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IARCCUM - Report from 2004
Ecclesiological Reflections on the Current Situation in the Anglican
Communion in the Light of ARCIC
Report of the ad hoc sub-commission of IARCCUM presented to the Most
Reverend and Right Honorable Archbishop of Canterbury, Rowan Williams and
to the President of the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity,
Cardinal Walter Kasper
June 8th, 2004
I. Introduction
- The Anglican Communion and the Roman Catholic Church have been committed
for almost forty years to 'serious dialogue which, founded on the Gospels
and the ancient common traditions, may lead to that unity in truth, for
which Christ prayed' (Common Declaration of Pope Paul VI and Archbishop
Michael Ramsey, 1966). Over these decades, remarkable progress has been
made towards the 'restoration of complete communion of faith and sacramental
life' called for by the 1966 Declaration. The importance of steady movement
towards this goal was emphasized by Pope John Paul II and Archbishop Robert
Runcie in their Common Declaration of 1989:
Against the background of human disunity the arduous journey to Christian
unity must be pursued with determination and vigor, whatever obstacles
are perceived to block the path. We here solemnly re-commit ourselves and
those we represent to the restoration of visible unity and full ecclesial
communion in the confidence that to seek anything less would be to betray
our Lord's intention for the unity of his people?
We also urge our clergy and faithful not to neglect or undervalue that
certain yet imperfect communion we already share.... This communion should
be cherished and guarded as we seek to grow into the fuller communion Christ
wills.
The Anglican and Roman Catholic bishops who gathered in Mississauga in
May of 2000, after reviewing the extensive progress made both in theological
agreement and in practical relationships since the Second Vatican Council,
confidently observed that the communion we already share is 'no longer
to be viewed in minimal terms'. It is 'a rich and life-giving, multi-faceted
communion. We have ... moved much closer to the goal of full visible communion
than we had at first dared to believe'.[1]
- It is a significant confirmation of the progress we have made, and
of the importance of our common commitment to the goal of full ecclesial
communion, that the appearance of a fresh obstacle to achieving that goal
has led to a common initiative to address that difficulty. The question
raised by the episcopal consecration in New Hampshire is immediately an
Anglican concern and is being addressed by the Anglican Communion itself.
However, consultations with the Roman Catholic Church led the Archbishop
of Canterbury to take the initiative of inviting Cardinal Kasper of the
Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity to join him in setting
up a special sub-commission of the International Anglican-Roman Catholic
Commission for Unity and Mission (IARCCUM) to address the ecclesiological
concerns raised by the event. As members of this sub-commission, we are
grateful to be given an opportunity to contribute to the process of discernment
within the Anglican Communion. We believe that the invitation to make this
ecumenical contribution illustrates how close our two communions have come
to each other, and reflects the fact that what one communion does has consequences
for the other. Cardinal Kasper said of the present situation that Catholics
do not see themselves simply as observers: because of our close relationship,
there is no such thing as an entirely unilateral decision or action. He
added that it was precisely in the midst of problems that dialogue was
most necessary.
- Our theological dialogue of the past decades, carried out through the
Anglican-Roman Catholic International Commission (ARCIC), has been principally
concerned with doctrinal issues, but it has also dealt with moral matters,
and in the process, has shown how closely the two are interconnected. The
Agreed Statement, Life in Christ: Morals, Communion and the Church (1994),
claimed that:
despite existing disagreement in certain areas of pastoral and practical
judgement, Anglicans and Roman Catholics derive from the Scripture and
Tradition the same controlling vision of the nature and destiny of humanity
and share the same fundamental moral values. (Life in Christ, 1)
Our sharing in this common Apostolic heritage enables us to give shared
witness and to speak prophetically on moral questions. Recent developments,
however, call into question the extent to which we in fact share a moral
vision. The episcopal consecration in New Hampshire raises two areas of
concern: one relating to the moral teaching involved; the other to the
ecclesiological difficulties deriving from the course of action taken.
With regard to the moral aspect, the Roman Catholic Church holds a firm
position on homosexuality, which is set out, for example, in the Catechism
of the Catholic Church, nn. 2357-2359. The consecration, following the
endorsement of the General Convention, has caused Roman Catholics, and
many Anglicans, to question, however, whether the churches of the Anglican
Communion can sustain a coherent teaching and practice in this area, since
the action was taken in spite of Resolution 1.10 of the 1998 Lambeth Conference
and the statement of the meeting of Primates in October, 2003. This very
fact simultaneously highlights the major ecclesiological questions that
have been raised.
- The Lambeth Commission has not been asked to address directly the question
of homosexuality but rather to focus on related ecclesiological issues.
In like manner, our sub-commission has been asked specifically to give
attention to the ecclesiological implications arising from the recent developments
in the Anglican Communion, particularly in the light of, and with reference
to, the relevant Agreed Statements of ARCIC. The major focus of our report,
therefore, will be to draw out of the ARCIC texts pertinent signposts which
relate to the current situation in the Anglican Communion, in the hope
that they may help the Lambeth Commission in addressing the questions before
it. In order to contextualize the contributions from ARCIC, showing them
to arise both out of our ancient common traditions, and out of recent ecclesiological
thinking in both the Anglican Communion and the Catholic Church, we offer
a preliminary section on shared ecclesiological foundations. We look first
at the 4th century, where there are certain parallels to the current context
which suggest some helpful insights for the present situation. Next, we
look to recent statements from both our communions on the maintenance of
communion, which have shaped and, in some instances, been influenced by
the work of ARCIC. Finally, in the principal section of this document,
we turn to the ARCIC Agreed Statements, identifying five areas relevant
to the task facing the Lambeth Commission. We hope that our reflections
will help the Commission to take full account of that 'certain yet imperfect
communion we already share', and to cherish and guard it 'as we seek to
grow into the fuller communion Christ wills' (Common Declaration, 1989).
II. Ecclesiological Pointers Past and Present
I.The Church's Life in the 4th Century
- The fourth century was a particularly turbulent period in the Church's
history, during which the Christian community was both grappling with the
doctrinal crisis of Arianism and adapting to a new relationship with the
State. Henry Chadwick notes that it 'was the misfortune of the fourth-century
church that it became engrossed in a theological controversy at the same
time as it was working out its institutional organization.'[2] The
same could be said for the Anglican Communion today, which is in the throes
of a major controversy regarding sexuality and ordination at the same time
as it is seeking to develop structures to sustain an interdependent life
among an ever increasing number of provinces. It is helpful to look to
the Church's life in the 4th century at a time of doctrinal crisis and
to note in particular the role of councils, the responsibilities of bishops
and metropolitans, and the relationship between local and universal within
the koinonia of the Church.
- The 4th century shows the Church's instinct to address problems by
means of councils of bishops, and in this way, to hold together the Church
in its local and universal expressions. The Council of Nicaea, for instance,
lays down fundamental principles for episcopal life and relations, stipulating
that a bishop should be ordained by all the bishops of his province, if
possible, but never by less than three, and that whatever is done in a
province is subject to the consent and confirmation of the metropolitan
of that province (canon 4). Nicaea also acknowledged particular regional
prerogatives of the bishops of Rome and Alexandria, whereby they had authority
to confirm episcopal elections beyond the strict bounds of their own provinces
(canon 6) . The Council of Sardica (342/3), while not accepted as a universal
council, reflects the same sense of interdependence between the local and
the universal. With regard to the integrity of the local church it decreed
that, 'if in any province, any bishop have a cause against his brother
and fellow-bishop, neither shall call in bishops from another province'.[3] This
measure in turn highlighted the leadership role of the metropolitan in
the bishops' own province. On the other hand, Sardica reflects the importance
of interdependence of local churches with the Church universal by decreeing
that if an accused or deposed bishop felt himself to be misjudged, there
could be an appeal to the Bishop of Rome by those who heard the case, by
the neighboring bishops or by the bishop himself. If the Bishop of Rome
decided that the case should be retried, he could appoint judges or send
a delegate to sit with the neighboring bishops to settle the matter (canon
3).
