Introduction
1. As representatives
of the Reformed Churches and of the Roman Catholic Church, we
have carried on a dialogue whose purpose has been to deepen
mutual understanding and to foster the eventual reconciliation
of our two communities. Our conversations have been officially
sponsored by the World Alliance of Reformed Churches and the
Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity. We have met
in Rome, Italy (1984), Kappel-am-Albis, Switzerland (1985),
Venice, Italy (1986), Cartigny, Switzerland. (1987) and Ariccia,
Italy (1988). This report emerged out of these encounters. Joint
sub-committees met in Geneva (1989 and 1990) to take into account
further suggestions of the Commission for the report and to
prepare it for publication.
2. An earlier phase of this dialogue took place under the same
sponsorship between 1970 and 1977. That series of conversations
produced a report entitled The Presence of Christ in Church
and World (PCCW), which gave attention to issues such as: the
relationship of Christ to the Church, the Church as a teaching
authority, the Eucharist, and the ministry. These earlier conversation
discovered considerable common ground, but left open questions
pertaining to such matters as authority, order, and Church discipline.
During approximately these same years representatives of the
Lutheran World Federation joined Reformed and Roman Catholic
participants in a trilateral dialogue to produce a report titled
The Theology of Marriage and the Problem of Mixed Marriages.1
3. In this
second phase of dialogue just completed we have concentrated
more directly on the doctrine of the Church. Certain ecclesiological
issues touched upon in the earlier conversations are further
treated. Building on this previous work, we have now gone deeper
into the realm of ecclesiology, bringing important aspects of
this subject into bilateral conversations for the first time.
In this way, we have sought further to clarify the common ground
between our communions as well as to identify our remaining
differences. We hope these results will encourage further steps
toward common testimony and joint ecumenical action.
4. We have
discovered anew that the Roman Catholic Church and the Reformed
Churches are bound by manifold ties. Both communions confess
Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior, affirm the Trinitarian faith
of the apostolic Church through the ages, and observe the one
Baptism into the threefold Name. In recent years Reformed and
Roman Catholic Christians have begun, in many places and at
many different levels, to share the experience of fellowship
and to seek fuller communion in truth and love for the sake
of our common service of Jesus Christ in the world. Our churches
share more common ground than previously we were able to see.
5. Yet
we have also realized anew that there remain disagreements and
divergences between us. Some of these have emerged in the course
of this dialogue and have been tackled head-on. Others have
been perceived, but left for substantive treatment in future
dialogue.
6. Our
communions are called to live and witness together to the fullest
extent possible now, and to work together toward future reconciliation.
The common ground we share compels us to be open toward one
another, and to aspire to that communion into which the Spirit
seeks to lead us. Each communion is bound in conscience to bear
witness to the way in which it understands the gospel, the Church,
and the relationship between them, but at the same time to bear
this witness in dialogue and mutual support. As we articulate
our differing positions in love, we are challenged to a deeper
fidelity to Jesus Christ.
7. This
report presents the results of our dialogue in four chapters.
Chapter I recalls the sixteenth-century Reformation and recounts
the path taken by each communion since that time. The new openness
of ecumenical relationships has helped us to see our respective
histories in new perspectives, and to clarify our relationships
today. A new assessment of our common ground and of our disagreements
is now possible; we are moving closer to being able to write
our histories together.
8. The
existence of this common ground gives us a context for discussing
what remains controversial. Thus its content needs careful consideration.
Chapter II seeks to accomplish this. This chapter focuses upon
two areas of fundamental agreement: that our Lord Jesus Christ
is the only mediator between God and humankind, and that we
receive justification by grace through faith. It follows that
together we also confess the Church as the community of all
who are called, redeemed and sanctified through the one mediator.
9. A complete
ecclesiology was beyond our scope in this phase of dialogue.
But it seemed especially important to reconsider the relation
between the Gospel and the Church in its ministerial and instrumental
roles. Chapter III takes up this question and carries it through
a series of topics: the Church as creatura verbi and the Church
as sacrament of grace; continuity and discontinuity in Church
history; the question of Church structure and the ordering of
ministry. Certain convergences are set forth, and the remaining
issues noted for future consideration.
10. Finally,
Chapter IV sketches some ways forward. Our churches meet in
many settings. In ways appropriate to each situation we may
(1) take specific steps to deepen our existing fellowship; (2)
address issues in such a way as to come closer to a reconciliation
of memories; (3) find arenas for common witness, and (4) consider
the nature of the unity we seek.
11. The Dialogue Commission offers this report to its sponsors
in the hope that it may encourage us all to work for the unity
of Christians which we believe is God's will.
Chapter
1
Toward
A Reconciliation Of Memories
1.1.
Whence Have We Come?
12. Whence
have our communions come? What paths have they followed - together
and apart, interacting, reacting, and going their separate ways
- over 450 years to reach where they are today? This first chapter
consists of accounts, written with consultation by each delegation,
of our respective histories in relation to one another, as we
see them now after five years of annual dialogues.
13. Today,
in the late twentieth century, our churches are not the same
dialogue partners they were even a generation ago, let alone
in the sixteenth century. In the past, we tended to read our
histories both selectively and polemically. To some extent,
we still do. We see the events through which we have lived through
confessionally biased eyes The present reality of our churches
is explained and justified by these readings of the past. Yet
we are beginning to be able to transcend these limitations (a)
by our common use of the results of objective scholarly inquiry
and (b) by the dialogue our churches have had with each other
in this consultation and elsewhere.
14. Historical
scholarship today has not only produced fresh evidence concerning
our respective roles in the Reformation and its aftermath. It
also brings us together in broad agreement about sources, methods
of inquiry and warrants for drawing conclusions. A new measure
of objectivity has become possible. If we still inevitably interpret
and select, at least we are aware that we do, and what that
fact means as we strive for greater objectivity and more balanced
judgement.
15. The
method used in our present dialogue has also deepened our shared
historical understanding. We first drafted our respective parts
of this chapter separately. Reading and reviewing these drafts
together we learned from each other and modified what we had
written. We were reminded that over the centuries our forbears
had often misunderstood each other's motives and language. We
learned that our histories were sometimes a matter of action
and reaction, but that at other times we followed separate paths.
We occasionally heard each other speak vehemently and felt some
of the passions that dictated the course of historical events
and still in some ways drive us today.
16. All this has contributed to a certain reassessment of the
past. We have begun to dissolve myths about each other, to clear
away misunderstandings. We must go on from here, as our conclusion
shows, to a reconciliation of memories, in which we will begin
to share one sense of the past rather than two.
1.2.
A Reformed Perspective
1.2.1.
The Ecclesiological Concerns of the Reformers
17. The
sixteenth-century Reformation was a response to a widespread
demand for a general renewal of Church and society. This demand
had begun to be heard long before: it grew more insistent in
the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, led to the emergence
of reformed communities such as the earlier Waldensians and
the Hussites, and was addressed by several Church councils.
In the sixteenth century it resulted in the establishment of
the major Protestant churches in various parts of Europe. Thus
the unity of the medieval Western Church was shattered not only
by the separation between the Protestant Churches and the See
of Rome, but also by the fact that the Reformation consisted
of several reforming movements occurring at different times
and places, often in conflict with one another, and leading
to the different communions and confessional groups we know
today.
18. Although
the Reformed Churches came to form a movement distinct from
the Lutheran Reformation in Germany, they shared the same fundamental
concerns: to affirm the sole headship of Jesus Christ over the
Church; to hear and proclaim the message of the Gospel as the
one Word of God which alone brings authentic faith into being;
to re-order the life, practice and institutions of the Church
in conformity with the Word of God revealed in Scripture. In
all this there was no intention of setting up a "new"
Church: the aim was to re-form the Church in obedience to God's
will revealed in his Word, to restore "the true face of
the Church" and, as a necessary part of this process, to
depart from ecclesiastical teachings, institutions, and practices
which were held to have distorted the message of the Gospel
and obscured the proper nature and calling of the Church. For
many complex reasons, there resulted new forms of Church organization
with far-reaching social, political and economic ramifications
- forms determined on the one hand by the fresh vision of the
Church's calling and commission, and on the other hand by rejection
of a great deal that had developed in the previous centuries.
19. Among
the chief affirmations of early Reformed ecclesiology were:
The unity and universality of the one true Church, to
which those belong whom God has called or will call in Jesus
Christ;
The authority of Jesus Christ governing the Church through
the Word in the power of his Spirit;
The identification of an authentic "visible Church"
by reference to the true preaching of the Word and the right
administration of the two dominical sacraments of Baptism and
the Lord's Supper;
The importance of a proper Church order, central to which
was the office of the ministry of Word and Sacrament and, alongside
it, the oversight exercised by elders sharing with the ministers
of the Word in governing the affairs of the Church.
20. As
a consequence of these affirmations the Reformers rejected all
in the life of the Church which, in their understanding, obscured
the unique mediatorship of Jesus Christ and seemed to give to
the Church an excessive role alongside him. The emphasis placed
in the ensuing controversy on the authority of the Church and
its hierarchy led them to question the value of episcopal succession
as an expression of the continuity of the Church in the apostolic
truth through the centuries. In particular, they rejected teachings
such as the following:
The appeal to the Church's tradition as an authority
equal to Scripture or belonging together with it;
The universal authority of the Pope;
The claim that Church Councils constitute an infallible
teaching authority;
The canonical distinction between the office of a bishop
and that of any other minister of the Word and Sacraments.
1.2.2.
The Emergence and Spread of the Reformed Churches
21. It
is conceivable that many if not all of the Reformers' goals
might have been realized without dividing the Western Church
into different confessional traditions. Their aims and insights
could perhaps eventually have been accepted by the entire Church
and issued in a comprehensive, unified Reformation. In fact,
this did not happen. The established leadership of the Western
Church was not generally prepared to agree to the amendments
of doctrine, Church order and practice which the Reformers sought.
The Reformers for their part were convinced that nothing less
than obedience to God and the truth of the Gospel was at stake,
and interpreted resistance as unwillingness to undergo conversion
and renewal. In addition, the process of reform proceeded at
different paces and took different forms in different local
and national settings. The result was division and much mutual
exclusion even among the reformation churches.
22. In
this and in the subsequent development of the Reformed Churches
such factors as geography, politics, social and cultural development
played a considerable part. The Reformation took place in a
period of radical intellectual, cultural and political upheaval
which irreversibly altered the face of. Europe and paved the
way for the emergence of the modern world. The nascent Reformed
Churches of the sixteenth century both contributed to and were
molded by these wider movements. The countries most profoundly
influenced by Reformed theology were prominent among those in
which, in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, for better
or for worse, the seeds of modern democracy were fostered, new
forms of economic order developed, autonomous natural science
came to its first great flowering and the demand for religious
tolerance became increasingly insistent. Where it became influential,
the Reformed ethos stimulated commerce, challenged despotisms,
encouraged parliamentary government and enhanced national consciousness.
23. In
these developments, however, the Reformed Churches showed that
they could, in their own ways, fall victim to many of the same
faults they criticized in the Roman Catholic Church. They became
legitimators of sometimes oppressive political establishments,
fell into clericalism, and grew intolerant of minority viewpoints.
They were occasionally guilty of condemnations, burnings and
banishment, for example in regard to the Anabaptists in Switzerland,
acts in many cases typical of their times, but not to be excused
on that account. The Reformed also sometimes lent themselves
to various forms of national chauvinism; colonialism and racism.
At times their criticisms of opponents (and especially of the
papacy) grew intemperate even by the standards of an age given
to vituperate language.
24. It
has been claimed that the heritage and influence of Reformed
thought contributed significantly alongside that of Renaissance
and later humanism to the shaping of modern Western culture.
There is less agreement concerning the exact nature of this
modernizing influence. It has been argued that in many respects
the Reformation was more a medieval than a modern phenomenon,
yet it set processes in motion that had far-reaching influence.
Even the Enlightenment of the eighteenth century can properly
be seen as owing much to these impulses, albeit in largely secularized
form. So, too, can the rise of modern biblical criticism in
the eighteenth century and its rapid development from the nineteenth
onwards.
25. The
Reformed Churches themselves could not but be affected by all
these direct and indirect outworkings of the Renaissance and
the Reformation. It must be admitted that they have displayed
-especially up to the middle of the nineteenth century, but
on occasion also since then as well - a tendency to divide and
subdivide on matters of theological or ecclesiological principle.
Rationalism, in the guise of a tendency to frame theology in
tightly deductive systems, exacerbated this tendency. At times,
rationalism gave rise in some Reformed Churches to movements
which even questioned such fundamental dogmatic convictions
as the Trinity and the divinity of Jesus Christ. Another source
of diversity lay in varying conceptions of proper church order,
e.g., whether the government of the Church should be synodal,
congregational or episcopal.
26. The
family of Reformed Churches has continued to grow and spread
up to the present. The expansion of the Reformed family is primarily
due to the missionary movement of the last two centuries. In
1875, the Alliance of Reformed Churches was founded as a rallying
point for the .worldwide Reformed and Presbyterian family. In
1970, it was widened to include the Congregational churches
as well. The World Alliance of Reformed Churches counts today
about 170 member churches. The majority of the member churches
of the Alliance are to be found in Asia, Africa, Latin America
and the Pacific. Moreover, the last century has witnessed major
efforts towards reunion within the Reformed family, and since
1918 various Reformed Churches have entered transconfessional
unions. Among the member churches of the Alliance there are
today also some 16 united churches, from the Evangelical Church
of the Czech Brethren (1918) to the United Reformed Church in
the United Kingdom (1981). At the same time it has also become
increasingly more aware of the challenge to search after a fuller
ecumenical unity. It is mindful of the abiding heritage of the
Reformation, but at the same time of the common calling of all
Christians today to confess and hold aloft that to which all
adhere and in which all believe, namely the Good News of Jesus
Christ, "the one Word of God which we have to hear and
obey in life and in death" (Theological Declaration of
Barmen, 1934).
27. In
pursuing its theological task the World Alliance of Reformed
Churches draws on the resources supplied by the rich tradition
of Reformed theology through the centuries from Zwingli and
Calvin and their contemporary Reformers to such figures of the
recent past as Karl Barth, Josef Hromadka and Reinhold Niebuhr.
