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Ecumenical co-operation crucial in the modern world By Cindy Wooden Catholic News Service VATICAN CITY (CNS) — The potential power, but also the limits, of an ecumenical proclamation of the Gospel and defence of Gospel values is likely to be a key topic during October’s world Synod of Bishops on the new evangelization.
While popes have long invited other Christians to be “fraternal
delegates” and make brief speeches at the synods, Pope Benedict
has begun a tradition of inviting important religious leaders to deliver
a major address. In 2008, Orthodox Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew of
Constantinople and Chief Rabbi Shear-Yashuv Cohen of Haifa, Israel, addressed
the Synod of Bishops on the Bible. Another rabbi and two Muslim leaders
gave speeches at the 2010 special synod on the Middle East. Bishop Brian Farrell, secretary of the Pontifical Council
for Promoting Christian Unity, said the invitations demonstrate the pope’s recognition
that the “challenges facing religious belief itself and church
life are common — no church, no religion is an island — and
we need one another and can learn from one another.” In addition, he said, ecumenical and inter-religious co-operation
shows the world that “we are together in promoting the values of
belief and the moral-ethical values that we stand by.” Ecumenical co-operation is crucial when trying to transmit the faith
in the modern world and to re-propose Christianity in areas, especially
Europe and North America, which had a Christian tradition, but are becoming
increasingly secularized. “The mission that the Lord entrusted to the Apostles, to preach
the Gospel to the ends of the earth, has not been fulfilled — mostly
because of divisions among his followers,” Farrell said. The beginnings of the modern ecumenical movement usually
are traced to a 1910 conference of missionaries “who had the experience of being
seen as preaching against each other instead of preaching Christ,” he
said. The missionaries recognized the scandal they were causing as they “exported
their divisions” to Asia, Africa and other parts of the world. Meanwhile, among some Catholics in the early 1900s, “there were
the beginnings of a spiritual interest in the idea of prayer for Christian
unity,” he said, but the quantum leap in the Catholic Church’s
commitment to ecumenism came with the 1962 - 65 Second Vatican Council. Farrell said the change in the church’s attitude reflected an “education
of the bishops at the council, because most of the bishops came with
the kind of theology that considered our Protestant brothers and sisters,
and the Orthodox to a certain degree, as just outside the church.” Through discussions and studies at the council, he said,
the bishops gained “a new perspective: We have a common faith in
Jesus Christ, we have a common baptism, and this is already a huge element
of real communion in the faith.” The ecumenical task, embraced by the Catholic Church, involves
prayer and dialogue to move that communion “from imperfect to perfect,” he
said. Until the process is complete, however, there will be some
limits to the possibilities for ecumenical co-operation in evangelization,
because Catholics, Orthodox, Anglicans and other mainline Christians
aren’t
just inviting people to profess faith in Jesus Christ, but to live that
faith in his body, the church. “There is a kind of superficial ecumenism that says, ‘it
doesn’t matter what church you belong to,’ ’’ Farrell
said, but the Catholic Church and most of its dialogue partners reject
that view. Because Christians aren’t passing on “some Gospel of their
own making,” but a faith they have received, “sharing one’s
faith means sharing one’s belonging to a particular community that
has given me that faith. It means sharing the conviction, in conscience,
that the Gospel comes to me in its fullness in this particular community,” the
bishop said. For the Catholic Church, Farrell said, “We can’t work for
a common minimum denominator; nor can we say, ‘let’s keep
our differences and just accept one another as we are.’ “We have to aim at whatever is required for the fullness of incorporation into Christ and into the one church he founded. But where is that church?” he said. “That is the question that will trouble us until Christian disunity becomes Christian unity: not uniformity, but true, grace-filled communion in faith and Christian living.” Copyright (c) 2012 Catholic News Service/U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops |
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