UT UNUM SINT
That They May Be One
Pope John Paul II
25 May 1995.
INTRODUCTION
I - THE CATHOLIC CHURCH'S COMMITMENT TO ECUMENISM
II - THE FRUITS OF DIALOGUE
III - QUANTA EST NOBIS VIA?
EXHORTATION
INTRODUCTION
UT UNUM SINT! The call
for Christian unity made by the Second Vatican Ecumenical Council with
such impassioned commitment is finding an ever greater echo in the hearts
of believers, especially as the Year 2000 approaches, a year which
Christians will celebrate as a sacred Jubilee, the commemoration of the
Incarnation of the Son of God, who became man in order to save humanity.
The courageous witness of so many
martyrs of our century, including members of Churches and Ecclesial
Communities not in full communion with the Catholic Church, gives new
vigor to the Council's call and reminds us of our duty to listen to and
put into practice its exhortation. These brothers and sisters of ours,
united in the selfless offering of their lives for the Kingdom of God, are
the most powerful proof that every factor of division can be transcended
and overcome in the total gift of self for the sake of the Gospel.
Christ calls all his disciples
to unity. My earnest desire is to renew this call today, to propose
it once more with determination, repeating what I said at the Roman
Colosseum on Good Friday 1994, at the end of the meditation on the Via
Cruces prepared by my Venerable Brother Bartholomew, the Ecumenical
Patriarch of Constantinople. There I stated that believers in Christ,
united in following in the footsteps of the martyrs, cannot remain
divided. If they wish truly and effectively to oppose the world's tendency
to reduce to powerlessness the Mystery of Redemption, they must
profess together the same truth about the Cross.[1] The Cross! An
anti- Christian outlook seeks to minimize the Cross, to empty it of its
meaning, and to deny that in it man has the source of his new life. It
claims that the Cross is unable to provide either vision or hope. Man, it
says, is nothing but an earthly being, who must live as if God did not
exist.
2. No one is unaware of the
challenge which all this poses to believers. They cannot fail to meet this
challenge. Indeed, how could they refuse to do everything possible, with
God's help, to break down the walls of division and distrust, to overcome
obstacles and prejudices which thwart the proclamation of the Gospel of
salvation in the Cross of Jesus, the one Redeemer of man, of every
individual?
I thank the Lord that he has led us
to make progress along the path of unity and communion between Christians,
a path difficult but so full of joy. Interconfessional dialogues at the
theological level have produced positive and tangible results: this
encourages us to move forward.
Nevertheless, besides the doctrinal
differences needing to be resolved, Christians cannot underestimate the
burden of long-standing misgivings inherited from the past, and
of mutual misunderstandings and prejudices. Complacency, indifference
and insufficient knowledge of one another often make this situation
worse. Consequently, the commitment to ecumenism must be based upon the
conversion of hearts and upon prayer, which will also lead to the
necessary purification of past memories. With the grace of the
Holy Spirit, the Lord's disciples, inspired by love, by the power of the
truth and by a sincere desire for mutual forgiveness and reconciliation,
are called to re-examine together their painful past and the hurt
which that past regrettably continues to provoke even today. All together,
they are invited by the ever fresh power of the Gospel to acknowledge with
sincere and total objectivity the mistakes made and the contingent factors
at work at the origins of their deplorable divisions. What is needed
is a calm, clear-sighted and truthful vision of things, a vision
enlivened by divine mercy and capable of freeing people's minds and of
inspiring in everyone a renewed willingness, precisely with a view to
proclaiming the Gospel to the men and women of every people and nation.
3. At the Second Vatican Council,
the Catholic Church committed herself irrevocably to following
the path of the ecumenical venture, thus heeding the Spirit of the Lord,
who teaches people to interpret carefully the "signs of the times". The
experiences of these years have made the Church even more profoundly aware
of her identity and her mission in history. The Catholic Church
acknowledges and confesses the weaknesses of her members,
conscious that their sins are so many betrayals of and obstacles to the
accomplishment of the Savior's plan. Because she feels herself constantly
called to be renewed in the spirit of the Gospel, she does not cease to do
penance. At the same time, she acknowledges and exalts still more the
power of the Lord, who fills her with the gift of holiness, leads her
forward, and conforms her to his Passion and Resurrection.
Taught by the events of her
history, the Church is committed to freeing herself from every purely
human support, in order to live in depth the Gospel law of the Beatitudes.
Conscious that the truth does not impose itself except "by virtue of its
own truth, as it makes its entrance into the mind at once quietly and with
power",[2] she seeks nothing for herself but the freedom to proclaim the
Gospel. Indeed, her authority is exercised in the service of truth and
charity.
I myself intend to promote
every suitable initiative aimed at making the witness of the entire
Catholic community understood in its full purity and consistency,
especially considering the engagement which awaits the Church at the
threshold of the new Millennium. That will be an exceptional occasion, in
view of which she asks the Lord to increase the unity of all Christians
until they reach full communion.[3] The present Encyclical Letter is meant
as a contribution to this most noble goal. Essentially pastoral in
character, it seeks to encourage the efforts of all who work for the cause
of unity.
4. This is a specific duty of the
Bishop of Rome as the Successor of the Apostle Peter. I carry out this
duty with the profound conviction that I am obeying the Lord, and with a
clear sense of my own human frailty. Indeed, if Christ himself gave Peter
this special mission in the Church and exhorted him to strengthen his
brethren, he also made clear to him his human weakness and his special
need of conversion: And when you have turned again, strengthen your
brethren (Lk 22:32). It is precisely in Peter's human weakness that
it becomes fully clear that the Pope, in order to carry out this special
ministry in the Church, depends totally on the Lord's grace and prayer:
I have prayed for you that your faith may not fail (Lk 22:32).
The conversion of Peter and that of his Successors is upheld by the very
prayer of the Redeemer, and the Church constantly makes this petition her
own. In our ecumenical age, marked by the Second Vatican Council, the
mission of the Bishop of Rome is particularly directed to recalling the
need for full communion among Christ's disciples.
The Bishop of Rome himself must
fervently make his own Christ's prayer for that conversion which is
indispensable for "Peter" to be able to serve his brethren. I earnestly
invite the faithful of the Catholic Church and all Christians to share in
this prayer. May all join me in praying for this conversion!
We know that during her earthly
pilgrimage the Church has suffered and will continue to suffer opposition
and persecution. But the hope which sustains her is unshakable, just as
the joy which flows from this hope is indestructible. In effect, the firm
and enduring rock upon which she is founded is Jesus Christ, her Lord.
I - THE CATHOLIC CHURCH'S COMMITMENT TO
ECUMENISM
God's plan and
communion
5. Together with all Christ's
disciples, the Catholic Church bases upon God's plan her ecumenical
commitment to gather all Christians into unity. Indeed, "the Church is not
a reality closed in on herself. Rather, she is permanently open to
missionary and ecumenical endeavor, for she is sent to the world to
announce and witness, to make present and spread the mystery of communion
which is essential to her, and to gather all people and all things into
Christ, so as to be for all an 'inseparable sacrament of unity"'.[4]
Already in the Old Testament, the
Prophet Ezekiel, referring to the situation of God's People at that time,
and using the simple sign of two broken sticks which are first divided and
then joined together, expressed the divine will to "gather from all sides"
the members of his scattered people. I will be their God, and they
shall be my people. Then the nations will know that I the Lord sanctify
Israel (cf. Ez 37:16-28). The Gospel of John, for its part,
considering the situation of the People of God at the time it was written,
sees in Jesus' death the reason for the unity of God's children: Jesus
would die for the nation, and not for the nation only, but to gather into
one the children of God who are scattered abroad (Jn 11:51-52).
Indeed, as the Letter to the Ephesians explains, Jesus broke down the
dividing wall of hostility ... through the Cross, thereby bringing the
hostility to an end; in place of what was divided he brought about
unity (cf. 2:14-16).
6. The unity of all divided
humanity is the will of God. For this reason he sent his Son, so that by
dying and rising for us he might bestow on us the Spirit of love. On the
eve of his sacrifice on the Cross, Jesus himself prayed to the Father for
his disciples and for all those who believe in him, that they might be
one, a living communion. This is the basis not only of the duty, but
also of the responsibility before God and his plan, which falls to those
who through Baptism become members of the Body of Christ, a Body in which
the fullness of reconciliation and communion must be made present. How is
it possible to remain divided, if we have been "buried" through Baptism in
the Lord's death, in the very act by which God, through the death of his
Son, has broken down the walls of division? Division "openly contradicts
the will of Christ, provides a stumbling block to the world, and inflicts
damage on the most holy cause of proclaiming the Good News to every
creature".[5]
The way of ecumenism:
the way of the Church
7. "The Lord of the Ages wisely and
patiently follows out the plan of his grace on behalf of us sinners. In
recent times he has begun to bestow more generously upon divided
Christians remorse over their divisions and a longing for unity.
Everywhere, large numbers have felt the impulse of this grace, and among
our separated brethren also there increases from day to day a
movement, fostered by the grace of the Holy Spirit, for the
restoration of unity among all Christians. Taking part in this
movement, which is called ecumenical, are those who invoke the Triune God
and confess Jesus as Lord and Savior. They join in not merely as
individuals but also as members of the corporate groups in which they have
heard the Gospel, and which each regards as his Church and, indeed, God's.
And yet almost everyone, though in different ways, longs that there
may be one visible Church of God, a Church truly universal and sent
forth to the whole world that the world may be converted to the Gospel and
so be saved, to the glory of God".[6]
8. This statement of the Decree
Unitatis Redintegratio is to be read in the context of the
complete teaching of the Second Vatican Council. The Council expresses the
Church's decision to take up the ecumenical task of working for Christian
unity and to propose it with conviction and vigour: "This sacred Synod
exhorts all the Catholic faithful to recognize the signs of the times and
to participate actively in the work of ecumenism".[7]
In indicating the Catholic
principles of ecumenism, the Decree Unitatis Redintegratio
recalls above all the teaching on the Church set forth in the Dogmatic
Constitution Lumen Gentium in its chapter on the People of
God.[8] At the same time, it takes into account everything affirmed in the
Council's Declaration on Religious Freedom Dignitatis Humanae.[9]
The Catholic Church embraces with
hope the commitment to ecumenism as a duty of the Christian conscience
enlightened by faith and guided by love. Here too we can apply the words
of Saint Paul to the first Christians of Rome: God's love has been
poured into our hearts through the Holy Spirit; thus our hope
does not disappoint us (Rom 5:5). This is the hope of Christian
unity, which has its divine source in the Trinitarian unity of the Father,
the Son and the Holy Spirit.
9. Jesus himself, at the hour of
his Passion, prayed that they may all be one (Jn 17:21). This
unity, which the Lord has bestowed on his Church and in which he wishes to
embrace all people, is not something added on, but stands at the very
heart of Christ's mission. Nor is it some secondary attribute of the
community of his disciples. Rather, it belongs to the very essence of this
community. God wills the Church, because he wills unity, and unity is an
expression of the whole depth of his agape.
In effect, this unity bestowed by
the Holy Spirit does not merely consist in the gathering of people as a
collection of individuals. It is a unity constituted by the bonds of the
profession of faith, the sacraments and hierarchical communion.[10] The
faithful are one because, in the Spirit, they are in
communion with the Son and, in him, share in his
communion with the Father: Our fellowship is with the Father
and with his Son Jesus Christ (1 Jn 1:3). For the Catholic Church,
then, the communion of Christians is none other than the
manifestation in them of the grace by which God makes them sharers in his
own communion, which is his eternal life. Christ's words "that
they may be one" are thus his prayer to the Father that the Father's plan
may be fully accomplished, in such a way that everyone may clearly see
what is the plan of the mystery hidden for ages in God who created all
things (Eph 3:9). To believe in Christ means to desire unity; to
desire unity means to desire the Church; to desire the Church means to
desire the communion of grace which corresponds to the Father's plan from
all eternity. Such is the meaning of Christ's prayer: "Ut unum
sint".
10. In the present situation of the
lack of unity among Christians and of the confident quest for full
communion, the Catholic faithful are conscious of being deeply challenged
by the Lord of the Church. The Second Vatican Council strengthened their
commitment with a clear ecclesiological vision, open to all the ecclesial
values present among other Christians. The Catholic faithful face the
ecumenical question in a spirit of faith.
The Council states that the Church
of Christ "subsists in the Catholic Church, which is governed by the
Successor of Peter and by the Bishops in communion with him", and at the
same time acknowledges that "many elements of sanctification and of truth
can be found outside her visible structure. These elements, however, as
gifts properly belonging to the Church of Christ, possess an inner
dynamism towards Catholic unity".[11]
"It follows that these separated
Churches and Communities, though we believe that they suffer from defects,
have by no means been deprived of significance and value in the mystery of
salvation. For the Spirit of Christ has not refrained from using them as
means of salvation which derive their efficacy from the very fullness of
grace and truth entrusted to the Catholic Church".[12]
11. The Catholic Church thus
affirms that during the two thousand years of her history she has been
preserved in unity, with all the means with which God wishes to endow his
Church, and this despite the often grave crises which have shaken her, the
infidelity of some of her ministers, and the faults into which her members
daily fall. The Catholic Church knows that, by virtue of the strength
which comes to her from the Spirit, the weaknesses, mediocrity, sins and
at times the betrayals of some of her children cannot destroy what God has
bestowed on her as part of his plan of grace. Moreover, the powers of
death shall not prevail against it (Mt 16:18). Even so, the Catholic
Church does not forget that many among her members cause God's plan to be
discernible only with difficulty. Speaking of the lack of unity among
Christians, the Decree on Ecumenism does not ignore the fact that "people
of both sides were to blame",[13] and acknowledges that responsibility
cannot be attributed only to the "other side". By God's grace, however,
neither what belongs to the structure of the Church of Christ nor that
communion which still exists with the other Churches and Ecclesial
Communities has been destroyed.
Indeed, the elements of
sanctification and truth present in the other Christian Communities, in a
degree which varies from one to the other, constitute the objective basis
of the communion, albeit imperfect, which exists between them and the
Catholic Church.
To the extent that these elements
are found in other Christian Communities, the one Church of Christ is
effectively present in them. For this reason the Second Vatican Council
speaks of a certain, though imperfect communion. The Dogmatic Constitution
Lumen Gentium stresses that the Catholic Church "recognizes that in many
ways she is linked"[14] with these Communities by a true union in the Holy
Spirit.
12. The same Dogmatic Constitution
listed at length "the elements of sanctification and truth" which in
various ways are present and operative beyond the visible boundaries of
the Catholic Church: "For there are many who honor Sacred Scripture,
taking it as a norm of belief and of action, and who show a true religious
zeal. They lovingly believe in God the Father Almighty and in Christ, Son
of God and Savior. They are consecrated by Baptism, through which they are
united with Christ. They also recognize and receive other sacraments
within their own Churches or Ecclesial Communities. Many of them rejoice
in the episcopate, celebrate the Holy Eucharist, and cultivate devotion
towards the Virgin Mother of God. They also share with us in prayer and
other spiritual benefits. Likewise, we can say that in some real way they
are joined with us in the Holy Spirit, for to them also he gives his gifts
and graces, and is thereby operative among them with his sanctifying
power. Some indeed he has strengthened to the extent of the shedding of
their blood. In all of Christ's disciples the Spirit arouses the desire to
be peacefully united, in the manner determined by Christ, as one flock
under one shepherd".[15]
The Council's Decree on Ecumenism,
referring to the Orthodox Churches, went so far as to declare that
"through the celebration of the Eucharist of the Lord in each of these
Churches, the Church of God is built up and grows in stature"[16] Truth
demands that all this be recognized.
13. The same Document carefully
draws out the doctrinal implications of this situation. Speaking of the
members of these Communities, it declares: "All those justified by faith
through Baptism are incorporated into Christ. They therefore have a right
to be honored by the title of Christian, and are properly regarded as
brothers and sisters in the Lord by the sons and daughters of the Catholic
Church".[17]
With reference to the many positive
elements present in the other Churches and Ecclesial Communities, the
Decree adds: "All of these, which come from Christ and lead back to him,
belong by right to the one Church of Christ. The separated brethren also
carry out many of the sacred actions of the Christian religion.
Undoubtedly, in many ways that vary according to the condition of each
Church or Community, these actions can truly engender a life of grace, and
can be rightly described as capable of providing access to the community
of salvation".[18]
These are extremely important texts
for ecumenism. It is not that beyond the boundaries of the Catholic
community there is an ecclesial vacuum. Many elements of great value
(eximia), which in the Catholic Church are part of the fullness
of the means of salvation and of the gifts of grace which make up the
Church, are also found in the other Christian Communities.
14. All these elements bear within
themselves a tendency towards unity, having their fullness in that unity.
It is not a matter of adding together all the riches scattered throughout
the various Christian Communities in order to arrive at a Church which God
has in mind for the future. In accordance with the great Tradition,
attested to by the Fathers of the East and of the West, the Catholic
Church believes that in the Pentecost Event God has already
manifested the Church in her eschatological reality, which he had prepared
"from the time of Abel, the just one".[19] This reality is something
already given. Consequently we are even now in the last times. The
elements of this already-given Church exist, found in their fullness in
the Catholic Church and, without this fullness, in the other
Communities,[20] where certain features of the Christian mystery have at
times been more effectively emphasized. Ecumenism is directed precisely to
making the partial communion existing between Christians grow towards full
communion in truth and charity.