- It is plain that the Church's conciliar life, which was developing
at this time, did not spontaneously function in total harmony. In 4th century
practice, many councils were actually summoned by the emperor (e.g. Nicaea,
325; Constantinople, 381) or emperors (Sardica, 342/343). Moreover, a feature
of the period between Nicaea and Constantinople 'was certainly the large
number of controversial assemblies of bishops which were summoned by one
party or the other or by the emperors themselves';[4]" the
resolution of these controversies necessitated further clarification of
the relationship between the local and the universal Church. Through this
formative period, we can see that metropolitans undoubtedly exercised a
vital role in the assurance of good order, and that important patriarchal
and primatial responsibilities were beginning to be clarified for the effective
living out of the Church's life of communion. Unity and interdependence
were emerging as essential hallmarks of authentic koinonia. Patterned on
the primordial communion of the three persons of the Holy Trinity, these
hallmarks were to characterize the life of the Church at all levels.
- Commenting on the councils of the early Church, the Orthodox scholar,
Alexander Schmemann, insists that: 'the basic truth to which all canons
dealing with bishops, their consecration and their jurisdiction point and
refer, is the reality of unity, as the very essence of the Church', and
that 'the unity and interdependence of the bishops' is 'the form of the
Church's unity'[5]." In
this way, the bishop mediates his church to the wider communion of churches,
and the wider communion to his own church. In the name of the Good Shepherd,
he has prerogatives of leadership among his people that cannot be abdicated.
The bishop is not just a chairman, but exercises his distinctive ministry
of leadership in, with and among his people. Authentic koinonia has a focal
point - the bishop among his people - just as the life of the Trinity is
centered upon the Father. Moreover, authentic koinonia requires unity and
interdependence between this focal figure and the community gathered around
him. As suggested above, the early Church displayed this configuration
not just within each local church but also at the regional or provincial
level. The 34th of the Apostolic Canons ca.375-380) stipulated that the
bishops of every region should acknowledge the one who is first among them
as their head and do nothing of consequence without his consent, as also
he should do nothing without their consent, 'for so there will be unanimity
and God will be glorified through Christ in the Holy Spirit'.[6]
- Recalling the crises, councils and canons of the 4th century helps
us to reflect on our current situation: in particular, on the role of the
local bishop, and his relationship to the metropolitan and the universal
Church, in safeguarding the unity of the Church. The practice of the 4th
century, which shows that, in challenging situations, consultation and
conciliarity alone are not always sufficient to sustain and protect ecclesial
communion, may also suggest models for the Anglican Communion as it seeks
to find a way forward. In particular, it may suggest the need for some
kind of right of appeal from within any Anglican province to the Archbishop
of Canterbury. More broadly, it may suggest the need to strengthen both
the focal role of the Primates within provinces and that of the Archbishop
of Canterbury among the Primates. These would be important developments
during this interim period as we continue to work towards full visible
unity between the Anglican Communion and the Catholic Church. There is
everything to be said for both our Communions developing a polity which
is both consistent with the early Church and also consistent with the sort
of Church we believe God is calling us to become together in the future.
ii. Recent Reflections on koinonia in our two Communions
- In order to contextualize the ARCIC material which follows, we turn
now to review some of the ecclesiological themes in recent writings of
both our Communions, illustrating a converging understanding about the
Church as koinonia, the maintenance of communion and decision-making in
communion.
- Each of our Communions affirms koinonia as the fundamental reality
of the Church and also as the primary concept for our understanding of
the life and mission of the Church, both through history and today.[7] Since
Jesus Christ is the Word of God incarnate, the life in which the Church
participates, as the Body of Christ, is the life of the Trinity, which
is one of perfect koinonia. Koinonia is both God's gift to us and our calling.
Dependent on the Holy Spirit, we are to manifest God's life in and for
the world.[8]
- Each of our Communions understands that koinonia is sustained and nurtured
by "structures of grace", the constituent elements or bonds
of communion. Each agrees that all the various elements of visible communion
are gifts of the Risen Christ, bestowed through the power of the Holy Spirit,
on the Church. They are not separable items but integrally related to one
another. Working together they serve and protect the inner mystery of the
Church's communion. By such gifts of communion, the Church is held together
in the apostolic Tradition, enabled to offer united worship and praise
to the Triune God, and strengthened and organized to be the sacrament of
God's presence in the world.[9]
- Each Communion considers that it lives by these bonds of communion.
Anglicans are held together in a life of visible communion by baptism,
'the confession of a common faith, the celebration of the eucharist, a
life of common prayer, the service of an ordered ministry, conciliar structures,
shared service and mission. These elements belong to the universal Church
and are not unique to Anglicans. They are, nevertheless, lived out in a
recognizably and characteristically Anglican way.[10] These
bonds are what Roman Catholics also indicate when they say that the unity
of the Church is 'constituted by the bonds of the profession of faith,
the sacraments and hierarchical communion.'[11] Essential
to these bonds for Roman Catholics is the ministry of the Bishop of Rome
and the bishops in communion with him.[12] Anglicans
recognize that the constitutive elements of the Church exist in the Roman
Catholic Church, while the Roman Catholic Church has acknowledged that
'some and even very many of the significant elements and endowments which
together go to build up and give life to the Church itself, can exist outside
the visible boundaries of the Catholic Church';[13] or,
in the words of Ut Unum Sint, that 'many elements of great value ? are
also found in other Christian Communities.'[14]
- Each of our Communions cherishes the ministry of episcopacy in apostolic
succession as having a decisive role within the succession of communities
living in fidelity to the apostolic Tradition. The episcopal ministry,
exercised in a personal, collegial and communal way, nurtures the communion
of the Church and safeguards the unity between local churches. Collegiality
and some form of primacy are exercised in both our Communions at the different
levels of the Church's life. At the world level, collegiality for Anglicans
is expressed in the meeting of the Lambeth Conference. The Archbishop of
Canterbury is the personal focus of unity and communion, having 'in a particular
way the care of all the churches which is shared by all the bishops'. His
task is 'not to command, but to gather', and within the Anglican Communion,
his authority is understood as moral and not juridical. His is 'a primacy
of honor'.[15] Only
an Archbishop of Canterbury may call bishops to a Lambeth Conference. He
presides at the Conference, chairs the regular meetings of Primates and
is President of the Anglican Consultative Council. For Anglicans, the communal
dimension of the exercise of episcope, expressed in synods in which laity
participate, is a vital part of the maintenance of communion. Roman Catholics
stress that the fullness of koinonia entails the ministry of universal
primacy of the Bishop of Rome, the successor of St Peter, to whom Christ
entrusted all his sheep 'to be confirmed in faith and shepherded in perfect
unity'. The service of unity of the Bishop of Rome is exercised by him
within the college of bishops.[16]
- Each of our Communions emphasizes the interdependence of the local
and the universal. Although binding decisions for Anglicans can only be
made at the level of a province, there has been a growing 'sense' that
matters that touch the faith, order or moral life of the Communion should
be settled within the interdependent life of the Anglican Communion - and,
in a divided Christendom, should be considered in a way that is open to
the rest of the Church. Archbishop Robert Runcie challenged what he called
'the shibboleth of autonomy'. His speech to the 1988 Lambeth Conference
was an encouragement to continue moving along a path from independence
to interdependence: 'We have reached the stage of growth of the Communion
when we must begin to make radical choices, or growth will imperceptibly
turn to decay. I believe the choice between independence and interdependence
is quite simply the choice between unity or gradual fragmentation'.[17] The
Virginia Report suggests that: 'within the Anglican Communion matters which
touch the communion of all the churches need to be discerned and tested
within the life of the interdependence of the Provinces…'[18]
- Anglicans have developed international structures and processes for
the purpose of helping them to maintain the communion of all the churches.