It also stands in the heritage of witness reflected in the confessions
of the Reformed churches from the 16th century onwards and seeks
to continue that witness faithfully today. It does not do so,
however, in the spirit of a narrow traditionalist Reformed confessionalism.
Rather, it is open ecumenically and concerned to face contemporary
and future social, cultural and ethical challenges. The contribution
of Reformed theology to today's churches does not consist merely
in the maintenance of theological traditions or in the preservation
of ecclesiastical institutions for their own sake, but in being
what Karl Barth called "the modest, free, critical and
happy science" (Evangelical Theology, ch. 1), which enquires
into the reality of God in relation to us human beings individually
and in community in the light of Jesus Christ, Emmanuel, God
with us'.
1.2.3.
Contemporary Reformed Attitudes Toward the Roman Catholic Church
28. Before
the Second Vatican Council, with notable exceptions, the general
Reformed view was that the Roman Catholic Church had not faced
the real challenge of the Reformation and remained essentially
"unreformed." This conviction was reinforced in the
modern era on the doctrinal level by the definitions of the
dogmas of Papal infallibility (1870), the Immaculate Conception
of the Virgin Mary (1854) and her Bodily Assumption (1950).
In practical terms, the same conviction grew from the experience
of Reformed minorities in countries dominated by Roman Catholicism.
Up to this day the memory of the persecution of Reformed minorities
plays a significant role. The development of the two traditions
largely in isolation - even when alongside each other in the
same country - increased the inclination of Reformed Christians
and churches to view the Roman Catholic Church in terms of its
reaction against the Reformation, and reinforced negative attitudes
toward Roman Catholic teaching, piety and practice.
29. Signs
of a change in perspective began to appear in the nineteenth
century, but remained sporadic. Contacts increased and the desire
for a new mutual understanding became more apparent in the twentieth
century, not least as an offshoot of the active role played
by many Reformed Churches from the beginnings of the ecumenical
movement. But it is really only since the pontificate of John
XXIII and the events surrounding the Second Vatican Council
that a genuinely new atmosphere has developed between the Reformed
and the Roman Catholic Churches. The presence of Reformed observers
at the Council and an other occasions since, the experience
of ecumenical contact, shared activity, worship and dialogue
at many different levels from the local congregation to international
commissions, and increasing cooperation and collaboration between
Reformed and Roman Catholic scholars in work of exegetical,
historical, systematic and practical theology - all this has
helped to break down misunderstandings and caricatures of the
present-day reality of the Roman Catholic Church. In particular,
these developments have helped the Reformed to appreciate the
seriousness with which the Roman Catholic Church has placed
the Word of God at the center of its life, not least in modern
liturgical reforms.
30. In
general it can be said today that a process of reassessment
and re-evaluation of the Roman Catholic Church has been taking
place among the Reformed Churches in the last decades, though
not proceeding at the same pace everywhere. There are within
the Reformed family those whose attitude to the Roman Catholic
Church remains essentially negative: some because they remain
to be convinced that the modern development of the Roman Catholic
Church has really addressed the issues of the Reformation, and
others because they have been largely untouched by the ecumenical
exchanges of recent times and have therefore not been challenged
or encouraged to reconsider their traditional stance. But this
is only one part of the picture. Others in the Reformed tradition
have sought to engage in a fresh constructive and critical evaluation
both of the contemporary teaching and practice of the Roman
Catholic Church and of the classical controverted issues.
31. There
is on the Reformed side an increasing sense that while the Reformation
was at the time theologically and historically necessary, the
division of the Western Church should not be accepted as the
last word; that it is at best one-sided to read that history
as if all the truth lay on the side of the Reformers and none
at all on the side of their opponents and critics within the
Roman Catholic camp; that there have been both in the more remote
and more recent past many positive developments in the Roman
Catholic Church itself; that the situation today presents new
challenges for Christian witness and service which ought so
far as possible to be answered together rather than in separation;
and - perhaps most important of all - that Reformed Christians
are called to search together with their Roman Catholic separated
brothers and sisters for the unity which Christ wills for his
Church, both in terms of contemporary witness and in terms of
reconsidering traditional disagreements. Theological dialogue,
joint working groups on doctrinal and ethical issues and programs
of joint action undertaken by some Reformed Churches together
with the Roman Catholic Church in recent years - all these reflect
this new climate, witness to a new and more positive evaluation
of the Roman Catholic Church as an ecumenical partner, and hold
out hope of further increase in mutual understanding in the
future.
32. This is not to say that all problems between Reformed and
Roman Catholic Churches have already been resolved; it is to
say that a search for solutions is under way, and being undertaken
together by both sides. One question requiring further consideration
is whether our two traditions from their separation in the sixteenth
century onwards need still to be seen as mutually exclusive.
Or can they not rather be seen as reconcilable? Can we not look
upon each other as partners in a search for full communion?
In that search we may be led to discover complementary aspects
in our two traditions, to combine appreciation for the questions
and insights of the Reformers with recognition that the Reformed
can also learn from the Roman Catholic Church, and to realize
that Reformed and Roman Catholics need each other in their attempt
to be more faithful to the Gospel. Those who have begun to think
in this way are attempting to reconcile their heritage as heirs
of the Reformation with their experience of fellowship with
and learning from their sisters and brothers in the Roman Catholic
Church. They are asking: Can our common faith set the questions
which have divided and in part still divide us in a wider horizon
of reconciliations?
1.3.
A Roman Catholic Perspective
1.3.1.
Ecclesiological and Reforming Concerns of Roman Catholics at
the Time of the Reformation
33. What
was the condition of the Western Church on the eve of the Reformation?
Contemporaries found much to criticize. So have subsequent historians.
Indeed, one of the most striking characteristics of the age
was the vehemence of its rhetoric against certain abuses. Efforts
were of course being made to change things for the better. Reform
within the Catholic Church was undertaken in an urgent and more
systematic way, however, only after the Council of Trent (1545-63)
began to address it. But by that time the Protestant Reformation
was already well established and underway.
34. Especially
denounced at that time were the venality and political and military
involvements of some of the Popes and members of the Curia;
the absence of bishops from their dioceses, their often ostentatious
wealth and neglect of pastoral duties; the ignorance of many
of the lower clergy; the often scandalous lives of clergy including
bishops and certain popes, the disedifying rivalry among the
religious orders; pastoral malpractice through misleading teaching
about the efficacy of certain rites and rituals; the irrelevance
and aridity of theological speculation in the universities and
the presence of these same defects in the pulpit; the lack of
any organized catechesis for the laity; a popular piety based
to a large extent on superstitious practices. Judgement on the
Church just before the Reformation has, therefore, been severe
- and justly so.
35. Efforts
at reform remained sporadic, uncoordinated or confined to restricted
segments of society. Among these efforts was the Observantist
movement in the mendicant orders, which sought to restore the
simplicity of their original inspiration. Furthermore a reform
of the diocesan clergy in Spain was well under way by 1517.
The Humanist movement encouraged a reform of theology and ministry
that would depend more directly on biblical texts; it advocated
a reform of education for both clergy and laity, and proposed
an ideal of piety that insisted upon greater interiority and
simplicity in religious practice. In the early stages of the
Reformation the urgency of the situation was reflected also
in the attempts of Pope Adrian VI (1522-23) to implement reform
in the Curia and elsewhere. The very vehemence with which abuses
were denounced in some sectors of Church and society indicates,
moreover, a deepened religious sensitivity. In such a perspective
the great leader of both the Reformation and the Catholic Reform
must be seen as products of the concerns of the age into which
they were born and, to that extent, in continuity with those
concerns and, indeed, with each other.
36. How,
then, can we explain the resistance met by the proposals of
reformers like Luther, Zwingli, and Calvin? It is at this point
that their discontinuity with previous efforts at reform emerges.
While those earlier efforts concentrated on discipline, education,
pastoral practice and similar matters, Luther addressed himself
first and foremost to doctrine, as later did Zwingli and Calvin.
Many people, and not only theologians, were taken by surprise
and were unwilling to accept this sudden shift to reform of
doctrine and especially Luther's emphasis on the doctrine of
justification. They were shocked by the implication that the
Church had for centuries been in error about the true meaning
of the Gospel. Moreover, Luther's case was soon embroiled in
a thicket of personal and theological rivalries and of imperial-papal
politics, so that fair procedures and the serenity required
for docility to the Spirit were tragically and almost irretrievably
compromised at the opening moment. At practically that same
moment a vituperative rhetoric from both sides began to dominate
theological exchanges.
37. In such an atmosphere the demands and proposals of the Reformers
were often also misunderstood by Catholics, and then just as
often distorted into caricatures. Direct access to their writings
was at best piecemeal, at worst thought unnecessary. This meant
that almost without exception the centrality and dramatically
evangelical nature of the issue of justification for the Reformers
was not grasped. Very few Catholics really understood that for
the Reformers what was at stake was not simply this or that
doctrine, practice or institution, but the very Gospel itself.
Thus, for Catholics "reform" continued to be conceived
in pre-Reformation terms as addressing disciplinary and pastoral
issues in their established form. They understood their engagement
with the Reformation as refuting its "doctrinal errors."
38. In
Catholic circles attention turned more or less immediately to
ecclesiological issues. Up to the time of the Reformation, reflection
on the Church had fallen into two main categories. The first
consisted of polemical and apologetical works dealing with church
order that arose out of conflicts between popes and either bishops
or secular leaders. The argumentation was juridical and political.
These works which provided a ready-made, though theologically
and biblically inadequate, defence of certain church institutions,
were then utilized against the Reformers.
39. The
second consisted of assumptions that were more properly theological
in nature, but that had become embedded in writings and practice
in a much less systematic way. These assumptions were, however,
broadly operative in the minds of many persons and they must
be taken into account if we are to understand Catholic resistance
to the Reformation. Some of these assumptions and the conclusions
drawn from them were as follows:
Christ founded the Church, establishing it on the Apostles
who are the basis of the episcopal order of ministry and authority
in the Church. In this order the bishop of Rome had more than
primacy of honor, though the precise nature, extent and function
of this primacy was much debated.
Therefore the proposals of the Reformers concerning church order
appeared to be an attack on the apostolic foundation of the
Church.
Christ promised unity for the Church. Consensus in doctrine,
extending through the ages, was a hallmark of the Spirit's work
and a sign of Christ's unfailing presence in the Church.
Therefore the turmoil accompanying the Reformation and the conflict
among some of the
Reformers themselves were taken as proof positive that the Spirit
of God was not at work among them.
Although the Church lived under Scripture, the Church
was chronologically prior to the writings of. the New Testament
and had recognized since earliest times that it itself as a
community, especially when assembled in Council, was the authoritative
interpreter of the divine Word.
In contrast, the Reformers seemed to arrogate to themselves
the right to interpret Scripture in a way at variance with the
continuing tradition of the community, and they did not seem
to provide any warrant for their interpretation that was necessarily
grounded in the community.
Bishops held primary responsibility for church polity.
In contrast, Luther, Zwingli and the English reformers appeared
to deliver the Church into the hands of secular princes and
magistrates, thus threatening to reduce the Church to a mere
instrument of secular politics.
1.3.2.
The Council of Trent and the Roman Catholic Reform
40. Within
only a few years after the beginning of the Reformation, the
seriousness of the crisis had become apparent to many. Less
apparent were the means to address it effectively. Particularly
from Germany, however, there soon came the cry for a council.
Pope Paul III convoked the Council of Trent in December 1945.
By that time - a full generation after Luther's 95 Theses -
positions had become so hardened and embittered that reconciliation
was, humanly speaking, impossible. Responsibility for the long
delay in convocation must be ascribed in part to the complex
political situation and to the ambivalent or obstructionist
attitudes of some Protestant leaders, but lies principally with
the fearful, vacillating and self-serving policies of Pope Clement
VII (1523-34). By the time Trent began its work Zwingli had
died (1531), Luther had less than a year to live, and other
Reformers (such as Calvin) were already utterly convinced that
Rome was unwilling to undertake the profound reform they wanted.
41. The
Council of Trent was destined to last, with long periods of
interruption, over eighteen years, finally concluding in December
1563. Attempts to have Protestants participate failed for a
number of reasons, with the result that membership in the council
was restricted to Catholics. This fact indicated that the religious
divisions were already deep and widespread. In a situation like
this, the course of the council almost perforce helped confirm
and sharpen the divisions, just as the various Protestant Confessions
of Faith had done and would continue to do.
42. Trent
addressed both doctrinal and disciplinary issues. Among its
doctrinal decrees, the most fully discussed and the most earnestly
researched was the Decree on Justification, approved in 1547.
The complaint of Luther and others that the Church in its actual
practice taught a Pelagian doctrine of justification was taken
by the principal authors of the Decree with utmost seriousness.
Every effort was made to avoid formulations that would fall
into that heresy, yet considerable care was also exercised to
insist on some measure of human responsibility, under grace,
in the process of salvation. In its other doctrinal decrees,
Trent gave an extraordinary amount of attention to the sacraments
because they were perceived as falling under special attack.
43. The
Council of Trent was animated by the conviction that it had
the special guidance of the Spirit, and it considered itself
to be the special vehicle of the continuing action of Christ
in the Church. Trent's explicit emphasis on the continuity of
the Church in practice, doctrine and structure with the Apostolic
Age was more pronounced than in any previous council. This emphasis
prevented serious consideration of most of the changes the Reformers
found to be required by their reading of the New Testament.
At the council a certain reciprocity of Word and Church was
taken for granted as given and witnessed in both the early and
contemporary Church. The Council, unlike the Reformers, ascribed
apostolic authority to certain traditions," although it
refrained from providing a list of them.
44. Trent
was notably concerned not to condemn any doctrinal position
held by "Catholic theologians," and, although it never
mentioned a single Reformer by name, it condemned what it thought
were Protestant errors. Its decrees must, therefore, be interpreted
with great caution. For several reasons, including the wide
range of opinions in the Council, Trent made practically no
direct and explicit pronouncements about the ecclesiological
disputes then raging. However, the very fact that the Council
took place was itself an expression of the self-understanding
of. the Church.
