1. Introduction
1.1. From the beginning of the Disciples-Roman
Catholic Dialogue in 1977 the goal was to enable all Christians
to be together in the visible unity of the one Church of God.
In the report of the first phase, the Commission accepted 'as
a basic principle of ecumenism that there can be only one Church
of God (unica Ecclesia) and that this Church already exists';
furthermore it stated, 'We see ourselves as having a communion
in via... Now we have the task of giving external expression
to the communion in via' (Apostolicity and Catholicity, p.
11). This was reaffirmed in the report of the second phase: 'Disciples
and Roman Catholics continued their dialogue in order to discover
the degree of communion they already share. Their goal is to be
together, growing in this communion and fostering it' (The
Church as Communion in Christ, § 9). After restating some
of the agreements about the vision of unity in the first report,
the second report continued, 'the goal of this statement of convergence
is to elucidate a shared vision of the Church' (The Church
as Communion in Christ, §§ 19-20). As we report on this third
phase of dialogue, we reaffirm these convictions about our goal.
1.2. This Report is a theological reflection.
But it arises out of regular meetings each year in which we prayed
and studied the Bible together, met with members of local congregations,
and studied and discussed together the similarities and differences
that characterize our two communities.1
This sharing locally and internationally is a vital part of the
'spiritual ecumenism' referred to in the first report.
1.3. Both the previous reports referred to the
relationship of the individual and the Church. Apostolicity
and Catholicity noted that 'each Christian's faith is inseparable
from the life of the community Personal faith is an appropriation
of the Church's faith and depends on it for authenticity as well
as for nurture' (p. 9). The Church as Communion in Christ stated
that 'the inner dynamism of the gift of faith - the power of the
Holy Spirit which draws believers into spiritual unity - sustains
the interaction of the faith of the individual and the faith of
the community' (§40). From this starting point, we reflected on
how the faith is handed on from one generation to another through
history; and came to see that the proclamation of the Good News
provided a crucial context for understanding the whole process
of receiving and handing on the faith.
1.4. Disciples and Roman Catholics share a commitment
to the Gospel of Jesus Christ; they place a similar emphasis on
the Church as communion, and on the sacraments of baptism and
eucharist. They share some common beliefs about the nature of
the Church; yet there are also some differences, which reveal
themselves in different structures. Perhaps the major query from
a Roman Catholic perspective is how Disciples, with an apparent
lack of structure and creedal formulations, have handed on the
Gospel. For Disciples, on the other hand, the main question is
whether the more elaborate hierarchical structure of the Roman
Catholic Church, with an apparent emphasis on uniformity, gives
people sufficient freedom of conscience in their response to the
Gospel.
1.5. Both Disciples and Roman Catholics acknowledge
that in the New Testament the community of believers is primary,
and that the identity of individuals is defined by their membership
in the community, not vice versa. This understanding, which
has been traditional for Roman Catholics, finds its own expression
among Disciples. Throughout Disciples history there has also been
a concern to identify with that which was believed always, everywhere
and by everybody (to use a phrase of St Vincent of Lérins).
The common sense philosophy characteristic of the early Disciples
leader, Alexander Campbell, depended on an appeal to that which
the community as a whole could accept. This community is the context
in and through which the Christian message is received and lived
out.
1.6. The conviction that it is necessary for every
Christian to come to a personal confession of faith (which has
sometimes been regarded as representing an individualistic emphasis)
does not in any way deny the logical and chronological priority
of the faith of the whole Christian community of believers. Rather
than arguing at length about the relative importance of the individual
and the Church, the Commission affirms that a believers Yes to
Christ incorporates that person into the Yes of faith spoken by
the Church throughout the ages (cf. 2 Cor 1:20).
1.7. This Report therefore begins with a discussion
of the Word of God, proclaimed and received (section 2) and continues
with a discussion of how the Church in history holds to the faith
(section 3). It then considers the question of the relation between
the teaching office of the Church and Christian freedom (section
4), and concludes by considering the mission of the whole Church
in handing on the faith (section 5). We offer this Report hoping
to remove mutual misunderstandings, to diminish the differences
which still separate us and to renew the vital link between the
mission and unity of the Church.
2. The Word of God, Proclaimed and Received
The Missionary Nature of the Church
2.1. The Christian faith announces that God has
reached out to humanity decisively in the Incarnation. Jesus Christ
is the living Word, the mediator and fullness of revelation. New
Testament writers express, in a variety of ways, the truth that
God wills to gather all humanity into the community that shares
in the communion between the Father and Son in the Spirit (cf.
