Vatican Official Proposes Ecumenical Catechism
Cardinal asks dialogue partners if an ecumenical catechism might work
By Cindy Wooden
Catholic News Service
VATICAN CITY (CNS) — A Vatican official has floated the idea of a shared “ecumenical catechism” as one of the potential fruits of 40 years of dialogue among Catholics, Anglicans, Lutherans, Methodists and members of the Reformed churches.
“We have affirmed our common foundation in Jesus Christ and the Holy Trinity as expressed in our common creed and in the doctrine of the first ecumenical councils,” Cardinal Walter Kasper, president of the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity, told representatives of the churches.
Opening a three-day symposium at the Vatican to brainstorm on the future of ecumenism, Cardinal Kasper said it is essential “to keep alive the memory of our achievements” in dialogue, educate the faithful about how much has been accomplished and prepare a new generation to carry on the work.
He said the members of his council “proposed an ecumenical catechism that would be written in consultation with our partners,” but “we do not yet have any idea how such a catechism could be structured and written.”
One thing for sure, he said, is that there is a need for “an ecumenism of basics that identifies, reinforces and deepens the common foundation” of faith in Christ and belief in the tenets of the creed. The churches may hold those positions officially, but if their members do not hold firmly to the basics of Christian faith, the dialogue cannot move forward, the cardinal said.
Cardinal Kasper, a theologian who will be 77 in March and has led the council for nine years, also said that ecumenical dialogue “is perhaps in danger of becoming a matter for specialists and thus of moving away from the grassroots.”
He called for “a people-centered ecumenism” that would support and give new energy to the theological dialogues.
The symposium was a follow-up to the publication in October of “Harvesting the Fruits,” a book complied by Cardinal Kasper and his staff summarizing the results of 40 years of official Catholic dialogue with the Anglican Communion, the Lutheran World Federation, the World Methodist Council and the World Alliance of Reformed Churches.
As for questions that still must be tackled in order for Christians to reach full unity and be able to share the Eucharist, the cardinal identified two basic areas: a common understanding of the church and its structure; and a common approach to applying the Gospel to modern social and moral concerns without falling into relativism.
Ethical issues, such as homosexuality and women’s equality, not only divide churches, he said, they raise more fundamental questions for modern and post-modern society, such as, “What is man, and what does it mean to be a man or woman in God’s plan?”
In the area of church structure and ministry, he said, the dialogues have seen progress toward a common agreement on the sacramental nature of ordination and on apostolic succession in the ministry of bishops, and have taken initial steps toward discussing the primacy of the bishop of Rome, the pope.
But on a more basic level, the dialogues must get into “not only what is the church, but where is the church? Has God given his church a specific structure or has he left the church to find its own structure, in such a way that a pluralism of structures is possible?” Cardinal Kasper asked.
The cardinal said the Vatican needs to better explain to its dialogue partners the Catholic conviction that “the Catholic Church is the church of Christ and that the Catholic Church is the true church,” even while “there exist many and important elements of the church of Christ outside the visible boundaries of the Catholic Church.”
The Catholic Church does believe “there are deficits in the other churches,” he said. “Yet on another level there are deficits, or rather wounds stemming from division and wounds deriving from sin, also in the Catholic Church.”
Ecumenical dialogue is the place where all Christians “learn to grow and mature in their faithfulness to Christ,” he said, and as each moves closer to Christ, they naturally will move closer to each other.
END


Who knows if this will ever come to fruition. Obvioulsy the primacy of the Pope is the largest stumbling block between the Orthodox church and the Catholic church. There is talk of using the phrase that the Pope is “first among Patriachs”.
How many Protestants would be able to cope with this phrase I wonder:-
“the Catholic Church is the church of Christ and that the Catholic Church is the true church,”
Many folks Anglo-Catholics in the UK have seriously considered the Pope’s offer to the Anglicans, however, what would they be asked to believe about Mary, once they had swum the Tiber? To many Anglicans the Catholic view of Mary is a bridge to far.
I noticed recently that the Pope met a delegation of the ELCA, I wonder how much the Catholics would have in common with the Evangelical Lutheran Church of America (ELCA), being as they recently endorsed gay marriage and changed their standards to allow pastors and other rostered leaders to be in committed same-sex relationships.
Sorry just realised that the Orthodox Church was not mentioned in the article, which makes my first comment a little irrelevant.
“Ecumenical” is defined by Rome. It always leads to others having to submit themselves under the authority of Pope. No, not interested. Let’s not forget what the Bible teaches about the Papacy.
Let’s hope they adopt Luther’s Small Catechism, or even the entire Book of Concord, as the text!
Amen, Matt!
I can’t imagine the Roman Catholic Church making any changes – it would be everyone else who would expected to change. They already claim to be the “true” church.
Indeed. At the end of the dialogue, we all end up Catholic. So, there is no dialogue at all, except to find language to make this “unity” appear so.
Did you notice, re that, how what are “deficits’ in other bodies are morphed into “wounds” in the RCC, not deficits?
This sounds a lot like the Orange Catholic Bible from the Ecumenical Translators in Frank Herbert’s Dune novels. Science Fiction!
Don’t catechisms usually end as official confessions or doctrinal statements? This could be the mother of all ecumenical agreements!
The Orange Catholic Bible makes an appearance on brother McCain’s blog comments. Glad to see I’m not the only geek around here.
I have a couple of question about the Catholic Church. Do they believe that every other Christian church is a false church and therefore not truly “Christian?” Do they believe people other than Catholics are not saved and damned to hell? If the answer to both of these questions is yes, than I think an ecumenical catechism would be laughable.