ABBREVIATIONS
Catholic
Documents
AG:
Vatican II,*
Decree on the Church's Missionary Activity, Ad gentes
CD:
Vatican II, Decree on the Pastoral Office of Bishops, Christus
Dominus
DH:
Vatican II, Declaration on Religious Freedom, Dignitatis Humanae
LG:
Vatican II, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church, Lumen Gentium
SC:
Vatican II, Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy, Sacrosanctum
Concilium
UR:
Vatican II, Decree on Ecumenism, Unitatis Redintegratio
EN:
Paul VI, Apostolic Letter "On the Evangelization in the
Modern World" Evangelii Nuntiandi (1975), Vatican Council
II, More Post Conciliar Documents, Austin Flannery, O.P., ed.
(Dublin, 1982), pp. 711-761
RM:
John Paul II, Encyclical Letter On the Permanent Validity
of the Church's Missionary Mandate, Redemptoris Missio (1990),
(Vatican City, 1990)
UUS:
John Paul II, Encyclical Letter On Commitment to Ecumenism
(1995), Ut unum sint, (Vatican City, 1995)
note
* Cf. The Documents of Vatican II, Walter M. Abbot ed.
(New York, 1966)
Back
to text
Evangelical Documents
Amsterdam: "The Amsterdam Declaration: A Charter for Evangelism
in the 21st Century" (2000), The Mission of
An Evangelist (Minneapolis, 2001) pp. 449-459
Lausanne: "Lausanne Covenant", 1974, New Directions
in Mission and Evangelization 1: Basic Statements 1974-1991,
James A. Scherer and Stephen Bevans, eds. (Maryknoll, 1992), pp.
253-259
Manila:
"Manila Manifesto", 1989, New Directions in Mission
and Evangelization 1: Basic Statements 1974-1991, James
A. Scherer and Stephen Bevans, eds. (Maryknoll, 1992), pp. 292-305
Dialogue Documents
B:
Summons to Witness to Christ in Today's World: A Report on the
Baptist-Roman Catholic International Conversations 1984-1988,
Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity, Information
Service [IS] 72 (1990/I) pp. 5-14
E:
The Evangelical-Roman Catholic Dialogue on Mission 1977-1984,
A Report, Basil Meeking and John Stott, eds. (Grand Rapids,
1986); see also IS 60 (1986/I-II) pp. 71-97
J:
Joint Working Group Between the Catholic Church and the World Council
of Churches, "The Challenge of Proselytism and the Calling to Common
Witness", The Seventh Report, Appendix C, (Geneva, 1998),
pp. 43-52; see also IS 91 (1996/I-II) pp. 77-83
P:
Evangelization, Proselytism and Common Witness, The Report from
the Fourth Phase of the International Dialogue (1990-1997) Between
the Roman Catholic Church and Some Classical Pentecostal Churches
and Leaders, IS 97 (1998/I-II) pp. 38-56; see also Pneuma
21:1(1999) pp. 11-51
APPENDIX 1
Evolution
of this International Consultation
a Brief Overview
1.
Historical Background
Increasing contacts between Evangelicals and Catholics during
the 1970s and 1980s provide a background for the international consultations
between the World Evangelical Fellowship and the Catholic Church
that have taken place since 1993.
Among these contacts, an international dialogue on mission
between some Evangelicals and Roman Catholics took place between
1978 and 1984. On the Catholic side it was sponsored by the Vatican's
Secretariat (after 1988, Pontifical Council) for Promoting Christian
Unity. Evangelical participants included some prominent leaders
such as John Stott, but the participants came on their own authority,
without officially representing any evangelical body. This dialogue
led to an important report, published in 1985, the first in which
Evangelicals and Catholics discussed together such themes as salvation,
evangelization, religious liberty, and proselytism.
Another important international arena in which Evangelical
and Catholic leaders have encountered one another has been the annual
meetings of the Conference of Secretaries of Christian World Communions
(CWC). This Conference, existing for more than forty years, includes
the general secretaries or their equivalent, from a broad range
of CWCs. The International Director of the World Evangelical Fellowship
and the Secretary of the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian
Unity have been among the participants in this informal annual meeting.
The need for more direct relations was evident from a specific
event which also led to the present WEF-Catholic conversations.