The Lambeth Conference has served the Anglican Communion since 1867. Resolution
49 of the Conference of 1930 declared that the Churches of the Anglican
Communion 'are bound together not by a central legislative and executive
authority, but by mutual loyalty sustained through the common counsel of
the bishops in conference.' Two newer organs, the Anglican Consultative
Council and the Primates' Meeting also have a part to play, along with
the Archbishop of Canterbury and the Lambeth Conference, in the Anglican
Communion's discernment of what is faithful to the Apostolic tradition
on matters which touch the unity of the Church. Decision-making entails
consultation, dialogue, discernment and reception and involves those with
a special ministry of oversight and the whole people of God.
- Roman Catholics hold to 'the very ancient discipline whereby the bishops
installed throughout the whole world lived in communion with one another
and with the Roman Pontiff in a bond of unity, charity and peace', and
also maintain the practice of holding councils wherein profound issues
are to be settled together.[19] The
college or body of bishops has 'no authority unless united with the Roman
Pontiff, Peter's successor, as its head'.[20] Lumen
gentium speaks of the role of the entire body of the faithful in the discernment
of matters of faith, which is 'aroused and sustained by the Spirit of truth'.[21]
- Each of our Communions is exploring more effective ways to maintain
koinonia in times of change. Roman Catholics, since Vatican II, have been
gradually developing structures for sustaining koinonia more effectively:
national and regional Episcopal Conferences, General Assemblies of the
Synod of Bishops and, at local level, the involvement of lay people and
clergy in parochial and diocesan pastoral councils. Anglicans have considered
how to develop their international instruments of communion: the role of
the Archbishop of Canterbury, the Lambeth Conference, the Anglican Consultative
Council and the Primates' Meeting - and what part each has to play in the
maintenance of the communion of local churches.
- Each of our Communions stress the qualities of life that belong to
Communion. The Virginia Report speaks of life in communion as one of mutuality,
common concern for one another, forbearing one another in love. Pope
John Paul II has called for the fostering of a 'spirituality of communion',
without which external structures 'will serve very little purpose', becoming
'mechanisms without a soul'. Such a spirituality centers on the 'contemplation
of the mystery of the Trinity dwelling in us, ‘whose light we must
also be able to see shining on the face of the brothers and sisters around
us.' A spirituality of communion means thinking of our brothers and sisters
in faith as 'those who are a part of me', and enables us to 'share their
joys and sufferings, to sense their desires and attend to their needs',
to 'make room' for each other, 'bearing "each other's burdens" (Gal
6:2)'.
- The convergence that we note in our understanding of the nature of
the Church, of the constitutive elements of communion and of the ways in
which communion is to be maintained prompt us to ask how far the recent
events in North America challenge what we both believe. With this question
in mind, we now turn our attention directly to the work of ARCIC, which
has given sustained expression to our shared belief.
III. ARCIC and the Lambeth Commission
- The theological conversations of ARCIC I and II have explored areas
which have a bearing on the current situation in the Anglican Communion.
ARCIC's Agreed Statements hold differing degrees of authority. The official
responses of both Communions to the work of ARCIC I recognized 'substantial
agreement' or 'significant convergence' in the areas treated in its Agreed
Statements. The Agreed Statements of ARCIC II have not received official
responses on the level of our two Communions. However, the Anglican and
Roman Catholic bishops gathered at Mississauga in May 2000 were able to
point to all the documents and note 'the very impressive degree of agreement
in faith that already exists'.[24] Such
recognition would seem to imply that actions or decisions taken by either
Communion, which touch the communion of the Church, necessarily have implications
for the other. Moreover, how each Communion acts either gives credibility
to what has been agreed in our theological dialogue or calls that agreement
into question. How we act also confirms, or denies, something about the
sort of life we look to live together in the future and indicates the seriousness,
or lack of seriousness, of our intention to move together in conformity
with what has been agreed.
- We believe that the theological Agreed Statements have insights to
offer in interpreting the current situation and may even help to suggest
a possible way forward. We would group these insights under five headings,
as follows:
- the nature of the Church as communion;
- the constitutive elements of communion, the episcopal office, unity
and diversity in ecclesial communion, and the relation between local churches
and the universal Church;
- discernment in the communion of the Church, authority and the use of
Scripture and Tradition;
- the qualities and obligations of life in communion;
- morals and discerning in communion.
A. The nature of the Church as communion
- The understanding of the Church as communion is fundamental to all
of the work of ARCIC - 'union with God in Christ Jesus through the Spirit
is the heart of Christian koinonia' (Final Report, Introduction, ").
'God wants his people to be in communion with him and with each other'
(Church as Communion, 7). This communion thus embraces 'both the visible
gathering of God's people and its divine life-giving source' (Church as
Communion, 3). These two aspects of the nature and life of the Church must
never be divorced. The Final Report goes on to talk of the eucharist as
the effectual sign of koinonia, episcope as serving koinonia, and primacy
as its link and focus (Introduction, 6).
- Church as Communion is ARCIC's fullest treatment of the theme of koinonia,
and notes in its conclusion that 'our two Communions agree in their understanding
of the Church as communion' ("6). The report expands upon the nature
of communion and sees how that notion is unfolded in Scripture. The Church,
as the body of those baptized into the life and love of God, is the communion
of believers called to be an effective sign, in and for the world, of all
God intends for the whole of humanity. It is also an instrument of salvation
and in its life, here and now, we are given a foretaste of the life God
intends for all. It is inadequate to speak only of an invisible communion.
Communion requires visible expression (43).
The New Hampshire consecration has had an effect on the unity of the Anglican
Communion. Recent documents have spoken of ‘impaired communion' and
even of ‘broken communion'. In the light of the centrality that ARCIC
gives to communion for the realization of the Church, we ask whether the
damage that the recent consecration is doing to communion can be acceptable
to those who profess belief in one, holy, catholic and apostolic Church.
B. Constitutive elements of ecclesial communion, the episcopal office,
unity and diversity in communion, and the relationship between local churches
and the universal Church
- ARCIC is clear that there are inter-related constitutive elements and
facets which 'belong to the visible communion of the universal Church.
Although their possession cannot guarantee the constant fidelity of Christians,
neither can the Church dispense with them.' (Church as Communion, n. 46);
indeed the Church has received these elements and has an obligation to
pass them on (Gift of Authority, 14). Church as Communion notes:
For all the local churches to be together in communion, the one visible
communion which God wills, it is required that all the essential constitutive
elements of ecclesial communion are present and mutually recognized in
each of them. Thus the visible communion between these churches is complete
and their ministers are in communion with each other. (43)
The text proceeds to describe what constitutes ecclesial communion:
It is rooted in the confession of the one apostolic faith, revealed in
the Scriptures and set forth in the Creeds. It is founded upon one baptism.
