman Catholics say that the function of the magisterium 
                is to regulate the formulations of the faith, so that they remain 
                true to the teaching of Scripture. They also draw a distinction. 
                On the one hand, there are certain privileged formulations  
                e.g. a formal definition in council by the College of Bishops, 
                of which the Pope is the presiding member, or a similar definition 
                by the Pope himself, in special circumstances and subject to particular 
                conditions, to express the faith of the Church. It is conceded 
                that such definitions do not necessarily succeed in conveying 
                all aspects of the truth they seek to express, and while what 
                they express remains valid the way it is expressed may not have 
                the same relevance for all times and situations." Nevertheless, 
                for Roman Catholics they do give a certainty to faith. Such formulations 
                are very few, but very important. On the other hand, statements 
                made by those who have a special teaching role in the Roman Catholic 
                Church have different levels of authority (e.g. papal encyclicals 
                and other pronouncements, decisions of provincial synods or councils, 
                etc.). These require to be treated with respect, but do not call 
                for assent in the same way as the first category.
                      We all believe that God will protect his 
                Church, for he has promised to do so and has given us both his 
                Scriptures and his Spirit; our disagreement is on the means and 
                the degree of his protection.
                      Roman Catholics believe that it is the authoritative 
                teaching of the Church which has the responsibility for oversight 
                in the interpretation of Scripture, allowing a wide freedom of 
                understanding, but excluding some interpretations as inadmissible 
                because erroneous.
                Evangelicals, on the other hand, believe that God uses the Christian 
                community as a whole to guard its members from error and evil. 
                Roman Catholics also believe in this sensus fidelium. For in the 
                New Testament Church members are urged: "let the word of 
                Christ dwell in you richly, teach and admonish one another" 
                (Col 3:16). They are also exhorted to "see to it" that 
                their brothers and sisters stand firm in truth and righteousness.14
              4) 
                Can the Church be Reformed?
              a) 
                The need for reform
                
                      So far in this first section of our Report 
                we have concentrated on the Church's responsibility to teach. 
                Can it also learn? Can the Church which gives instruction receive 
                it? More particularly, can Scripture exercise a reforming role 
                in the Church? Is the Church itself under the Scripture it expounds?
                      These are questions which the Roman Catholic 
                Church put to itself anew during the Second Vatican Council, and 
                has continued to ask itself since (see the Vatican II Decree on 
                Ecumenism, 6).
                      Evangelicals, however, to whom continuous 
                reformation by the Word of God has always been a fundamental concern, 
                wonder whether the reform to which the Roman Catholic Church consented 
                at Vatican II was radical enough. Has it been more than an aggiornamento 
                of ecclesiastical institutions and liturgical forms? Has it touched 
                the Church's theological life or central structures? Has there 
                been an inner repentance?
                      At the same time, Roman Catholic have always 
                asked whether Evangelicals, in the discontinuity of the 16th century 
                Reformation, have not lost something essential to the gospel and 
                the Church.
                      Yet we all agree that the Church needs to 
                be reformed, and that its reformation comes from God. The one 
                truth is in God himself. He is the reformer by the power of his 
                Spirit according to the Scriptures. In order to discern what he 
                may be saying, Christian individuals and communities need each 
                other. Individual believers must keep their eyes on the wider 
                community of faith, and churches must be listening to the Spirit, 
                who may bring them correction or insight through an individual 
                believer.
              b) 
                Our response to God's Word
                
                      We agree on the objectivity of the truth 
                which God has revealed. Yet it has to be subjectively received, 
                indeed "apprehended," if through it God is to do his 
                reforming work. How then should our response to revelation be 
                described?
                      We all acknowledge the difficulties we experience 
                in receiving God's Word. For as it comes to us, it finds each 
                of us in our own social context and culture. True, it creates 
                a new community, but this community also has its cultural characteristics 
                derived both from the wider society in which it lives and from 
                its own history which has shaped its understanding of God's revelation. 
                So we have to be on the alert, lest our response to the Word of 
                God is distorted by our cultural conditioning.
                      One response will be intellectual. For God's 
                revelation is a rational revelation, and the Holy Spirit is the 
                Spirit of truth. So the Christian community is always concerned 
                to understand and to formulate the faith, so that it may preserve 
                truth and rebut error.
                Response to God's truth can never be purely cognitive, however. 
                Truth in the New Testament is to be "done" as well as 
                "known," and so to find its place in the life and experience 
                of individuals and churches. Paul called this full response "the 
                obedience of faith" (Rom 1:5; 16:26). It is a commitment 
                of the whole person.
                      Understanding, faith and obedience will in 
                their turn lead to proclamation. For revelation by its very nature 
                demands communication. The believing and obeying community must 
                be a witnessing community. And as it faithfully proclaims what 
                it understands, it will increasingly understand what it proclaims.
                      Thus reform is a continuous process, a work 
                of the Spirit of God through the agency of the Word of God.
              
              
            
              
              ENDNOTES
              
              
              
                 
                -  
                  E.g. Ps 19:1-6; 
                    Rom 1:19-20. Back 
                  to text
 
 
-  
                  Dei verbum, 
                    13. Back 
                  to text
 
 
-  
                  Dei verbum, 
                    10. Back 
                  to text
 
 
-  
                  Dei verbum, 
                    22. Back 
                  to text
 
 
-  
                  E.g. 1 Thess 
                    5:14-15; Heb 3:12-13; 12:15. Back 
                  to text