Eph 1:9-10, Col 1:19-20, 1 Jn 1:3). The Holy Spirit, sent to make
real the work of Christ in mysterious ways which are not all revealed,
is thus the agent of mission. The Church is gathered by God to
carry on the work of the twofold mission of the Son and the Holy
Spirit. Thus, the Church is essentially a missionary community,
a community of those sent into the world to proclaim the offer
of God's gifts to all persons.
2.2. In living out its missionary identity the
Church proclaims the Word of God and invites persons to be converted
and become part of the communion of believers. Only there can
the full meaning of the Gospel be known. Our two communions are
convinced that, in all the Church says and does, its call to proclaim
salvation is accompanied by the presence of the Holy Spirit empowering
the Church to discern that which is necessary for salvation.
Hearing the Word of God
2.3. One way in which the Holy Spirit has assisted
the Church in its call to proclaim salvation to all is in the
writing and identification of the books that came to be in the
Bible. The books of the Bible had human authors to be sure; nevertheless,
God is heard speaking through these books. We agree that we hear
the Word of God through the Bible when it is used in celebrating
the sacraments, in preaching, in teaching the faith and in personal
devotional activities.
2.4. Members of each communion participate in
a living tradition of scriptural interpretation and prayer, which
they pass on to others. The shaping of distinctive common ways
of understanding and sharing the scriptural text links each Christian
and each generation of Christians with those who have preceded
them. It is through the reading and interpretation of the Scriptures
in the congregational life of each communion that the Word of
God is made real in both praise of God and Christian discipleship.
Thus, the Gospel message leads necessarily to life in community,
which in turn helps to shape the understanding of the message
for subsequent generations (cf. The Church as Communion
in Christ, §§ 13-14, 21-23). Both Disciples of Christ and
Roman Catholics affirm that the Holy Spirit guides the Church,
which because of this guidance will not finally fail in its task
of proclaiming the Gospel. Our ultimate confidence is in God's
promise to bring about the divine purpose for all.
2.5. Disciples of Christ and Roman Catholics agree
on the necessary link between the Word and the sacraments. The
Word of God has its own efficacy: and its saving power is experienced
most fully when the Word is received together with the sacraments,
especially the Eucharist. The fullness of the Good News is received
in the gift of communion with God and with each other, a communion
beginning through baptism and incorporation into the Body of Christ
and extending throughout one's fife. In both the Roman Catholic
Church and the Disciples of Christ the sacraments; make real the
communion the Gospel announces (cf. Apostolicity and
Catholicity, pp. 9, 12). The sacraments are by their nature
integral to the life and being of the Church. They bring a new
believer into the community, creating a link between the believer
and all other Christians in every time and place. Thus each believer
receives the living Tradition, becomes part of it, and participates
in passing it on.
3. Holding to the Faith: The Church in History
3.1 As they waited in expectation for the return
of the Lord, Christians wanted to remain faithful to him while
they celebrated his presence in word and sacrament. The Church
has always recognized the need to hold on to the memory of the
apostolic community about what God has done in Christ. Both Disciples
and Roman Catholics recognize that the canon of the Scriptures,
councils of the Church, and creeds confessing the faith were developed
as instruments to do this, under the promised guidance of the
Holy Spirit (Jn 14:26) (cf. The Church as Communion
in Christ, § 36). In our dialogue we have also come to appreciate
more deeply the process the Church used in discerning these instruments
of faithfulness; this process of discernment continues whenever
the Church seeks to confess the Gospel with courage in the face
of new situations and challenges. Through our discussions on the
formation of the canon, on councils and the declaration of the
faith, and on the process of discerning the Gospel in every age,
we have enriched our understanding of the ways that the Church
holds on to the faith throughout history.
Formation of the Canon
3.2. Why did Christians develop a canon of the
books they came to regard as their Scriptures? The reason can
be stated simply: Christians wanted to hold on to the same faith
preached by the apostolic community. In the face of controversies
about the content of the faith, the Churches in the East and the
West began to list the venerable books, which they considered
as the genuine documents of God's revelation, containing the substance
of the apostolic faith and expressing the will of God for Christian
life. In this diverse group of books the Church recognized the
authentic Word of God in its written form inspired by the Holy
Spirit.
3.3. The early churches included those begun by
the apostles; but in addition churches were considered 'apostolic'
in which the apostles preached or to which they wrote letters.