Renewal and
conversion
15. Passing from principles, from
the obligations of the Christian conscience, to the actual practice of the
ecumenical journey towards unity, the Second Vatican Council emphasizes
above all the need for interior conversion. The messianic proclamation
that "the time is fulfilled and the Kingdom of God is at hand", and the
subsequent call to repent, and believe in the Gospel (Mk 1:15)
with which Jesus begins his mission, indicate the essential element of
every new beginning: the fundamental need for evangelization at every
stage of the Church's journey of salvation. This is true in a special way
of the process begun by the Second Vatican Council, when it indicated as a
dimension of renewal the ecumenical task of uniting divided Christians.
"There can be no ecumenism worthy of the name without a change of
heart".[21]
The Council calls for personal
conversion as well as for communal conversion. The desire of every
Christian Community for unity goes hand in hand with its fidelity to the
Gospel. In the case of individuals who live their Christian vocation, the
Council speaks of interior conversion, of a renewal of mind.[22]
Each one therefore ought to be more
radically converted to the Gospel and, without ever losing sight of God's
plan, change his or her way of looking at things. Thanks to ecumenism, our
contemplation of "the mighty works of God" (mirabilia Dei) has
been enriched by new horizons, for which the Triune God calls us to give
thanks: the knowledge that the Spirit is at work in other Christian
Communities, the discovery of examples of holiness, the experience of the
immense riches present in the communion of saints, and contact with
unexpected dimensions of Christian commitment. In a corresponding way,
there is an increased sense of the need for repentance: an awareness of
certain exclusions which seriously harm fraternal charity, of certain
refusals to forgive, of a certain pride, of an unevangelical insistence on
condemning the "other side", of a disdain born of an unhealthy
presumption. Thus, the entire life of Christians is marked by a concern
for ecumenism; and they are called to let themselves be shaped, as it
were, by that concern.
16. In the teaching of the Second
Vatican Council there is a clear connection between renewal, conversion
and reform. The Council states that "Christ summons the Church, as she
goes her pilgrim way, to that continual reformation of which she always
has need, insofar as she is an institution of human beings here on earth.
Therefore, if the influence of events or of the times has led to
deficiencies ... these should be appropriately rectified at the proper
moment".[23] No Christian Community can exempt itself from this call.
By engaging in frank dialogue,
Communities help one another to look at themselves together in the light
of the Apostolic Tradition. This leads them to ask themselves whether they
truly express in an adequate way all that the Holy Spirit has transmitted
through the Apostles.[24] With regard to the Catholic Church, I have
frequently recalled these obligations and perspectives, as for example on
the anniversary of the Baptism of Kievan Rus'[25] or in
commemorating the eleven hundred years since the evangelizing activity of
Saints Cyril and Methodius.[26] More recently, the Directory for the
Application of Principles and Norms on Ecumenism, issued with my
approval by the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity, has
applied them to the pastoral sphere.[27]
17. With regard to other
Christians, the principal documents of the Commission on Faith and
Order[28] and the statements of numerous bilateral dialogues have
already provided Christian Communities with useful tools for discerning
what is necessary to the ecumenical movement and to the conversion which
it must inspire. These studies are important from two points of view: they
demonstrate the remarkable progress already made, and they are a source of
hope inasmuch as they represent a sure foundation for further study.
The increase of fellowship in a
reform which is continuous and carried out in the light of the Apostolic
Tradition is certainly, in the present circumstances of Christians, one of
the distinctive and most important aspects of ecumenism. Moreover, it is
an essential guarantee for its future. The faithful of the Catholic Church
cannot forget that the ecumenical thrust of the Second Vatican Council is
one consequence of all that the Church at that time committed herself to
doing in order to re-examine herself in the light of the Gospel and the
great Tradition. My Predecessor, Pope John XXIII, understood this clearly:
in calling the Council, he refused to separate renewal from ecumenical
openness.[29] At the conclusion of the Council, Pope Paul VI solemnly
sealed the Council's commitment to ecumenism, renewing the dialogue of
charity with the Churches in communion with the Patriarch of
Constantinople, and joining the Patriarch in the concrete and profoundly
significant gesture which "condemned to oblivion" and "removed from memory
and from the midst of the Church" the excommunications of the past. It is
worth recalling that the establishment of a special body for ecumenical
matters coincided with the launching of preparations for the Second
Vatican Council[30] and that through this body the opinions and judgments
of the other Christian Communities played a part in the great debates
about Revelation, the Church, the nature of ecumenism and religious
freedom.
The fundamental
importance of doctrine
18. Taking up an idea expressed by
Pope John XXIII at the opening of the Council,[31] the Decree on Ecumenism
mentions the way of formulating doctrine as one of the elements of a
continuing reform.[32] Here it is not a question of altering the deposit
of faith, changing the meaning of dogmas, eliminating essential words from
them, accommodating truth to the preferences of a particular age, or
suppressing certain articles of the Creed under the false pretext
that they are no longer understood today. The unity willed by God can be
attained only by the adherence of all to the content of revealed faith in
its entirety. In matters of faith, compromise is in contradiction with God
who is Truth. In the Body of Christ, the way, and the truth, and the
life (Jn 14:6), who could consider legitimate a reconciliation
brought about at the expense of the truth? The Council's Declaration on
Religious Freedom Dignitatis Humanae attributes to human dignity
the quest for truth, "especially in what concerns God and his Church",[33]
and adherence to truth's demands. A "being together" which betrayed the
truth would thus be opposed both to the nature of God who offers his
communion and to the need for truth found in the depths of every human
heart.
19. Even so, doctrine needs to be
presented in a way that makes it understandable to those for whom God
himself intends it. In my Encyclical Epistle Slavorum Apostoli, I
recalled that this was the very reason why Saints Cyril and Methodius
labored to translate the ideas of the Bible and the concepts of Greek
theology in the context of very different historical experiences and ways
of thinking. They wanted the one word of God to be "made accessible in
each civilization's own forms of expression".[34] They recognized that
they could not therefore "impose on the peoples assigned to their
preaching either the undeniable superiority of the Greek language and
Byzantine culture, or the customs and way of life of the more advanced
society in which they had grown up".[35] Thus they put into practice that
"perfect communion in love which preserves the Church from all forms of
particularism, ethnic exclusivism or racial prejudice, and from any
nationalistic arrogance".[36] In the same spirit, I did not hesitate to
say to the Aboriginal Peoples of Australia: "You do not have to be divided
into two parts ... Jesus calls you to accept his words and his values into
your own culture".[37] Because by its nature the content of faith is meant
for all humanity, it must be translated into all cultures. Indeed, the
element which determines communion in truth is the meaning of
truth. The expression of truth can take different forms. The renewal
of these forms of expression becomes necessary for the sake of
transmitting to the people of today the Gospel message in its unchanging
meaning.[38]
"This renewal therefore has notable
ecumenical significance".[39] And not only renewal in which the faith is
expressed, but also of the very life of faith. It might therefore be
asked: who is responsible for doing this? To this question the Council
replies clearly: "Concern for restoring unity pertains to the whole
Church, faithful and clergy alike. It extends to everyone, according to
the ability of each, whether it be exercised in daily Christian living or
in theological and historical studies".[40]
20. All this is extremely important
and of fundamental significance for ecumenical activity. Thus it is
absolutely dear that ecumenism, the movement promoting Christian unity,
is not just some sort of "appendix" which is added to the
Church's traditional activity. Rather, ecumenism is an organic part of her
life and work, and consequently must pervade all that she is and does; it
must be like the fruit borne by a healthy and flourishing tree which grows
to its full stature.
This is what Pope John XIII
believed about the unity of the Church and how he saw full Christian
unity. With regard to other Christians, to the great Christian family, he
observed: "What unites us is much greater than what divides us". The
Second Vatican Council for its part exhorts "all Christ's faithful to
remember that the more purely they strive to live according to the Gospel,
the more they are fostering and even practicing Christian unity. For they
can achieve depth and ease in strengthening mutual brotherhood to the
degree that they enjoy profound communion with the Father, the Word, and
the Holy Spirit".[41]
The primacy of
prayer
21. "This change of heart and
holiness of life, along with public and private prayer for the unity of
Christians, should be regarded as the soul of the whole ecumenical
movement, and can rightly be called 'spiritual ecumenism'."[42]
We proceed along the road leading
to the conversion of hearts guided by love which is directed to God and,
at the same time, to all our brothers and sisters, including those not in
full communion with us. Love gives rise to the desire for unity, even in
those who have never been aware of the need for it. Love builds communion
between individuals and between Communities. If we love one another, we
strive to deepen our communion and make it perfect. Love is given to
God as the perfect source of communion-the unity of Father, Son and
Holy Spirit-that we may draw from that source the strength to build
communion between individuals and Communities, or to re-establish it
between Christians still divided. Love is the great undercurrent which
gives life and adds vigour to the movement towards unity.
This love finds its most
complete expression in common prayer. When brothers and sisters who
are not in perfect communion with one another come together to pray, the
Second Vatican Council defines their prayer as the soul of the whole
ecumenical movement. This prayer is "a very effective means of petitioning
for the grace of unity", "a genuine expression of the ties which even
now bind Catholics to their separated brethren".[43] Even when prayer
is not specifically offered for Christian unity, but for other intentions
such as peace, it actually becomes an expression and confirmation of
unity. The common prayer of Christians is an invitation to Christ himself
to visit the community of those who call upon him: Where two or three
are gathered in my name, there am I in the midst of them (Mt 18:20).
22. When Christians pray together,
the goal of unity seems closer. The long history of Christians marked by
many divisions seems to converge once more because it tends towards that
Source of its unity which is Jesus Christ. He is the same yesterday,
today and forever! (Heb 13:8). In the fellowship of prayer Christ is
truly present; he prays "in us", "with us" and "for us". It is he who
leads our prayer in the Spirit-Consoler whom he promised and then bestowed
on his Church in the Upper Room in Jerusalem, when he established her in
her original unity.
Along the ecumenical path to unity,
pride of place certainly belongs to common prayer, the prayerful union of
those who gather together around Christ himself. If Christians, despite
their divisions, can grow ever more united in common prayer
around Christ, they will grow in the awareness of how little divides them
in comparison to what unites them. If they meet more often and more
regularly before Christ in prayer, they will be able to gain the courage
to face all the painful human reality of their divisions, and they will
find themselves together once more in that community of the Church which
Christ constantly builds up in the Holy Spirit, in spite of all weaknesses
and human limitations.
23. Finally, fellowship in
prayer leads people to look at the Church and Christianity in a new
way. It must not be forgotten in fact that the Lord prayed to the
Father that his disciples might be one, so that their unity might bear
witness to his mission and the world would believe that the Father had
sent him (cf. Jn 17:21). It can be said that the ecumenical movement in a
certain sense was born out of the negative experience of each one of those
who, in proclaiming the one Gospel, appealed to his own Church or
Ecclesial Community. This was a contradiction which could not escape those
who listened to the message of salvation and found in this fact an
obstacle to acceptance of the Gospel. Regrettably, this grave obstacle has
not been overcome. It is true that we are not yet in full communion. And
yet, despite our divisions, we are on the way towards full unity, that
unity which marked the Apostolic Church at its birth and which we
sincerely seek. Our common prayer, inspired by faith, is proof of this. In
that prayer, we gather together in the name of Christ who is One. He is
our unity.
"Ecumenical" prayer is at the
service of the Christian mission and its credibility. It must thus be
especially present in the life of the Church and in every activity aimed
at fostering Christian unity. It is as if we constantly need to go back
and meet in the Upper Room of Holy Thursday, even though our presence
together in that place will not be perfect until the obstacles to full
ecclesial communion are overcome and all Christians can gather together in
the common celebration of the Eucharist.[44]
24. It is a source of joy to see
that the many ecumenical meetings almost always include and indeed
culminate in prayer. The Week of Prayer for Christian Unity,
celebrated in January or, in some countries, around Pentecost, has become
a widespread and well established tradition. But there are also many other
occasions during the year when Christians are led to pray together. In
this context, I wish to mention the special experience of the Pope's
pilgrimages to the various Churches in the different continents and
countries of the present-day oikoumene. I am very conscious that
it was the Second Vatican Council which led the Pope to exercise his
apostolic ministry in this particular way. Even more can be said. The
Council made these visits of the Pope a specific responsibility in
carrying out the role of the Bishop of Rome at the service of
communion.[45] My visits have almost always included an ecumenical meeting
and common prayer with our brothers and sisters who seek unity in
Christ and in his Church. With profound emotion I remember praying
together with the Primate of the Anglican Communion at Canterbury
Cathedral (29 May 1982); in that magnificent edifice, I saw "an eloquent
witness both to our long years of common inheritance and to the sad
years of division that followed".[46] Nor can I forget the meetings
held in the Scandinavian and Nordic Countries (1-10 June 1989), in North
and South America and in Africa, and at the headquarters of the World
Council of Churches (12 June 1984), the organization committed to calling
its member Churches and Ecclesial Communities "to the goal of visible
unity in one faith and in one Eucharistic fellowship expressed in worship
and in common life in Christ".[47] And how could I ever forget taking part
in the Eucharistic Liturgy in the Church of Saint George at the Ecumenical
Patriarchate (30 November 1979), and the service held in Saint Peter's
Basilica during the visit to Rome of my Venerable Brother, Patriarch
Dimitrios I (6 December 1987)? On that occasion, at the Altar of the
Confession, we recited together the Nicene-Constantinopolitan Creed
according to its original Greek text. It is hard to describe in a few
words the unique nature of each of these occasions of prayer. Given the
differing ways in which each of these meetings was conditioned by past
events, each had its own special eloquence. They have all become part of
the Church's memory as she is guided by the Paraclete to seek the full
unity of all believers in Christ.
25. It is not just the Pope who has
become a pilgrim. In recent years, many distinguished leaders of other
Churches and Ecclesial Communities have visited me in Rome, and I have
been able to join them in prayer, both in public and in private. I have
already mentioned the visit of the Ecumenical Patriarch Dimitrios I. I
would now like to recall the prayer meeting, also held in Saint Peter's
Basilica, at which I joined the Lutheran Archbishops, the Primates of
Sweden and Finland, for the celebration of Vespers on the occasion of the
Sixth Centenary of the Canonization of Saint Birgitta (5 October 1991).
This is just one example, because awareness of the duty to pray for unity
has become an integral part of the Church's life. There is no important or
significant event which does not benefit from Christians coming together
and praying. It is impossible for me to give a complete list of such
meetings, even though each one deserves to be mentioned. Truly the Lord
has taken us by the hand and is guiding us. These exchanges and these
prayers have already written pages and pages of our "Book of unity", a
"Book" which we must constantly return to and re-read so as to draw from
it new inspiration and hope.
26. Prayer, the community at
prayer, enables us always to discover anew the evangelical truth of the
words: You have one Father (Mt 23:9), the
Father-Abba-invoked by Christ himself, the Only-begotten and
Consubstantial Son. And again: You have one teacher, and you are all
brethren (Mt 23:8). Ecumenical prayer discloses this
fundamental dimension of brotherhood in Christ, who died to gather
together the children of God who were scattered, so that in becoming
sons and daughters in the Son (cf. Eph 1:5) we might show forth
more fully both the mysterious reality of God's fatherhood and the truth
about the human nature shared by each and every individual.
Ecumenical prayer, as the
prayer of brothers and sisters, expresses all this. Precisely because they
are separated from one another, they meet in Christ with all the more
hope, entrusting to him the future of their unity and their
communion. Here too we can appropriately apply the teaching of the
Council: "The Lord Jesus, when he prayed to the Father 'that all may
be one ... as we are one' (Jn 17:21-22), opened up vistas closed to
human reason For he implied a certain likeness between the union of the
Divine Persons, and the union of God's children in truth and charity".[48]
The change of heart which is the
essential condition for every authentic search for unity flows from prayer
and its realization is guided by prayer: "For it is from newness of
attitudes, from self-denial and unstinted love, that yearnings for unity
take their rise and grow towards maturity. We should therefore pray to
the divine Spirit for the grace to be genuinely self-denying, humble,
gentle in the service of others, and to have an attitude of brotherly
generosity towards them".[49]
27. Praying for unity is not a
matter reserved only to those who actually experience the lack of unity
among Christians. In the deep personal dialogue which each of us must
carry on with the Lord in prayer, concern for unity cannot be absent. Only
in this way, in fact, will that concern fully become part of the reality
of our life and of the commitments we have taken on in the Church. It was
in order to reaffirm this duty that I set before the faithful of the
Catholic Church a model which I consider exemplary, the model of a
Trappistine Sister, Blessed Maria Gabriella of Unity, whom I
beatified on 25 January 1983.[50] Sister Maria Gabriella, called by her
vocation to be apart from the world, devoted her life to meditation and
prayer centered on chapter seventeen of Saint John's Gospel, and offered
her life for Christian unity. This is truly the cornerstone of all prayer:
the total and unconditional offering of one's life to the Father, through
the Son, in the Holy Spirit. The example of Sister Maria Gabriella is
instructive; it helps us to understand that there are no special times,
situations or places of prayer for unity. Christ's prayer to the Father is
offered as a model for everyone, always and everywhere.