45. In
its decrees "concerning reform," Trent articulated
its presumptions in generally juridical terms. It meant these
decrees, however, to serve better ministerial practice and more
effective care of souls. In reaffirming traditional structures,
Trent at the same time undertook a certain redefinition of some
of them. Perhaps the most sweeping, though implicit, ecclesiological
redefinition in the Council and during that era was that the
Church was primarily a pastoral institution. Trent sought especially
to direct bishops to a properly pastoral appreciation of their
office. It assigned to them the preaching of the Word as their
principal task, an assignment taken with the utmost seriousness
by many post-Tridentine bishops, following the example set by
Charles Borromeo and others.
46. Although
Trent had given the greatest importance to the responsibility
of bishops to proclaim the Word of God (cf. Sessio XXIV, 11
Nov. 1563, can IV de Reformatione; COD (1973) p. 763), the doctrine
of the sacrament of Order, promulgated a few months sooner in
the same year, did not provide any place for the ministry of
the Word, so much was the Council worried about defending the
doctrine of sacraments (Sessio XXIII, 15 July 1563, De Ordine,
COD (1973), pp. 742 ss.). This fact masks what was actually
happening in Catholicism at the time and for several centuries
thereafter. In fact, the ministry of the Word was vigorously
pursued, not so much because of the criticism of the Reformers
as because in this regard the same reforming ideals impelled
both Protestants and Catholics, even though much Catholic preaching
may not have been biblical in a sense that the Reformed could
recognize.
47. This
development in the ministry of the Word illustrates the fact
that Catholic Reform in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries
was much broader than the Council of Trent and cannot be simply
equated with it. That Reform promoted, among many other things,
a great flowering of spiritualities and cultivation of religious
experience, a vast program of catechesis, extensive systems
of schools for laity and clergy, as well as other new forms
of ministry and evangelization. Impressive though the Reform
was in so many ways, however, it was not without its failures
and false steps. For in stance: many earlier abuses like the
nepotistic practices of the papal court and the seignorial style
of the episcopacy seemed little affected for the better; life
various inquisitions had terribly deleterious effects resulting
from repressive measures that included confiscation of goods,
banishments and executions. The reading of the Bible in the
vernacular, although not always forbidden to laity (contrary
to that which is often asserted), was subject nevertheless to
some extremely strict conditions which in practice discouraged
the laity. Those who were educated were able to read in Latin,
as did the clergy, but those who would read it in the vernacular
were often considered suspect. Moreover, the doctrinal and disciplinary
decrees of Trent itself often came to be interpreted with a
rigor and a partisanship the council did not intend.
1.3.3.
From Trent to the Present
48. Post-Tridentine
partisanship was manifested in various ways, not the least of
which was the manner of stressing divergent understandings of
the Church. For example, when Roman Catholic apologists focused
on the notes of the Church one, holy, catholic and apostolic
Catholic positions were presented in ways intended to
refute the ecclesiological claims of their Protestant contemporaries
as well as to convey what Roman Catholics believed about the
Church. Thus, in contrast to the diversity of Protestant movements,
Roman Catholics were united in one, visible Church under the
pope; where the Reformers championed justification by faith
alone, Roman Catholics maintained also the role of good works
in sanctification (in being made holy) and insisted on the grace
conveyed by a worthy reception of the Sacraments; where the
newly formed Protestant churches had broken with the apostolic
succession of the universal Church, the Roman Catholic Church
had retained the threefold apostolic ministry of episcopate,
presbyterate and diaconate; where the Reformers relied on their
individual interpretation of Scripture, Roman Catholics claimed
to preserve the entirety of catholic doctrine transmitted from
Christ through the ages.
49. Such
one-sided argumentation (which has generally been abandoned
by Roman Catholic theologians since Vatican II) was apologetically
successful - if not in convincing Protestants - at least in
assuring Roman Catholics that theirs was the one and only true
Church of Jesus Christ. Moreover, post-Tridentine apologetics
capitalized on the divisiveness within Protestantism in contrast
to the organic unity of Roman Catholicism. At the same time,
Post-Tridentine Catholicism became ever more juridical in its
approach to a wide range of issues and ecclesiology increasingly
institution oriented and papally centered.
50. This
"pyramidal" ecclesiology, which emerged in the context
of rising nationalism, received considerable reinforcement in
the nineteenth century when both the spiritual prerogatives
and the political power of papacy were subject to repeated attacks.
Many ecclesiologists hastened to defend both the spiritual independence
and the doctrinal authority of the popes. Simultaneously, on
the popular level, the pope was considered the symbol of Roman
Catholic unity, his slightest command a matter of unquestioning
obedience. In the eyes of many, both within and outside the
Roman Catholic Church, papal centrism appeared to have been
absolutized by the First Vatican Council's teaching on the "Primacy
and Infallible Teaching Authority of the Roman Pontiff."
Due to the adjournment of the Council shortly after this definition,
Vatican I did not have sufficient opportunity to take up the
broader ecclesiological issues in the schema De Ecclesia that
was proposed for consideration, but never adopted.
51. In
fact, the teaching of the First Vatican Council in this regard
is much more nuanced than either its ultramontane proponents
or its anti-papal opponents seem to have realized. For example,
Vatican I did not teach that "the pope is infallible"
- as is popularly imagined. Rather it taught that the pope can,
under carefully specified and limited circumstances, officially
exercise the infallibility divinely given to the Church as a
whole, in order to decide questions of faith and morals for
the Universal Church.
52. Forces
already then at work have had profound effects on the Catholic
Church in the twentieth century, influencing ecclesiology as
well. Renewal movements relating to biblical studies, liturgy,
theology, pastoral concerns, ecumenism, and other factors, paved
the way for the Second Vatican Council (1962-1965). Influenced
also by the ecumenical movement, this Council's rich presentation
of the Church in Lumen Gentium differed significantly from apologetical
approaches to the past. Concentrating not just on institutional
aspects, but on basic biblical and patristic insights on the
Church, Lumen Gentium re-emphasized, among other themes, the
notion of the Church as the People of God and as a communion.
All members of the People of God, it said, participate, even
if in different ways, in the life of Christ and in his role
as prophet, priest and king (LG 9-13). The Council described
the dimensions of collegiality in which the bishops of the whole
world live in communion with one another and with the pope,
the head of the episcopal college. While reiterating again the
primacy of the Bishop of Rome, the Council made clear that the
bishops also "exercise their own proper authority for the
good of their faithful, indeed even for the good of the whole
Church" (LG 22). In focusing on an ecclesiology of communion,
the Council was also able to give fresh insights on relations
already existing, despite separations, with Christians of other
churches and ecclesial communities - a real, though imperfect
communion that exists because of baptism (Unitatis Redintegratio,
22).
53. As
already seen, Catholics agree that there was need for reform
in the Church in the sixteenth century, and acknowledge the
fact that Church authorities did not undertake the reform which
might have prevented the tragic divisions that took place. At
the same time the Roman Catholic Church has never agreed with
some of the steps taken by the Reformers relating to their separation
from the Roman Catholic Communion, nor with certain theological
positions that developed in Reformed communities, and seeks
dialogue with the Reformed on those issues. The various ways
in which reform. and renewal have taken place within the Catholic
Church since the sixteenth century illustrate resources that
existed for bringing renewal from within. Thus while the Council
of Trent came too late to avoid divisions, it clarified Catholic
doctrine and introduced reforms which have had lasting effects
in the Church. The birth of new religious orders from the sixteenth
century to the twentieth, and the renewal of older religious
orders, gave fresh impulses to missionary activity. From the
sixteenth century, evangelization has increased. Catholic missionaries,
sometimes at the cost of their lives, brought the Gospel to
lands where it had never been heard before. In traditionally
Christian countries, other groups emphasized apostolates of
service to the poor and of education of the young, or the renewal
of contemplative life. Movements of lay spirituality and Catholic
action have flourished, especially in the twentieth century,
along with movements for liturgical, biblical and pastoral renewal.
Such developments and many others paved the way for the significant
reform and renewal brought about in the Catholic Church through
the Second Vatican Council which continues to be implemented
in the Church today.
1.3.4.
Contemporary Roman Catholic Attitudes toward the Reformed Churches
54. The
ecumenical experience of Roman Catholics also gradually increased,
sometimes intentionally through such efforts as the week of
prayer for Christian Unity, and sometimes circumstantially as
in the experiences of World War II, when Christians from different
churches suffered and died together as prisoners and refugees.
While such shared experiences helped to develop the ecumenical
climate in which Vatican II met, even the most prophetic could
not have predicted that the Council would provide what turned
out to be a pervasive reorientation in Roman Catholic liturgy
and life, theology and thought.
55. Prior
to Vatican II, the attitude of most Roman Catholics towards
Protestants in general, and members of Reformed Churches in
particular, was negative, though the degree of negativity ranged
from overt hostility in some places to guarded acceptance in
others. Friendship between members of the two traditions tended
to be based on family, business, and social relationships, in
which religious differences were frequently left undiscussed.
Genuine theological dialogue, though not unknown, was comparatively
rare; more common were polemical exchanges in which Roman Catholics
criticized and sometimes caricatured the history, doctrine and
worship of their Protestant "adversaries" .
56. Roman
Catholic negativity towards the Reformed churches had a number
of intertwined bases. On the ecclesiastical level, the most
obvious focus of contention was the Reformed rejection of the
episcopacy and the papacy that was also sometimes expressed
in terms that Roman Catholics found extremely offensive. Another
cause of opposition was the fact that the Reformed principle
of sola scriptura resulted in a repudiation of many Roman Catholic
teachings and practices, such as the sacrifice of the Mass,
Marian devotions, and the earning of indulgences.
57. These
religious differences were further intensified by social, economic,
and political disparities. In areas where Roman Catholics were
a minority, they frequently felt themselves oppressed by members
of the "Protestant Establishment." The separate and
frequently antagonistic development of the Reformed and Roman
Catholic communities tended to perpetuate stereotypes and, in
some cases, still continues to impede dialogue even today.
58. Although
there were some instances of ecumenical dialogue between Reformed
and Roman Catholic theologians prior to the Second Vatican Council,
it was the Council that provided the significant breakthrough
for overcoming the long-standing antagonism in Reformed-Roman
Catholic relationships. While the Council primarily aimed at
achieving an aggiornamento within the Roman Catholic Church,
the presence of observers from other Christian communions, including
Reformed Churches, was a constant reminder that ecclesial reform
and renewal are not only internal concerns, but have ecumenical
implications as well.
59. In
particular, Unitatis Redintegratio noted that the churches and
communities coming from the Reformation "are bound to the
Catholic Church by an especially close relationship as a result
of the long span of earlier centuries when Christian people
lived together in ecclesiastical communion" (19). It recognized
that the Spirit of Christ has not refrained from using them
as a means of salvation (3). The Council encouraged Catholics
to work for the reunion of all Christians through ecumenical
dialogue, a disavowal of prejudices, and co-operation on projects
of mutual concern. Instead of repeating the polemical accusations
that charged Protestant Christians with the sin of separation,
the Council acknowledged them as "separated brethren"
(fratres seiuncti), justified by their faith through baptism,
who reverence the written Word of God, share in the life of
grace, receive the gifts of the Holy Spirit, celebrate Christ's
death and resurrection when they gather for the Lord's Supper,
and witness to Christ through the moral uprightness of their
lives, through their works of charity, and their efforts for
justice and peace in the world.
60. During
the years since Vatican II, this process of reconciliation has
been carried on in. different ways and at various levels - local,
national, regional, international. For example, Reformed and
Roman Catholics have prayed together, have been involved in
theological dialogue at various levels; they have joined in
producing bible translations; they have collaborated on a variety
of projects of social concern, economic justice and political
witness. At the international level, the efforts of the dialogue
co-sponsored by the Vatican Secretariat for Promoting Christian
Unity and the World Alliance of Reformed Churches were recognized
by Pope John Paul II in a letter to Dr. James McCord, President
of the World Alliance of Reformed Churches, on the occasion
of its General Council in Ottawa, in July, 1982:
The way
upon which we have embarked together is without return, we can
only move forward, that is why we strive to manifest unity more
perfectly and more visibly, just as God wants it for all those
who believe in him. (Secretariat for Promoting Christian Unity,
Information Service, 51 (1983) p. 30).
61. In
the scholarly world, these efforts at reconciliation have been
accompanied by new interpretations of Reformation history and
theology. For example, Roman Catholic theologians today generally
acknowledge that many of the issues raised by the Reformers
urgently needed to be faced and resolved. Similarly, Roman Catholic
historians, while not agreeing with all aspects of their thought,
have become more sympathetic to Zwingli and to Calvin, no longer
seeing them chiefly as rebels against ecclesial authority, but
as reformers who felt obliged by their understanding of the
Gospel to continue their efforts to reform the Church at all
costs. The "zeal that animated these two outstanding religious
personalities of Swiss history" was favorably noted by
Pope John Paul II on the occasion of his pastoral visit to the
Catholic Church of Switzerland in 1984:
The legacy
of the thought and ethical convictions particular to each of
these two men continues to be forcefully and dynamically present
in various parts of Christianity. On the one hand, we cannot
forget that the work of their reform remains a permanent challenge
among us and makes our ecclesiastical division always present;
but on the other hand, no one can deny that elements of the
theology and spirituality of each of them maintain deep ties
between us. (Secretariat for Promoting Christian Unity, Information
Service 55 (1984) p. 47).
1.4.
Conclusion
62. As
mentioned at the beginning of this chapter, these reviews of
our respective histories, even when sketched so briefly, have
shown us "whence we have come," so that we can better
understand where we are - so that we can better understand what
yet needs to be done in reassessing our past. We see more clearly
how our respective self-understandings have been so largely
formed by confessional historiographies of the sixteenth and
seventeenth centuries. These differing self-interpretations
have, in turn, fostered the establishment of whole sets of different
values, symbols, assumptions and institutions - in a word, different
religious and ecclesial cultures. The result is that today,
as in the past, the same words, even the same biblical expressions,
are sometimes received and understood by us in quite different
ways.
63. The
very recognition that this is the case marks important progress
in our attempt to rid our memories of significant resentments
and misconceptions. We need to set ourselves more diligently,
however, to the task of reconciling these memories, by writing
together the story of what happened in the sixteenth century,
with attention not only to the clash of convictions over doctrine
and church order, but with attention also as to how in the aftermath
our two churches articulated their respective understandings
into institutions, culture and the daily lives of believers.
But, above all, for the ways in which our divisions have caused
a scandal, and been an obstacle to the preaching of the Gospel,
we need to ask forgiveness of Christ and of each other.