Some books not written by apostles were included in the early
lists making up the canon because they too came from the apostolic
era, they were sometimes read aloud during liturgical celebrations,
and they were in agreement with the apostolic tradition. The canon
also enabled those churches with no direct personal link to the
apostles to have the assurance that they too proclaimed the apostolic
faith in communion with the apostolic churches. The books which
constitute our New Testament are those in which, from apostolic
times, guided by the Holy Spirit, the local churches in communion
with one another had come to recognize the apostolic faith.
3.4. The way in which sayings and deeds of Jesus
were transmitted helps us to understand concretely what the authority
of the canon means. The deeds and words of Jesus were known and
'received' 2
in the communities of believers from the teaching and preaching
of the apostolic witnesses to the Christ-event. But not all these
deeds and words were included in the written gospels; and not
all the written gospels, but only four, were judged to have a
reliably apostolic origin and 'received' in the official canon.
3.5. The making of a list of books to serve as
a canon does not imply that the truth concerning God and the norms
for the guidance of Christian life are to be searched for only
in these documents. But if Christians want to hold on to their
faith, to preach authentic Christian doctrine, to live according
to authentic evangelical norms, they must look at these documents
and conform their words and deeds to these teachings. The intention
of the canon is to indicate where the heart of Christian faith
is authentically to be found, because the Church is sure that
in the documents listed - after centuries of testing - the 'memory'
of the Church of God has been faithfully preserved and transmitted
since earliest times.
3.6. Moreover, the Church beheves that the books
which comprise the canon belong to the work of the Holy Spirit
in history which keeps the Church indefectibly attached to the
revelation disclosed in the history of the People of God and ultimately
given in Christ Jesus. Thus setting the canon was at the same
time an act of obedience and of authority. In obedience to the
Holy Spirit the Church discerned which books contained the authentic
apostolic witness, and acted with authority to set these books
as its norm.
3.7. By holding together the Old Testament and
the New Testament in this canon of inspired books, the Church
shows its recognition of the links between the books inherited
from the Jewish community and the books recording the Church's
memory about Christ Jesus. And by holding together the rich but
limited variety of books within the New Testament itself, the
Church manifests that the diversity found there !s compatible
with the koinonia of all the faithful in 'one faith, one
Lord, one baptism' (Eph 4:5). The canon is therefore a symbol
of unity in the diversity of the Church's life; it is also part
of the givenness of that life.
3.8. The formation of the canon was a process
of ecclesial discernment which lasted many years and involved
many aspects of the life of the Church. Today Roman Catholics
and Disciples recognize the significance of this process and the
criteria which, at least implicitly, functioned to determine which
books were to be included or not to be included in the canon.
These criteria included apostolicity, conformity with the Gospel
of salvation in Jesus Christ, and use during liturgical celebrations.
But these interlocking criteria did not function in isolation
during the Church's discernment process.
3.9. Although official lists were authorized by
local churches as early as the second century, only in 1442 did
the canon enter a conciliar decree when the Council of Florence
listed the books of the canon within its statement on union with
the Copts. While this was quite a long time after the canon-making
process of the early Church, the center or heart of the canon
had not been questioned. Disagreements between the Reformers and
the Council of Trent about the canon of Scripture concerned only
the somewhat imprecise edges of the canon of the Old Testament.3
The differences between Roman Catholics and Disciples on the number
of books in the Old Testament need not be Church-dividing.
3.10. There is a close relationship between the
canon of the Scriptures and the unity of the Church. Because it
is held in common by Christians, the Bible holds Christians together
with one another as they read and proclaim the same Word of God
received from the Church of the apostles. The diversity of the
Bible also helps to explain why the same Word of God has led to
different emphases among different Christian communities. The
canon of the Scriptures determines and supports the faith of both
of our communions, so Roman Catholics and Disciples again and
again recognize each other as brothers and sisters in Christ.
Councils and the Declaration of the Faith
3.11. Disciples and Roman Catholics share the
desire to hold on to the emphasis on Church unity which characterized
the patristic period of the Church's history. For Roman Catholics
the patristic writers are witnesses to the Tradition who have
a special authority because their foundational insights on the
central trinitarian, christological, and sacramental teachings
have been received by the Church, notably through the great councils.
Disciples for their part have received the major teachings of
the patristic period without necessarily always using its texts
explicitly However most Disciples theologians turn less readily
to the patristic writers, the councils and creeds, than do Roman
Catholics.
3.12. Roman Catholics and Disciples agree in recognizing
the theological definitions of the first seven ecumenical councils
as part of the common history of the Church. In these councils
the Church responded to new controversies about the content of
its faith and sought to hold on to the authentic teaching received
from the apostles.