This took place when two representatives of the Catholic Church,
one of them from the Secretariat for Promoting Christian Unity,
were invited as observers and brought greetings to the 1980 General
Assembly of WEF held in Hoddesdon, England. Their presence led to
a heated debate, after which "the Italian Evangelical Alliance withdrew
its membership and the Spanish Evangelical Alliance placed its participation
in abeyance". The WEF Theological Commission responded by creating
a seventeen-member Ecumenical Issues Task Force. It developed a
statement that was published as Roman Catholicism: A Contemporary
Evangelical Perspective (ed. Paul G. Schrotenboer, Grand Rapids:
Baker 1988) in which the details just mentioned are found (p. 9).
The CWC meeting in Jerusalem in October 1988 provided
an occasion for a private conversation on the book between, on
the one hand, Rev David Howard, International Director of WEF,
and Dr. Paul Schrotenboer, General Secretary of the Reformed Ecumenical
Synod and Chairman of the WEF Task Force, with, on the other hand,
Rev. Pierre Duprey, Secretary of the Pontifical Council for Promoting
Christian Unity and Msgr. John Radano of the same Pontifical Council.
They decided to hold a short meeting to discuss issues raised
in the book. This meeting took place on the occasion of the CWC
meeting in October 1990 in Budapest, Hungary. Two persons from
each side Dr. Paul Schrotenboer and Dr. George Vandervelde,
for WEF, and Msgr. Kevin McDonald and Msgr. John Radano, for the
PCPCU met for two full days to discuss the book. This discussion
helped to pinpoint some of the differences between the two communions,
but it was clear that more time was required to explore these
issues. It was therefore proposed that a well prepared and longer
consultation be arranged for a later date. Bishop Pierre Duprey
invited the consultation to meet in Venice.
2.
Brief Overview of the Meetings
Starting with the one held in Venice in October 1993, several
international meetings have taken place. Their general aim has been
to foster greater mutual understanding and better relations.
An initial assessment from the 1990 meeting ascertained that
the important topics to discuss in Venice were Scripture, tradition
(including the development of doctrine), and the nature of the church
as communion. It became clear that the doctrine of justification,
too would have to be treated. Papers were prepared by Rev. Avery
Dulles, S.J. ("Revelation as the Basis for Scripture and Tradition")
with a response by Dr. Henri Blocher, and by Dr. George Vandervelde
("Justification between Scripture and Tradition"). The exploratory
nature and delicacy of this encounter was reflected in the fact
that no common statement or communique was published. Eventually
the papers were published in 1997 in the Evangelical Review of
Theology. The meeting confirmed the importance of the issues
taken up for discussion but lifted up especially two issues that
tend to divide Evangelicals and Catholics. Besides the nature of
the church as communion, the other issue was the nature and practice
of mission and evangelism.
These topics were taken up at the next consultation, held
in October 1997 at the Tantur Ecumenical Institute in Jerusalem.
Papers were given by Rev. Avery Dulles, S.J. ("The Church as One,
Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic"), Dr. George Vandervelde ("Ecclesiology
in the Breach: Evangelical Soundings"), Rev. Thomas Stransky, C.S.P.
("The Mission of the Church"), and Dr. Samuel Escobar ("Missionary
Dynamism in Search of Missiological Discernment"). Co-secretaries
for this meeting were Dr. Paul Schrotenboer and Rev. Timothy Galligan.
Increasing mutual confidence between the two partners was
reflected in the fact that for the first time a communique about
this meeting was published. The papers were published both in the
Evangelical Review of Theology and in One in Christ,
a Roman Catholic journal. Some months after this meeting we received
the sad news of the death of Dr. Paul Schrotenboer. His deep commitment
to the process was reflected in the fact that as early as the Venice
meeting, he participated despite the discomfort caused by the illness
that was increasingly testing his strength. In 1997 he co-chaired
the Tantur meeting, despite having had his leg amputated some months
earlier. We give thanks to God for the firm witness of Dr. Schrotenboer
to overcoming misunderstanding and hostilities between Evangelicals
and Catholics, which have persisted for so long.
The third meeting was held at Williams Bay, Wisconsin,
November 1999, at the invitation of WEF. By this time it was agreed
to proceed with these meetings on a regular basis. The Williams
Bay session focused on the theme of the church as communion. Rev.
Avery Dulles developed this theme on the Catholic side and Dr.
Henry Blocher on the Evangelical side. Rev. Thomas Stransky, C.S.P.
presented a paper highlighting aspects of several reports dealing
with "Religious Freedom, Common Witness, and Proselytism." Daniel
M. Carroll Rodas presented a paper on the same issues as they
affect Roman CatholicEvangelical relations in Latin America.