Chapter
2
Our
Common Confession of Faith
2.1.
Our Lord Jesus Christ:
The Only Mediator Between God And Humankind
64. Before moving on to matters which are still points of disagreement
and divergence between our churches, we as a Dialogue Commission
propose to confess together our faith in Christ. We give this
affirmation of faith the title "confession" even though
it is neither a confession in the ecclesial sense nor a complete
statement of faith. We do so because we are convinced that the
importance of what we are able to say together merits such a
title.
65. We make this confession of faith, wishing to manifest publicly
our desire to re-examine the reasons which brought about our
separation in the past and to assess whether or not they are
still of such a nature as to justify our division. Jesus Christ,
in whose name our forbears separated themselves from one another,
is also the one who unites us in a community of forgiveness
and of kinship. We wish to voice our conviction that what unites
us as Christians is more important, more essential, than that
which separates us as Roman Catholics and Reformed. Even if
full communion is not yet granted us, we cannot define our relations
to each other simply in terms of separation and division.
66. We
make this confession, moreover, mindful of this world of ours,
so as to give common witness before it. With respect for all
who seek God, however God is named for them, or even if for
them God cannot as yet be named, we wish to speak the Good News
of salvation brought in Jesus Christ by God seeking out humankind.
In that Good News we Christians already find our reconciliation
and the strength to work for the fuller reconciliation of all
with God and with each other.
67. This
confession involves on our part the recognition of the authority
of the Scriptures, as these have been identified by the early
church, to whose teaching we desire to remain obedient. We recall
what was said on this subject in the report of the first phase
of our dialogue (The Presence of Christ in Church and World,
25-33). In the same way we recognize together in the teaching
of the ancient Church, the force of a norma norrnata, i.e.,
an authority which is subject to the authority of the Scripture,
and we desire to maintain that teaching in its purity. The teaching
of the Church ought to be an authentic explanation of the Trinitarian
and christological affirmations of the early confessions of
faith and the early councils (cf. on this subject, PCCW, 34-38).
2.1.1.
Christ, Mediator and Reconciler
68. Before
all humankind, our sisters and brothers, we announce the death
of the Lord (cf. 1 Cor 11:26) and proclaim his resurrection
from the dead (cf. Rom 10:9; Acts 2:32; 3:15). In that mystery
of death and resurrection we confess the event which saves humanity,
that is, liberates it from the distress in which it is imprisoned
by sin and establishes it in communion of life with God. That
event reveals who God is, who we are and who Christ is as mediator
between God and humankind.
69. a)
God is the One who "chose us (in Christ) before the foundation
of the world... He destined us in love to be his sons through
Jesus Christ" (Eph 1:4-5)2, a God of tenderness and mercy,
who wills not the death of the sinner, but rather that the sinner
should be converted and live. God is the One who has loved us
unto death: indeed, in the person of Jesus Christ, God himself
died on the Cross for, "in Christ, God was reconciling
the world to himself" (2 Cor 5:19). But this was not the
"death of God" proclaimed in recent times: it was
the death of the Just One fallen into the hands of evil persons,
and faithful to his mission to the end. Jesus died a death which
is a victory over the death which touches all. God's omnipotence
is revealed in the deepest weakness of human nature, assumed
in solidarity with us. If the death of Jesus is the work of
sinners, God from all eternity has made it one with the design
of salvation, accomplishing that life giving work by raising
Jesus from the dead. Placed at the heart of human violence,
Jesus by his love has transformed the work of death into the
work of life.
b) The
death and resurrection of Jesus also reveal to us who we are:
not merely creatures who are object of God's benevolence, but
also human beings capable of sin, historically imprisoned in
the bonds of a sin which is our curse. From the beginning we
hid ourselves from God, and this is why God is hidden from us.
It is not that God is distant and inaccessible, but that we
reject the God who is too near and too explicit. This awareness
of alienation and exile in the midst of faith we call sin. We
recognize that there is a betrayal of God's trust in us and
that God's heart is saddened by our separation. From this condition
we cannot free ourselves by our own strength. This is why the
need and expectation of a mediator are central to the Old Covenant,
where the law, sacrifices, prophecies, wisdom are ways of mediating
between a living God and a humanity subject to sin and death.
But none of these paths fully reach the goal. Because of sin,
the law intended for life judges, condemns and leads to death.
Substitute sacrifices are endlessly repeated. Prophecies lag,
bide their time, fall silent. Wisdom remains an ideal. In Jesus,
the unique mediator, in his death and resurrection, we are radically
freed from this situation: the way of true life is opened to
us anew.
c) The
death and resurrection of Jesus finally reveal who Jesus himself
is, the one mediator between God and humanity, that is, the
One who comes to reconcile us with God. This is why we accept
together the confession of faith of the New Testament. "
For there is one God, and there is one Mediator between God
and men, the man Christ Jesus, who gave himself as a ransom
for all" (1 Tim 2:56). We confess that "there is no
other name under heaven given among men by which we must be
saved" (Acts 4:12).
70. Mediation
and reconciliation have been embodied and located, named and
personified in Jesus of Nazareth - whence it was thought at
that time nothing good could come, condemned and executed at
Jerusalem - which God has since David's time identified as the
place of God's peace, resurrected by the power of God and placed
at God's right hand. This is the news, still surprising and
overwhelming, which constitutes the Gospel; of this the Church
is the beneficiary and the herald.
71. We
therefore confess together that Christ, established as Mediator,
achieves our reconciliation in all its dimensions: God reconciling
humanity, human beings reconciled with each other; and humanity
reconciled with God.
On the one hand, indeed, in and through Jesus Christ we have
reconciliation with God. For "every good endowment and
every perfect gift is from above, coming down from the Father
of lights" (Jas 1:17). For "all this is from God,
who through Christ reconciled us to himself." (2 Cor 5:18);
"In him we have redemption through his blood, the forgiveness
of our trespasses"(Eph 1:7).
On the other hand, in and through Jesus Christ, we have reconciliation
among ourselves, "For he is our peace, who has made us
both one." In his flesh he "has broken down the dividing
wall of hostility... that he might create in himself one new
man in place of the two, so making peace, and might reconcile
us both to God in one body through the cross, thereby bringing
the hostility to an end. And he came and preached peace to you
who were far off and peace to those who were near" (Eph
2:14-17). The vertical and horizontal dimensions of reconciliation
are interdependent: just as hostility is the consequence and
sign of separation from God, so reconciliation in peace among
human beings is the fruit and sign of reconciliation with God.
From Christ we receive the gift of reconciliation which aims
to extend to all. To this we witness together in faith.
Finally, thanks to Jesus Christ, Jews and Gentiles "both
have access in one Spirit to the Father" (Eph 2:18). In
and through Christ we can offer ourselves "as a living
sacrifice, holy and acceptable to God, which is ... spiritual
worship" (Rom 12:1). For he "gave himself up for us,
a fragrant offering and sacrifice to God" (Eph 5:2). Jesus,
the Christ, marks the end of condemnation by the law, because
he is "...our righteousness and sanctification and redemption"
(1 Cor 1:30); he marks the end of the sacrifices of the law
because "he entered once for all into the holy place, taking...
his own blood, thus securing an eternal redemption" (Heb
9:12); Christ marks the end of waiting on prophecies because
he fulfils all that was written of him "...in the Law of
Moses, and the prophets and the psalms" (cf. Lk 24:44);
Christ marks the end of the anonymity of wisdom, for he himself
is the "wisdom of God" (1 Cor 1:24).
72. We
confess together that just as God is unique, the Mediator and
Reconciler between God and humankind is unique and that the
fullness of reconciliation is entire and perfect in him. Nothing
and nobody could replace or duplicate, complete or in any way
add to the unique mediation accomplished "once for all"
(Heb 9:12) by Christ, "mediator of a new covenant "(Heb
9:15; cf. 8:6 and 12:24). This mediation is still present and
active in the person of the risen Christ who "is able for
all time to save those who draw near to God through him, since
he always lives to make intercession for them" (Heb 7:25).
2.1.2.
The Work of Christ Reveals That He is the Son Within the Trinity
73. In
his life and in his death Jesus is revealed as the Son par excellence
of God, the One who alone knows the Father and whom the Father
alone knows (cf. Mt 11:27), who can address himself to God saying
"Abba, Father" (Mk 14:36). Thus in the light of Jesus'
resurrection and exaltation Christians have confessed that he
has been made Christ and Lord (cf. Acts 2:36) and that he is
the one to whom are applied the words of the Psalm: "Thou
art my Son, today I have begotten thee"(Acts 13:33; cf.
Heb 1:5). He is, then, this One whom God has sent us (cf. Gal
4:4); he who "though he was in the form of God, did not
count equality with God a thing to be grasped, but emptied himself,
taking the form of a servant, being born in the likeness of
men. And being found in human form he humbled himself and became
obedient unto death, even death on a cross" (Phil 2:6-8).
This is why with the Church of every age, we confess Jesus Christ
as at once true God and true human being, at once one with God
and joined in solidarity with humankind, not an intermediary
between God and humanity but a genuine Mediator, able to bring
together God and humanity in immediate communion. His reconciling
mediation opens up for us a vision of his mediation in creation:
he is "the first-born of all creation; for in him all things
were created, in heaven and on earth... all things were created
through him and for him" (Col 1:15-16). He is the Word
and "all things were made through him" (Jn 1:3). The
mediation of Christ has thus a cosmic universality: it is directed
towards the transformation of our world in God.
74. Finally,
the work of Jesus, the Son, reveals to us the role of the Spirit
of God who is common to him and to the Father: it reveals to
us that God is Triune.
75. The
Holy Spirit is present and active throughout the history of
salvation. In the life of Jesus the Spirit intervenes at all
the decisive moments: Jesus was conceived by the Holy Spirit
(cf. Lk 1:35; Mt 1:20); the Spirit descended on him at his baptism
(Lk 3:22); he was filled with the Holy Spirit (Lk 4:1); he accomplished
his ministry with the power of the Spirit (Lk 4:14). He proclaimed
that the prophecy of the book of Isaiah: "The Spirit of
the Lord is upon me, because the Lord has anointed me"
(61:1) was fulfilled in him (Lk 4:17-21). He rejoiced in the
Holy Spirit (Lk 10,21). No one had ever possessed the Spirit
as lie did, "not by measure" (Jn 3:34). Still more,
it is he who promises to send the Spirit (Jn 14:26; 16:7) and
invokes the Spirit on his own disciples after the resurrection
(Jn 20:22), because his death had been an act of "giving
up" the Spirit to God and at the same time an act of "transmission
of the Spirit" (Jn 19:30). In turn God raises him up and
gives him the Spirit, so that he might spread the Spirit among
us (cf. Acts 2:32-33). By the life, death and resurrection of
Jesus, the Holy Spirit becomes the common gift of the Father
and the Son to humanity.
76. Just
as the Spirit came upon Jesus at the moment of his baptism,
so the Spirit descends upon the disciples gathered in the upper
room (Acts 2:1-12) and on the Gentiles who listen to the word
(Acts 10:44-48). These three closely linked "Pentecosts"
belong to the foundation of the Church and make it the "Temple
of the Spirit." Thus the design pursued from the beginning
by God the Creator and Savior - to bring into being a people
- is accomplished.
2.2.
Justification By Grace, Through Faith
77. Because
we believe in Christ, the one Mediator between God and humankind,
we believe that we are justified by the grace which comes from
him, by means of faith which is a living and life-giving faith.
We recognize that our justification is a totally gratuitous
work accomplished by God in Christ. We confess that the acceptance
in faith of justification is itself a gift of grace. By the
grace of faith we recognize in Jesus of Nazareth, established
Christ and Lord by his resurrection, the one who saves us and
brings us into communion of life with God. To rely for salvation
on anything other than faith, would be to diminish the fullness
accomplished and offered in Jesus Christ. Rather than completing
the Gospel, it would weaken it.
78. To speak in this way of our justification and reconciliation
with God is to say that faith is above all a reception (Rom
5:1-2): it is received and in turn it gives thanks for grace.
The raising to life, by God alone, of Jesus Christ, put to death
by all, is the eschatological event which defines faith as reception
of a gift of God, not as any human work (Eph 2:8-10). We receive
from Christ our justification, that is our pardon, our liberation,
our life with God. By faith, we are liberated from our presumption
that we can somehow save ourselves; by faith, we are comforted
in spite of our terror of losing ourselves. We are set at liberty
to open ourselves to the sanctification which bod wills for
us.
79. The
person justified by the free gift of faith, i.e. by a faith
embraced with a freedom restored to its fullness, can henceforth
live according to righteousness. The person who has received
grace is called to bear fruits worthy of that grace. Justification
makes him or her an "heir of God, co-heir with Christ"
(Rom 8:17). The one who has freely received is committed to
gratitude and service. This is not a new form of bondage but
a new way forward. And so, justification by faith brings with
it the gift of sanctification, which can grow continuously as
it creates life, justice and liberty. Jesus Christ, the one
mediator between God and humankind, is also the unique way which
leads toward pleasing God. Faith receives freely and bears testimony
actively, as it works itself out through love (Gal 5:6).
2.3. The Calling of the Church: its Role in Justification
by Grace through Fath
80. Together
we confess the Church, for there is no justification in isolation.
All justification takes place in the community of believers,
or is ordered toward the gathering of such a community. Fundamental
for us all is the presence of Christ in the Church, considered
simultaneously as both a reality of grace and a concrete community
in time and space. Christ himself acts in the Church in the
proclamation of the Word, in the celebration of the sacraments,
in prayer and in intercession for. the world. This presence
and this action are enabled and empowered by the Spirit, by
whom Christ calls to unite human beings to himself, to express
his reality through them, to associate them in the mystery of
his self-offering for them.
81. The
Church's calling is set within the triune God's eternal plan
of salvation for humankind. In this sense, the Church is already
present at creation (Col 1:15-18). It is present in the history
of humankind: "the Church from Abel," as it was called
in the ancient Church. It is also present at the Covenant declared
to Abraham, from which the chosen people would come. Even more,
the Church is present at the establishment of the People of
the covenant. Through the law and the prophets, God calls this
people and prepares them for a communion which will be accomplished
at the sending of Emmanuel, "God with us" (cf. Mt
1:23). The novelty introduced by the incarnation of the Word
does not call into question the continuity of the history of
salvation. Nor does it call into question the significance of
the interventions of that same Word and Spirit in the course
of the Old Testament revelation. For God has not rejected this
people (Rom 11:1). The continued existence of the chosen people
is an integral part of the history of salvation.