Ecumenical
dialogue
28. If prayer is the "soul" of
ecumenical renewal and of the yearning for unity, it is the basis and
support for everything the Council defines as "dialogue". This
definition is certainly not unrelated to today's personalist way of
thinking. The capacity for "dialogue" is rooted in the nature of the
person and his dignity. As seen by philosophy, this approach is linked to
the Christian truth concerning man as expressed by the Council: man is in
fact "the only creature on earth which God willed for itself"; thus he
cannot "fully find himself except through a sincere gift of himself".[51]
Dialogue is an indispensable step along the path towards human
self-realization, the self-realization both of each
individual and of every human community. Although the
concept of "dialogue" might appear to give priority to the cognitive
dimension (dia-logos), all dialogue implies a global, existential
dimension. It involves the human subject in his or her entirety; dialogue
between communities involves in a particular way the subjectivity of each.
This truth about dialogue, so
profoundly expressed by Pope Paul VI in his Encyclical Ecclesiam
Suam,[52] was also taken up by the Council in its teaching and
ecumenical activity. Dialogue is not simply an exchange of ideas. In some
way it is always an "exchange of gifts".[53]
29. For this reason, the Council's
Decree on Ecumenism also emphasizes the importance of "every effort to
eliminate words, judgments, and actions which do not respond to the
condition of separated brethren with truth and fairness and so make mutual
relations between them more difficult".[54] The Decree approaches the
question from the standpoint of the Catholic Church and refers to the
criteria which she must apply in relation to other Christians. In all
this, however, reciprocity is required. To follow these criteria is a
commitment of each of the parties which desire to enter into dialogue and
it is a precondition for starting such dialogue. It is necessary to pass
from antagonism and conflict to a situation where each party recognizes
the other as a partner. When undertaking dialogue, each side
must presuppose in the other a desire for reconciliation, for
unity in truth. For this to happen, any display of mutual
opposition must disappear. Only thus will dialogue help to overcome
division and lead us closer to unity.
30. It can be said, with a sense of
lively gratitude to the Spirit of Truth, that the Second Vatican Council
was a blessed time, during which the bases for the Catholic Church's
participation in ecumenical dialogue were laid. At the same time, the
presence of many observers from various Churches and Ecclesial
Communities, their deep involvement in the events of the Council, the many
meetings and the common prayer which the Council made possible, also
helped bring about the conditions for dialogue with one another.
During the Council, the representatives of other Churches and Ecclesial
Communities experienced the readiness of the worldwide Catholic
Episcopate, and in particular of the Apostolic See, to engage in dialogue.
Local structures of
dialogue
31. The Church's commitment to
ecumenical dialogue, as it has clearly appeared since the Council, far
from being the responsibility of the Apostolic See alone, is also the duty
of individual local or particular Churches. Special commissions for
fostering the ecumenical spirit and ecumenical activity have been set up
by the Bishops' Conferences and the Synods of the Eastern Catholic
Churches. Suitable structures similar to these are operating in individual
Dioceses. These initiatives are a sign of the widespread practical
commitment of the Catholic Church to apply the Council's guidelines on
ecumenism: this is an essential aspect of the ecumenical movement.[55]
Dialogue has not only been undertaken; it has become an outright
necessity, one of the Church's priorities. As a result, the "methods"
of dialogue have been improved, which in turn has helped the spirit of
dialogue to grow. In this context mention has to be made in the first
place of "dialogue between competent experts from different Churches and
Communities. In their meetings, which are organized in a religious spirit,
each explains the teaching of his Communion in greater depth and brings
out dearly its distinctive features".[56] Moreover, it is useful for all
the faithful to be familiar with the method which makes dialogue possible.
32. As the Council's Declaration on
Religious Freedom affirms: "Truth is to be sought after in a manner proper
to the dignity of the human person and his social nature. The inquiry is
to be free, carried on with the aid of teaching or instruction,
communication, and dialogue. In the course of these, people explain to one
another the truth they have discovered, or think they have discovered, in
order thus to assist one another in the quest for truth. Moreover, as the
truth is discovered, it is by a personal assent that individuals are to
adhere to it"[57]
Ecumenical dialogue is of essential
importance. "Through such dialogue everyone gains a truer knowledge and
more just appreciation of the teaching and religious life of both
Communions. In addition, these Communions cooperate more closely
in whatever projects a Christian conscience demands for the common good.
They also come together for common prayer, where that is permitted.
Finally, all are led to examine their own faithfulness to Christ's will
for the Church and, wherever necessary, undertake with vigour the tasks of
renewal and reform".[58]
Dialogue as an
examination of conscience
33. In the Council's thinking,
ecumenical dialogue is marked by a common quest for truth, particularly
concerning the Church. In effect, truth forms consciences and directs
efforts to promote unity. At the same time, it demands that the
consciences and actions of Christians, as brethren divided from one
another, should be inspired by and submissive to Christ's prayer for
unity. There is a close relationship between prayer and dialogue. Deeper
and more conscious prayer makes dialogue more fruitful. If on the one
hand, dialogue depends on prayer, so, in another sense, prayer also
becomes the ever more mature fruit of dialogue.
34. Thanks to ecumenical dialogue
we can speak of a greater maturity in our common prayer for one another.
This is possible inasmuch as dialogue also serves as an examination of
conscience. In this context, how can we fail to recall the words of
the First Letter of John? If we say we have no sin, we deceive
ourselves, and the truth is not in us. If we confess our sins, God is
faithful and just, and will forgive our sins and cleanse us from all
unrighteousness (1:8-9). John even goes so far as to state: If we
say that we have not sinned, we make him a liar, and his word is not in
us (1:10). Such a radical exhortation to acknowledge our
condition as sinners ought also to mark the spirit which we bring to
ecumenical dialogue. If such dialogue does not become an examination of
conscience, a kind of "dialogue of consciences", can we count on the
assurance which the First Letter of John gives us? My little children,
I am writing this to you so that you may not sin; but if any one does sin,
we have an advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous; and he is
the expiation for our sins, and not for ours only but also for the sins of
the whole world (2:1-2). All the sins of the world were gathered up
in the saving sacrifice of Christ, including the sins committed against
the Church's unity: the sins of Christians, those of the pastors no less
than those of the lay faithful. Even after the many sins which have
contributed to our historical divisions, Christian unity is
possible, provided that we are humbly conscious of having sinned
against unity and are convinced of our need for conversion. Not only
personal sins must be forgiven and left behind, but also social sins,
which is to say the sinful "structures" themselves which have contributed
and can still contribute to division and to the reinforcing of division.
35. Here once again the Council
proves helpful. It can be said that the entire Decree on Ecumenism is
permeated by the spirit of conversion.[59] In the Document, ecumenical
dialogue takes on a specific characteristic; it becomes a dialogue of
conversion, and thus, in the words of Pope Paul VI, an authentic
"dialogue of salvation".[60] Dialogue cannot take place merely on a
horizontal level, being restricted to meetings, exchanges of points of
view or even the sharing of gifts proper to each Community. It has also a
primarily vertical thrust, directed towards the One who, as the Redeemer
of the world and the Lord of history, is himself our Reconciliation. This
vertical aspect of dialogue lies in our acknowledgment, jointly and to
each other, that we are men and women who have sinned. It is precisely
this acknowledgment which creates in brothers and sisters living in
Communities not in full communion with one another that interior space
where Christ, the source of the Church's unity, can effectively act, with
all the power of his Spirit, the Paraclete.
Dialogue as a means of
resolving disagreements
36. Dialogue is also a natural
instrument for comparing differing points of view and, above all, for
examining those disagreements which hinder full communion between
Christians. The Decree on Ecumenism dwells in the first place on a
description of the attitudes under which doctrinal discussions should take
place: "Catholic theologians engaged in ecumenical dialogue, while
standing fast by the teaching of the Church and searching together with
separated brothers and sisters into the divine mysteries, should act with
love for truth, with charity, and with humility".[61]
Love for the truth is the deepest
dimension of any authentic quest for full communion between Christians.
Without this love it would be impossible to face the objective
theological, cultural, psychological and social difficulties which appear
when disagreements are examined. This dimension, which is interior and
personal, must be inseparably accompanied by a spirit of charity and
humility. There must be charity towards one's partner in dialogue, and
humility with regard to the truth which comes to light and which might
require a review of assertions and attitudes.
With regard to the study of areas
of disagreement, the Council requires that the whole body of doctrine be
clearly presented. At the same time, it asks that the manner and method of
expounding the Catholic faith should not be a hindrance to dialogue with
our brothers and sisters.[62] Certainly it is possible to profess one's
faith and to explain its teaching in a way that is correct, fair and
understandable, and which at the same time takes into account both the way
of thinking and the actual historical experiences of the other party.
Full communion of course will have
to come about through the acceptance of the whole truth into which the
Holy Spirit guides Christ's disciples. Hence all forms of reductionism or
facile "agreement" must be absolutely avoided. Serious questions must be
resolved, for if not, they will reappear at another time, either in the
same terms or in a different guise.
37. The Decree Unitatis
Redintegratio also indicates a criterion to be followed when
Catholics are presenting or comparing doctrines: "They should remember
that in Catholic teaching there exists an order or 'hierarchy' of truths,
since they vary in their relationship to the foundation of the Christian
faith. Thus the way will be opened for this kind of fraternal rivalry to
incite all to a deeper realization and a clearer expression of the
unfathomable riches of Christ".[63]
38. In dialogue, one inevitably
comes up against the problem of the different formulations whereby
doctrine is expressed in the various Churches and Ecclesial Communities.
This has more than one consequence for the work of ecumenism.
In the first place, with regard to
doctrinal formulations which differ from those normally in use in the
community to which one belongs, it is certainly right to determine whether
the words involved say the same thing. This has been ascertained in the
case for example of the recent common declarations signed by my
Predecessors or by myself with the Patriarchs of Churches with which for
centuries there have been disputes about Christology. As far as the
formulation of revealed truths is concerned, the Declaration Mysterium
Ecclesiae states: "Even though the truths which the Church intends to
teach through her dogmatic formulas are distinct from the changeable
conceptions of a given epoch and can be expressed without them,
nevertheless it can sometimes happen that these truths may be enunciated
by the Sacred Magisterium in terms that bear traces of such conceptions.
In view of this, it must be stated that the dogmatic formulas of
the Church's Magisterium were from the very beginning suitable for
communicating revealed truth, and that as they are they remain for ever
suitable for communicating this truth to those who interpret them
correctly".[64] In this regard, ecumenical dialogue, which prompts the
parties involved to question each other, to understand each other and to
explain their positions to each other, makes surprising discoveries
possible. Intolerant polemics and controversies have made incompatible
assertions out of what was really the result of two different ways of
looking at the same reality. Nowadays we need to find the formula which,
by capturing the reality in its entirety, will enable us to move beyond
partial readings and eliminate false interpretations.
One of the advantages of ecumenism
is that it helps Christian Communities to discover the unfathomable riches
of the truth. Here too, everything that the Spirit brings about in
"others" can serve for the building up of all Communities[65] and in a
certain sense instruct them in the mystery of Christ. Authentic ecumenism
is a gift at the service of truth.
39. Finally, dialogue puts before
the participants real and genuine disagreements in matters of faith. Above
all, these disagreements should be faced in a sincere spirit of fraternal
charity, of respect for the demands of one's own conscience and of the
conscience of the other party, with profound humility and love for the
truth. The examination of such disagreements has two essential points of
reference: Sacred Scripture and the great Tradition of the Church.
Catholics have the help of the Church's living Magisterium.
Practical
cooperation
40. Relations between Christians
are not aimed merely at mutual knowledge, common prayer and dialogue. They
presuppose and from now on call for every possible form of practical
cooperation at all levels: pastoral, cultural and social, as well as that
of witnessing to the Gospel message.[66]
"Cooperation among all Christians
vividly expresses that bond which already unites them, and it sets in
clearer relief the features of Christ the Servant".[67] This cooperation
based on our common faith is not only filled with fraternal communion, but
is a manifestation of Christ himself.
Moreover, ecumenical cooperation is
a true school of ecumenism, a dynamic road to unity. Unity of action leads
to the full unity of faith: "Through such cooperation, all believers in
Christ are able to learn easily how they can understand each other better
and esteem each other more, and how the road to the unity of Christians
may be made smooth".[68]
In the eyes of the world,
cooperation among Christians becomes a form of common Christian witness
and a means of evangelization which benefits all involved.
II - THE FRUITS OF DIALOGUE
Brotherhood
rediscovered
41. What has been said above about
ecumenical dialogue since the end of the Council inspires us to give
thanks to the Spirit of Truth promised by Christ the Lord to the Apostles
and the Church (cf. Jn 14:26). It is the first time in history that
efforts on behalf of Christian unity have taken on such great proportions
and have become so extensive. This is truly an immense gift of God, one
which deserves all our gratitude. From the fullness of Christ we receive
grace upon grace (Jn 1:16). An appreciation of how much God has
already given is the condition which disposes us to receive those gifts
still indispensable for bringing to completion the ecumenical work of
unity.
An overall view of the last thirty
years enables us better to appreciate many of the fruits of this common
conversion to the Gospel which the Spirit of God has brought about by
means of the ecumenical movement.
42. It happens for example that, in
the spirit of the Sermon on the Mount, Christians of one confession no
longer consider other Christians as enemies or strangers but see them as
brothers and sisters. Again, the very expression separated
brethren tends to be replaced today by expressions which more readily
evoke the deep communion-linked to the baptismal character-which the
Spirit fosters in spite of historical and canonical divisions. Today we
speak of "other Christians", "others who have received Baptism", and
"Christians of other Communities". The Directory for the Application
of Principles and Norms on Ecumenism refers to the Communities to
which these Christians belong as "Churches and Ecclesial Communities that
are not in full communion with the Catholic Church".[69] This broadening
of vocabulary is indicative of a significant change in attitudes. There is
an increased awareness that we all belong to Christ. I have personally
been able many times to observe this during the ecumenical celebrations
which are an important part of my Apostolic Visits to various parts of the
world, and also in the meetings and ecumenical celebrations which have
taken place in Rome. The "universal brotherhood" of Christians has become
a firm ecumenical conviction. Consigning to oblivion the excommunications
of the past, Communities which were once rivals are now in many cases
helping one another: places of worship are sometimes lent out;
scholarships are offered for the training of ministers in the Communities
most lacking in resources; approaches are made to civil authorities on
behalf of other Christians who are unjustly persecuted; and the slander to
which certain groups are subjected is shown to be unfounded.
In a word, Christians have been
converted to a fraternal charity which embraces all Christ's disciples. If
it happens that, as a result of violent political disturbances, a certain
aggressiveness or a spirit of vengeance appears, the leaders of the
parties in question generally work to make the "New Law" of the spirit of
charity prevail. Unfortunately, this spirit has not been able to transform
every situation where brutal conflict rages. In such circumstances those
committed to ecumenism are often required to make choices which are truly
heroic.
It needs be reaffirmed in this
regard that acknowledging our brotherhood is not the consequence of a
large-hearted philanthropy or a vague family spirit. It is rooted in
recognition of the oneness of Baptism and the subsequent duty to glorify
God in his work. The Directory for the Application of Principles and
Norms on Ecumenism expresses the hope that Baptisms will be mutually
and officially recognized.[70] This is something much more than an act of
ecumenical courtesy; it constitutes a basic ecclesiological statement.
It is fitting to recall that the
fundamental role of Baptism in building up the Church has been clearly
brought out thanks also to multilateral dialogues.[71]
Solidarity in the
service of humanity
43. It happens more and more often
that the leaders of Christian Communities join together in taking a stand
in the name of Christ on important problems concerning man's calling and
on freedom, justice, peace, and the future of the world. In this way they
"communicate" in one of the tasks which constitutes the mission of
Christians: that of reminding society of God's will in a realistic manner,
warning the authorities and their fellow-citizens against taking steps
which would lead to the trampling of human rights. It is clear, as
experience shows, that in some circumstances the united voice of
Christians has more impact than any one isolated voice.
Nor are the leaders of Communities
the only ones joined in the work for unity. Many Christians from all
Communities, by reason of their faith, are jointly involved in bold
projects aimed at changing the world by inculcating respect for the rights
and needs of everyone, especially the poor, the lowly and the defenceless.
In my Encyclical Letter Sollicitudo Rei Socialis, I was pleased
to note this cooperation, stressing that the Catholic Church cannot fail
to take part in these efforts.[72] In effect, Christians who once acted
independently are now engaged together in the service of this cause, so
that God's mercy may triumph.
This way of thinking and acting is
already that of the Gospel. Hence, reaffirming what I wrote in my first
Encyclical Letter Redemptor Hominis, I have had occasion "to
insist on this point and to encourage every effort made in this direction,
at all levels where we meet our other brother Christians"[73] I have
thanked God "for what he has already accomplished in the other Churches
and Ecclesial Communities and through them", as well as through the
Catholic Church.[74] Today I see with satisfaction that the already vast
network of ecumenical cooperation is constantly growing. Thanks also to
the influence of the World Council of Churches, much is being accomplished
in this field.