The one celebration of the eucharist is its pre-eminent expression and
focus. It necessarily finds expression in shared commitment to the mission
entrusted by Christ to his Church?. Also constitutive of life in communion
is acceptance of the same basic moral values, the sharing of the same vision
of humanity created in the image of God and recreated in Christ and the
common confession of the one hope in the final consummation of the Kingdom
of God. (4")
The text goes on to state that the ministry of oversight, the fullness
of which is entrusted to the episcopate, is needed to maintain and express
the Church's unity and to hold together believers in the communion of the
local church in the communion of all the churches. 'This ministry of oversight
has both collegial and primatial dimensions?. It is exercised so that unity
and communion are expressed, preserved and fostered at every level - locally,
regionally and universally.' It is precisely within the context of the
communion of all the churches that 'the Episcopal ministry of a universal
primate finds its role as visible focus of unity' (4").
ARCIC understands that there is an essential relationship between all of
the constitutive elements of the Church. They interrelate and belong to
a single life of communion. To deny or damage one is to weaken the total
life of communion of the Church. The New Hampshire consecration raises
questions about how constitutive elements of communion – the unity
of the episcopate, the authority of Scripture and its interplay with Tradition,
and the holding of ‘the same basic moral values' – have been
honoured, singly and together.
- ARCIC has much to say about the role of the bishop, both within the
local church and in the service of the communion of all the churches. At
ordination, every bishop receives 'both responsibility for his local church
and the obligation to maintain it in living awareness and practical service
of other churches. The Church of God is found in each of them and in their
koinonia' (Authority I, 10). Within the local church, the bishop carries
a pastoral authority, by virtue of which he is primarily 'responsible for
preserving and promoting the integrity of the koinonia in order to further
the Church's response to the Lordship of Christ and its commitment to mission'
(Authority I, "). The bishop is to teach 'the faith through the proclamation
and explanation of the Word of God', to provide for the celebration of
the sacraments, and to maintain the Church in holiness and truth (Gift
of Authority, 36). 'The exercise of this teaching authority requires that
what (is taught) be faithful to Holy Scripture and consistent with apostolic
Tradition' (Gift, 44). ARCIC also communicates the understanding of both
Anglican and Roman Catholic Communions that bishops carry out their ministry
in succession of the Apostles, which is 'intended to assure each community
that its faith is indeed the apostolic faith, received and transmitted
from apostolic times' (Church as Communion, 33).
- ARCIC sees the mission of the local church as being held within the
mission of the universal Church. Authority I notes that 'koinonia is realized
not only in the local Christian communities, but also in the communion
of these communities with one another' (8). The text goes on to state:
A local church cannot be truly faithful to Christ if it does not desire
to foster universal communion, the embodiment of that unity for which Christ
prayed?. Every local church must therefore ever seek a deeper understanding
and clearer expression of this common faith, both of which are threatened
when churches are isolated by division.' (Authority I, 13)
Each bishop, in communion with all other bishops, is responsible to preserve
and express the larger koinonia of the church, and 'participates in the
care of all the churches' (Gift, 39). The bishop is therefore 'both a voice
for the local church and one through whom the local church learns from
other churches' (Gift, 38). By means of communion among the bishops, 'the
whole Church is made aware of the perceptions and concerns of the local
churches: at the same time the local churches are enabled to maintain their
place and particular character within the communion of all the churches'
(Church as Communion, 33). Authority I (") had already affirmed the
'mutual responsibility and interdependence' of all who minister in the
Church, and Gift of Authority underlines more deeply the same notion in
speaking of the role played by the college of bishops in maintaining the
unity of the Church - a topic which will be further addressed in the forthcoming
section (29ff) on discernment:
'The mutual interdependence of all the churches is integral to the reality
of the Church as God wills it to be. No local church that participates
in the living Tradition can regard itself as self-sufficient.... The ministry
of the bishop is crucial, for his ministry serves communion within and
among local churches. Their communion with each other is expressed through
the incorporation of each bishop into a college of bishops. Bishops are,
both personally and collegially, at the service of the communion ' (Gift,
37).
- While communion with other local churches safeguards the Church's unity
and catholicity, this is not to result in a narrow uniformity. The challenge
and responsibility of bishops in this regard is 'so to exercise their ministry
that they promote the unity of the whole Church in faith and life in a
way that enriches rather than diminishes the legitimate diversity of local
churches' (Gift of Authority, 33). A diversity of traditions, faithful
to the Word revealed in Jesus Christ, is indeed 'the practical manifestation
of catholicity and confirms rather than contradicts the vigor of Tradition'
(Gift, 27). Church as Communion speaks of a legitimate diversity in liturgies
and forms of spirituality, in ways of exercising authority and canonical
structure, in theological approaches, and in diverse theological expressions
of the same doctrine (36, 43). The text notes: 'These varieties complement
one another, showing that, as the result of communion with God in Christ,
diversity does not lead to division; on the contrary, it serves to bring
glory to God for the munificence of his gifts' (36). The text proceeds
to speak about the framework within which that diversity is held together,
including a reference to a common ministry of oversight:
Amid all the diversity that the catholicity intended by God implies, the
Church's unity and coherence are maintained by the common confession of
the one apostolic faith, a shared sacramental life, a common ministry of
oversight and joint ways of reaching decisions and giving authoritative
teaching. (39)
- From the perspective of ARCIC's understanding of the episcopate, we
conclude that the collegiality of bishops is seriously affected if the
majority of bishops in the Anglican Communion will neither receive nor
recognise the ministry of the Bishop of New Hampshire.
- How can a bishop whose ordination made him a cause of controversy (leading
others to break communion with him and with those who consecrated him)
represent the local community in the councils of the Church?
- How can he mediate the unity of the universal Church to his diocese
when he is at odds with large segments of the universal church, the latter
arguing that he has departed from the moral teaching of the apostolic faith?
- Does not this situation damage both the communion of the local church
of New Hampshire and the communion of the diocese of New Hampshire with
all churches in the Anglican Communion?
C. Discernment in the communion of the Church, authority and the use
of Scripture and Tradition
- Church as Communion notes that tensions are inevitable in the life
of the Church. Some are creative tensions, others are not:
Some may cause a loss of continuity with apostolic Tradition, disruption
within the community, estrangement from other parts of the Church. Within
the history of Christianity, some diversities have become differences that
have led to such conflict that ecclesial communion has been severed. Whenever
differences become embodied in separated ecclesial communities, so that
Christians are no longer able to receive and pass on the truth within the
one community of faith, communion is impoverished and the living memory
of the Church is affected. (30)
Amid internal tension and conflict, it is the Church's task to 'distinguish
between tolerable and intolerable diversity in the expression of the apostolic
faith'. Church as Communion adds that 'in the area of life and practice
the Church has to discover what is constructive and what is disruptive
of its own communion' (40).
- These evocative citations serve to highlight the decisive importance
of discernment, most especially when the unity of the communion is at stake.
This sub-commission's reflections on ARCIC's understanding of Christian
discernment are offered mindful of the discernment process with which the
Anglican Communion and its churches are currently engaged.[25] Our
reflections also have in mind the New Hampshire consecration, which was
itself the result of processes of discernment on the diocesan and provincial
levels. The Diocese of New Hampshire issued a statement noting that they
'faithfully and prayerfully considered and followed a Spirit-led process'
in their election of a new bishop.[26] As
we have already seen, these processes of discernment all have broad ecclesiological
implications, and with these in mind we turn to what ARCIC has to say about
the nature of discernment in communion.