82. Nevertheless we believe that the coming of Christ, the Word
incarnate, brings with it a radical change in the situation
of the world in the sight of God. Henceforth the divine gift
which God has made in Jesus Christ is irreversible and definitive.
On God's side, salvation is accomplished and is offered to all.
The presence of God has become inward among believers (Jer 31:33;
Ezek 36:26) in a new fashion, by the Holy Spirit which conforms
them to the image of Jesus Christ. At the same time, God's presence
becomes universal; it is not limited to one people but is offered
to all humanity called to be gathered together by Christ in
the Spirit.
83. This
is why we believe that the people of God gathered together by
the death and resurrection of Christ does not live solely by
the promise. Henceforth it lives also by the gift already received
through the mystery of the event of Jesus, Christ and Lord,
who has sent his Spirit. We therefore confess Jesus Christ as
the foundation of the Church (1 Cor 3:11).
84. The
inauguration of the Church takes place in time and in stages
related to the unfolding of the Christ-event. These stages,
closely related as they are, are three in number:
a) There
is, first, the missionary activity of Jesus "in the days
of his flesh" (Heb 5:7): his preaching of the Kingdom,
which presupposes the promises of the Old Testament, and his
mighty works; the invitation to believe in him and the call
to conversion addressed to all; the gathering of the disciples,
men and women (Lk 8:1-3) and the appointment of the group of
Twelve (Mk 3:13-19); the change of Simon's name to Peter (Mt
16:18) and the role which is assigned to him in the circle of
the disciples (Lk 22:31-32).
b) The
second stage is Jesus' celebration of the Last Supper with these
same disciples as a memorial (Lk 22:14-20) of the giving of
his life for all; his death on the Cross, by which he accomplished
the salvation of all (Jn 12:32); the resurrection of Jesus,
which gathers the scattered community of the disciples. The
risen Christ for forty days leads his followers into a more
profound faith (Acts 1:2-3); in leaving them he gives them the
command to baptize (Mt 28:18), to preach repentance and forgiveness,
and to bear witness to him (Lk 24:47-48).
c) The
third stage is the sending of the Spirit upon the community
of one hundred and twenty gathered on the day of Pentecost (Acts
2/2-4). The disciples are sent out to Israelites and to Gentiles,
as is shown by the gift of the Spirit to the Gentiles (Acts
10:44) which may be called a "new Pentecost." Thus
the Church is founded once for all, fully constituted and equipped
for its universal vocation in the world and for its eschatological
destiny. This gift of the Spirit is the first fruits. The Spirit's
work of renewal and gathering will be fully achieved and manifested
only when Christ returns in glory.
85. The
Church is called into being as a community of men and women
to share in the salvific activity of Christ Jesus. He has reconciled
them to God, freed them from sin and redeemed them from evil.
"They are justified by his grace as a gift, through the
redemption which is in Christ Jesus" (Rom 3:24).
86. The justification of Jesus' disciples, sinful individuals
freely justified by grace without any merit on their part, has
been one of the constitutive experiences of the Christian faith
since the foundation of the Church. Justification by grace through
faith is given us in the Church. This is not to say that the
Church exercises a mediation complementary to that of Christ,
or that it is clothed with a power independent of the gift of
grace. The Church is at once the place, the instrument, and
the minister chosen by God to make heard Christ's word and to
celebrate the sacraments in God's name throughout the centuries.
When the Church faithfully preaches the word of salvation and
celebrates the sacraments, obeying the command of the Lord and
invoking the power of the Spirit, it is sure of being heard,
for it carries out in its ministry the action of Christ himself.
87. The
ministerial and instrumental role of the Church in the proclamation
of the Gospel and in the celebration of the sacraments in no
way infringes the sovereign liberty God. If God chooses to act
through the Church for the salvation of believers, this does
not restrict saving grace to these means. The sovereign freedom
of God can always call anyone to salvation independently of
such actions. But it is true to say that God's call is always
related to the Church, in that God's call always has as its
purpose the building up of the Church which is the Body of Christ
(1 Cor 12:2728; Eph 1:22-23) (cf. N. 101).
88. This
common confession of the Church, of its vocation and of its
role in justification by grace through faith, provides a positive
context for a study of some of the questions which still divide
us in our respective understandings of the relationship between
Christ's Gospel and the Church as a community existing in the
world.
Chapter
3
The
Church We Confess
And Our Divisions In History
3.1.
Introduction
89. The
difficulties which still separate our communions arise largely
from our different understandings of the relationship between
that which we confess, on the one hand, concerning the origin
and the vocation of the one, holy, catholic and apostolic Church
in God's plan of salvation and, on the other hand, the forms
of its historical existence. Our two communions regard themselves
as belonging to the Una Sancta, but differ in their understanding
of that belonging.
90. In
addressing this subject, we must move beyond comparative ecclesiology.
Our method requires us both to say what we can together and
to recognize without ambiguity that which cannot yet be the
object of consensus.
91. This
implies a double challenge. There are, first, differences of
perspective such that we find in the position of the partner
a complementary point of view or a different accent on a single
commonly held truth. In opening ourselves to the partners critique
we can learn to express our own views in a more balanced way
and perhaps find a common frame of reference for understanding
each other
92. Secondly, however, some of our positions seem simply to
diverge. They appear mutually incompatible or incommensurable.
That leaves us, for the present at least, with no choice but
to agree to disagree, while seeking clarity about the nature
of our disagreements. We find, among other things, that we disagree
about what issues are serious enough to be church-dividing.
Questions which, from the Roman Catholic side, are obstacles
to full communion are not necessarily so from the perspective
of the Reformed, and vice-versa. This does not dispense us from
the responsibility of searching for reconciliation across even
the most apparently insurmountable barriers. In the meantime
we respect each other, and we are grateful for the measure of
community that is possible between us.
93. In
this Report we do not treat the whole range of ecclesiological
issues. We prefer to highlight three particular arenas of discussion
because of what is at stake in them and because of the light
they can cast on the way to a fuller consensus. We shall deal,
first, with two conceptions of the Church which, though different,
we consider potentially complimentary. We then deal with two
areas of apparent divergence or incompatibility: our views of
continuity and discontinuity in Church history, and of the Church's
visibility and ministerial order.
3.2.
Two Conceptions of the Church
94. We
have already affirmed the ministerial and instrumental role
of the Church in the proclamation of the Gospel and the celebration
of the sacraments (NN. 85-86). Word and sacrament alike are
of the very nature of the Church. They also provide us with
two different conceptions for understanding the Church and the
way in which it fulfils its ministerial and instrumental role,
the first, more "Reformed," the second, more "Roman
Catholic."
3.2.1.
The Church as "Creatura Verbi"
95. The
Church existing as a community in history has been understood
and described in the Reformed tradition as creatura verbi, as
"the creation of the Word." God is eternally Word
as well as Spirit; by God's Word and Spirit all things were
created; reconciliation and renewal are the work of the same
God, by the same Word and Spirit.
96. God's
Word in history has taken a threefold form. Primarily it is
the Word made flesh: Jesus Christ, incarnate, crucified and
risen. Then it is the Word as spoken in God's history with God's
people and recorded in the Scriptures of the Old and New Testaments
as testimony to Jesus Christ. Third, it is the Word as heard
and proclaimed in the preaching, witness and action of the Church.
The third form depends upon and is bound to the second, through
which it has access to the first, the Word incarnate in Jesus
Christ. This is why the Reformed tradition has insisted so emphatically
that the preaching, teaching, and witness of the Church through
the centuries - the Church's dogma and tradition are always
to be subordinated to the testimony of the Bible, that Scripture
rather than Tradition is "the word of God written"
and "the only infallible rule of faith and practice."
Scripture is the control by which the Church's proclamation
must be governed if that proclamation is to witness authentically
to God's Word in Jesus Christ and to be "the Word proclaimed."
For the Word of God is one consistent word: The Word of judgement
and mercy, the Gospel of reconciliation, the announcing of the
Reign of God. It is a Word alive as Jesus Christ himself is
alive: it is a Word calling to be heard, answered and reechoed;
it is a Word claiming response, obedience and commitment as
the Word of grate which evokes and empowers authentic faith.
97. The
Church depends upon this word the Word incarnate, the Word written,
the Word preached
in at least three ways.
the Church is founded upon the Word of God
the Church is kept in being as the Church by the Word
of God
the Church continually depends upon the Word of God for
its inspiration, strength and renewal.
98. In
each of these aspects, the Word and Spirit of God work together,
for it is the power of the Spirit that enables the hearing of
the Word and the response of faith. The Word and Spirit of God
together establish, preserve and guide the community of the
Church in and through human history. The Church, like faith
itself, is brought into being by the hearing of God's Word in
the power of God's Spirit; it lives ex auditat, by hearing.
99. This
emphasis upon hearing the Word of God has been of central important
in Reformed theology since the 16th century. This is why the
Reformed have stressed "the true preaching of the Word"
together with "the right dispensing of the sacraments according
to the institution of Jesus Christ" as a decisive "mark
of the true Church." Behind this emphasis lies a keen awareness
of the way in which the Old Testament proclaimed "the Word
of the Lord," of the New Testament recognition of Jesus
Christ as "the Word who was in the beginning with God"
and of the new sense in the 16th century that the Bible is a
living, contemporary Word with which the Church's teaching and
order, as these had come to develop, were by no means always
in harmony. Against the appeal to continuity, custom and institution,
the Reformed appealed to the living voice of the living God
as the essential and decisive factor by which the Church must
live, if it will live at all: the Church, as creatura verbi.
100. Thus
far, our exposition has been relatively traditional and familiar.
But despite the intended organic relationship between Word and
Church, the Reformed tradition has not always held it steadily
in view. It has sometimes inclined to verbalism, to the reduction
of the Gospel to doctrine, of the divine Word incarnate in Jesus
Christ to theological theory. Proclamation of the Word has been
seen simply as an external mark of the Church rather than intrinsic
to it; the Church itself regarded more as the place where Scripture
is interpreted than as a community living from the Word. Such
understandings fall short of the full meaning of creatura verbi
as describing the nature and calling of the Church.
101. The
Church is the creation of the Word because the Word itself is
God's creative Word of grace by which we are justified and renewed.
The Church is the human community shaped and ruled by that grace;
it is the community of grace, called to let "this mind
be among yourselves, which is yours in Christ Jesus..."
(Phil 2:5). The community of faith is thus not merely the community
in which the gospel is preached; by its hearing and responding
to the Word of grace, the community itself becomes a medium
of confession, its faith a "sign" or "token"
to, the world; it is itself a part of the world transformed
by being addressed and renewed by the Word of God.
3.2.2.
The Church as "Sacrament of Grace"
102. Even
before Vatican II, many Roman Catholic theologians described
the Church as a "sacrament," because this term is
associated with the biblical term "mystery." Such
a sacramental description highlights the comparison between
what the Church is and what is enacted in the celebration of
the sacraments. The adoption of this term by the Second Vatican
Council (Lumen Gentium I, 1) for speaking of the Church has
made this usage almost a commonplace in Roman Catholic thought.
103. The Second Vatican Council described the Church, because
of its relationship with Christ, as "a kind of sacrament,
or sign of intimate union with God, and of the unity of all
humankind" (Lumen Gentium 1). The Church is described as
the "universal sacrament of salvation" (Lumen Gentium
48; Gaudium et Spes 45; Ad Gentes 1), the "visible sacrament
of this saving unity" (Lumen Gentium 9), the "wondrous
sacrament" (Sacrosanctum Concilium 5). In some cases the
conciliar text indicates the deep roots of this conception of
the Church in patristic thinking, by referring to some expressions
of Cyprian who speaks of ecclesial unity as a sacrament (LG
9 and SC 26). It then directly applies these formulas to the
Church in extending the dynamic of their meaning. At the same
time, it refers to a prayer in the Roman Missal before the restoration
of Holy Week, which affirms that "from the side of Christ
on the cross there came forth the wondrous sacrament which is
the whole Church" (SC 5).
104. The
application of the category "sacrament" to the Church
is doubly analogical. On the one hand, it is analogical with
regard to its application to Christ. Christ, indeed, is the
primordial sacrament of God in that the Logos became flesh,
assuming our humanity. Jesus is the full revelation of grace
(cf. Jn 1:14) and "the image of the invisible God"
(Col 1:15), the one who has become "the source of eternal
salvation to all who obey him" (Heb 5:9). That is why Paul
proclaims "the mystery of Christ" (Col 4:3). Later
on, Augustine, for whom the terms "mystery" and "sacrament
" are practically equivalent, writes: "There is no
other mystery of God than Christ"(P.L. 33, 845). For Saint
Thomas the original sacraments of our salvation are the "mysteries
of the flesh of Christ," in particular, the passion and
the resurrection of Christ are sacraments by reason of their
double character of being exemplary sign as well as instrumental
and effective cause (cf. Comp. Theol. 239; S. Theol. III°,
Q. 62, art. 5 and primum). Luther made his own this traditional
interpretation of Christ: "The Holy Scriptures know only
one sacrament, which in Christ the Lord himself" (Disputatio
de fide infusa et acquisita de 1520, 18; Weimar edition, 6,
p. 86). All language concerning the sacramentality of the Church,
then, must respect the absolute Lordship of Christ over the
Church and the sacraments. Christ is the unique foundational
sacrament, that is to say, the active and original power of
the whole economy of salvation visibly manifested in our world.
The Church is a sacrament by the gift of Christ, because it
is given to it to be the sign and instrument of Christ.
105. In
the New Testament the term "mystery" is not directly
applied to the Church, although Ephesians 5:32 applies this
term to Genesis 2:24 and relates that verse to the relationship
between Christ and the Church (and the Latin Vulgate translated
"mysterium" as "sacramentum"). The Church
then is only a sacrament founded by Christ and entirely dependent
on him. Its being and its sacramental acts are the fruit of
a free gift received from Christ, a gift in relation to which
he remains radically transcendent, but which, however, he commits
to the salvation of humankind. That is why, according to the
Second Vatican Council, "It is not a vain analogy to compare
the Church with the mastery of the Word Incarnate," for
its one complex reality is "constituted from both a human
aspect and a divine aspect" (LG 8). This analogy should
not make us forget the radical difference which remains between
Christ and the Church. In particular, the Church is only the
spouse and the body of Christ through the gift of the Spirit.