Approaching one another
through the Word of God and through divine worship
44. Significant progress in
ecumenical cooperation has also been made in another area, that of the
Word of God. I am thinking above all of the importance for the different
language groups of ecumenical translations of the Bible. Following the
promulgation by the Second Vatican Council of the Constitution Dei
Verbum, the Catholic Church could not fail to welcome this
development.[75] These translations, prepared by experts, generally offer
a solid basis for the prayer and pastoral activity of all Christ's
followers. Anyone who recalls how heavily debates about Scripture
influenced divisions, especially in the West, can appreciate the
significant step forward which these common translations represent.
45. Corresponding to the liturgical
renewal carried out by the Catholic Church, certain other Ecclesial
Communities have made efforts to renew their worship. Some, on the basis
of a recommendation expressed at the ecumenical level,[76] have abandoned
the custom of celebrating their liturgy of the Lord's Supper only
infrequently and have opted for a celebration each Sunday. Again, when the
cycles of liturgical readings used by the various Christian Communities in
the West are compared, they appear to be essentially the same. Still on
the ecumenical level,[77] very special prominence has been given to the
liturgy and liturgical signs (images, icons, vestments, light, incense,
gestures). Moreover, in schools of theology where future ministers are
trained, courses in the history and significance of the liturgy are
beginning to be part of the curriculum in response to a newly discovered
need.
These are signs of convergence
which regard various aspects of the sacramental life. Certainly, due to
disagreements in matters of faith, it is not yet possible to celebrate
together the same Eucharistic Liturgy. And yet we do have a burning desire
to join in celebrating the one Eucharist of the Lord, and this desire
itself is already a common prayer of praise, a single supplication.
Together we speak to the Father and increasingly we do so "with one
heart". At times it seems that we are closer to being able finally to seal
this "real although not yet full" communion. A century ago who could even
have imagined such a thing?
46. In this context, it is a source
of joy to note that Catholic ministers are able, in certain particular
cases, to administer the Sacraments of the Eucharist, Penance and
Anointing of the Sick to Christians who are not in full communion with the
Catholic Church but who greatly desire to receive these sacraments, freely
request them and manifest the faith which the Catholic Church professes
with regard to these sacraments. Conversely, in specific cases and in
particular circumstances, Catholics too can request these same sacraments
from ministers of Churches in which these sacraments are valid. The
conditions for such reciprocal reception have been laid down in specific
norms; for the sake of furthering ecumenism these norms must be
respected.[78]
Appreciating the
endowments present among other Christians
47. Dialogue does not extend
exclusively to matters of doctrine but engages the whole person; it is
also a dialogue of love. The Council has stated: "Catholics must joyfully
acknowledge and esteem the truly Christian endowments from our common
heritage which are to be found among our separated brothers and sisters.
It is right and salutary to recognize the riches of Christ and virtuous
works in the lives of others who are bearing witness to Christ, sometimes
even to the shedding of their blood. For God is always wonderful in his
works and worthy of admiration".[79]
48. The relationships which the
members of the Catholic Church have established with other Christians
since the Council have enabled us to discover what God is bringing about
in the members of other Churches and Ecclesial Communities. This direct
contact, at a variety of levels, with pastors and with the members of
these Communities has made us aware of the witness which other Christians
bear to God and to Christ. A vast new field has thus opened up for the
whole ecumenical experience, which at the same time is the great challenge
of our time. Is not the twentieth century a time of great witness, which
extends "even to the shedding of blood"? And does not this witness also
involve the various Churches and Ecclesial Communities which take their
name from Christ, Crucified and Risen?
Such a joint witness of holiness,
as fidelity to the one Lord, has an ecumenical potential extraordinarily
rich in grace. The Second Vatican Council made it clear that elements
present among other Christians can contribute to the edification of
Catholics: "Nor should we forget that whatever is wrought by the grace of
the Holy Spirit in the hearts of our separated brothers and sisters can
contribute to our own edification. Whatever is truly Christian never
conflicts with the genuine interests of the faith; indeed, it can always
result in a more ample realization of the very mystery of Christ and the
Church".[80] Ecumenical dialogue, as a true dialogue of salvation, will
certainly encourage this process, which has already begun well, to advance
towards true and full communion.
The growth of
communion
49. A valuable result of the
contacts between Christians and of the theological dialogue in which they
engage is the growth of communion. Both contacts and dialogue have made
Christians aware of the elements of faith which they have in common. This
has served to consolidate further their commitment to full unity. In all
of this, the Second Vatican Council remains a powerful source of incentive
and orientation.
The Dogmatic Constitution Lumen
Gentium links its teaching on the Catholic Church to an
acknowledgment of the saving elements found in other Churches and
Ecclesial Communities.[81] It is not a matter of becoming aware of static
elements passively present in those Churches and Communities. Insofar as
they are elements of the Church of Christ, these are by their nature a
force for the re-establishment of unity. Consequently, the quest for
Christian unity is not a matter of choice or expediency, but a duty which
springs from the very nature of the Christian community.
In a similar way, the bilateral
theological dialogues carried on with the major Christian Communities
start from a recognition of the degree of communion already present, in
order to go on to discuss specific areas of disagreement. The Lord has
made it possible for Christians in our day to reduce the number of matters
traditionally in dispute.
Dialogue with the
Churches of the East
50. In this regard, it must first
be acknowledged, with particular gratitude to Divine Providence, that our
bonds with the Churches of the East, weakened in the course of the
centuries, were strengthened through the Second Vatican Council. The
observers from these Churches present at the Council, together with
representatives of the Churches and Ecclesial Communities of the West,
stated publicly, at that very solemn moment for the Catholic Church, their
common willingness to seek the re-establishment of communion.
The Council, for its part,
considered the Churches of the East with objectivity and deep affection,
stressing their ecclesial nature and the real bonds of communion linking
them with the Catholic Church. The Decree on Ecumenism points out:
"Through the celebration of the Eucharist of the Lord in each of these
Churches, the Church of God is built up and grows in stature". It adds, as
a consequence, that "although these Churches are separated from us, they
possess true sacraments, above all-by apostolic succession-the priesthood
and the Eucharist, whereby they are still joined to us in a very close
relationship,"[82]
Speaking of the Churches of the
East, the Council acknowledged their great liturgical and spiritual
tradition, the specific nature of their historical development, the
disciplines coming from the earliest times and approved by the Holy
Fathers and Ecumenical Councils, and their own particular way of
expressing their teaching. The Council made this acknowledgment in the
conviction that legitimate diversity is in no way opposed to the Church's
unity, but rather enhances her splendor and contributes greatly to the
fulfillment of her mission.
The Second Vatican Ecumenical
Council wished to base dialogue on the communion which already exists, and
it draws attention to the noble reality of the Churches of the East:
"Therefore, this Sacred Synod urges all, but especially those who plan to
devote themselves to the work of restoring the full communion that is
desired between the Eastern Churches and the Catholic Church, to give due
consideration to these special aspects of the origin and growth of the
Churches of the East, and to the character of the relations which obtained
between them and the Roman See before the separation, and to form for
themselves a correct evaluation of these facts".[83]
51. The Council's approach has
proved fruitful both for the steady maturing of fraternal relations
through the dialogue of charity, and for doctrinal discussion in the
framework of the Joint International Commission for the Theological
Dialogue between the Catholic Church and the Orthodox Church. It has
likewise proved most fruitful in relations with the Ancient Churches of
the East.
The process has been slow and
arduous, yet a source of great joy; and it has been inspiring, for it has
led to the gradual rediscovery of brotherhood.
Resuming
contacts
52. With regard to the Church of
Rome and the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople, the process which
we have just mentioned began thanks to the mutual openness demonstrated by
Popes John XXIII and Paul VI on the one hand, and by the Ecumenical
Patriarch Athenagoras I and his successors on the other. The resulting
change found its historical expression in the ecclesial act whereby "there
was removed from memory and from the midst of the Church"[84] the
remembrance of the excommunications which nine hundred years before, in
1054, had become the symbol of the schism between Rome and Constantinople.
That ecclesial event, so filled with ecumenical commitment, took place
during the last days of the Council, on 7 December 1965. The Council thus
ended with a solemn act which was at once a healing of historical
memories, a mutual forgiveness, and a firm commitment to strive for
communion.
This gesture had been preceded by
the meeting of Pope Paul VI and Patriarch Athenagoras I in Jerusalem, in
January 1964, during the Pope's pilgrimage to the Holy Land. At that time
Pope Paul was also able to meet Benedictos, the Orthodox Patriarch of
Jerusalem. Later, Pope Paul visited Patriarch Athenagoras at the Phanar
(Istanbul), on 25 July 1967, and in October of the same year the Patriarch
was solemnly received in Rome. These prayer-filled meetings mapped out the
path of rapprochement between the Church of the East and the Church of the
West, and of the re-establishment of the unity they shared in the first
millennium.
Following the death of Pope Paul VI
and the brief pontificate of Pope John I, when the ministry of Bishop of
Rome was entrusted to me, I considered it one of the first duties of my
pontificate to renew personal contact with the Ecumenical Patriarch
Dimitrios I, who had meanwhile succeeded Patriarch Athenagoras in the See
of Constantinople. During my visit to the Phanar on 29 November 1979, the
Patriarch and I were able to decide to begin theological dialogue between
the Catholic Church and all the Orthodox Churches in canonical communion
with the See of Constantinople. In this regard it would seem important to
add that at that time preparations were already under way for the
convocation of a future Council of the Orthodox Churches. The quest for
harmony between them contributes to the life and vitality of these sister
Churches; this is also significant in view of the role they are called to
play in the path towards unity. The Ecumenical Patriarch decided to repay
my visit, and in December 1987 I had the joy of welcoming him to Rome with
deep affection and with the solemnity due to him. It is in this context of
ecclesial fraternity that we should mention the practice, which has now
been in place for a number of years, of welcoming a delegation from the
Ecumenical Patriarchate to Rome for the Feast of the Holy Apostles Peter
and Paul, as well as the custom of sending a delegation of the Holy See to
the Phanar for the solemn celebration of Saint Andrew.
53. Among other things, these
regular contacts permit a direct exchange of information and opinions with
a view to fostering fraternal coordination. Furthermore, taking part
together in prayer accustoms us once more to living side by side and helps
us in accepting and putting into practice the Lord's will for his Church.
On the path which we have traveled
since the Second Vatican Council, at least two particularly telling events
of great ecumenical significance for relations between East and West
should be mentioned. The first of these was the 1984 Jubilee in
commemoration of the eleventh centenary of the evangelizing activity of
Saints Cyril and Methodius, an occasion which enabled me to proclaim the
two Holy Apostles of the Slavs, those heralds of faith, co-patrons of
Europe. In 1964, during the Council, Pope Paul VI had already proclaimed
Saint Benedict patron of Europe. Associating the two Brothers from
Thessalonica with the great founder of Western monasticism serves
indirectly to highlight that twofold ecclesial and cultural tradition
which has proved so significant for the two thousand years of Christianity
which mark the history of Europe. Consequently it is worth recalling that
Saints Cyril and Methodius came from the background of the Byzantine
Church of their day, at a time when the latter was in communion with Rome.
In proclaiming them patrons of Europe, together with Saint Benedict, it
was my intention not only to reaffirm the historical truth about
Christianity in Europe, but also to provide an important topic for the
dialogue between East and West which has raised such high hopes in the
period since the Council. As in Saint Benedict, so in Saints Cyril and
Methodius, Europe can rediscover its spiritual roots. Now, as the second
millennium since the Birth of Christ draws to a close, they must be
venerated together, as the patrons of our past and as the Saints
to whom the Churches and nations of Europe entrust their future.
54. The other event which I am
pleased to recall is the celebration of the Millennium of the Baptism of
Rus' (988-1988). The Catholic Church, and this Apostolic See in
particular, desired to take part in the Jubilee celebrations and also
sought to emphasize that the Baptism conferred on Saint Vladimir in Kiev
was a key event in the evangelization of the world. The great Slav nations
of Eastern Europe owe their faith to this event, as do the peoples living
beyond the Ural Mountains and as far as Alaska.
In this perspective an expression
which I have frequently employed finds its deepest meaning: the Church
must breathe with her two lungs! In the first millennium of the history of
Christianity, this expression refers primarily to the relationship between
Byzantium and Rome. From the time of the Baptism of Rus' it comes to have
an even wider application: evangelization spread to a much vaster area, so
that it now includes the entire Church. If we then consider that the
salvific event which took place on the banks of the Dnieper goes back to a
time when the Church in the East and the Church in the West were not
divided, we understand clearly that the vision of the full communion to be
sought is that of unity in legitimate diversity. This is what I strongly
asserted in my Encyclical Epistle Slavorum Apostoli[85] on Saints
Cyril and Methodius and in my Apostolic Letter Euntes in
Mundum[86] addressed to the faithful of the Catholic Church in
commemoration of the Millennium of the Baptism of Kievan Rus'.
Sister
Churches
55. In its historical survey the
Council Decree Unitatis Redintegratio has in mind the unity
which, in spite of everything, was experienced in the first millennium and
in a certain sense now serves as a kind of model. "This most sacred Synod
gladly reminds all ... that in the East there flourish many particular or
local Churches; among them the Patriarchal Churches hold first place; and
of these, many glory in taking their origin from the Apostles
themselves".[87] The Church's journey began in Jerusalem on the day of
Pentecost and its original expansion in the oikoumene of that
time was centered around Peter and the Eleven (cf. Acts 2:14). The
structures of the Church in the East and in the West evolved in reference
to that Apostolic heritage. Her unity during the first millennium was
maintained within those same structures through the Bishops, Successors of
the Apostles, in communion with the Bishop of Rome. If today at the end of
the second millennium we are seeking to restore full communion, it is to
that unity, thus structured, which we must look.
The Decree on Ecumenism highlights
a further distinctive aspect, thanks to which all the particular Churches
remained in unity: "an eager desire to perpetuate in a communion of faith
and charity those family ties which ought to thrive between local
Churches, as between sisters".[88]
56. Following the Second Vatican
Council, and in the light of earlier tradition, it has again become usual
to refer to the particular or local Churches gathered around their Bishop
as "Sister Churches". In addition, the lifting of the mutual
excommunications, by eliminating a painful canonical and psychological
obstacle, was a very significant step on the way towards full communion.
The structures of unity which
existed before the separation are a heritage of experience that guides our
common path towards the re-establishment of full communion. Obviously,
during the second millennium the Lord has not ceased to bestow on his
Church abundant fruits of grace and growth. Unfortunately, however, the
gradual and mutual estrangement between the Churches of the West and the
East deprived them of the benefits of mutual exchanges and cooperation.
With the grace of God a great effort must be made to re-establish full
communion among them, the source of such good for the Church of Christ.
This effort calls for all our good will, humble prayer and a steadfast
cooperation which never yields to discouragement. Saint Paul urges us:
Bear one another's burdens (Gal 6:2). How appropriate and
relevant for us is the Apostle's exhortation! The traditional designation
of "Sister Churches" should ever accompany us along this path.
57. In accordance with the hope
expressed by Pope Paul VI, our declared purpose is to re-establish
together full unity in legitimate diversity: "God has granted us to
receive in faith what the Apostles saw, understood, and proclaimed to us.
By Baptism 'we are one in Christ Jesus' (Gal 3:28). In virtue of
the apostolic succession, we are united more closely by the priesthood and
the Eucharist. By participating in the gifts of God to his Church we are
brought into communion with the Father through the Son in the Holy Spirit
... In each local Church this mystery of divine love is enacted, and
surely this is the ground of the traditional and very beautiful expression
'Sister Churches', which local Churches were fond of applying to one
another (cf. Decree, Unitatis Redintegratio, 14). For centuries
we lived this life of 'Sister Churches', and together held Ecumenical
Councils which guarded the deposit of faith against all corruption. And
now, after a long period of division and mutual misunderstanding, the Lord
is enabling us to discover ourselves as 'sister Churches' once more, in
spite of the obstacles which were once raised between us".[89] If today,
on the threshold of the third millennium, we are seeking the
re-establishment of full communion, it is for the accomplishment of this
reality that we must work and it is to this reality that we must refer.
Contact with this glorious
tradition is most fruitful for the Church. As the Council points out:
"From their very origins the Churches of the East have had a treasury from
which the Church of the West has amply drawn for its liturgy, spiritual
tradition and jurisprudence".[90]
Part of this "treasury" are also
"the riches of those spiritual traditions to which monasticism gives
special expression. From the glorious days of the Holy Fathers, there
flourished in the East that monastic spirituality which later flowed over
into the Western world".[91] As I have had the occasion to emphasize in my
recent Apostolic Letter Orientale Lumen, the Churches of the East
have lived with great generosity the commitment shown by monastic life,
"starting with evangelization, the highest service that the Christian can
offer his brother, followed by many other forms of spiritual and material
service. Indeed it can be said that monasticism in antiquity-and at
various times in subsequent ages too-has been the privileged means for the
evangelization of peoples".[92]
The Council does not limit itself
to emphasizing the elements of similarity between the Churches in the East
and in the West. In accord with historical truth, it does not hesitate to
say: "It is hardly surprising if sometimes one tradition has come nearer
than the other to an apt appreciation of certain aspects of the revealed
mystery or has expressed them in a clearer manner. As a result, these
various theological formulations are often to be considered as
complementary rather than conflicting".[93] Communion is made fruitful by
the exchange of gifts between the Churches insofar as they complement each
other.