- In the Elucidation of Authority I, ARCIC notes that in all it says,
it takes for granted two fundamental principles: 'that Christian faith
depends on divine revelation and that the Holy Spirit guides the Church
in the understanding and transmission of revealed truth' (1). All Christian
discernment has as its foundational reference point God's revelation in
Christ, who 'sums up in himself the whole of God's self-disclosure' (Authority
I, Elucidation, 2). Christian discernment is therefore always a seeking
of the guidance of the Holy Spirit, a discerning of the mind of Christ,
an attentiveness to how God speaks into a particular situation. This discernment
is not principally a matter of subjective insight; it is done in communion,
recognizing the objectivity and givenness of the Word that addresses us.
- Scripture and Tradition play foundational roles in Christian discernment.
The fullness of revelation manifest in Jesus Christ is mediated to the
Church of subsequent generations by the apostolic community's reception
of that revelation, as recorded in the New Testament. The Commission states
clearly and strongly the place and authority of the Scriptures: 'Scriptures
are the uniquely inspired witness to divine revelation' (Authority I Elucidation
n. 2). Within Tradition the Scriptures occupy a 'normative place' and are
'uniquely authoritative'; the Church is 'constantly to measure its teaching,
preaching and action' against the Scriptures (Gift, 19). In ARCIC's understanding,
Scripture and Tradition are indelibly bound together. Scripture arises
from the living proclamation of the Church and the formation of the Canon
takes place within it (Gift, 22). However, every generation needs 'prophetically
to translate' the Gospel (Authority I, 1"). 'Tradition is a dynamic
process, communicating to each generation what was delivered once for all
to the apostolic community. Tradition is far more than the transmission
of true propositions concerning salvation' (Gift, 14). The handing on involves
stating the Gospel message in new ways. Yet all such restatement 'must
be consonant with the apostolic witness recorded in the Scriptures' (Authority
I, 1"). Finally, the Gospel 'is fully understood only within the Church.
God's revelation has been entrusted to a community.' Hence, individualistic
interpretation of the Scriptures is 'incompatible with the nature of the
authority of the revealed Word of God. Word of God and Church of God cannot
be put asunder' (Gift, 23).
- ARCIC understands bishops as having a vital role in the process of
discernment, bearing 'a special responsibility for promoting truth and
discerning error' (Authority I, 18) and for preserving and promoting communion;
but this is never exercised apart from the whole body of the faithful.
The 'interaction of bishop and people' in this exercise of discernment
and teaching 'is a safeguard of Christian life and fidelity' (Authority
I, 18). Church as Communion reflects on this interaction, noting:
In responding to the insights of the community, and of the individual Christian,
whose conscience is also molded by the same Spirit, those exercising oversight
seek to discern what is the mind of Christ. Discernment involves both heeding
and sifting in order to assist the people of God in understanding, articulating
and applying their faith. (32)
The Gift of Authority develops this further by emphasizing the role of
the whole people of God as bearers of the living tradition: discernment
is the duty of all, together in communion. Each Christian who is seeking
to follow Christ and who is incorporated into the life of the Church has
a sense of faith, and 'when this capacity is exercised in concert by the
body of the faithful we may speak of the exercise of the sensus fidelium'
(Gift, 29; cf. Authority I Elucidation, 3-4). The Church is like a symphony
in which all have a part to play; all are walking together on the way.
'Consulting the faithful is an aspect of episcopal oversight' (Gift, 38).
- ARCIC texts also reflect on the decisive role of the college of bishops
and synodal and collegial structures in the Church's discernment.
'When bishops take counsel together they seek both to discern and to articulate
the sensus fidelium as it is present in the local church and in the wider
communion of churches. Their role is magisterial: that is, in this communion
of the churches, they are to determine what is to be taught as faithful
to the apostolic Tradition.'(Gift, 38)
The teaching office, which 'is not above the Word of God but serves it'
(Gift cites Dei Verbum, n. 10), is exercised in communion. As Gift of Authority
puts it: 'the authenticity of the teaching of individual bishops is evident
when this teaching is in solidarity with that of the whole episcopal college.
The exercise of this teaching authority requires that what it teaches be
faithful to Holy Scripture and consistent with apostolic Tradition' (Gift,
44). Both personally and collegially, bishops are to be concerned with
synodality 'in all its expressions':
These expressions have included a wide variety of organs, instruments and
institutions, notably synods or councils, local, provincial, worldwide,
ecumenical. The maintenance of communion requires that at every level there
is a capacity to take decisions appropriate to that level. When those decisions
raise serious questions for the wider communion of churches, synodality
must find a wider expression. (Gift, 37; cf Church as Communion, 4";
Authority I, 16)
When a discernment process issues forth in authoritative teaching, an important
role is also played by the reception of this teaching by the faithful as
an authentic expression of the apostolic faith. Particularly in challenging
situations, or when contradictory interpretations of Scripture or Tradition
are proposed, Christian discernment in the Church requires the participation
of the whole body of believers, not only of those charged with the ministry
of memory and teaching (Gift, 43). The people of God must be able to recognize
that what is presented as authoritative teaching expresses the apostolic
faith and operates within the truth of Christ, the Head of the Church.
In the formulation of Authority I Elucidation (3), reception 'does not
create truth nor legitimize the decision', but 'is the final indication
that such a decision has fulfilled the necessary conditions for it to be
a true expression of the faith' (cf Authority I, 6, 16; Church as Communion,
32).
- Finally, ARCIC also touches briefly on the role of the bishop of a
principal see in the Church's discernment, reflects at length on a universal
primacy which would serve the koinonia of the Church, and invites cooperation
between our churches in discernment.
- Authority I notes that it is the duty of a bishop of a principal see
to assist the bishops of his region to promote right teaching, unity and
the Church's mission. 'When he perceives a serious deficiency in the life
or mission of one of the churches he is bound, if necessary, to call the
local bishop's attention to it and to offer assistance' (Authority I, 11).
- Regarding a universal primacy, what Authority I notes is that 'if God's
will for the unity in love and truth of the whole Christian community is
to be fulfilled, this general pattern of the complementary primatial and
conciliar aspects of episkope serving the koinonia of the churches needs
to be realized at the universal level (23; cf. Gift, 46). While our two
Communions haven't yet reached full consensus on a universal primacy, ARCIC
has explored this subject intermittently for thirty years, and its reflections
are an integral part of its reflection on discernment. The Gift of Authority
envisioned a primacy which would help to 'uphold the legitimate diversity
of traditions, strengthening and safeguarding them in fidelity to the Gospel'
(Gift, 60; cf. 47).
- Regarding consultation between our two Communions, Gift of Authority
noted: 'For the sake of koinonia and a united Christian witness to the
world, Anglican and Roman Catholic bishops should find ways of cooperating
and developing relationships of mutual accountability in their exercise
of oversight' ("8). We see the invitation for this sub-commission
to offer these reflections as a valuable example of the latter.
ARCIC's thorough treatment of discernment within the Church offers various
insights to the Anglican Communion in its current discernment process,
and raises numerous questions, among which we would highlight the following:
ARCIC is clear about the normative role of Scripture within the Tradition
of the Church and the need to have recourse to Scripture and Tradition
in discerning the will of Christ. The teaching of the Anglican Communion
on the issue of homosexuality is set forth in Resolution 1.10 of the 1998
Lambeth Conference. Roman Catholic teaching is stated in the Catechism
of the Catholic Church (nn. 23"7-"9). Both see their conclusions
as grounded in Scripture and Tradition. While in recent times differing
interpretations of Scripture have emerged with regard to the issue of homosexuality,
the traditional teaching continues to be upheld by our two Communions.