3.13. We discovered that we share more agreement
about these seven early councils than previously recognized. Disciples
and Roman Catholics together recognize the first seven councils
as authentic gatherings of the Church able to speak in the name
of the whole Church for four main reasons:
a) The councils articulated and defined
the mystery of the Triune God manifested in history, revealed
through Christ Jesus, which the Church has to proclaim 'until
he comes again'.
b) The councils were conscious that Christ
is in their midst because they were gathered in his name. In their
teachings received by the Church they always remained 'under the
Gospel': the Holy Spirit was at work in the community to maintain
it in an authentic communion with what Christ did and taught despite
the sometimes questionable tactics of some participants.
c) In their decisions the councils
respected and preserved the diversity of traditions present in
the Scriptures. As the councils of Nicaea and Chalcedon themselves
demonstrate, councils wished only to be at the service of the
Scriptures. Conciliar definitions were not intended as substitutes
for the language of the New Testament authors; they clarified
and made explicit the main affirmations of the Scriptures.
d) The councils gathered the bishops, who
were seen as succeeding to the apostolic community. As leaders
of their communities presiding at the Eucharist, they were considered
to embody their local churches and as such were able to speak
for them in the process of clarifying or defining the faith. Subsequent
to the councils, the bishops were responsible for interpreting
the councils' decisions to their churches. All local churches
were drawn into the decisions of the councils through reception
afterwards.
3.14. Roman Catholics believe that their life
continues to be shaped by the work of the seven ecumenical councils
celebrated and received by the Eastern and Western Churches together.
The Roman Catholic Church is assured that some of its provincial
councils and its general councils assembled since the separation
between the West and East and the Reformation divisions are providential
instruments the Spirit of God uses to keep the People of God faithful
to the Gospel. Moreover the Roman Catholic Church claims that,
when the college of bishops meets in an ecumenical council which
is confirmed or at least recognized as such by the Bishop of Rome,
it is able to define doctrine as divinely revealed, to be accepted
with the obedience of faith.
3.15. The situation is not the same for the communities
of the Disciples. Certainly Disciples recognize that their life
continues to be shaped by many of the declarations and decisions
of the councils - the seven ecumenical councils and some of the
Western general councils - celebrated before the Reformation.
The Disciples tradition has never held the theological positions
condemned by the early ecumenical councils. Disciples hold that
the conciliar christological and trinitarian definitions belong
to the providential oikonomia (ordering) by which the Church
of God kept within the path of the Gospel and preserved from grave
distortions in its confession of Christ Jesus, the Savior. To
the extent that they have accepted the decisions of those councils,
Disciples have acknowledged their authority.
3.16. The first generation of Disciples leaders
was critical of the way in which confessions of faith were used
as tests of fellowship, particularly at the Communion Table. The
main targets of their criticism were the Reformation and post-Reformation
confessions such as the Westminster Confession and the Secession
Testimony,4
rather than the Apostles' or Nicene Creeds. The motto 'No Creed
but Christ' was not intended to exclude the use of creeds for
the purpose of teaching the faith. Disciples, however, have preferred
to use New Testament confessions of faith; they emphasize the
dependence of the conciliar creeds on the New Testament.
3.17. Today both Disciples and Roman Catholics
draw on the central teachings of the first seven councils when
judging new ideas or practices proposed in our churches. These
conciliar teachings 'define the boundaries within which to search
for faithful interpretations of the Gospel. For example, a wide
diversity of theological understandings of Christ can be used
in preaching and teaching, but an understanding of Christ in opposition
to the teaching of Nicaea or Chalcedon is not acceptable. At the
same time, affirming the teachings of these councils does not
imply affirmation of their world view or conceptual structure.
Both Roman Catholics and Disciples recognize that no statement
exhausts the mystery of God to which it points and that attempts
to express in human language the mystery of God's saving work
for humanity are open to restatement. A distinction may be drawn
between the language in which conciliar definitions are expressed
and the reality to which they bear witness. It may be necessary
to restate that reality in different terms in later ages, but
such restatement will always be faithful to the truth originally
intended, and not contradict it. In fact, the councils demonstrate
that sometimes the Church finds such restatement necessary precisely
in order to remain in continuity with the faith it has received.
3.18. The ecumenical commitment of the Second
Vatican Council acts today as an invitation to Disciples to explore
together with Roman Catholics what more may be received from the
heritage of the councils. Ecumenical dialogue has become one of
the most important channels for the diffusion and reception of
conciliar teaching, and because of such dialogue Disciples are
more ready than in the past to use the Nicene Creed in the celebration
of the eucharist as Roman Catholics do. In fact, today some Disciples
congregations are in a process of 're-reception of the doctrinal
formulations of the early councils. Yet ultimately the full reception
of the work of councils will be unselfconscious, reflected in
the everyday teaching and worship of the Church.