58. From the reaffirmation of an
already existing communion of faith, the Second Vatican Council drew
pastoral consequences which are useful for the everyday life of the
faithful and for the promotion of the spirit of unity. By reason of the
very close sacramental bonds between the Catholic Church and the Orthodox
Churches, the Decree on Eastern Catholic Churches Orientalium
Ecclesiarum has stated: "Pastoral experience clearly shows that with
respect to our Eastern brethren there should and can be taken into
consideration various circumstances affecting individuals, wherein the
unity of the Church is not jeopardized nor are intolerable risks involved,
but in which salvation itself and the spiritual profit of souls are
urgently at issue. Hence, in view of special circumstances of time, place
and personage, the Catholic Church has often adopted and now adopts a
milder policy, offering to all the means of salvation and an example of
charity among Christians through participation in the Sacraments and in
other sacred functions and objects".[94]
In the light of experience gained
in the years following the Council, this theological and pastoral
orientation has been incorporated into the two Codes of Canon Law.[95] It
has been explicitly treated from the pastoral standpoint in the
Directory for the Application of Principles and Norms on
Ecumenism.[96]
In so important and sensitive a
matter, it is necessary for Pastors to instruct the faithful with care,
making them clearly aware of the specific reasons both for this sharing in
liturgical worship and for the various regulations which govern it.
There must never be a loss of
appreciation for the ecclesiological implication of sharing in the
sacraments, especially in the Holy Eucharist.
Progress in
dialogue
59. Since its establishment in
1979, the Joint International Commission for the Theological Dialogue
between the Catholic Church and the Orthodox Church has worked
steadily, directing its study to areas decided upon by mutual agreement,
with the purpose of re-establishing full communion between the two
Churches. This communion which is founded on the unity of faith, following
in the footsteps of the experience and tradition of the ancient Church,
will find its fulfillment in the common celebration of the Holy Eucharist.
In a positive spirit, and on the basis of what we have in common, the
Joint Commission has been able to make substantial progress and, as I was
able to declare in union with my Venerable Brother, His Holiness Dimitrios
I, the Ecumenical Patriarch, it has concluded "that the Catholic Church
and the Orthodox Church can already profess together that common faith in
the mystery of the Church and the bond between faith and sacraments".[97]
The Commission was then able to acknowledge that "in our Churches
apostolic succession is fundamental for the sanctification and the unity
of the people of God".[98] These are important points of reference for the
continuation of the dialogue. Moreover, these joint affirmations represent
the basis for Catholics and Orthodox to be able from now on to bear a
faithful and united common witness in our time, that the name of the Lord
may be proclaimed and glorified.
60. More recently, the Joint
International Commission took a significant step forward with regard to
the very sensitive question of the method To be followed in re-
establishing full communion between the Catholic Church and the Orthodox
Church, an issue which has frequently embittered relations between
Catholics and Orthodox. The Commission has laid the doctrinal foundations
for a positive solution to this problem on the basis of the doctrine of
Sister Churches. Here too it has become evident that the method to be
followed towards full communion is the dialogue of truth, fostered and
sustained by the dialogue of love. A recognition of the right of the
Eastern Catholic Churches to have their own organizational structures and
to carry out their own apostolate, as well as the actual involvement of
these Churches in the dialogue of charity and in theological dialogue,
will not only promote a true and fraternal mutual esteem between Orthodox
and Catholics living in the same territory, but will also foster their
joint commitment to work for unity.[99] A step forward has been taken. The
commitment must continue. Already there are signs of a lessening of
tensions, which is making the quest for unity more fruitful.
With regard to the Eastern Catholic
Churches in communion with the Catholic Church, the Council expressed its
esteem in these terms: "While thanking God that many Eastern sons of the
Catholic Church ... are already living in full communion with their
brethren who follow the tradition of the West, this sacred Synod declares
that this entire heritage of spirituality and liturgy, of discipline and
theology, in their various traditions, belongs to the full catholic and
apostolic character of the Church".[100] Certainly the Eastern Catholic
Churches, in the spirit of the Decree on Ecumenism, will play a
constructive role in the dialogue of love and in the theological dialogue
at both the local and international levels, and thus contribute to mutual
understanding and the continuing pursuit of full unity.[101]
61. In view of all this, the
Catholic Church desires nothing less than full communion between East and
West. She finds inspiration for this in the experience of the first
millennium. In that period, indeed, "the development of different
experiences of ecclesial life did not prevent Christians, through mutual
relations, from continuing to feel certain that they were at home in any
Church, because praise of the one Father, through Christ in the Holy
Spirit, rose from them all, in a marvelous variety of languages and
melodies; all were gathered together to celebrate the Eucharist, the heart
and model for the community regarding not only spirituality and the moral
life, but also the Church's very structure, in the variety of ministries
and services under the leadership of the Bishop, successor of the
Apostles. The first Councils are an eloquent witness to this enduring
unity in diversity".[102] How can unity be restored after almost a
thousand years? This is the great task which the Catholic Church must
accomplish, a task equally incumbent on the Orthodox Church. Thus can be
understood the continuing relevance of dialogue, guided by the light and
strength of the Holy Spirit.
Relations with the
Ancient Churches of the East
62. In the period following the
Second Vatican Council, the Catholic Church has also, in different ways
and with greater or lesser rapidity, restored fraternal relations with the
Ancient Churches of the East which rejected the dogmatic formulations of
the Councils of Ephesus and Chalcedon. All these Churches sent official
observers to the Second Vatican Council; their Patriarchs have honored us
by their visits, and the Bishop of Rome has been able to converse with
them as with brothers who, after a long time, joyfully meet again.
The return of fraternal relations
with the Ancient Churches of the East witnesses to the Christian faith in
situations which are often hostile and tragic. This is a concrete sign of
how we are united in Christ in spite of historical, political, social and
cultural barriers. And precisely in relation to Christology, we have been
able to join the Patriarchs of some of these Churches in declaring our
common faith in Jesus Christ, true God and true man. Pope Paul VI of
venerable memory signed declarations to this effect with His Holiness
Shenouda III, the Coptic Orthodox Pope and Patriarch,[103] and with His
Beatitude Jacoub III, the Syrian Orthodox Patriarch of Antioch.[104] I
myself have been able to confirm this Christological agreement and draw on
it for the development of dialogue with Pope Shenouda,[105] and for
pastoral cooperation with the Syrian Patriarch of Antioch Mor Ignatius
Zakka I Iwas.[106]
When the Venerable Patriarch of the
Ethiopian Church, Abuna Paulos, paid me a visit in Rome on 11 June 1993,
together we emphasized the deep communion existing between our two
Churches: "We share the faith handed down from the Apostles, as also the
same sacraments and the same ministry, rooted in the apostolic succession
... Today, moreover, we can affirm that we have the one faith in Christ,
even though for a long time this was a source of division between
us".[107]
More recently, the Lord has granted
me the great joy of signing a common Christological declaration with the
Assyrian Patriarch of the East, His Holiness Mar Dinkha IV, who for this
purpose chose to visit me in Rome in November 1994. Taking into account
the different theological formulations, we were able to profess together
the true faith in Christ.[108] I wish to express my joy at all this in the
words of the Blessed Virgin: My soul proclaims the greatness of the
Lord (Lk 1:46).
63. Ecumenical contacts have thus
made possible essential clarifications with regard to the traditional
controversies concerning Christology, so much so that we have been able to
profess together the faith which we have in common. Once again it must be
said that this important achievement is truly a fruit of theological
investigation and fraternal dialogue. And not only this. It is an
encouragement for us: for it shows us that the path followed is the right
one and that we can reasonably hope to discover together the solution to
other disputed questions.
Dialogue with other
Churches and Ecclesial Communities in the West
64. In its great plan for the
re-establishment of unity among all Christians, the Decree on Ecumenism
also speaks of relations with the Churches and Ecclesial Communities of
the West. Wishing to create a climate of Christian fraternity and
dialogue, the Council situates its guidelines in the context of two
general considerations: one of an historical and psychological nature, and
the other theological and doctrinal. On the one hand, this Decree affirms:
"The Churches and Ecclesial Communities which were separated from the
Apostolic See of Rome during the very serious crisis that began in the
West at the end of the Middle Ages, or during later times, are bound to
the Catholic Church by a special affinity and close relationship in view
of the long span of earlier centuries when the Christian people lived in
ecclesiastical communion".[109] On the other hand, with equal realism the
same Document states: "At the same time one should recognize that between
these Churches and Communities on the one hand, and the Catholic Church on
the other, there are very weighty differences not only of a historical,
sociological, psychological and cultural nature, but especially in the
interpretation of revealed truth".[110]
65. Common roots and similar, if
distinct, considerations have guided the development in the West of the
Catholic Church and of the Churches and Communities which have their
origins in the Reformation. Consequently these share the fact that they
are "Western" in character. Their "diversities", although significant as
has been pointed out, do not therefore preclude mutual interaction and
complementarity.
The ecumenical movement really
began within the Churches and Ecclesial Communities of the Reform. At
about the same time, in January, 1920, the Ecumenical Patriarchate
expressed the hope that some kind of cooperation among the Christian
Communions could be organized. This fact shows that the weight of cultural
background is not the decisive factor. What is essential is the question
of faith. The prayer of Christ, our one Lord, Redeemer and Master, speaks
to everyone in the same way, both in the East and in the West. That prayer
becomes an imperative to leave behind our divisions in order to seek and
re-establish unity, as a result also of the bitter experiences of division
itself.
66. The Second Vatican Council did
not attempt to give a "description" of post- Reformation Christianity,
since "in origin, teaching and spiritual practice, these Churches and
Ecclesial Communities differ not only from us but also among themselves to
a considerable degree".[111] Furthermore, the Decree observes that the
ecumenical movement and the desire for peace with the Catholic Church have
not yet taken root everywhere.[112] These circumstances notwithstanding,
the Council calls for dialogue.
The Council Decree then seeks to
"propose ... some considerations which can and ought to serve as a basis
and motivation for such dialogue".[113]
"Our thoughts are concerned ...
with those Christians who openly confess Jesus Christ as God and Lord and
as the sole Mediator between God and man unto the glory of the one God,
Father, Son and Holy Spirit."[114]
These brothers and sisters promote
love and veneration for the Sacred Scriptures: "Calling upon the Holy
Spirit, they seek in these Sacred Scriptures God as he speaks to them in
Christ, the One whom the prophets foretold, God's Word made flesh for us.
In the Scriptures they contemplate the life of Christ, as well as the
teachings and the actions of the Divine Master on behalf of the salvation
of all, in particular the mysteries of his Death and Resurrection ... They
affirm the divine authority of the Sacred Books".[115]
At the same time, however, they
"think differently from us ... about the relationship between the
Scriptures and the Church. In the Church, according to Catholic belief, an
authentic teaching office plays a special role in the explanation and
proclamation of the written word of God".[116] Even so, "in [ecumenical]
dialogue itself, the sacred utterances are precious instruments in the
mighty hand of God for attaining that unity which the Savior holds out to
all".[117]
Furthermore, the Sacrament of
Baptism, which we have in common, represents "a sacramental bond of unity
linking all who have been reborn by means of it".[118] The theological,
pastoral and ecumenical implications of our common Baptism are many and
important. Although this sacrament of itself is "only a beginning, a point
of departure", it is "oriented towards a complete profession of faith, a
complete incorporation into the system of salvation such as Christ himself
willed it to be, and finally, towards a complete participation in
Eucharistic communion".[119]
67. Doctrinal and historical
disagreements at the time of the Reformation emerged with regard to the
Church, the sacraments and the ordained ministry. The Council therefore
calls for "dialogue to be undertaken concerning the true meaning of the
Lord's Supper, the other sacraments and the Church's worship and
ministry".[120]
The Decree Unitatis
Redintegratio, pointing out that the post-Reformation Communities
lack that "fullness of unity with us which should flow from Baptism",
observes that "especially because of the lack of the Sacrament of Orders
they have not preserved the genuine and total reality of the Eucharistic
mystery", even though "when they commemorate the Lord's Death and
Resurrection in the Holy Supper, they profess that it signifies life in
communion with Christ and they await his coming in glory".[121]
68. The Decree does not overlook
the spiritual life and its moral consequences: "The Christian way of life
of these brethren is nourished by faith in Christ. It is strengthened by
the grace of Baptism and the hearing of God's Word. This way of life
expresses itself in private prayer, in meditation on the Bible, in
Christian family life, and in services of worship offered by Communities
assembled to praise God. Furthermore, their worship sometimes displays
notable features of the ancient, common liturgy".[122]
The Council document moreover does
not limit itself to these spiritual, moral and cultural aspects but
extends its appreciation to the lively sense of justice and to the sincere
charity towards others which are present among these brothers and sisters.
Nor does it overlook their efforts to make social conditions more humane
and to promote peace. All this is the result of a sincere desire to be
faithful to the Word of Christ as the source of Christian life.
The text thus raises a series of
questions which, in the area of ethics and morality, is becoming ever more
urgent in our time: "There are many Christians who do not always
understand the Gospel in the same way as Catholics".[123] In this vast
area there is much room for dialogue concerning the moral principles of
the Gospel and their implications.
69. The hopes and invitation
expressed by the Second Vatican Council have been acted upon, and
bilateral theological dialogue with the various worldwide Churches and
Christian Communities in the West has been progressively set in motion.
Moreover, with regard to
multilateral dialogue, as early as 1964 the process of setting up a "Joint
Working Group" with the World Council of Churches was begun, and since
1968 Catholic theologians have been admitted as full members of the
theological Department of the Council, the Commission on Faith and Order.
This dialogue has been and
continues to be fruitful and full of promise. The topics suggested by the
Council Decree have already been addressed, or will be in the near future.
The reflections of the various bilateral dialogues, conducted with a
dedication which deserves the praise of all those committed to ecumenism,
have concentrated on many disputed questions such as Baptism, the
Eucharist, the ordained ministry, the sacramentality and authority of the
Church and apostolic succession. As a result, unexpected possibilities for
resolving these questions have come to light, while at the same time there
has been a realization that certain questions need to be studied more
deeply.
70. This difficult and delicate
research, which involves questions of faith and respect for one's own
conscience as well as for the consciences of others, has been accompanied
and sustained by the prayer of the Catholic Church and of the other
Churches and Ecclesial Communities. Prayer for unity, already so deeply
rooted in and spread throughout the body of the Church, shows that
Christians do indeed see the importance of ecumenism. Precisely because
the search for full unity requires believers to question one another in
relation to their faith in the one Lord, prayer is the source of
enlightenment concerning the truth which has to be accepted in its
entirety.
Moreover, through prayer the quest
for unity, far from being limited to a group of specialists, comes to be
shared by all the baptized. Everyone, regardless of their role in the
Church or level of education, can make a valuable contribution, in a
hidden and profound way.
Ecclesial
relations
71. We must give thanks to Divine
Providence also for all the events which attest to progress on the path to
unity. Besides theological dialogue, mention should be made of other forms
of encounter, common prayer and practical cooperation. Pope Paul VI
strongly encouraged this process by his visit to the headquarters of the
World Council of Churches in Geneva on 10 June 1969, and by his many
meetings with representatives of various Churches and Ecclesial
Communities. Such contacts greatly help to improve mutual knowledge and to
increase Christian fraternity.
Pope John Paul I, during his very
brief Pontificate, expressed the desire to continue on this path.[124] The
Lord has enabled me to carry on this work. In addition to important
ecumenical meetings held in Rome, a significant part of my Pastoral Visits
is regularly devoted to fostering Christian unity. Some of my journeys
have a precise ecumenical "priority", especially in countries where the
Catholic communities constitute a minority with respect to the
post-Reformation communities or where the latter represent a considerable
portion of the believers in Christ in a given society.
72. This is true above all for the
European countries, in which these divisions first appeared, and for North
America. In this regard, without wishing to minimize the other visits, I
would especially mention those within Europe which took me twice to
Germany, in November 1980 and in April-May 1987; to the United Kingdom
(England, Scotland and Wales) in May-June 1982; to Switzerland in June
1984; and to the Scandinavian and Nordic countries (Finland, Sweden,
Norway, Denmark and Iceland) in June 1989. In an atmosphere of joy, mutual
respect, Christian solidarity and prayer I met so very many brothers and
sisters, all making a committed effort to be faithful to the Gospel.
Seeing all this has been for me a great source of encouragement. We
experienced the Lord's presence among us.
In this respect I would like to
mention one demonstration dictated by fraternal charity and marked by deep
clarity of faith which made a profound impression on me. I am speaking of
the Eucharistic celebrations at which I presided in Finland and Sweden
during my journey to the Scandinavian and Nordic countries. At Communion
time, the Lutheran Bishops approached the celebrant. They wished, by means
of an agreed gesture, to demonstrate their desire for that time when we,
Catholics and Lutherans, will be able to share the same Eucharist, and
they wished to receive the celebrant's blessing. With love I blessed them.
The same gesture, so rich in meaning, was repeated in Rome at the Mass at
which I presided in Piazza Farnese, on the sixth centenary of the
canonization of Saint Birgitta of Sweden, on 6 October 1991.