106. On
the other hand, the Church is called a sacrament by analogy
to the liturgies of Baptism and the Eucharist, which the Greek
fathers called "the mysteries," in a sense already
analogous to the Pauline mysterion. The sacraments are the gestures
and the words which Christ has confided to his Church and to
which he has linked the promise of grace by the gift of his
Spirit.
107. In
the Church as "sacrament," "a bridge is built
between the visible face of creation and the design of God realised
in the Covenant" (cf. Groupe des Dombes, L'Esprit Saint,
l'Église et les Sacrements, 23). Or, in a slightly different
register, one can also call the Church a "living sign."
The terms "sacrament" and "sign" imply coherence
and continuity between diverse moments of the economy of salvation;
they designate the Church at once as the place of presence and
the place of distance; and they depict the Church as instrument
and ministry of the unique mediation of Christ. Of this unique
mediation the Church is the servant, but never either its source
or its mistress.
108. As
Christ's mediation was carried out visibly in the mystery of
his incarnation, life, death and resurrection, so the Church
- has also been established as visible sign and instrument of
this unique mediation across time and space. The Church is an
instrument in Christ's hands because it carries out, through
the preaching of the Word, the administration of the sacraments
and the oversight of communities, a ministry entirely dependent
on the Lord, just like a tool in the hand of a worker. So the
New Testament describes the ministry of the Church as serving
the ministry of Christ. Ministers are "God's fellow workers"
(1 Cor 3:9), "servants of Christ and stewards of the mysteries
of God" (1 Cor 4:1), "ministers of a new covenant"
(2 Cor 3:6), "ministers of reconciliation" accomplished
by Christ (Cf. 2 Cor 5:18) and, more generally "envoys"
or "ambassadors for Christ" (2 Cor 5:20).
109. The
instrumental ministry of the Church is confided to sinful human
beings. It can therefore be disfigured or atrophied, mishandled
and exaggerated. But the reality of God's gift always transfigures
human failure, and God's fidelity to the Church continually
maintains it, according to the promise (Mt 28:20) which sustains
it in its mission of salvation across the ages.
110. The
Church is thus constituted as a sacrament, an instrument of
the unique mediation of Christ, a sign of the efficacious presence
of that mediation. The Church is such in that it lives out of
the Word, which has engendered it and which it proclaims, and
to the extent that it is open and docile to the Spirit that
dwells within it. The Paraclete maintains and continually renews
the memory of Christ in the Church (Jn 14:26; 16:15) until the
Savior comes again. This Paraclete accomplishes in the Church
the ministry of liberty (2 Cor 3:17), of truth (Jn 16:13), of
sanctification (Rom 8:12-13) and of transformation (2 Cor 3:18).
In this way, the Church is the bearer of the tradition of the
Word, that, is, the sacrament of the Word of God; and bearer
of transmission of salvation, that is, the sacrament of Christ
and of the Spirit.
111. If
the Church is seen in relation to its source, it may be described
as the sacrament of God, of Christ, and of the Spirit - as a
sacrament of grace. If it is seen in relation to its mission
and calling, it may be called the sacrament of the kingdom,
or the sacrament of salvation (Lumen Gentium 48): "like
a sacrament, that is a sign and instrument of intimate union
with God and of the unity of the entire human species"
(ibid. 1).
3.2.3.
Questions and Reflections
112. We
are agreed in recognizing the radical dependence of the Church
in receiving the transcendent gift which God makes to it and
we recognize that gift as the basis of its activity of service
for the salvation of humanity. But we do not yet understand
the nature of this salutary activity in the same way. The Reformed
commonly allege that Catholics appropriate to the Church the
role proper to Christ. Roman Catholics, for their part, commonly
accuse the Reformed of holding the Church apart from the work
of salvation and of giving up the assurance that Christ is truly
present and acting in his Church. Both these views are caricatures,
but they can help to focus attention on genuine underlying differences
of perspective of which the themes of creatura verbi and sacramentum
gratiae serve as symbols.
113. The
two conceptions, "the creation of the Word" and "sacrament
of grace," can in fact be seen as expressing the same instrumental
reality under different aspects, as complementary to each other
or as two sides of the same coin. They can also become the poles
of a creative tension between our churches. A particular point
at which this tension becomes apparent is reached when it is
asked how the questions of the continuity and order of the Church
through the ages appear in the light of these two concepts.
3.3.
The Continuity of the Church Throughout the Ages
114. In
what sense can it be said that the Church has remained one from
generation to generation? This question is of immediate relevance
for relations between the Reformed and Roman Catholic churches
because the events leading to the Reformation and resulting
in division seem to imply a discontinuity in the life of the
one Church.
3.3.1.
God's Fidelity and Our Sinfulness
115. Together
we believe that God remains faithful to God's promise and never
abandons the people he has called into being. "God is faithful,
by whom you were called into the fellowship of his Son, Jesus
Christ our Lord" (1 Cor 1:9). Such is the ground of our
conviction that the Church continues through the ages to carry
out the mission it has received until the end of time, because
"the powers of death shall not prevail against it"
(Mt 16:18). Through the Church, Christ who is present with us
all days until the end of time (cf. Mt 28:20), leads us indefectibly
to salvation.
116. The
continuity of the Church has an origin: it is the sending-of
the apostles on a mission by Christ, a sending which makes them
"apostles"; it has a purpose - the mission, "apostle,"
to make disciples of all the nations (cf. Mt 28:19). This is
why the Church is of its essence apostolic and its ministry
is within an apostolic succession. As was said in our preceding
document, this succession "requires at once a historical
continuity with the original apostles and a contemporary and
graciously renewed action of the Holy Spirit" (PCCW, 1O1).
Apostolicity is then a living reality which simultaneously keeps
the Church in communion with its living source and allows it
to renew its youth continually so as to reach the Kingdom.
117. God's
fidelity is given to men and women who are part of a long history
and who, moreover, are sinners. The Church's response to God's
fidelity must be renewed to meet the challenges of various times
and cultures. The Church is not worthy of its name if it is
not a living and resourceful witness, concretely addressing
people's needs. This is also why the Church's continuity demands
that it recognizes itself as semper reformanda. The sinfulness
of humanity which affects not only members of the Church but
also its institutions, is opposed to fidelity to God. If human
sinfulness does not put the Church in check, it can nevertheless
do grave harm to the Church's mission and witness. The constant
need for reform in the Church is recognized. "Christ summons
the Church, as it goes on its pilgrim way, to that continual
reformation of which it always has need, insofar as it is an
institution of human beings here one earth" (Unitatis Redintegratio,
6). The Church must then live within a constant dynamic of conversion.
3.3.2.
The Need for Reform and Renewal
118. We
acknowledge that at the time of the Reformation the Church was
in urgent need of reform. We recognize that the various strivings
for reform were in their profoundest inspiration signs of the
work of the Holy Spirit. In the event of the Reformation, the
Word of God played a role, that Word which is "living and
active, sharper than any two-edged sword, piercing to the division
of soul and spirit" (Heb 4:12). Not everything that happened
can be attributed to the Word because in the division of the
Western Church human sinfulness also played its part. Our common
awareness of this summons us to "discern the spirits,"
i.e., to distinguish in this process the work of human sinfulness
from the work of the Spirit. As Roman Catholics and Reformed,
we should not seek to justify ourselves here. We must each assume
responsibility for our own past and for that part of the sin
which was our own.
119. But
that is not all If it is true that "in everything (even
sin, one could say) God works for good with those who love him,
who are called according to his purpose"(Rom 8:28), we
must then recognize the mysterious design of God which moves
toward its accomplishment in spite of our division. Our continual
conversion to Christ should make us discover and understand
the positive meaning of this event in the life of Christ's Church.
It reminds us of the Church's dependence on Christ and the Spirit,
who act in it and for it with sovereign liberty. It invites
us to recognize new fruits of holiness. It involves us in a
Christian striving that impels us to reconcile in our lives
complementary aspects of the one Gospel. Reflection on the positive
meaning of the Reformation, despite the division, concerns us
all, because it is a major event in the history of the Church.
3.3.3.
Questions and Reflections
120. Nonetheless,
as things are at present, divergences persist between us in
our understanding of the continuity of the Church and its visibility.
The Reformed churches give first consideration to continuity
in the confession of faith and in the teaching of Gospel doctrine.
It is in this sense that the Church remains apostolic and the
ministers raised up in it by the Spirit form part of the apostolic
succession. The Catholic Church, for its part, considers that
this apostolicity of faith and preaching as well as that of
the administration of the sacraments are linked to a certain
number of visible signs through which the Spirit works, in particular
to the apostolic succession of bishops.
121. We
both acknowledge the reality of tradition, but we do not give
it the same weight. The Reformed see in Holy Scripture the sufficient
witness of the Gospel message, a message that "constantly
creates the understanding of itself afresh" (PCCW 29) and
is the locus of the immediate communication of the truth. This
does not imply disregard for tradition as an expression of faithful
communion throughout the centuries. Catholics for their part
regard Scripture as the norma normans of all doctrine of the
faith, but they think that Scripture, the work of the living
tradition of the apostolic generation, is in its turn read and
interpreted in a living way in an act of uninterrupted transmission
which constitutes the tradition of the Church throughout its
history. The authority of this living tradition and of the magisterial
decisions which mark it from time to time is founded on submission
to the message of Scripture. In order to help the people of
God be obedient to this message, the Church is led to make interpretative
decisions about the meaning of the Gospel (cf. PCCW, 30, 32).
122. Further,
we differ in our understanding of the nature of sin in the Church.
Undoubtedly we both recognize that, whatever the effect of sin
on persons and institutions, the holiness of the preaching of
the Word and of the administration of the sacraments endures,
because the gift of God to the Church is irrevocable. In this
sense the Church is holy, for it is the instrument of that gift
of holiness which comes from God. But the Reformed think that
God's fidelity is stronger than our infidelity, than the repeated
"errors and resistances to the Word on the part of the
Church" (PCCW, 42). Hence the Church can experience moments
when despite the exemplary witness of individuals its true identity
is obscured by sin beyond recognition. This does not mean that
God abandons the Church, which, for the Reformed, continues
in being always and until the end of time. On the Catholic side,
it is thought that human sin, even if it goes so far as to mar
greatly the signs and institutions of the Church, never nullifies
its mission of grace and salvation and never falsifies essentially
the proclamation of the truth, because God unfailingly guards
the Church "which he has obtained with the blood of his
own Son"(Acts 20:28). The times of the worst abuses were
frequently times in which great sanctity flourished. In other
words, we do not think in the same way about the relation of
the Church to the Kingdom of God. The Reformed insist more on
the promise of a "not-yet"; Catholics underline more
the reality of a gift "already-there."
123. Accordingly,
our respective interpretations of the division in the sixteenth
century are not the same. The Reformed consider that the Reformation
was a rupture with the Catholic "establishment" of
the period. This establishment had become greatly corrupted
and incapable of responding to an appeal for reform in the sense
of a return to the purity of the Gospel and the holiness of
the early Church. Nevertheless, this does not mean that the
resulting division was a substantial rupture in the continuity
of the Church. For Catholics, however, this break struck at
the continuity of the tradition derived from the apostles and
lived through many centuries. Insofar as the Reformed had broken
with the ministerial structure handed down by tradition, they
had deeply wounded the apostolicity of their churches. The severity
of this judgment is moderated today because ecumenical contacts
have made Catholics more aware of the features of authentic
Christian identity preserved in those churches.
124. In
the future, our dialogue will need to address such still often
divisive questions as the following:
1. Considering
the interpretation of our positions given above, what can Reformed
and Roman Catholics now say together about the reform movements
of the sixteenth century the reasons behind them, the course
they took, and the results that cane about?
2. Recognizing
(because of baptism and other ecclesial factors) that despite
continuing divisions a real though imperfect communion already
exists between Reformed and Roman Catholic Christians, what
implications does this communion have for our understanding
of the continuity of the Church?
3. To what
extent can we together proclaim the Gospel in an idiom intelligible
to our contemporaries, even if we differ in some ways in our
understanding of the Apostolic faith?
4. How
can we reconcile the freedom of the individual Christian in
appropriating the Christian message with the responsibility
of the Church for authoritatively teaching that message?
In the
past, we have usually answered such questions from our separate
ecclesiological perspectives; in the future, we will need to
work out a joint response in dialogue.
3.4.
The Visibility and the Ministerial Order of the Church
125. The
Reformed and Roman Catholic communions differ in a third way
with respect to their understanding of the relation between
Gospel and Church. Our divergence here has to do with the role
of visible structure, particularly in relation to mission and
ministry We will look first at visibility and invisibility in
the Church as such, and then at mission and ministerial order.
3.4.1.
The Church: Visible and Invisible
126. In
the past, Reformed churches have sometimes displayed a tendency
not only to distinguish, but also to separate the invisible
church, known to God alone, and the visible church, manifest
in the world as a community gathered by the Word and Sacrament.
In fact, such a distinction is not part of genuine Reformed
teaching. We can affirm together the indissoluble link between
the invisible and the visible. There exists but one Church of
God. It is called into being by the risen Christ, forms "one
body," is summoned to "one hope," and acknowledges
know ledges "One Lord, one faith, one baptism, one God
and Father of us all..."(Eph 4:4-6). Christ, through his
Spirit, has empowered this Church for a mission and a ministry
in the world, and equipped it to call others to the same unity,
hope and faith. From its earliest time, it has been provided
through God's grace with ministerial means necessary and sufficient
for the fulfilment of its mission.
127. The
invisible church is the hidden side of the visible, earthly
church. The Church is manifest to the world where it is called
to share in the Kingdom of God as God's chosen people. This
visible/invisible Church is real as event and institution, wherever
and whenever God calls men and women to service.
128. This
visible/invisible Church lives in the world as a structured
community. Gathered around Word and Sacraments, it is enabled
to proclaim God's Gospel of salvation to the world. Its visible
structure is intended to enable the community to serve as an
instrument of Christ for the salvation of the world. It thus
bears witness to all human beings of the saving activity of
God in Jesus Christ. This testimony of the visible/invisible
Church often calls it to a confrontation with the world. In
such testimony the Church sees itself summoned to praise and
glorify God. In all its visible activity its goal is Soli Deo
gloria, ad maiorem Dei gloriam.