Dr. George Vandervelde and Msgr. Timothy Galligan served the meeting
as co-secretaries.
A new development in the conversations was marked by the
request for the preparation of two collaboratively developed papers.
Rev. Avery Dulles, S.J. and Prof. Henri Blocher were requested to
prepare a unified summary on the convergences and differences on
the church as koinonia. Dr. Thomas Oden, Rev. Thomas Stransky, C.S.P.
and Rev. John Haughey, S.J. were asked to prepare a paper on the
themes of religious freedom, common witness, and proselytism.
Besides the discussion of the papers, several important events
took place during this Williams Bay meeting which helped to deepen
our mutual understanding. The dialogue members together visited
important Evangelical schools, including Wheaton College and Trinity
Evangelical Divinity School. The participants met and had informal
discussions with some of the faculty of both institutions. At Wheaton,
they visited the Institute for the Study of American Evangelicals
and had conversations with the director, and also visited the Billy
Graham Museum, with its display of the history of Evangelicalism
in the USA At Trinity, they were welcomed at a reception by the
Academic Dean, Dr. Bingham Hunter and addressed by Dr. Kenneth Kantzer,
a former president, after which they had the opportunity for informal
discussions with the faculty. The members of the consultation also
visited the Seminary of the Archdiocese of Chicago at Mundelein,
where Cardinal Francis George, Archbishop of Chicago hosted a dinner.
Here the consultation team also met the local Catholic-Evangelical
"Common Root" project. These various meetings and events gave the
dialogue participants deeper insights into the life of their partner,
and showed a broader view of Evangelical--Catholic contacts, all
of which encouraged the dialogue in its important work.
Indicative of the growth of fellowship was the fact that
WEF accepted the invitation of Pope John Paul II, conveyed by the
PCPCU, and extended also to many other churches and Christian World
Communions, to send a representative to the "Ecumenical Commemoration
of Witnesses to the Faith in the Twentieth Century," held at the
Colosseum in Rome on May 7, 2000, one of the Ecumenical events of
the Jubilee Year 2000. Dr. George Vandervelde and Rev. Johan Candelin
participated in this event on behalf of WEF.
The fourth meeting took place at Mundelein, Illinois, Feb.
18-24, 2001. The evolution of this dialogue was reflected in the
fact that for the first time it had before it an initial draft of
a common text, namely, on the theme of koinonia, developed by Avery
Dulles in cooperation with Henry Blocher (Rev. Dulles, S.J. was
unable to attend this meeting because he was in Rome for his investiture
as Cardinal by Pope John Paul II). Another text, prepared by Dr.
Thomas Oden, gathered representative aspects from previous dialogue
documents on the themes of religious liberty and proselytism. This
and a number of brief theses reflecting on this material, prepared
by Rev. John Haughey, S.J. were discussed as well.
A Fifth Meeting took place in Swanwick, England, February
17-26, 2002. Significant changes had taken place in both sponsoring
bodies in the time between the previous meeting and this. WEF's
name was changed to World Evangelical Alliance (WEA), and
it was in process of seeking new leadership. At the Pontifical
Council for Promoting Christian Unity, changes in its leadership
took place and a new president and secretary took office. Also,
when Msgr. Timothy Galligan, Co-Secretary of this Consultation,
completed his term of service to the PCPUC in 2001, Rev. Juan Usma
Gómez was appointed to that responsibility on the Catholic
side. Three new participants on the Evangelical side attended for
the first time: Rev. Dr. Rolf Hille, Chairman of the Theological
Commission of WEA, Rev. Dr. David Hilborn, Theological Advisor
to the Evangelical Alliance UK, and Rev. Carlos Rodríguez
Mansur, Fraternidad Teológica Latinoamericana in Brazil.
While preparations for this meeting were slowed down because of
these changes in both administrations, the Consultation had before
it at Swanwick an integrated draft of a proposed common report;
and aimed at bringing it to a completed form. The text achieved
at the end of the week included two main parts. Part I focused on
convergences between Catholics and Evangelicals on Koinonia;
and Part II on the relationship of koinonia to evangelization.
It was agreed that the completed report would be presented
to the sponsoring bodies requesting approval for its publication
as a study text. The completion of this text brought a phase of
conversations to a close. As they completed their work, the participants
expressed the hope that this consultation between the World Evangelical
Alliance and the Catholic Church would continue.