I have encountered similar
sentiments on the other side of the ocean also: in Canada, in September
1984; and particularly in September 1987 in the United States, where one
notices a great ecumenical openness. This was the case, to give one
example, of the ecumenical meeting held at Columbia, South Carolina on 11
September 1987. The very fact that such meetings regularly take place
between the Pope and these brothers and sisters whose Churches and
Ecclesial Communities originate in the Reformation is important in itself.
I am deeply grateful for the warm reception which I have received both
from the leaders of the various Communities and from the Communities as a
whole. From this standpoint, I consider significant the ecumenical
celebration of the Word held in Columbia on the theme of the family.
73. It is also a source of great
joy to observe how in the postconciliar period and in the local Churches
many programs and activities on behalf of Christian unity are in place,
programs and activities which have a stimulating effect at the level of
Episcopal Conferences, individual Dioceses and parishes, and at the level
of the various ecclesial organizations and movements.
Achievements of
cooperation
74. Not every one who says to
me, 'Lord, Lord', will enter the kingdom of heaven, but he who does the
will of my Father who is in heaven (Mt 7:21). The consistency and
honesty of intentions and of statements of principles are verified by
their application to real life. The Council Decree on Ecumenism notes that
among other Christians "the faith by which they believe in Christ bears
fruit in praise and thanksgiving for the benefits received from the hands
of God. Joined to it are a lively sense of justice and a true neighborly
charity".[125]
What has just been outlined is
fertile ground not only for dialogue but also for practical cooperation:
"Active faith has produced many organizations for the relief of spiritual
and bodily distress, the education of youth, the advancement of humane
social conditions, and the promotion of peace throughout the world".[126]
Social and cultural life offers
ample opportunities for ecumenical cooperation. With increasing frequency
Christians are working together to defend human dignity, to promote peace,
to apply the Gospel to social life, to bring the Christian spirit to the
world of science and of the arts. They find themselves ever more united in
striving to meet the sufferings and the needs of our time: hunger, natural
disasters and social injustice.
75. For Christians, this
cooperation, which draws its inspiration from the Gospel itself, is never
mere humanitarian action. It has its reason for being in the Lord's words:
For I was hungry and you gave me food (Mt 25:35). As I have
already emphasized, the cooperation among Christians clearly manifests
that degree of communion which already exists among them.[127]
Before the world, united action in
society on the part of Christians has the clear value of a joint witness
to the name of the Lord. It is also a form of proclamation, since it
reveals the face of Christ.
The doctrinal disagreements which
remain exercise a negative influence and even place limits on cooperation.
Still, the communion of faith which already exists between Christians
provides a solid foundation for their joint action not only in the social
field but also in the religious sphere.
Such cooperation will facilitate
the quest for unity. The Decree on Ecumenism noted that "through such
cooperation, all believers in Christ are able to learn easily how they can
understand each other better and esteem each other more, and how the road
to the unity of Christians may be made smooth".[128]
76. In this context, how can I fail
to mention the ecumenical interest in peace, expressed in prayer and
action by ever greater numbers of Christians and with a steadily growing
theological inspiration? It could not be otherwise. Do we not believe in
Jesus Christ, the Prince of Peace? Christians are becoming ever more
united in their rejection of violence, every kind of violence, from wars
to social injustice.
We are called to make ever greater
efforts, so that it may be ever more apparent that religious
considerations are not the real cause of current conflicts, even though,
unfortunately, there is still a risk of religion being exploited for
political and polemical purposes.
In 1986, at Assisi, during the
World Day of Prayer for Peace, Christians of the various Churches
and Ecclesial Communities prayed with one voice to the Lord of history for
peace in the world. That same day, in a different but parallel way, Jews
and representatives of non-Christian religions also prayed for peace in a
harmonious expression of feelings which struck a resonant chord deep in
the human spirit.
Nor do I wish to overlook the
Day of Prayer for Peace in Europe, especially in the Balkans,
which took me back to the town of Saint Francis as a pilgrim on 9-10
January 1993, and the Mass for Peace in the Balkans and especially in
Bosnia-Hercegovina, which I celebrated on 23 January 1994 in Saint
Peter's Basilica during the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity.
When we survey the world joy fills
our hearts. For we note that Christians feel ever more challenged by the
issue of peace. They see it as intimately connected with the proclamation
of the Gospel and with the coming of God's Kingdom.
III. QUANTA EST NOBIS VIA?
Continuing and
deepening dialogue
77. We can now ask how much further
we must travel until that blessed day when full unity in faith will be
attained and we can celebrate together in peace the Holy Eucharist of the
Lord. The greater mutual understanding and the doctrinal convergences
already achieved between us, which have resulted in an affective and
effective growth of communion, cannot suffice for the conscience of
Christians who profess that the Church is one, holy, catholic and
apostolic. The ultimate goal of the ecumenical movement is to re-establish
full visible unity among all the baptized.
In view of this goal, all the
results so far attained are but one stage of the journey, however
promising and positive.
78. In the ecumenical movement, it
is not only the Catholic Church and the Orthodox Churches which hold to
this demanding concept of the unity willed by God. The orientation towards
such unity is also expressed by others.[129]
Ecumenism implies that the
Christian communities should help one another so that there may be truly
present in them the full content and all the requirements of "the heritage
handed down by the Apostles".[130] Without this, full communion will never
be possible. This mutual help in the search for truth is a sublime form of
evangelical charity.
The documents of the many
International Mixed Commissions of dialogue have expressed this commitment
to seeking unity. On the basis of a certain fundamental doctrinal unity,
these texts discuss Baptism, Eucharist, ministry and authority.
From this basic but partial unity
it is now necessary to advance towards the visible unity which is required
and sufficient and which is manifested in a real and concrete way, so that
the Churches may truly become a sign of that full communion in the one,
holy, catholic and apostolic Church which will be expressed in the common
celebration of the Eucharist.
This journey towards the necessary
and sufficient visible unity, in the communion of the one Church willed by
Christ, continues to require patient and courageous efforts. In this
process, one must not impose any burden beyond that which is strictly
necessary (cf. Acts 15:28).
79. It is already possible to
identify the areas in need of fuller study before a true consensus of
faith can be achieved: 1) the relationship between Sacred Scripture, as
the highest authority in matters of faith, and Sacred Tradition, as
indispensable to the interpretation of the Word of God; 2) the Eucharist,
as the Sacrament of the Body and Blood of Christ, an offering of praise to
the Father, the sacrificial memorial and Real Presence of Christ and the
sanctifying outpouring of the Holy Spirit; 3) Ordination, as a Sacrament,
to the threefold ministry of the episcopate, presbyterate and diaconate;
4) the Magisterium of the Church, entrusted to the Pope and the Bishops in
communion with him, understood as a responsibility and an authority
exercised in the name of Christ for teaching and safeguarding the faith;
5) the Virgin Mary, as Mother of God and Icon of the Church, the spiritual
Mother who intercedes for Christ's disciples and for all humanity.
In this courageous journey towards
unity, the transparency and the prudence of faith require us to avoid both
false irenicism and indifference to the Church's ordinances.[131]
Conversely, that same transparency and prudence urge us to reject a
halfhearted commitment to unity and, even more, a prejudicial opposition
or a defeatism which tends to see everything in negative terms.
To uphold a vision of unity which
takes account of all the demands of revealed truth does not mean to put a
brake on the ecumenical movement.[132] On the contrary, it means
preventing it from settling for apparent solutions which would lead to no
firm and solid results.[133] The obligation to respect the truth is
absolute. Is this not the law of the Gospel?
Reception of the
results already achieved
80. While dialogue continues on new
subjects or develops at deeper levels, a new task lies before us: that of
receiving the results already achieved. These cannot remain the statements
of bilateral commissions but must become a common heritage. For this to
come about and for the bonds of communion to be thus strengthened, a
serious examination needs to be made, which, by different ways and means
and at various levels of responsibility, must involve the whole People of
God. We are in fact dealing with issues which frequently are matters of
faith, and these require universal consent, extending from the Bishops to
the lay faithful, all of whom have received the anointing of the Holy
Spirit.[134] It is the same Spirit who assists the Magisterium and awakens
the sensus fidei.
Consequently, for the outcome of
dialogue to be received, there is needed a broad and precise critical
process which analyzes the results and rigorously tests their consistency
with the Tradition of faith received from the Apostles and lived out in
the community of believers gathered around the Bishop, their legitimate
Pastor.
81. This process, which must be
carried forward with prudence and in a spirit of faith, will be assisted
by the Holy Spirit. If it is to be successful, its results must be made
known in appropriate ways by competent persons. Significant in this regard
is the contribution which theologians and faculties of theology are called
to make by exercising their charism in the Church. It is also clear that
ecumenical commissions have very specific responsibilities and tasks in
this regard.
The whole process is followed and
encouraged by the Bishops and the Holy See. The Church's teaching
authority is responsible for expressing a definitive judgment.
In all this, it will be of great
help methodologically to keep carefully in mind the distinction between
the deposit of faith and the formulation in which it is expressed, as Pope
John XXIII recommended in his opening address at the Second Vatican
Council.[135]
Continuing spiritual
ecumenism and bearing witness to holiness
82. It is understandable how the
seriousness of the commitment to ecumenism presents a deep challenge to
the Catholic faithful. The Spirit calls them to make a serious examination
of conscience. The Catholic Church must enter into what might be called a
"dialogue of conversion", which constitutes the spiritual foundation of
ecumenical dialogue. In this dialogue, which takes place before God, each
individual must recognize his own faults, confess his sins and place
himself in the hands of the One who is our Intercessor before the Father,
Jesus Christ.
Certainly, in this attitude of
conversion to the will of the Father and, at the same time, of repentance
and absolute trust in the reconciling power of the truth which is Christ,
we will find the strength needed to bring to a successful conclusion the
long and arduous pilgrimage of ecumenism. The "dialogue of conversion"
with the Father on the part of each Community, with the full acceptance of
all that it demands, is the basis of fraternal relations which will be
something more than a mere cordial understanding or external sociability.
The bonds of fraternal koinonia must be forged before God and in
Christ Jesus.
Only the act of placing ourselves
before God can offer a solid basis for that conversion of individual
Christians and for that constant reform of the Church, insofar as she is
also a human and earthly institution,[136] which represent the
preconditions for all ecumenical commitment. One of the first steps in
ecumenical dialogue is the effort to draw the Christian Communities into
this completely interior spiritual space in which Christ, by the power of
the Spirit, leads them all, without exception, to examine themselves
before the Father and to ask themselves whether they have been faithful to
his plan for the Church.
83. I have mentioned the will of
the Father and the spiritual space in which each community hears the call
to overcome the obstacles to unity. All Christian Communities know that,
thanks to the power given by the Spirit, obeying that will and overcoming
those obstacles are not beyond their reach. All of them in fact have
martyrs for the Christian faith.[137] Despite the tragedy of our
divisions, these brothers and sisters have preserved an attachment to
Christ and to the Father so radical and absolute as to lead even to the
shedding of blood. But is not this same attachment at the heart of what I
have called a "dialogue of conversion"? Is it not precisely this dialogue
which clearly shows the need for an ever more profound experience of the
truth if full communion is to be attained?
84. In a theocentric vision, we
Christians already have a common Martyrology. This also includes
the martyrs of our own century, more numerous than one might think, and it
shows how, at a profound level, God preserves communion among the baptized
in the supreme demand of faith, manifested in the sacrifice of life
itself.[138] The fact that one can die for the faith shows that other
demands of the faith can also be met. I have already remarked, and with
deep joy, how an imperfect but real communion is preserved and is growing
at many levels of ecclesial life. I now add that this communion is already
perfect in what we all consider the highest point of the life of grace,
martyria unto death, the truest communion possible with Christ
who shed his Blood, and by that sacrifice brings near those who once were
far off (cf. Eph 2:13).
While for all Christian communities
the martyrs are the proof of the power of grace, they are not the only
ones to bear witness to that power. Albeit in an invisible way, the
communion between our Communities, even if still incomplete, is truly and
solidly grounded in the full communion of the Saints-those who, at the end
of a life faithful to grace, are in communion with Christ in glory. These
Saints come from all the Churches and Ecclesial Communities which
gave them entrance into the communion of salvation.
When we speak of a common heritage,
we must acknowledge as part of it not only the institutions, rites, means
of salvation and the traditions which all the communities have preserved
and by which they have been shaped, but first and foremost this reality of
holiness.[139]
In the radiance of the "heritage of
the saints" belonging to all Communities, the "dialogue of conversion"
towards full and visible unity thus appears as a source of hope. This
universal presence of the Saints is in fact a proof of the transcendent
power of the Spirit. It is the sign and proof of God's victory over the
forces of evil which divide humanity. As the liturgies sing: "You are
glorified in your Saints, for their glory is the crowning of your
gifts".[140]
Where there is a sincere desire to
follow Christ, the Spirit is often able to pour out his grace in
extraordinary ways. The experience of ecumenism has enabled us to
understand this better. If, in the interior spiritual space described
above, Communities are able truly to "be converted" to the quest for full
and visible communion, God will do for them what he did for their Saints.
He will overcome the obstacles inherited from the past and will lead
Communities along his paths to where he wills: to the visible
koinonia which is both praise of his glory and service of his
plan of salvation.
85. Since God in his infinite mercy
can always bring good even out of situations which are an offense to his
plan, we can discover that the Spirit has allowed conflicts to serve in
some circumstances to make explicit certain aspects of the Christian
vocation, as happens in the lives of the Saints. In spite of
fragmentation, which is an evil from which we need to be healed, there has
resulted a kind of rich bestowal of grace which is meant to embellish the
koinonia. God's grace will be with all those who, following the
example of the Saints, commit themselves to meeting its demands. How can
we hesitate to be converted to the Father's expectations? He is with us.
Contribution of the
Catholic Church to the quest for Christian unity
86. The Constitution Lumen
Gentium, in a fundamental affirmation echoed by the Decree
Unitatis Redintegratio,[141] states that the one Church of Christ
subsists in the Catholic Church.[142] The Decree on Ecumenism emphasizes
the presence in her of the fullness (plenitudo) of the means of
salvation.[143] Full unity will come about when all share in the fullness
of the means of salvation entrusted by Christ to his Church.
87. Along the way that leads to
full unity, ecumenical dialogue works to awaken a reciprocal fraternal
assistance, whereby Communities strive to give in mutual exchange what
each one needs in order to grow towards definitive fullness in accordance
with God's plan (cf. Eph 4:11-13). I have said how we are aware, as the
Catholic Church, that we have received much from the witness borne by
other Churches and Ecclesial Communities to certain common Christian
values, from their study of those values, and even from the way in which
they have emphasized and experienced them. Among the achievements of the
last thirty years, this reciprocal fraternal influence has had an
important place. At the stage which we have now reached,[144] this process
of mutual enrichment must be taken seriously into account. Based on the
communion which already exists as a result of the ecclesial elements
present in the Christian communities, this process will certainly be a
force impelling towards full and visible communion, the desired goal of
the journey we are making. Here we have the ecumenical expression of the
Gospel law of sharing. This leads me to state once more: "We must take
every care to meet the legitimate desires and expectations of our
Christian brethren, coming to know their way of thinking and their
sensibilities ... The talents of each must be developed for the utility
and the advantage of all".[145]
The ministry of unity
of the Bishop of Rome
88. Among all the Churches and
Ecclesial Communities, the Catholic Church is conscious that she has
preserved the ministry of the Successor of the Apostle Peter, the Bishop
of Rome, whom God established as her "perpetual and visible principle and
foundation of unity"[146] and whom the Spirit sustains in order that he
may enable all the others to share in this essential good. In the
beautiful expression of Pope Saint Gregory the Great, my ministry is that
of servus servorum Dei. This designation is the best possible
safeguard against the risk of separating power (and in particular the
primacy) from ministry. Such a separation would contradict the very
meaning of power according to the Gospel: I am among you as one who
serves (Lk 22:27), says our Lord Jesus Christ, the Head of the
Church. On the other hand, as I acknowledged on the important occasion of
a visit to the World Council of Churches in Geneva on 12 June 1984, the
Catholic Church's conviction that in the ministry of the Bishop of Rome
she has preserved, in fidelity to the Apostolic Tradition and the faith of
the Fathers, the visible sign and guarantor of unity, constitutes a
difficulty for most other Christians, whose memory is marked by certain
painful recollections. To the extent that we are responsible for these, I
join my Predecessor Paul VI in asking forgiveness.[147]
89. It is nonetheless significant
and encouraging that the question of the primacy of the Bishop of Rome has
now become a subject of study which is already under way or will be in the
near future. It is likewise significant and encouraging that this question
appears as an essential theme not only in the theological dialogues in
which the Catholic Church is engaging with other Churches and Ecclesial
Communities, but also more generally in the ecumenical movement as a
whole. Recently the delegates to the Fifth World Assembly of the
Commission on Faith and Order of the World Council of Churches, held in
Santiago de Compostela, recommended that the Commission "begin a new study
of the question of a universal ministry of Christian unity"[148] After
centuries of bitter controversies, the other Churches and Ecclesial
Communities are more and more taking a fresh look at this ministry of
unity.[149]
90. The Bishop of Rome is the
Bishop of the Church which preserves the mark of the martyrdom of Peter
and of Paul: "By a mysterious design of Providence it is at Rome that
[Peter] concludes his journey in following Jesus, and it is at Rome that
he gives his greatest proof of love and fidelity. Likewise Paul, the
Apostle of the Gentiles, gives his supreme witness at Rome. In this way
the Church of Rome became the Church of Peter and of Paul".[150]
In the New Testament, the person of
Peter has an eminent place. In the first part of the Acts of the Apostles,
he appears as the leader and spokesman of the Apostolic College described
as Peter ... and the Eleven (2:14; cf. 2:37, 5:29). The place
assigned to Peter is based on the words of Christ himself, as they are
recorded in the Gospel traditions.