In this context, should there not be restraint within Anglican Provinces
while together in the communion of the Church we seek the guidance of the
Holy Spirit regarding issues facing us?
ARCIC holds that the maintenance of communion requires that decisions which
raise questions for the wider communion of churches be addressed in appropriately
wide synodal structures and processes.
- Should the decision to ordain a priest in a committed same sex relationship
for the office and work of a bishop be taken in a local or regional church
when the matter is considered to touch the moral life of the whole Church?
- The fact that the New Hampshire Consecration took place in opposition
to Resolution 1.10 passed by the bishops at the Lambeth Conference, to
Resolution 34 of ACC 12, to the statement of the Primates' Meeting in October
2003, and to a public statement of the Archbishop of Canterbury, would
seem to call into question the processes of discernment in communion, and
in particular the place of the episcopate and the ministry of primacy in
their respective responsibilities for the maintenance of unity in the Anglican
Communion. When individual dioceses and provinces act autonomously against
the recommendations of the Communion's instruments of unity, at what cost
is this done?
- How can these instruments of unity more effectively serve and safeguard
the koinonia of the Anglican Communion?
- How can the effective governance of the Church on diocesan and provincial
levels be complemented by collegial and primatial structures in such a
way that the unity of the Anglican Communion is creatively maintained in
the Apostolic faith and not under recurring threat of dissolution?
Alongside these questions, those posed to the Anglican Communion at the
end of The Gift of Authority about authority and decision-making in the
life of the Church seem particularly pertinent:
Is the Communion open to the acceptance of instruments of oversight which
would allow decisions to be reached that, in certain circumstances, would
bind the whole Church? When new questions arise which, in fidelity to Scripture
and Tradition, require a united response, will these structures assist
Anglicans to participate in the sensus fidelium with all Christians? To
what extent does unilateral action by provinces or dioceses in matters
concerning the whole Church, even after consultation has taken place, weaken
koinonia? (Gift, "6)[27]
D. The qualities and obligations of communion
- Church as Communion also stresses that our koinonia is a participation
in the life and love of the Trinity, and must therefore be modeled on and
grounded in the love which is at the heart of the divine life (1").
'It is a life of shared concern for one another in mutual forbearance,
submission, gentleness and love; in the placing of interests of others
above the interests of self; in making room for each other in the body
of Christ?'(4"). It includes a sharing in one another's joys and sorrows,
a common responsibility for maintaining unity and peace, and a mutual giving
and receiving of gifts because of the fellowship that exists in Christ.
-
When fundamental changes arise which may impair the communion of the
Church, then concern for others, mutual forbearance, deferring to others,
putting the interest of others above one's own are marks of the way of
communion. We ask whether these attitudes were shown towards all sections
of the Anglican Communion and towards the holders of all shades of opinion
in the Communion in the recent decisions of New Hampshire and New
Westminster.
- We ask how these attitudes can be fostered during this period of discernment
in the Anglican Communion. Whose responsibility is it in the Anglican
Communion to nurture the qualities and obligations of communion as it seeks
to discern a common mind, in fidelity to the Apostolic faith, when facing new
and potentially divisive questions and how is this to be done?
E. Morals and discerning in communion
- In its 1994 Agreed Statement Life in Christ: Morals, Communion and
the Church, ARCIC addressed the Church's moral teaching. In this context,
the Commission briefly touched upon the question of homosexual relationships,
affirming a significant degree of common teaching,[28] while
also drawing attention to remaining differences in Anglican and Roman Catholic
approaches.[29] We
are mindful that our sub-commission has not been asked to reflect directly
on questions pertaining to human sexuality, but rather, to address the
ecclesiological implications arising from the recent developments in the
Anglican Communion in light of the work of ARCIC. In what follows, we draw
attention to three themes in ARCIC's work on morals which complement the
topics presented in our previous sections on koinonia and discernment.
They are:
- the relationship that ARCIC sees between communion and the process
of moral judgement;
- the foundational moral positions that are held in common by Anglicans
and Roman Catholics and an understanding of the factors that have led to
divergences between us on certain matters;
- the mutually felt need for common study, consultation and common witness
on moral questions.
- The relevance of these three themes to the debate about homosexuality
is evident.
- First, the subtitle of Life in Christ, namely 'Morals, Communion and
the Church', reflects the close relationship upheld by ARCIC between morals
and the communion of the Church. The text begins by noting that Church
doctrines and morals are closely inter-connected (2), and that 'authentic
Christian unity is as much a matter of life as of faith' (Co-Chair's Preface).
The Preface reiterates the statement made in Church as Communion (4")
that 'acceptance of the same basic moral values' and 'the sharing of the
same vision of humanity created in the image of God and re-created in Christ'
are constitutive elements of ecclesial communion. The text (3) notes that
our koinonia determines 'both the structure of the moral order and the
method of the Church's discernment and response':
Life in Christ is a life of communion.... (C)ommunion means that members
of the Church share a responsibility for discerning the action of the Spirit
in the contemporary world, for shaping a truly human response, and for
resolving the ensuing moral perplexities with integrity and fidelity to
the Gospel. (96- 97)
- Secondly, Life in Christ reflects upon the common foundations that
Anglicans and Roman Catholics share on moral questions, but also identifies
divergences on particular issues, and explores underlying reasons for those
divergences. Regarding common foundations, the text notes that both Anglicans
and Roman Catholics 'appeal to a shared tradition' and 'recognize the same
Scriptures as normative of that tradition', respecting the role of reason
in moral discernment (102). We derive from that common heritage a shared
vision of human nature and destiny fulfilled in Christ, upholding the same
fundamental moral values and identifying common general principles for
discerning the mind of Christ on moral questions (1, 12, 23-32, 96). Our
centuries of separation led to a breakdown in communication and to developments
in our moral teachings and practices 'in isolation from each other' (88;
cf. 89); the resulting differences, however, are not on the level of fundamental
moral values, but on their application or implementation in practical judgments
(37, 83, 84, 86, 88, 96). Reflecting on these differences, Life in Christ
notes divergent views on the way in which authority on moral matters 'is
most fruitfully exercised and the common good best promoted' (49):
Anglicans affirm that authority needs to be dispersed rather than centralized,
that the common good is better served by allowing to individual Christians
the greatest possible liberty of informed moral judgment, and that therefore
official moral teaching should as far as possible be commendatory rather
than prescriptive and binding. Roman Catholics, on the other hand, have,
for the sake of the common good, emphasized the need for a central authority
to preserve unity and to give clear and binding teaching. (49; cf. "2)
Could it not be that, in our drawing together, we can learn from one another
and take advantage of the complementary value of both these factors of
moral discernment?
- Thirdly, Life in Christ proposes that steps should be taken even at
the present stage of our journey towards unity in view of dealing together
with moral issues. It argues for the importance of such a shared approach
from the need to give common witness to the world. 'The urgency of the
times and the perplexity of the human condition demand that (our two Communions)
now do all they can to come together to provide a common witness and guidance
for the well-being of humankind and the good of the whole creation' (88).