129. We
diverge, however, on the matter of the closer identification
of the Church with its visible aspects and structure. Roman
Catholics maintain that the Church of Christ "subsists"
in the Roman Catholic Church (Lumen Gentium 8), a formulation
adopted at the Second Vatican Council to avoid the exclusive
identification of Christ's Church with it. They admit likewise
that many "elements" or "attributes" of
great value by which the Church is constituted, are present
in the "separated churches and communities" and that
these last are "in no way devoid of significance and value
in the mystery of salvation" (Unitatis Redintegratio 3).
The question is, therefore, to what degree they can recognize
that the Church of Christ also exists in the Reformed churches.
The Reformed for their part do not understand the Church as
reducible to this or that community, hierarchy or institution.
They claim to belong to the Church and recognize that others
also do. Their chief difficulty is not in extending this recognition
to the Roman Catholic Church, but the view that the Roman Catholic
Church has of its special relation to the Church of Jesus Christ.
3.4.2.
Mission and Ministerial Order
130. Catholics
and Reformed agree that the order of the Church originates in
the Gospel which the risen Christ charged his disciples to proclaim.
In this perspective, it is given first in Word and Sacrament:
"Go, therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing
them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy
Spirit, teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you;
and lo, I am with you always, to the close of the age"(Mt
28:19-20; cf. Lk 24:47-48; Jn 20:21 b).
131. For
those who follow Christ, the Word of God contained in Scripture
and proclaimed, lived and interpreted in the Church, is the
fundamental and inalienable point of reference for the Church's
order. Scripture bears the Word of salvation by which faith
is born. Faith leads to Baptism and it is nourished by the celebration
of the Lord's Supper, the Eucharist.
132. This
mission which the risen Christ committed to the "eleven"
(Mt 28:16) and from which the Church arose, implies that one
should distinguish between those who announce the gospel ("you")
and those to whom it is proclaimed ("make disciples").
It entails, moreover, a ministry of Word, Sacrament and oversight
given by Christ to the Church to be carried out by some of its
members for the good of all. This triple function of the ministry
equips the Church for its mission in the world.
133. This
ministerial order manifests itself above all in the ministry
of the Word, i.e. in the preaching of the Gospel, "the
word of God which you heard from us"(I Thess 2:13; cf.
2 Cor 11:7), the announcing of repentance and forgiveness of
sins in the name of Jesus (Lk 24:47-48), and the proclaiming
of him as the one anointed with the Spirit "to preach good
news to the poor... to set at liberty those who are oppressed"(Lk
4:18). He who was the preacher of God's Word par excellence
has thus become the Preached One in the Word carried to the
"ends of the earth"(Acts 1:8) by his chosen witnesses
(Acts 10:41-42).
134. The
ministerial order also finds expression in the ecclesial rites,
traditionally called Sacraments. We believe that in them Christ
himself acts through the Spirit among his people. The Church
is ordered through Baptism, in which all who believe in Christ
are not only washed and signed by the Triune God, but are "built
into a spiritual house, to be a holy priesthood" (I Pet
2:5). Similarly, in the Lord's Supper, or the Eucharist, the
community of faith, hope and love finds its rallying point:
"Because there is one bread, we who are many are one body,
for we all partake of the one bread" (1 Cor 10:17). Such
rites along with the Word of God are fruitful means of grace
for those who believe, and by them the whole people of God is
built up and nurtured.
135. This
order is further manifest in the ministry of oversight (episkopé),
exercised by Church members for the fidelity, unity, harmony,
growth and discipline of the wayfaring people of God under Christ,
who is "the Shepherd and Guardian (episkopos)" of
all souls (I Pet 2:25). Various "gifts," "services,"
and "activities," are inspired by God's Spirit in
the Church (I Cor 12:4-6), but all members are called upon to
be concerned for that same unity, harmony, and unbuilding of
the Church.
136. Leadership
in the New Testament took different forms at various times and
places under diverse names (see e.g., Acts 1:20-25; 20:17; 28;
1 Cor 12:28; Eph 4:11-13; Phil 1:1; 1 Tim 3:1-13; 4:14; 5:3-22;
Tit 1:5-9). Paul often refers to himself as "the servant/slave
of Jesus Christ." (Rom 1:1; Gal 1:10; Phil 1:1) and as
such writes to churches that he has founded as one exercising
authority in virtue of the Gospel that he preaches (I Thess
2:9, 13; cf. I Cor 15:11: "Whether it was I or they, so
we preach and so you believed"). Though we have no direct
indication that the communities founded by Paul were presbyterally
organized, but only the affirmation of Acts 14:23, where Paul,
according to Luke, appoints presbyters "in every Church,"
Paul was at least aware of a structure of leadership in some
communities to which he wrote: I Thess 5:12: "respect those
who labor among you and are over you in the Lord and admonish
you"; Phil 1:1, greetings are sent to "all the saints
in ...Philippi, with the overseers and deacons" (syn episkopois
kai diakonois). From the various forms of leadership mentioned
in the Pastorals there emerged a pattern of episcopoi, presbyters
and deacons, which became established by the of the second century.
137. This
pattern of leadership developed from some New Testament forms,
while other (even earlier) New Testament forms did not develop.
The spread and theological interpretation of ecclesial leadership
in the immediate post New Testament period must be seen against
the background of the wider development of the early Church
and its articulation of the faith (see I Clem 40-44, especially
42, 1-2, 4; 44, 1-2; Ignatius of Antioch, Eph 2, 1-5; Magn 2;
Hippolytus, Apost. Trad.). In the course of history some of
the functions of such leaders underwent change; even so the
ministry of bishops, presbyters and deacons became in the ancient
Church the universal pattern of church leadership.
3.5.
The Mutual Challenge
138. We
have now explored and reflected upon three dimensions of the
relation between Gospel and Church. Despite our agreements,
there remain divergences between us which deserve further exploration
and offer us new challenges.
139. First,
on the question of doctrinal authority in the Church, the previous
report, The Presence of Christ in Church and World (24-42),
described our agreement concerning the view that we in large
measure share regarding Scripture and its canon. In this area,
formerly contested matters have been substantially clarified.
This document likewise has identified the core of what still
separates us in the interpretation of Scripture, the authority
of confessions of faith and of conciliar decisions, and the
question of the infallibility of the Church. These divergences
still remain to this day. Among the remaining divergences, the
following are particularly important:
- Both
sides emphasize the indefectible character of Spirit guided
preaching and teaching that mirrors the Gospel and Holy Scripture.
Roman Catholics relate that preaching and teaching to a God-given
authority vested in the Church, which, in service to the Word
of God in Scripture and Tradition, has been entrusted with authentically
interpreting it, and which in distinct cases is assisted by
the Holy Spirit to pronounce infallibly on matters of faith
and morals. Reformed Christians refer such preaching and teaching
ultimately to the supreme authority of the Word of God in Scripture
as illuminated by the Holy Spirit.
140. Second, on the question of the Sacraments, in spite of
growing convergence, there still exists between us not only
a disagreement concerning their number, but also a divergence
in our understanding of "Sacrament" and of the competence
of the one who ministers. Roman Catholics recognize seven Sacraments,
according to the Council of Trent (DS 1601), though they give
a major importance to Baptism and Eucharist and recognize in
the Eucharist the center of the sacramental life of the Church.
The Reformed Churches recognize Baptism and the Lord's Supper
as Sacraments in the ordinary sense, though also recognizing
in the laying on of hands "an efficacious sign which initiates
and confirms the believer in the ministry conferred" (PCCW,
98). Calvin himself did not object to calling ordination a Sacrament,
but he did not count it on a level with Baptism and Eucharist
because it was not intended for all Christians (Institutes IV:
19,28).
141. Third, the earlier document (PCCW, 98) provides a common
description of ordination, putting in relief its double reference
to the "historical and present action" of Jesus Christ
and to "the continual operation of the Holy Spirit."
Nevertheless, the nature of ordination still causes difficulty
between us. Is the laying-on of hands a sending on a mission,
a passing on of a power, or an incorporation into an order?
(cf. Ibid, 108). On the other hand, can a defect in form put
in question or invalidate the ministry as such - or can such
a defect be remedied "by reference to the faith of the
Church?" (ibid.).
- One
further difference concerning the ordained ministry cannot be
ignored, especially today. In the Reformed churches as in many
other Protestant communions it has become increasingly common
in recent decades to ordain women without restriction to the
ministry of Word and Sacrament.
142. Fourth,
on the question of how the authority of Christ must be exercised
in the Church, we are in accord that the structure of the ministry
is essentially collegial (Compare: PCCW, 102). We agree on the
need for episkopè in the Church, on the local level (for
pastoral care in each congregation), on the regional level (for
the link of congregations among themselves), and on the universal
level (for the guidance of the supranational communion of churches).
There is disagreement between us about who is regarded as episkopos
at these different levels and what is the function or role of
the episkopos.
a) Catholics
insist that the ordained ministry is a gift of God given to
persons "set apart" (cf. Rom 1:1) in the community
By the sacrament of ordination the minister is united with Christ,
the sole High Priest, in a new way which qualifies him to represent
Christ in and for the community. The one ordained can act there
"in persona Christi"; his ministry is an embassy in
the name of Christ in the service of the Word of God (cf. 2
Cor 3:5). Ordination to the priesthood qualifies one to represent
the Church before God, in its offering to the Father through
Christ in the Spirit. All of these aspects of this ministry
are especially realized in the eucharistic celebration. The
ordained ministry thus places the Church in total and current
dependence on its unique Lord.
b) Likewise,
for Catholics, at the heart of the ministry, ordained in the
succession of the Apostles, stands the bishop who continues
in the community the preaching of the apostolic faith and the
celebration of the sacraments, either in his own right or through
his collaborators, the priests and deacons. His role is also
to develop a life of harmony within the community (homothymadon).
The bishop also represents his church before other local churches
in the bosom of the universal communion. Charged to maintain
and deepen the communion of all the churches among themselves,
the bishops, with the Bishop of Rome who presides over the universal
communion, form a "college." This "college"
is seen as the continuation of the "college" of the
apostles among whom Peter was the first. The Bishop of Rome,
understood as the successor of Peter, is the prime member of
this college and has the authority necessary for the fulfilment
of his service on behalf of the unite of the whole Church in
apostolic faith and life.
c) Reformed
Churches also emphasize the importance of the ordained ministry
of Word and Sacrament for the life of the Church (cf. Eph 4:
11-16). The Reformed understanding of the ministry is in general
more "kerygmatic" than "priestly"; this
corresponds to the awareness of the Word of God as the power
by which the Church lives. Within this perspective, however,
there is a valid sense in which the Reformed minister acts "in
the person of Christ" - e.g. in preaching, in dispensing
the sacraments, in pastoral care - and also represents the people,
in articulating and leading their worship. For this reason Reformed
churches approach the preparation and ordination of ministers
with great care, emphasizing the need for a proper order and
the laying-on of hands by duly ordained ministers.
d) The
Reformed stress the collegial exercise of episkopé. At
the local level the responsibility lies with pastors, elders
and/or deacons, with a very important role often played by the
church meeting. At regional and national levels it is exercised
collectively by synods. The same applies, in principle, to the
universal level. The Reformed have never given up hope for a
universal council based on the authority of the Scriptures.
That hope has not yet materialized, though ecumenical world
assemblies in our century are an important step towards its
fulfillment.
e) The
Reformed hold that the sixteenth century brought into being
a new form of Church order based on Scripture and a practice
of the ancient Church, adapted to the needs of a new situation.
Reformed churches today still maintain that pattern and believe
it to be legitimate and serviceable in the life of the Church.
This does not exclude the possibility of further development
in the ecumenical future of the Church.
143. Finally,
we have begun to come to terms with the particularly difficult
issue of the structure of ministry required for communion in
the universal Church. The earlier report (PCCW) made allusion
to it. Our discussion of the matter has shown how complex the
issues involved are and how different the perspectives in which
they are seen on both sides. As we pursue the dialogue on the
Church's structure and ministry, this theme deserves closer
attention.
144. As
a program for future dialogue we suggest the following questions:
Our interpretations of Scripture are inextricably bound up with
our ecclesiological convictions. With what hermeneutical and
doctrinal perspectives do we approach the New Testament in the
search for guidance on the ordering of the Church in the ecumenical
future?
What significance is there for the Church today in the
role assigned to Peter in several central New Testament passages
- and in the way in which that role was interpreted in the ancient
Church?
What is the connection between the ministry of leadership
described in the New Testament (presidents, leader, bishops,
pastors) and in the ancient Church and (a) Roman Catholic bishops,
(b) Reformed ministers of Word and Sacraments?
Chapter
4
The
Way Forward
145. Our five years of dialogue have convinced us that a new
situation now exists between the Roman Catholic Church and the
Reformed Churches. It has become apparent that the two confessions
share much in common and can, therefore, enter into a living
relationship with each other. Encounters in many parts of the
world have led to mutual openness and a new understanding. It
has become clear that the two sides have much to say to each
other and also much to learn from each other.
146. The
common ground that unites our churches is far greater than has
usually been assumed. We start from the premise that God has
already granted us unite in Christ. It is not for us to create
unity, for in Christ it is already given for us. It will become
visible in our midst as and when we turn to him in faith and
obedience and we realize fully in our churches what he expects
from us. We firmly believe that the unifying power of the Holy
Spirit must prove stronger than all the separation that has
occurred through our human sinfulness. This confirms our conviction
that we must work for the ultimate goal of full communion in
one faith and one eucharistic fellowship.
147. At
the same time, however, our dialogue has shown that certain
disagreements in understanding the relationship between the
Gospel and the Church have not yet been overcome. It would therefore
be unrealistic to suppose that the time has now come for declaring
full communion between our churches.
148. But
we do believe that the living relationship that has come into
being between our churches makes possible a new way of dealing
with these divergences. They should not be looked upon primarily
as grounds for mutual exclusion, but should rather be seen as
terrain for mutual challenge. In ecumenical encounter we can
deepen our understanding and our obedience. We can discover
in the other the gift of God.