91. The Gospel of Matthew gives a
clear outline of the pastoral mission of Peter in the Church: Blessed
are you, Simon Bar-Jona! For flesh and blood has not revealed this to you,
but my Father who is in heaven. And I tell you, you are Peter, and on this
rock I will build my Church and the powers of death shall not prevail
against it. I will give you the keys of the kingdom of heaven, and
whatever you bind on earth shall be bound in heaven, and whatever you
loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven (16:17-19). Luke makes clear
that Christ urged Peter to strengthen his brethren, while at the same time
reminding him of his own human weakness and need of conversion (cf.
22:31-32). It is just as though, against the backdrop of Peter's human
weakness, it were made fully evident that his particular ministry in the
Church derives altogether from grace. It is as though the Master
especially concerned himself with Peter's conversion as a way of preparing
him for the task he was about to give him in his Church, and for this
reason was very strict with him. This same role of Peter, similarly linked
with a realistic affirmation of his weakness, appears again in the Fourth
Gospel: Simon, son of John, do you love me more than these? ... Feed
my sheep (cf. Jn 21:15-19). It is also significant that according to
the First Letter of Paul to the Corinthians the Risen Christ appears to
Cephas and then to the Twelve (cf. 15:5).
It is important to note how the
weakness of Peter and of Paul clearly shows that the Church is founded
upon the infinite power of grace (cf. Mt 16:17; 2 Cor 12:7-10). Peter,
immediately after receiving his mission, is rebuked with unusual severity
by Christ, who tells him: You are a hindrance to me (Mt 16:23).
How can we fail to see that the mercy which Peter needs is related to the
ministry of that mercy which he is the first to experience? And yet, Peter
will deny Jesus three times. The Gospel of John emphasizes that Peter
receives the charge of shepherding the flock on the occasion of a
threefold profession of love (cf. 21:15-17), which corresponds to his
threefold denial (cf. 13:38). Luke, for his part, in the words of Christ
already quoted, words which the early tradition will concentrate upon in
order to clarify the mission of Peter, insists on the fact that he will
have to strengthen his brethren when he has turned again (cf.
22:32).
92. As for Paul, he is able to end
the description of his ministry with the amazing words which he had heard
from the Lord himself: "My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is
made perfect in weakness"; consequently, he can exclaim: When I am
weak, then I am strong (2 Cor 12:9-10). This is a basic
characteristic of the Christian experience.
As the heir to the mission of Peter
in the Church, which has been made fruitful by the blood of the Princes of
the Apostles, the Bishop of Rome exercises a ministry originating in the
manifold mercy of God. This mercy converts hearts and pours forth the
power of grace where the disciple experiences the bitter taste of his
personal weakness and helplessness. The authority proper to this ministry
is completely at the service of God's merciful plan and it must always be
seen in this perspective. Its power is explained from this perspective.
93. Associating himself with
Peter's threefold profession of love, which corresponds to the earlier
threefold denial, his Successor knows that he must be a sign of mercy. His
is a ministry of mercy, born of an act of Christ's own mercy. This whole
lesson of the Gospel must be constantly read anew, so that the exercise of
the Petrine ministry may lose nothing of its authenticity and
transparency.
The Church of God is called by
Christ to manifest to a world ensnared by its sins and evil designs that,
despite everything, God in his mercy can convert hearts to unity and
enable them to enter into communion with him.
94. This service of unity, rooted
in the action of divine mercy, is entrusted within the College of Bishops
to one among those who have received from the Spirit the task, not of
exercising power over the people as the rulers of the Gentiles and their
great men do (cf. Mt 20:25; Mk 10:42)-but of leading them towards peaceful
pastures. This task can require the offering of one's own life (cf. Jn 10:
18). Saint Augustine, after showing that Christ is "the one Shepherd, in
whose unity all are one", goes on to exhort: "May all shepherds thus be
one in the one Shepherd; may they let the one voice of the Shepherd be
heard; may the sheep hear this voice and follow their Shepherd, not this
shepherd or that, but the only one; in him may they all let one voice be
heard and not a babble of voices ... the voice free of all division,
purified of all heresy, that the sheep hear".[151] The mission of the
Bishop of Rome within the College of all the Pastors consists precisely in
"keeping watch" (episkopein), like a sentinel, so that, through
the efforts of the Pastors, the true voice of Christ the Shepherd may be
heard in all the particular Churches. In this way, in each of the
particular Churches entrusted to those Pastors, the una, sancta,
catholica et apostolica Ecclesia is made present. All the Churches
are in full and visible communion, because all the Pastors are in
communion with Peter and therefore united in Christ.
With the power and the authority
without which such an office would be illusory, the Bishop of Rome must
ensure the communion of all the Churches. For this reason, he is the first
servant of unity. This primacy is exercised on various levels, including
vigilance over the handing down of the Word, the celebration of the
Liturgy and the Sacraments, the Church's mission, discipline and the
Christian life. It is the responsibility of the Successor of Peter to
recall the requirements of the common good of the Church, should anyone be
tempted to overlook it in the pursuit of personal interests. He has the
duty to admonish, to caution and to declare at times that this or that
opinion being circulated is irreconcilable with the unity of faith. When
circumstances require it, he speaks in the name of all the Pastors in
communion with him. He can also-under very specific conditions clearly
laid down by the First Vatican Council-declare ex cathedra that a
certain doctrine belongs to the deposit of faith.[152] By thus bearing
witness to the truth, he serves unity.
95. All this however must always be
done in communion. When the Catholic Church affirms that the office of the
Bishop of Rome corresponds to the will of Christ, she does not separate
this office from the mission entrusted to the whole body of Bishops, who
are also "vicars and ambassadors of Christ".[153] The Bishop of Rome is a
member of the "College", and the Bishops are his brothers in the ministry.
Whatever relates to the unity of
all Christian communities clearly forms part of the concerns of the
primacy. As Bishop of Rome I am fully aware, as I have reaffirmed in the
present Encyclical Letter, that Christ ardently desires the full and
visible communion of all those Communities in which, by virtue of God's
faithfulness, his Spirit dwells. I am convinced that I have a particular
responsibility in this regard, above all in acknowledging the ecumenical
aspirations of the majority of the Christian Communities and in heeding
the request made of me to find a way of exercising the primacy which,
while in no way renouncing what is essential to its mission, is
nonetheless open to a new situation. For a whole millennium Christians
were united in "a brotherly fraternal communion of faith and sacramental
life ... If disagreements in belief and discipline arose among them, the
Roman See acted by common consent as moderator".[154]
In this way the primacy exercised
its office of unity. When addressing the Ecumenical Patriarch His Holiness
Dimitrios I, I acknowledged my awareness that "for a great variety of
reasons, and against the will of all concerned, what should have been a
service sometimes manifested itself in a very different light. But ... it
is out of a desire to obey the will of Christ truly that I recognize that
as Bishop of Rome I am called to exercise that ministry ... I insistently
pray the Holy Spirit to shine his light upon us, enlightening all the
Pastors and theologians of our Churches, that we may seek- together, of
course-the forms in which this ministry may accomplish a service of love
recognized by all concerned".[155]
96. This is an immense task, which
we cannot refuse and which I cannot carry out by myself. Could not the
real but imperfect communion existing between us persuade Church leaders
and their theologians to engage with me in a patient and fraternal
dialogue on this subject, a dialogue in which, leaving useless
controversies behind, we could listen to one another, keeping before us
only the will of Christ for his Church and allowing ourselves to be deeply
moved by his plea that they may all be one ... so that the world may
believe that you have sent me (Jn 17:21)?
The communion of all
particular Churches with the Church of Rome: a necessary condition for
unity
97. The Catholic Church, both in
her praxis and in her solemn documents, holds that the communion
of the particular Churches with the Church of Rome, and of their Bishops
with the Bishop of Rome, is-in God's plan-an essential requisite of full
and visible communion. Indeed full communion, of which the Eucharist is
the highest sacramental manifestation, needs to be visibly expressed in a
ministry in which all the Bishops recognize that they are united in Christ
and all the faithful find confirmation for their faith. The first part of
the Acts of the Apostles presents Peter as the one who speaks in the name
of the apostolic group and who serves the unity of the community all the
while respecting the authority of James, the head of the Church in
Jerusalem. This function of Peter must continue in the Church so that
under her sole Head, who is Jesus Christ, she may be visibly present in
the world as the communion of all his disciples.
Do not many of those involved in
ecumenism today feel a need for such a ministry? A ministry which presides
in truth and love so that the ship-that beautiful symbol which the World
Council of Churches has chosen as its emblem-will not be buffeted by the
storms and will one day reach its haven.
Full unity and
evangelization
98. The ecumenical movement in our
century, more than the ecumenical undertakings of past centuries, the
importance of which must not however be underestimated, has been
characterized by a missionary outlook. In the verse of John's Gospel which
is ecumenism's inspiration and guiding motif-that they may all be one
... so that the world may believe that you have sent me (Jn
17:21)-the phrase that the world may believe has been so strongly
emphasized that at times we run the risk of forgetting that, in the mind
of the Evangelist, unity is above all for the glory of the Father. At the
same time it is obvious that the lack of unity among Christians
contradicts the Truth which Christians have the mission to spread and,
consequently, it gravely damages their witness. This was dearly understood
and expressed by my Predecessor Pope Paul VI, in his Apostolic Exhortation
Evangelii Nuntiandi: "As evangelizers, we must offer Christ's
faithful not the image of people divided and separated by unedifying
quarrels, but the image of people who are mature in faith and capable of
finding a meeting-point beyond the real tensions, thanks to a shared,
sincere and disinterested search for truth. Yes, the destiny of
evangelization is certainly bound up with the witness of unity given by
the Church ... At this point we wish to emphasize the sign of unity among
all Christians as the way and instrument of evangelization. The division
among Christians is a serious reality which impedes the very work of
Christ".[156]
How indeed can we proclaim the
Gospel of reconciliation without at the same time being committed to
working for reconciliation between Christians? However true it is that the
Church, by the prompting of the Holy Spirit and with the promise of
indefectibility, has preached and still preaches the Gospel to all
nations, it is also true that she must face the difficulties which derive
from the lack of unity. When non- believers meet missionaries who do not
agree among themselves, even though they all appeal to Christ, will they
be in a position to receive the true message? Will they not think that the
Gospel is a cause of division, despite the fact that it is presented as
the fundamental law of love?
99. When I say that for me, as
Bishop of Rome, the ecumenical task is "one of the pastoral priorities" of
my Pontificate,[157] I think of the grave obstacle which the lack of unity
represents for the proclamation of the Gospel. A Christian Community which
believes in Christ and desires, with Gospel fervor, the salvation of
mankind can hardly be closed to the promptings of the Holy Spirit, who
leads all Christians towards full and visible unity. Here an imperative of
charity is in question, an imperative which admits of no exception.
Ecumenism is not only an internal question of the Christian Communities.
It is a matter of the love which God has in Jesus Christ for all humanity;
to stand in the way of this love is an offense against him and against his
plan to gather all people in Christ. As Pope Paul VI wrote to the
Ecumenical Patriarch Athenagoras I: "May the Holy Spirit guide us along
the way of reconciliation, so that the unity of our Churches may become an
ever more radiant sign of hope and consolation for all mankind".[158]
EXHORTATION
100. In my recent Letter to the
Bishops, clergy and faithful of the Catholic Church indicating the path to
be followed towards the celebration of the Great Jubilee of the Holy
Year 2000, I wrote that "the best preparation for the new millennium
can only be expressed in a renewed commitment to apply, as faithfully
as possible, the teachings of Vatican II to the life of every individual
and of the whole Church".[159] The Second Vatican Council is the
great beginning-the Advent as it were-of the journey leading us to the
threshold of the Third Millennium. Given the importance which the Council
attributed to the work of rebuilding Christian unity, and in this our age
of grace for ecumenism, I thought it necessary to reaffirm the fundamental
convictions which the Council impressed upon the consciousness of the
Catholic Church, recalling them in the light of the progress subsequently
made towards the full communion of all the baptized.
There is no doubt that the Holy
Spirit is active in this endeavor and that he is leading the Church to the
full realization of the Father's plan, in conformity with the will of
Christ. This will was expressed with heartfelt urgency in the prayer
which, according to the Fourth Gospel, he uttered at the moment when he
entered upon the saving mystery of his Passover. Just as he did then,
today too Christ calls everyone to renew their commitment to work for full
and visible communion.
101. I therefore exhort my Brothers
in the Episcopate to be especially mindful of this commitment. The two
Codes of Canon Law include among the responsibilities of the
Bishop that of promoting the unity of all Christians by supporting all
activities or initiatives undertaken for this purpose, in the awareness
that the Church has this obligation from the will of Christ himself.[160]
This is part of the episcopal mission and it is a duty which derives
directly from fidelity to Christ, the Shepherd of the Church. Indeed all
the faithful are asked by the Spirit of God to do everything possible to
strengthen the bonds of communion between all Christians and to increase
cooperation between Christ's followers: "Concern for restoring unity
pertains to the whole Church, faithful and clergy alike. It extends to
everyone according to the potential of each".[161]
102. The power of God's Spirit
gives growth and builds up the Church down the centuries. As the Church
turns her gaze to the new millennium, she asks the Spirit for the grace to
strengthen her own unity and to make it grow towards full communion with
other Christians.
How is the Church to obtain this
grace? In the first place, through prayer. Prayer should always
concern itself with the longing for unity, and as such is one of the basic
forms of our love for Christ and for the Father who is rich in mercy. In
this journey which we are undertaking with other Christians towards the
new millennium prayer must occupy the first place.
How is she to obtain this grace?
Through giving thanks, so that we do not present ourselves
empty-handed at the appointed time: Likewise the Spirit helps us in
our weakness ... [and] intercedes for us with sighs too deep for
words (Rom 8:26), disposing us to ask God for what we need.
How is she to obtain this grace?
Through hope in the Spirit, who can banish from us the painful
memories of our separation. The Spirit is able to grant us
clear-sightedness, strength and courage to take whatever steps are
necessary, that our commitment may be ever more authentic.
And should we ask if all this is
possible, the answer will always be yes. It is the same answer which Mary
of Nazareth heard: with God nothing is impossible.
I am reminded of the words of Saint
Cyprian's commentary on the Lord's Prayer, the prayer of every
Christian: "God does not accept the sacrifice of a sower of disunion, but
commands that he depart from the altar so that he may first be reconciled
with his brother. For God can be appeased only by prayers that make peace.
To God, the better offering is peace, brotherly concord and a people made
one in the unity of the Father, Son and Holy Spirit".[162]
At the dawn of the new millennium,
how can we not implore from the Lord, with renewed enthusiasm and a deeper
awareness, the grace to prepare ourselves, together, to offer this
sacrifice of unity?
103. I, John Paul, servus
servorum Dei, venture to make my own the words of the Apostle Paul,
whose martyrdom, together with that of the Apostle Peter, has bequeathed
to this See of Rome the splendor of its witness, and I say to you, the
faithful of the Catholic Church, and to you, my brothers and sisters of
the other Churches and Ecclesial Communities: Mend your ways,
encourage one another, live in harmony, and the God of love and peace will
be with you ... The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ and the love of God and
the fellowship of the Holy Spirit be with you all (2 Cor 13:11, 13).
Given in Rome, at Saint Peter's, on
25 May, the Solemnity of the Ascension of the Lord, in the year 1995, the
seventeenth of my Pontificate.
Joannes Paulus II
NOTES
1. Cf. Address following the Way of
the Cross on Good Friday (1 April 1994), 3: AAS 87 (1995), 88.
2. Second Vatican Ecumenical
Council, Declaration on Religious Freedom Dignitatis Humanae, 1.
3. Cf. Apostolic Letter Tertio
Millennio Adveniente (10 November 1994), 16: AAS 87 (1995),
15.
4. Congregation for the Doctrine of
the Faith, Letter to the Bishops of the Catholic Church on Some Aspects of
the Church Understood as Communion Communionis Notio (28 May
1992), 4: AAS 85 (1993), 840.
5. Second Vatican Ecumenical
Council, Decree on Ecumenism Unitatis Redintegratio, 1.
6. Ibid.
7. Ibid., 4.
8. Cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical
Council, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church Lumen Gentium, 14.
9. Cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical
Council, Declaration on Religious Freedom Dignitatis Humanae, 1
and 2.
10. Cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical
Council, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church Lumen Gentium, 14.
11. Ibid., 8.
12. Second Vatican Ecumenical
Council, Decree on Ecumenism Unitatis Redintegratio, 3.