The final section of the text, entitled 'Towards moral integrity and full
communion', draws helpful connections between the desire of Anglicans and
Roman Catholics for full communion and the desire to resolve our differences
on certain moral teachings, noting concisely that the integrity of our
moral response requires a movement towards full communion (99ff; 3). After
highlighting the benefits of further exchange between our two traditions
on moral questions, the Agreed Statement concludes by proposing that 'steps
should be taken to establish further instruments of co-operation between
our two Communions at all levels of church life (especially national and
regional), to engage with the serious moral issues confronting humanity
today' (103). Such co-operation would be 'a practical way of expressing
the communion we already enjoy, of moving towards full communion, and of
understanding more clearly what it entails; without such collaboration
we run the risk of increasing divergence' (104).
- ARCIC's proposal for a communion-seeking approach to moral matters
by Anglicans and Roman Catholics has, unfortunately, had limited fulfilment
The degree of communion that exists between us has, indeed, been put at
risk by both our churches when they have made statements, or acted, on
matters that affect communion without taking the other into due consideration.
The bishops gathered at Mississauga in May 2000 took up this issue again.
They expressed the hope that their Action Plan would in future promote
collegiality through various means, including 'examining ways of ensuring
formal consultation prior to one Church making decisions on matters of
faith and morals which would affect the other Church, keeping in view the
agreed statements of ARCIC.'
The decision of an Anglican diocese and province to consecrate as bishop
a priest who is in a same-sex relationship seems to us to call into question
the criteria for moral discernment that we have found in the ARCIC agreed
statement on moral matters. Specifically we ask:
- Has the decision given sufficient weight to the commonly-held belief,
shared by ARCIC, that teaching on homosexuality touches those ‘basic
moral values' about which agreement is needed in order to establish and
preserve communion; and that consequently significant decisions about it
should be taken only with the agreement of those who are in communion with
each other?
- When moral discernment on an issue that matters for communion is undertaken
by one part of the Anglican Communion independently of the rest of the
Communion, and actions are taken on the basis of that discernment, are
not the same kind of fractures of communion that have occurred, and still
exist, between Anglicans and Roman Catholics liable to occur within the
Anglican Communion?
- When such decisions are made by one part of the Anglican Communion
with little attentiveness to the ecumenical relationships of their Communion
with other churches and Christian bodies, is there not an undermining of
the movement towards restoration of full communion to which the churches
are committed, and does not there occur by default a serious diminishment
of what our relations and our dialogue have already achieved?
- Could not the Anglican Communion, as it struggles with this issue,
offer a model of how moral discernment might be done, in communion, in
a way that takes full advantage of the grace that communion brings to such
endeavour?
F. Conclusion
- There is an immense amount to be grateful for in the recent developments
within Anglican-Roman Catholic relations. Our international commissions
have produced valuable work and have given us reasons for hope. Relations
between Archbishops of Canterbury and the Holy See have grown and deepened.
There are an impressive number of instruments for theological dialogue,
maintaining communication, and fostering relations between Anglicans and
Roman Catholics - reminders of how deeply our relationship has evolved
over the past decades. What we have achieved and the hope this has given
rise to accentuate the pain and awkwardness of the current situation for
us.
- One concern which has motivated us is the desire to preserve that which
has been gained through our theological dialogue. That is why in writing
this report we have particularly wished to show the ways in which we have
together articulated our understanding of communion and the dynamics and
structures which nurture and sustain it. Communion is simultaneously both
a gift and a calling; it makes demands. All through its history, by God's
grace, the Church has been striving to bear witness to this gift and respond
to the calling, and to accept its demands. The living of communion in history
requires an effective way of dealing with new and difficult issues, so
as to be able to continue to live and grow together. This applies both
within the Roman Catholic Church and the Anglican Communion, respectively,
and it applies also between us as we make every effort to grow closer in
our life and witness, in search of the unity which we believe is the will
of Christ.
- We have tried to show how the decision of the Episcopal Church USA
to proceed with the recent consecration despite sustained strong opposition
from large segments of the Anglican Communion calls into question significant
portions of our agreed statements on authority and ecclesiology: the nature
of ecclesial communion; the mutual interdependence of churches; the role
of episcopal and collegial authority in maintaining the unity of the communion;
the process of discernment in the communion of the Church, and the decisive
role of Scripture and Tradition therein. This decision also challenges
our mutual claim that we uphold a shared vision of human nature and the
same fundamental moral values.
- We believe that interdependence is of the essence of communion. It
causes us concern that the New Hampshire consecration went ahead contrary
to the resolutions and requests of the Anglican instruments of unity. Archbishop
Runcie's warning of the need to confront the 'shibboleth of autonomy' and
choose between independence and interdependence has taken on a new urgency
in the light of recent events. The new obstacles which have arisen need
to be addressed in the strength of our increasingly shared understanding
of the apostolic tradition, and with a great resolve born of the profound
conviction that communion matters crucially; it is what the world most
needs and what the Church empowered by the Holy Spirit (2 Cor 13:13) is
charged to show forth and minister.
- If Anglican Dioceses or provinces were to embrace the notion of a "local
option" for important decisions about the teaching of the Church in
matters of faith and morals, and if bonds of communion were weakened in
the direction of a federation of autonomous provinces rather than a relationship
of mutual responsibility and interdependence, then our consensus on the
ecclesiology of communion would be seriously undermined, and perhaps irreparably
damaged. A federal arrangement cannot adequately express the profound link
between the visible gathering of God's people and its life giving source,
and is a pale shadow of a proper ecclesiology of communion.
- We have also sought to show that ARCIC's statements on koinonia and
discernment in communion are consistent with and find a clear echo in recent
Anglican (and Roman Catholic) ecclesiological statements, and are consonant
with developments within the Anglican Communion concerning the four instruments
of unity. They are also grounded in 'the ancient common traditions' as
we saw these developing in the 4th century.
- In reflecting on the effect of decisions in the Diocese of New Westminster
and the Episcopal Church USA on the communion that Anglicans and Roman
Catholics already share, we have taken seriously the following concerns
raised frankly by representatives of the Pontifical Council for Promoting
Christian Unity in recent discussions with leaders of the Anglican Communion:
Unitatis redintegratio n. 13 singles out the Anglican Communion as occupying
a special place among Churches and Ecclesial Communities with roots in
the 16th c. Reformation. On that presumption we have proceeded to maintain
relations at the highest level possible. Even at difficult moments in the
past we have not sought to downgrade our relations, and do not seek to
do so now.
But in the same breath, we must add: the current decisions you face are
of monumental ecclesiological importance.... Clearly the ecclesiological
decisions you make will be a decisive factor in determining the shape of
our future relations. As we see it, the kind of answer you will give to
the current situation will tell us what kind of communion you are.
It is profoundly worrisome that the term communion needs increasingly to
be qualified by the adjectives impaired and broken, and that ecclesiological
anomalies threaten to pile up as means of responding to tensions within
Anglican provinces.... Decisive in this regard, if the term 'communion'
is still to be meaningfully applied, is the interpretation given to the
autonomy of the Anglican provinces, and the parameters of that autonomy.
If you choose to strengthen the authority structures and instruments of
unity within the Anglican Communion and find an effective means of addressing
the tendency towards divergence on matters of faith and doctrine, we would
clearly see this as enhancing the possibility of meaningful and fruitful
dialogue in the search for Christian unity, and of an increasing commitment
to shared witness and mission.
It is our overwhelming desire that the Anglican Communion stays together,
rooted in the historic faith which our dialogue and relations over four
decades have led us to believe that we share to a large degree.