149. "Welcome one another, therefore, as Christ has welcomed
you, for the glory of God" (Rom 15:7). On the basis of
this appeal of the Apostle Paul, we conclude that the Roman
Catholic Church and the Reformed Churches should no longer oppose
each other or even simply live side by side. Rather, despite
their divergences, they should live for each other in order
to be witnesses to Christ. Guided by this mission, they should
open themselves to and for each other.
4.1.
The Diversity of Situations
150. In
some countries, far-reaching agreement has already been achieved.
Official dialogues have taken place and, as a general rule,
these have led to results similar to those to be found in the
present report. In some other countries the churches maintain
close relationships and collaborate regularly, reacting together
to important problems of public life. But there are also countries
where their relations, even today, hardly go beyond occasional
and individual contacts. The mistrust inherited from the past
has not yet been overcome. Political situations and sociological
factors often play an important part in this mistrust. In some
places the Roman Catholic and Reformed Churches even find themselves
on opposite sides of political conflict. In other places, closer
relations are made more difficult by the numerical size of the
partners: whenever a large church finds itself faced with a
small minority, a great deal of sensitivity and effort are needed
if living relationships are to be established. In many places,
the diversity of the Reformed Churches makes interconfessional
dialogue and collaboration more complex.
151. We
agree that initiatives should be taken to deepen Christian fellowship
in each country. We are grateful for the convergences we have
found in the dialogue at the international level and believe
that these results can serve as a stimulus for the churches
in each country. But the desired living relationship cannot
be created only by an agreement at the international level.
First, according to the Reformed understanding, each member
church is responsible for its own confession, its life and its
witness; consequently, the World Alliance of Reformed Churches
has no binding authority over its member churches. Secondly,
we are convinced that the call for unity must always aim at
concrete and lived communion. It is always addressed to "all
in each place." But we do believe that the mutual understanding
reached in international dialogue should serve as an encouragement
to establish more active relations between our churches at the
local level.
4.2.
Steps Along The Way To Unity
152. We
suggest that dialogues between local churches should keep in
mind the following steps on the way to unity.
a) Our churches should give expression to mutual recognition
of Baptism. In some countries, the Roman Catholic and Reformed
Churches have already agreed to accept each other's Baptism
fully and without reserve, provided that it has been celebrated
in the name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit and with
the use of water. We believe that such agreements can and should
be made in all places without delay. Such an agreement implies
that under no circumstances can there be a repetition of baptism
which took place in the other church. Mutual recognition of
baptism is to be understood as an expression of the profound
communion that Jesus Christ himself establishes among his disciples
and which no human failure can ever destroy.
b) Though
mutual recognition of Baptism is already possible today, we
are not yet in a position to celebrate the Eucharist or Lord's
Supper together. Our different understandings of the relation
between the Gospel and the Church also have consequences as
regards admission to communion.
The Reformed
Churches take the view that, precisely because Christ himself
is the host at the table, the Church must not impose any obstacles.
All those who have received baptism and love the Lord Jesus
Christ are invited to the Lord's Supper (see the declaration
of the World Alliance, Princeton 1954).
The Roman
Catholic Church, on the other hand, is convinced that the celebration
of the Eucharist is of itself a profession of faith in which
the whole Church recognizes and expresses itself. Sharing the
Eucharist therefore presupposes agreement with the faith of
the Church which celebrates the Eucharist.
This difference
in the understanding of Eucharistic sharing must be respected
by both sides. Still, we recall and reaffirm the progress in
our common understanding of the Eucharist that has already been
made in the first phase of dialogue (PCCW, 67-92). Aspects of
the common understanding were summarized in these words, which
we repeat again here: "...we gratefully acknowledge that
both traditions, Reformed and Roman Catholic, hold to the belief
in the Real Presence of Christ in the Eucharist; and both hold
at least that the Eucharist is, among other things:
1) a memorial of the death and resurrection of the Lord;
2) a source
of living communion with him in the power of the Spirit (hence
the epiclesis in the liturgy), and
3) a source
of the eschatological hope for his coming again" (PCCW,
91).
c) In
many countries there has been a rapid rise in the number of
confessionally mixed marriages in recent years. It is not therefore
surprising that the problem of a more appropriate way of dealing
with this new reality has cropped up time and again in the course
of bilateral dialogues. We hold that confessionally mixed marriages
could be seen as an opportunity of encounter between the two
traditions, even though some difficulties cannot be denied.
We deem it to be important that the two churches should jointly
exercise pastoral responsibility for those who live or grow
up in confessionally mixed marriages in a manner which supports
the integrity of the conscience of each person and respects
their rights. In this respect see also the report of the dialogue
between the Roman Catholic Church, the Lutheran World Federation
and the World Alliance of Reformed Churches (The Theology of
Marriage and the Problem of Mixed Marriages, cf. N° 2 above).
4.3.
Toward the Reconciliation of Memories
153. In
Chapter I we tried together to understand our separated histories
afresh. Beyond this lies a step not yet taken. From understanding
each other's memories we must move to a reconciliation of the
memories of Roman Catholics with those of Reformed Christians,
and vice versa. Shared memories, even if painful, may in time
become a basis for new mutual bonding and a growing sense of
shared identity.
154. This proposal has been made time and again by both Reformed
and Roman Catholic authorities. Pope John Paul II formulated
it in the following terms: "Remembrance of the events of
the past must not restrict the freedom of our present efforts
to eliminate the harm that has been triggered by these events.
Coming to terms with these memories is one of the main elements
of ecumenical progress. It leads to frank recognition of mutual
injury and errors in the way the two communities reacted to
each other, even though it was the intention of all concerned
to bring, the Church more into line with the will of the Lord"
(Address to the members of the Swiss Evangelical Church Federation,
14 June 1984).
155. Chapter
I shows how much has been accomplished in this direction. Mention
should be made, for example, of the efforts of Roman Catholic
historians to produce a new interpretation of the great Reformers,
especially John Calvin, or the attempt of the World Alliance
to give a new overtone to the memories of the revocation of
the Edict of Nantes. But much yet remains to be done.
156. As
illustrations we choose the following:
a) The
problem of interpreting the rupture caused by the Reformation
has already been touched on. In addition to the theological
reflections already offered, serious historical research needs
to be jointly undertaken.
b) We
must tackle the problem of the condemnations that the Roman
Catholic Church and the Reformed Churches pronounced against
each other. The polemics between the churches found expression
in mutual anathematizations, and these continue to make themselves
felt today. One need only think, for example, of the condemnation
of certain Roman Catholic teachings and practices in such Reformed
confessions as the Heidelberg Catechism or the Westminster Confession,
or the identification of doctrines condemned by the Council
of Trent with certain of the teachings of the Reformers. Conscious
efforts at theological and historical research will have to
be made in order to distinguish the justified concerns of these
declarations from the polemical distortions.
c) Particular attention should be paid to the way in which confessional
separation was brought to the Americas, Africa, Asia and Oceania.
Churches in these areas had no part in originating the separation.
It was only through migration or missionary expansion that European
divisions were transplanted to these continents. What in actual
fact are the reasons for the separate existence of these churches
today? A careful historical analysis might well bring to light
new factors of separation which have been added to the inherited
confessional differences.
4.4.
Common Witness in the World of Today
157. "Living
for each other" as churches must also mean "bearing
common witness." We take the view that the Roman Catholic
Church and the Reformed Churches must make every effort to speak
jointly to the men and women of today to whom God desires to
communicate Christ's message of salvation.
158. Every
opportunity for taking common stands with regard to contemporary
issues should be taken and used. Our separation must not prevent
us from expressing the agreement we have already achieved in
our witnessing. For example, the Roman Catholic Church and the
World Alliance of Reformed Churches are wholly agreed that every
form of racism is contradictory to the Gospel and must therefore
be rejected. In particular, they see apartheid as a system that
the Christian Church must condemn if its evangelical credibility
is not to be put into jeopardy.
159. Something
very similar applies with regard to the witness of the churches
on issues of justice, peace and the integrity of God's creation.
The most profound convictions of their faith oblige both churches
to render decisive witness in these fields. They would imperil
the integrity of their teaching if they failed to give it.
160. We
also know, however, that challenges which call for common confession
in our day and age also generate new divergences and divisions.
These could stress and endanger our still fragile fellowship.
It is therefore all the more important that we should continually
listen anew together to what the Spirit is saying to the Church
today: the Spirit who will lead us to the fullness of the truth.
4.5.
What Kind of Unity Do We Seek?
161. Even
though we are still far from being able to proclaim full communion,
it is important for the relations between our churches that
we should have an agreed vision of the ultimate goal that should
guide our efforts. This is a question that needs further study.
Various concepts of unity have been proposed and deserve attention.
But we believe that serious consideration should be given in
our Reformed Roman Catholic relationship, and in the ecumenical
movement in general, to the description of the "unity we
seek," as expressed by the Assembly of the World Council
of Churches in Nairobi (1975). This text describes what is called
"conciliar fellowship," and goes as follows:
"The one Church is to be envisioned as a conciliar fellowship
of local churches which are themselves truly united.
"In this conciliar fellowship each local church possesses,
in communion with the others, the fullness of catholicity, witnesses
to the same apostolic faith and therefore recognizes the others
as belonging to the same Church of Christ and guided by the
same Spirit.
"As the New Delhi Assembly pointed out, they are bound
together because they have received the same baptism and share
in the same eucharist; they recognize each other's members and
ministries.
"They are one in their common commitment to confess the
Gospel of Christ by proclamation and service to the world. To
this end, each church aims at maintaining sustained and sustaining
relationships with her sister churches, expressed in conciliar
gatherings whenever required for the fulfilment of this common
calling." (David M. Paton, Editor, Breaking Barriers, Nairobi,
1975. The Official Report of the Fifth Assembly of the World
Council of Churches, Nairobi, 23 November - 10 December, 1975.
London: SPCK, and Grand Rapids: Wm. B. Eerdmans, 1976, p. 60).
162. We
see in the Nairobi declaration a sketch of the way in which
organic unity could be structured even at the universal level.
The statement does not describe the present state of relations
between the churches, but rather serves the purpose, without
reference to conciliarist controversies of the past, of articulating
a concept and vision of unity toward which Christians can move
to overcome their divisions.
163. Some
of the features described in this text have since been given
further attention within our dialogue and within the broader
ecumenical movement. A crucial factor in the description is
that each local church "witnesses to the same apostolic
faith." Without this there can be no unity. In this report,
for example, the second Chapter, "Our Common Confession
of Faith," indicates important aspects of the apostolic
faith that we can confess together. Basic for unity too is the
need to share the same faith in regard to baptism, eucharist
and ministry. An important contribution towards achieving this
is the document of the Faith & Order Commission on Baptism,
Eucharist and Ministry, to which the churches have given their
official responses.
164. If
the living relationship between our churches is to grow, we
must consciously foster regular contact with each other. If
each church is to consider God's gift in the other, each will
have to orientate itself towards the other. Inherited problems
of doctrine call for further reflection. Newly arising problems
(for example, relationships and dialogue with people of other
living faiths, or issues raised by the progress of science and
technology) must become subjects of frank and open dialogue.
The road to unity can be traveled more readily if both communions
can learn to listen together to the Word of God and to the questions
raised by each other.
165. We
pray God to grant us the Spirit to heal wounds, to gather and
edify Christ's people, to purify us and to send us into the
world anew.
Participants
World
Alliance of Reformed Churches
Members:
Rev. Dean
Lewis S. Mudge (USA) (Co-Chairman)
Rev. Prof. Dr. Shirley C. Guthrie (USA) (meetings 1984-1987)
Rev. Prof. Dr. Alaisdair I.C. Heron (FRG)
Rev. Bernard M. Muindi (Kenya) (meetings 1984, 1985, 1987)
Bishop Mercuria M. Serina (Philippines) (meetings 1984-1985)
Consultants:
Rev. Dr.
Lukas Vischer (Switzerland)
Rev. Prof. Dr. Paolo Ricca (Italy)
Rev. Prof. Dr. John E. Burkhart (USA) (1986)
Rev. Alan Falconer (Ireland) (1986)
Rev. Dr. Alan E. Lewis (Scotland) (1985)
Staff:
Rev. Dr.
Alan P.F. Sell (Geneva) (1984-1987)
Rev. Henny Dirks-Blatt (Geneva) (1985)
Rev..Christiane Nolting (Geneva) (1988)
Roman
Catholic Church
Members:
Rev. Prof.
Bernard Sesboüé, SJ (France) (co-chairman)
Rev. Prof. Joseph A. Fitzmyer, SJ (USA)
Rev. Prof. John H. Fitzsimmons (Scotland) (meetings 1984, 1985,
1988)
Rev. Prof. Francis T. Lysinge (Cameroon)
Rev. Prof. Dr. Joseph Trütsch (Switzerland) (meetings 1984,
1985, 1988)
Consultants:
Msgr. Dr.
Aloys Klein (staff Rome, 1984) (FRG) (1985, 1986, 1988)
Dom Emmanuel Lanne, OSB (Belgium) (1986-1988)
Rev. Dr. John Ford, CSC (USA) (1987-1988)
Rev. Dr. John O'Malley SJ (USA) (1987-1988)
Rev. Dr. Elmar Salmann, OSB (Italy) (1984)
Rev. Prof. Dr. Heinz Schütte (FRG) (1984)
Staff:
Rev. Dr.
Pierre Duprey, M. Afr. (Rome)
Msgr. Dr. John A. Radano (Rome) (1985-1988)
World
Council of Churches Observer:
Rev. Prof.
Dr. Günther Wagner (Switzerland.) (1985, 1986, 1988)
[Information Service 74 (1990/III) 91-118]
Endnotes
1. Both
reports can be found in Harding Meyer and Lukas Vischer, Editors,
Growth in Agreement: Reports and Agreed Statements of Ecumenical
Conversations on a World Level, New York/Ramsey: Paulist Press,
and Geneva: World Council of Churches, 1984, pp. 433-463 and
277-306 respectively.
2. Biblical
Quotations are taken from the Common Bible: the Holy Bible,
Revised Standard Version, containing the Old and New Testaments
with the Apocryphal Deuterocanonical Books: An Ecumenical Edition,
New York, Glasgow, London, Toronto, Sydney, Auckland: Collins:
1973.
[Information
Service 35 (1977/III-IV) 18-33]
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