13. Ibid.
14. No. 15.
15. Ibid.
16. Second Vatican Ecumenical
Council, Decree on Ecumenism Unitatis Redintegratio, 15.
17. Ibid., 3.
18. Ibid.
19. Cf. Saint Gregory the Great,
Homilies on the Gospel, 19, 1: PL, 1154, quoted in Second Vatican
Ecumenical Council Dogmatic Constitution on the Church Lumen
Gentium, 2.
20. Cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical
Council, Decree on Ecumenism Unitatis Redintegratio, 4.
21. Ibid., 7.
22. Cf. ibid.
23. Ibid., 6.
24. Cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical
Council, Dogmatic Constitution Dei Verbum, 7.
25. Cf. Apostolic Letter Euntes
in Mundum (25 January 1988): AAS 80 (1988), 935- 956.
26. Cf. Encyclical Epistle
Slavorum Apostoli (2 June 1985): AAS 77 (1985), 779-813.
27. Cf. Directory for the
Application of Principles and Norms on Ecumenism (25 March 1993):
AAS 85 (1993), 1039-1119.
28. Cf. in particular, the Lima
Document: Baptism Eucharist and Ministry (January 1982), and the
study of the Joint Working Group Between the Catholic Church and the World
Council of Churches, Confessing the "One" Faith (1991), Document
No. 153 of the Commission on Faith and Order, Geneva, 1991.
29. Cf. Opening Address of the
Second Vatican Ecumenical Council (11 October 1962): AAS 54
(1962), 793.
30. We are speaking of the
Secretariat For Promoting Christian Unity, established by Pope John XXIII
with the Motu Proprio Superno Dei Nutu (5 June 1960), 9:
AAS 52 (1960), 436, and confirmed by successive documents: John
XXIII Motu Proprio Appropinquante Concilio (6 August 1962), c.
III, a. 7, # 2, I: AAS 54 (1962), 614; cf. Paul VI Apostolic
Constitution Regimini Ecclesiae Universae (15 August 1967),
92-94: AAS 59 (1967), 918-919. This dicastery is now called the
Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity: cf. John Paul II,
Apostolic Constitution Pastor Bonus (28 June 1988), V, Arts.
135-138: AAS 80 (1988), 895-896.
31. Opening Address of the Second
Vatican Ecumenical Council (11 October 1962): AAS 54 (1962), 792.
32. Cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical
Council, Decree on Ecumenism Unitatis Redintegratio 6.
33. Second Vatican Ecumenical
Council, Declaration on Religious Freedom Dignitatis Humanae, 1.
34. Encyclical Epistle Slavorum
Apostoli (2 June 1985), 11: AAS 77 (1985), 792.
35. Ibid., 13: loc.
cit., 794.
36. Ibid., 11: loc.
cit., 792.
37. Address to the Aboriginal
Peoples (29 November 1986), 12: AAS 79 (1987), 977.
38. Cf. Saint Vincent of Lerins,
Commonitorium primum, 23: PL 50, 667-668.
39. Second Vatican Ecumenical
Council, Decree on Ecumenism Unitatis Redintegratio, 6.
40. Ibid., 5.
41. Ibid., 7.
42. Ibid., 8.
43. Ibid.
44. Cf. ibid, 4.
45. Cf. John Paul II, Apostolic
Letter Tertio Millennio Adveniente (10 November 1994), 24:
AAS 87 (1995), 19-20.
46. Address at Canterbury Cathedral
(29 May 1982), 5: AAS 74 (1982), 922.
47. World Council of Churches,
Constitution and Rules, III, 1.
48. Second Vatican Ecumenical
Council, Pastoral Constitution on the Church in the Modern World
Gaudium et Spes, 24.
49. Second Vatican Ecumenical
Council, Decree on Ecumenism Unitatis Redintegratio, 7.
50. Maria Sagheddu was born at
Dorgali (Sardinia) in 1914. At twenty-one years of age she entered the
Trappistine Monastery in Grottaferrata. Through the apostolic labors of
Abbe Paul Couturier she came to understand the need for prayers and
spiritual sacrifices for the unity of Christians. In 1936, at the time of
an Octave for Unity, she chose to offer her life for the unity of
the Church. Following a grave illness, Sister Maria Gabriella died on 23
April 1939.
51. Second Vatican Ecumenical
Council, Pastoral Constitution on the Church in the Modern World
Gaudium et Spes, 24.
52. Cf. AAS 56 (1964),
609-659.
53. Cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical
Council, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church Lumen Gentium, 13.
54. Second Vatican Ecumenical
Council, Decree on Ecumenism Unitatis Redintegratio, 4.
55. Cf. Code of Canon Law,
Canon 755; Code of Canons of the Eastern Churches, Canons
902-904.
56. Cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical
Council, Decree on Ecumenism Unitatis Redintegratio, 4.
57. Second Vatican Ecumenical
Council, Declaration on Religious Freedom Dignitatis Humanae, 3.
58. Second Vatican Ecumenical
Council, Decree on Ecumenism Unitatis Redintegratio, 4.
59. Cf. ibid.
60. Encyclical Letter Ecclesiam
Suam (6 August 1964), III: AAS 56 (1964), 642.
61. Second Vatican Ecumenical
Council Decree on Ecumenism, Unitatis Redintegratio, 11.
62. Cf. ibid.
63. Ibid.; cf.
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, Declaration in Defense of
Catholic Doctrine on the Church Mysterium Ecclesiae (24 June
1973), 4: AAS 65 (1973), 402.
64. Congregation for the Doctrine
of the Faith, Declaration in Defense of Catholic Doctrine on the Church
Mysterium Ecclesiae, 5: AAS 65 (1973), 403.
65. Cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical
Council, Decree on Ecumenism Unitatis Redintegratio, 4.
66. Cf. Common Christological
Declaration between the Catholic Church and the Assyrian Church of the
East: L'Osservatore Romano, 12 November 1994, 1.
67. Second Vatican Ecumenical
Council, Decree of Ecumenism Unitatis Redintegratio, 12.
68. Ibid.
69. Pontifical Council for
Promoting Christian Unity, Directory for the Application of Principles
and Norms on Ecumenism (25 March 1993), 5: AAS 85 (1993),
1040.
70. Ibid. 94: loc. cit.,
1078.
71. Cf. Commission on Faith and
Order of the World Council of Churches, Baptism, Eucharist, and
Ministry (January 1982).
72. Cf. Encyclical Letter
Sollicitudo Rei Socialis (30 December 1987), 32: AAS 80
(1988), 556.
73. Address to the Cardinals and
the Roman Curia (28 June 1985 ), 10: AAS 77 (1985), 1158, cf.
Encyclical Letter Redemptor Hominis (4 March 1979), 11
AAS 71 (1979), 277-278
74. Address to the Cardinals and
the Roman Curia (28 June 1985 ), 10: AAS 77 (1985), 1158.
75. Cf. Secretariat for Promoting
Christian Unity and the Executive Committee of the United Bible Societies
Guiding Principles for Interconfessional Cooperation in Translating
the Bible (1968). This was revised and then published by the
Secretariat for Promoting Christian Unity, "Guidelines for
Interconfessional Cooperation in Translating the Bible": Information
Service, 65 (1987), 140-145.
76. Cf. Commission on Faith and
Order of the World Council of Churches, Baptism, Eucharist and
Ministry (January 1982).
77. For example, at the most recent
assemblies of the World Council of Churches in Vancouver (1983) and in
Canberra (1991), and of the Commission on Faith and Order in Santiago de
Compostela (1993).
78. Cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical
Council, Decree on Ecumenism Unitatis Redintegratio, 8 and 15;
Code of Canon Law, Canon 844; Code of Canons of the Eastern
Churches, Canon 671; Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian
Unity, Directory for the Application of Principles and Norms on
Ecumenism (25 March 1993) 122-125, 129-131, 123 and 132: AAS
85 (1993), 1086-1087, 1088-1089, 1087 and 1089.
79. Second Vatican Ecumenical
Council, Decree On Ecumenism Unitatis Redintegratio, 4.
80. Ibid.
81. Cf. No. 15.
82. No. 15.
83. Ibid., 14.
84. Cf. Joint Declaration of Pope
Paul VI and the Patriarch of Constantinople Athenagoras I (7 December
1965): Tomos Agapis, Vatican-Phanar (1958-1970), Rome-Istanbul,
1971, 280-281.
85. Cf. AAS 77 (1985),
779-813.
86. Cf. AAS 80 (1988),
933-956; Cf. Message Magnum Baptismi Donum, (14 February 1988):
AAS 80 (1988), 988-997.
87. Second Vatican Ecumenical
Council, Decree On Ecumenism Unitatis Redintegratio, 14.
88. Ibid.
89. Apostolic Brief Anno
Ineunte (25 July 1967): Tomos Agapis,Vatican-Phanar
(1958-1970), Rome-Istanbul, 1971, 388-391.
90. Second Vatican Ecumenical
Council, Decree on Ecumenism Unitatis Redintegratio, 14.
91. Ibid., 15.
92. No. 14: L'Osservatore
Romano, 2-3 May 1995, 3.
93. Second Vatican Ecumenical
Council, Decree on Ecumenism Unitatis Redintegratio, 17.
94. No. 26.
95. Cf. Code of Canon Law,
Canon 844, # 2 and 3; Code of Canons of the Eastern Churches,
Canon 671, # 2 and 3.
96. Pontifical Council for
Promoting Christian Unity, Directory for the Application of Principles
and Norms on Ecumenism (25 March 1993), 122-128: AAS 85
(1993), 1086-1088.
97. Declaration by His Holiness
Pope John Paul II and the Ecumenical Patriarch Dimitrios I (7 December
1987) AAS 80 (1988), 253.
98. Joint International Commission
for the Theological Dialogue Between the Catholic Church and the Orthodox
Church, "The Sacrament of Order in the Sacramental Structure of the
Church, with Particular Reference to the Importance of the Apostolic
Succession for the Sanctification and the Unity of the People of God" (26
June 1988), 1: Information Service, 68 (1988), 173.
99. Cf. John Paul II, Letter to the
Bishops of Europe on the Relations between Catholics and Orthodox in the
New Situation of Central and Eastern Europe (31 May 1991), 6: AAS
84 (1992), 168.
100. Second Vatican Ecumenical
Council, Decree on Ecumenism Unitatis Redintegratio, 17.
101. Cf. Apostolic Letter
Orientale Lumen (2 May 1995), 24: L'Osservatore Romano,
2-3 May 1995, 5.
102. Ibid., 18: loc.
cit., 4.
103. Cf. Joint Declaration by His
Holiness Pope Paul VI and His Holiness Shenouda m, Pope of Alexandria and
Patriarch of the See of Saint Mark of Alexandria (10 May 1973):
AAS 65 (1973), 299-301.
104. Cf. Joint Declaration by His
Holiness Pope Paul VI and His Beatitude Mar Ignatius Jacoub III, Patriarch
of the Church of Antioch of the Syrians (27 October 1971): AAS 63
(1971), 814-815.
105. Cf. Address to the Delegates
of the Coptic Orthodox Church (2 June 1979): AAS 71 (1979),
1000-1001.
106. Cf. Joint Declaration of Pope
John Paul II and the Syrian-Orthodox Patriarch of Antioch, Moran Mor
Ignatius Zakka I Iwas (23 June 1984): Insegnamenti VII/1 (1984),
1902-1906.
107. Address to His Holiness Abuna
Paulos, Patriarch of the Orthodox Church of Ethiopia (11 June 1993):
L'Osservatore Romano, 11-12 June 1993, 4.
108. Cf. Common Christological
Declaration between the Catholic Church and the Assyrian Church of the
East: L'Osservatore Romano, 12 November 1994, 1.
109. Second Vatican Ecumenical
Council, Decree on Ecumenism Unitatis Redintegratio, 19.
110. Ibid.
111. Ibid., 19.
112. Cf. ibid.
113. Ibid.
114. Ibid., 20.
115. Ibid., 21.
116. Ibid.
117. Ibid.
118. Ibid., 22.
119. Ibid.
120. Ibid., 22; cf. 20.
121. Ibid., 22.
122. Ibid., 23.
123. Ibid.
124. Cf. Radio Message Urbi et
Orbi (27 August 1978): AAS 70 (1978), 695-696.
125. Second Vatican Ecumenical
Council, Decree on Ecumenism Unitatis Redintegratio, 23.
126. Ibid.
127. Cf. ibid., 12.
128. Ibid.
129. The steady work of the
Commission on Faith and Order has led to a comparable vision adopted by
the Seventh Assembly of the World Council of Churches in the Canberra
Declaration (7-20 February 1991); cf. Signs of the Spirit,
Official Report, Seventh Assembly, WCC, Geneva, 1991, pp. 235-258. This
vision was reaffirmed by the World Conference of Faith and Order at
Santiago de Compostela (3-14 August 1993); cf. Information
Service, 285 (1994), 18-37.
130. Second Vatican Ecumenical
Council, Decree on Ecumenism Unitatis Redintegratio, 14.
131. Cf. ibid., 4 and 11.
132. Cf. Address to the Cardinals
and the Roman Curia (28 June 1985), 6: AAS 77 (1985), 1153.
133. Cf. ibid.
134. Cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical
Council, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church Lumen Gentium, 12.
135. Cf. AAS 54 (1962),
792.
136. Cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical
Council, Decree on Ecumenism Unitatis Redintegratio, 6.
137. Cf. ibid., 4; Paul
VI, Homily for the Canonization of the Ugandan Martyrs (18 October 1964):
AAS 56 (1964), 906.
138. Cf. John Paul II, Apostolic
Letter Tertio Millennio Adveniente (10 November 1994), 37:
AAS 87 (1995), 29-30.
139. Cf. Paul VI, Address at the
Shrine in Namugongo, Uganda (2 August 1969): AAS 61 (1969),
590-591.
140. Cf. Missale Romanum,
Praefatio le Sanctis I: Sanctorum "coronando merita tua dona
coronans".
141. Cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical
Council, Decree on Ecumenism Unitatis Redintegratio, 4.
142. Cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical
Council, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church Lumen Gentium, 8.
143. Cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical
Council, Decree on Ecumenism Unitatis Redintegratio, 3.
144. After the Lima Document of the
Commission on Faith and Order, Baptism, Eucharist and Ministry
(January 1982), and in the spirit of the Declaration of the Seventh
General Assembly of the World Council of Churches, The Unity of the
Church as "koinonia": Gift and Task (Canberra, 7-20 February 1991):
cf. Istina 36 (1991), 389-391.
145. Address to the Cardinals and
the Roman Curia (28 June 1985), 4: AAS 77 (1985), 1151-1152.
146. Second Vatican Ecumenical
Council, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church Lumen Gentium, 23.
147. Cf. Discourse at the
Headquarters of the World Council of Churches, Geneva (12 June 1984), 2:
Insegnamenti VII/1 (1984), 1686.
148. World Conference of the
Commission on Faith and Order, Report of the Second Section, Santiago de
Compostela (1993 ): Confessing the One Faith to God's Glory 31,
2, Faith and Order Paper No. 166, World Council of Churches, Geneva, 1994,
243.
149. To cite only a few examples:
Anglican-Roman Catholic International Commission, Final Report
ARCIC-I (September 1981); International Commission for Dialogue Between
the Disciples of Christ and the Roman Catholic Church, Report
(1981); Roman Catholic/Lutheran Joint Commission, The Ministry in the
Church (13 March 1981). The problem takes clear shape in the research
conducted by the Joint International Commission for the Theological
Dialogue Between the Catholic Church and the Orthodox Church.
150. Address to the Cardinals and
the Roman Curia (28 June 1985 ), 3: AAS 77 (1985), 1150.
151. Sermon XLVI, 30:
CCL 41, 557.
152. Cf. First Vatican Ecumenical
Council Dogmatic Constitution on the Church of Christ Pastor
Aeternus: DS 3074.
153. Second Vatican Ecumenical
Council, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church Lumen Gentium, 27.
154. Second Vatican Ecumenical
Council, Decree on Ecumenism Unitatis Redintegratio, 14.
155. Homily in the Vatican Basilica
in the presence of Dimitrios I, Archbishop of Constantinople and
Ecumenical Patriarch (6 December 1987), 3: AAS 80 (1988), 714.
156. Apostolic Exhortation
Evangelii Nuntiandi (8 December 1975), 77: AAS 68
(1976), 69; Cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Decree on Ecumenism
Unitatis Redintegratio, 1; Pontifical Council for Promoting
Christian Unity, Directory for the Application of Principles and Norms
on Ecumenism (25 March 1993), 205-209: AAS 85 (1993),
1112-1114.
157. Address to the Cardinals and
the Roman Curia (28 June 1985), 4: AAS 77 (1985), 1151.
158. Letter of 13 January 1970:
Tomos Agapis, Vatican-Phanar (1958-1970), Rome-Istanbul, 1971,
pp. 610-611.
159. Apostolic Letter Tertio
Millennio Adveniente (10 November 1994), 20: AAS 87 (1995),
17.
160. Cf. Code of Canon
Law, Canon 755; Code of Canons of the Eastern Churches,
Canon 902.
161. Second Vatican Ecumenical
Council, Decree on Ecumenism Unitatis Redintegratio, 5.
162. On The Lord's Prayer,
23: CSEL 3, 284-285.
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