APPENDIX 2
List
of Participants
1.
Venice, Italy, 21-25 October, 1993
World
Evangelical Alliance
|
Catholic
Church
|
Dr.
Henri Blocher, France
Dr. Pablo Perez, U.S.A.
Dr.
Paul Schrotenboer, U.S.A.
Dr.
George Vandervelde, Canada
|
Bishop
Jorge Mejía, Rome
Rev.
Karl Muller, S.V.D., Germany
Rev.
John Redford, England
Rev.
Thomas Stransky, C.S.P., Jerusalem
Msgr.
John Radano, Rome
Rev.
Timothy Galligan, Rome |
2.
Jerusalem, 13-19 October, 1997
World
Evangelical Alliance
|
Catholic
Church
|
Dr.
Paul Schrotenboer, U.S.A., Secretary
Dr.
Henri Blocher, France
Dr.
Samuel Escobar, U.S.A.
Dr.
George Vandervelde, Canada
Dr.
Stanley Mutunga, Kenya
Dr. Thomas Oden, U.S.A.
Dr. Peter Kusmic, U.S.A. (unable to attend)
|
Rev.
Timothy Galligan, Rome, Secretary
Rev.
Frans Bouwen, M. Afr., Jerusalem
Msgr.
Joseph Dinh Duc Dao, Rome
Rev.
Avery Dulles, S.J., U.S.A.
Sr.
Maria Ko, F.M.A., Hong Kong/Rome
Msgr.
John Radano, Rome
Rev.
Thomas Stransky, C.S.P., Jerusalem
Rev.
Juan Usma Gómez, Rome |
3.
Williams Bay, WI, 7-13 November, 1999
World
Evangelical Alliance
|
Catholic
Church
|
Dr.
George Vandervelde, Canada, Secretary
Dr.
Henri Blocher, France
Dr.
Thomas Oden, U.S.A.
Dr.
M. Daniel Carroll Rodas, U.S.A.
Dr.
Tite Tienou, U.S.A.
Dr.
James Stamoolis, U.S.A. |
Rev.
Timothy Galligan, Rome, Secretary
Rev. Avery Dulles, S.J., U.S.A.
Rev.
John Haughey, S.J., U.S.A.
Sr.
Maria Ko, F.M.A., Hong Kong/Rome
Msgr.
John Radano, Rome
Rev.
Thomas Stransky, C.S.P., Jerusalem
Rev.
Juan Usma Gómez, Rome
Br.
Jeffrey Gros, F.S.C., U.S.A.
|
4. Mundelein, IL, 18-24 February, 2001
World
Evangelical Alliance
|
Catholic
Church
|
Dr.
George Vandervelde, Canada, Secretary
Dr.
Henri Blocher, France
Dr.
Thomas Oden, U.S.A.
Prof.
Lilia Solano, Colombia
Dr.
James Stamoolis, U.S.A.
Dr.
Daniel H. Williams, U.S.A. |
Rev.
Timothy Galligan, Rome, Secretary
Card. Avery Dulles, S.J., U.S.A. (unable to attend)
Rev.
John Haughey, S.J., U.S.A.
Sr.
Maria Ko, F.M.A., Hong Kong/Rome
Msgr.
John Radano, Rome
Rev.
Juan Usma Gómez, Rome
Br.
Jeffrey Gros, F.S.C., U.S.A.
Rev.
Thomas Rausch, S.J., U.S.A.
|
5.
Swanwick, UK, 17-26 February, 2002
World
Evangelical Alliance
|
Catholic
Church
|
Dr.
George Vandervelde, Canada, Secretary
Dr.
Henri Blocher, France
Dr.
Thomas Oden, U.S.A.
Dr.
Rolf Hille, Germany
Dr.
David Hilborn, U.K.
Rev.
Carlos Rodríguez Mansur, Brasil
Dr.
James Stamoolis (unable to attend)
Dr.
Daniel H. Williams, U.S.A. (unable to attend) |
Rev.
Juan Usma Gómez, Rome, Secretary
Card. Avery Dulles, S.J., U.S.A. (unable to attend)
Rev. John Haughey, S.J., U.S.A.
Sr.
Maria Ko, F.M.A., Hong Kong (unable to attend)
Msgr.
John Radano, Rome
Br.
Jeffrey Gros, F.S.C., U.S.A.
Rev.
Thomas Rausch, S.J., U.S.A. |
[Information Service 113 (2003/II-III) 85-101]
|