- The members of this sub-commission are conscious of how many Christians
and others are watching the Anglican Communion, to see how it responds
to its difficulties. We hope that these reflections, rooted in the work
of our theological dialogue commission, will assist your discernment process
as you seek the mind of Christ. We find it a hopeful sign that this small
group was invited to comment on recent events in the light of the work
of ARCIC. We hope that the work of IARCCUM will soon be resumed and that
the Commission will be able to carry out its mandate of fostering the reception
of the work of ARCIC and finding means of giving tangible expression in
our ecclesial lives to the level of faith we share. We accompany the work
of the Lambeth Commission with our heartfelt prayers.
- Church as Communion notes that 'the closer we draw together the more
acutely we feel those differences which remain', words which resonate strongly
for us and for many who, over the past decades, have worked and prayed
for closer relations between us. The text closes with a word of encouragement
and an invitation to persevere in our pursuit of that unity to which God
is calling us:
The forbearance and generosity with which we seek to resolve these remaining
differences will testify to the character of the fuller communion for which
we strive. Together with all Christians, Anglicans and Roman Catholics
are called by God to continue to pursue the goal of complete communion
of faith and sacramental life. This call we must obey until all come into
the fullness of that Divine Presence, to whom Father, Son and Holy Spirit
be ascribed all honor, thanksgiving and praise to the ages of ages. Amen.
("8)
The Members of the Ecclesiological Sub-Commission of IARCCUM were:
Anglicans
The Rt Revd David Beetge - Anglican Co Chair of IARCCUM
The Rt Revd John Baycroft
Dr Mary Tanner
The Revd Canon Gregory Cameron, Anglican Co-Secretary, IARCCUM, ex officio
Roman Catholics
The Revd Peter Cross
The Revd Dr Paul McPartlan
The Revd Liam Walsh, OP
The Revd Canon Donald Bolen, Roman Catholic Co-Secretary, IARCCUM, ex officio
Notes
1. Communion in
Mission, nn."-6.
2. Henry Chadwick, The
Early Church (Harmondsworth: Penguin, revised ed. 1993), p. 133.
3. J. Stevenson
(ed.), Creeds, Councils and Controversies (London: SPCK, 1989),
p. 15
4. R.N.D.Kelly, Early
Christian Creeds (London: Longman, 1972), p. 263.
5. Alexander
Schmemann, 'Problems of Orthodoxy in America', St Vladimir's Seminary
Quarterly 8 (1964), pp. 75, 80.
6. F.X. Funk, Didascalia
et Constitutiones Apostolorum (Paderborn, 1905), vol.1, pp. 572-575.
7. The Final
Report of the Extraordinary Synod of Bishops, 1985 states: "The
ecclesiology of communion is the central and fundamental idea of the Council's
document" (II. C. n.1); The Virginia Report, Chapter 2.
8. The Virginia
Report , Chapter 2; Unitatis redintegratio, n. 2; The Final Report of the
Extraordinary Synod of Bishops, 1985, II. C. n. 1.
9. First Report
of the Eames Commision paras 26-27; Lumen gentium, n.8; Unitatis
redintegratio, n. 3.
10. The Virginia
Report, Chapter 3.
11. Ut Unum
Sint, n. 9.
12. The Ecumenical
Directory (1993), n. 10 and Ut Unum Sint, n. 79.
13. Unitatis
redintegratio, n.3; cf. Lumen gentium, n. 8.
14. Ut Unum
Sint, n. 13.
15. The
Truth Shall Make you Free: Report of the 1988 Lambeth Conference (London:
CHP, 1988) Dogmatic and Pastoral Concerns, p. 110. He is 'a pastor in the
service of unity, offers a ministry of service, care and support to the
Communion' (The Virginia Report, in The Official Report of
the Lambeth Conference, 1998, p. 56).
16. Unitatis
redintegratio, n. 2.
17. Robert
Runcie, Opening Address to the Lambeth Conference, The Truth Shall
Make You Free, The Lambeth Conference 1988, pp. 16 and 17.
18. The
Virginia Report, Chapter 5, para. 24; cf also Resolution 34 of the
ACC 2002 having in mind the emphasis on mutual responsibility and interdependence
called upon: '1) dioceses and individual bishops not to undertake unilateral
actions or adopt policies which would strain our communion with one another
without reference to their provincial authorities; 2) provincial authorities
to have in mind the impact of their decisions within the wider Communion;
and 3) all members of the Communion, even in our disagreements to have
in mind the 'need for courtesy, tolerance, mutual respect and prayer for
one another' (1998, II.2 e).
19. Lumen
gentium, n. 22. Lumen gentium elaborates on the ministry
of the Bishop of Rome, who 'presides over the whole assembly of charity
and protects their legitimate variety, while at the same time taking care
that these differences do not hinder unity, but rather contribute to it?'
(n. 13). 'There never is an ecumenical council which is not confirmed or
at least recognized as such by Peter's successor. And it is the prerogative
of the Roman Pontiff to convoke such councils, to preside over them and
to confirm them' (n. 22).
20. Ibid.
21. Ibid, n.
12.
22. Virginia
Report, chapter 3, para. 4.
23.Novo
Millennio Ineunte, n. 43.
24 Communion
in Mission, n. 4.
25. The 'Guide
for Ecumenical Partners', issued by the Anglican Communion Office following
the Primates' Meeting of Oct. 15-16, 2003, anticipated the consequences
of the New Hampshire consecration and spoke of the (forthcoming) discernment
process in the following terms: 'Questions remain about the nature, extent
and duration of this impaired or broken communion. Will a breach in Communion
between two parts of the Anglican Communion mean a Communion-wide split
with each province having to choose between one side or the other? How
will these divisions affect the relationship of each province with the
See of Canterbury as the center of unity of the Communion?' (Anglican Communion
News Service, October 17, 2003).
26. Statement
from the Diocese of New Hampshire, October 17, 2003 (Anglican Communion
News Service 3639). Regarding the discernment process at the General Synod
of the Episcopal Church USA, see the statement of ECUSA Primate and Presiding
Bishop Frank Griswold, August 8, 2003 (General Convention website).
27. Gift (53)
also takes note of the 1998 Lambeth Conference Resolution which requested
the Primates' Meeting to initiate a study in each province 'on whether
effective communion, at all levels, does not require appropriate instruments,
with due safeguards, not only for legislation, but also for oversight -
as well as on the issue of a universal ministry in the service of Christian
unity' [Resolution III, 8 (h)].
28. Regarding
homosexual relationships, Life in Christ (87) notes: 'Both our communions
affirm the importance and significance of human friendship and affection
among men and women, whether married or single. Both affirm that all persons,
including those of homosexual orientation, are made in the divine image
and share the full dignity of human creatureliness. Both affirm that a
faithful and lifelong marriage between a man and a woman provides the normative
context for a fully sexual relationship. Both appeal to Scripture and the
natural order as the sources of their teaching on this issue. Both reject,
therefore, the claim sometimes made, that homosexual relationships and
married relationships are morally equivalent, and equally capable of expressing
the right ordering and use of the sexual drive. Such ordering and use,
we believe, are an essential aspect of life in Christ.
29. 'our different
approach to the formulation of law are relevant (cf. Para 52). Roman Catholic
teaching holds that homosexual activity is 'intrinsically disordered',
and concludes that it is always objectively wrong. This affects the kind
of pastoral advice that is given to homosexual persons. Anglicans could
agree that such activity is disordered; but there may well be differences
among them in the consequent moral and pastoral advice they would think
it right to offer to those seeking their counsel and direction' (Life in
Christ, 87).