3.19. The history of councils reveals Gods guidance,
but human sinfulness and frailty can be seen there as well. Sometimes
councils failed to overcome divisions. Despite this, the history
of the conciliar process itself gives our churches a record of
a series of solutions to problems threatening the Church's unity
in faith. The heritage of the councils shows that a common faith
can be maintained along with a diversity of theological interpretations.
Disciples and Roman Catholics can take hope from the struggle
for unity in this conciliar heritage.
Discerning the Gospel in Every Age
3.20. As the Commission discovered many unexpected
agreements about the canon of the Scriptures, ecumenical councils
and the declaration of the faith, we also. discovered agreements
about the process by which they came to be received into the life
and teaching of the Church. In fact, this process of discerning
the Gospel is central to the life of the Church because of what
God has done 'for us and our salvation' (Nicene Creed).
3.21. Christians believe that God has acted within,
indeed has entered, history in Jesus Christ. Living in Christ,
the Church is both an eschatological and an historical reality.
The Church belongs to the reality of salvation and to the oikonomia
(ordering) revealed in the incarnation of the Son of God, who
became flesh in an authentic and concrete humanity marked by its
historical and cultural context.
3.22. The discernment of the meaning of the revealed
truth and of the imperatives of Christ's will for his people takes
place in this historical situation. It cannot be detached from
the contingencies of human dependence in regard to history. Time
provides the opportunity for the Church to sift authentic from
inauthentic developments in its tradition.
3.23. The discernment and reception of the Word
of Truth are the fruit of the presence in all the faithful of
the sensus fidei (the sense of the faith). It belongs to
their Christian being, The Spirit gives to all the baptized believers
this sensus fidei, together with a diversity of charisms.
Among these aria the gifts attached to the functions of exercising
episkope (oversight), of teaching, of searching the meaning
of the revealed Word through study and research. (The process
of authoritative teaching is discussed further in §§ 4.9-4.16.)
3.24. This meaning is not discerned by the mere
addition of individual insights. It is the result of the communion
of all these diverse charisms expressing the mind of the entire
Body of Christ, through a process of mutual reception. To be authentic,
ecclesial agreement in matters of faith will include ordained
ministers with responsibility for teaching in the Church, scholars
working within the community of faith, and the body of the faithful
who receive and celebrate this consensus in their worship and
witness.
3.25. Disciples and Roman Catholics agree that
the Church must always be sensitive to contemporary questions
and to diversity of cultures when discerning authentic developments
in its understanding of the Gospel. Elements harmful to the Gospel
must be distinguished from the insights necessary for its effective
proclamation in that time and place. In every changing circumstance
of its history the Church stands under the judgment of God.
3.26. In many cases an immediate discernment is
impossible because the community as such has to be involved in
the complex dynamism of reception. Disciples and Roman Catholics
both recognize the importance of the way in which the Gospel has
been received and handed on from generation to generation for
an authentic understanding of Scripture. They recognize a process
of development in the understanding of doctrine in the Church
which can be traced through history. Reception plays a crucial
part in this ongoing process. Disciples and Roman Catholics are
not unanimous on the ways in which reception is achieved, but
they agree on its necessity.
4. Receiving the Faith: The Individual in the Community
4.1. Receiving the faith from previous generations
is an important and complex process. Through the fife and teaching
of the Church each generation seeks to work out the meaning and
implications of obedience to the Word of God in that time and
place. Here there is a difference of emphasis between Disciples
and Roman Catholics on the relative weight given to individual
discernment and conscience, on the one hand, and to the communal
mind of the Church on the other. In The Church as Communion
in Christ, we wrote: 'Roman Catholics are convinced that,
although they must decide for themselves, they cannot decide by
themselves. Disciples, on the other hand, are convinced that,
although they cannot decide by themselves, they must decide for
themselves' (§ 16). This section explores this difference further.
Nevertheless both Disciples and Roman Catholics agree that obedience
to the Word of God has priority.
Conscience, Freedom and Being in Christ
4.2. The mission of the Church is to proclaim
the Word of God. As it does so, the Church respects the freedom
of every human being created 'in the image and likeness of God'
(cf. Gen 1:26-27). Both Roman Catholics and Disciples agree
that the Church affirms each person's freedom; but the Church
also has a responsibility to help its members make informed decisions,
not to misuse the freedom that is God's gift, but use it for following
God's will.
4.3. Consideration of Christian freedom necessarily
involves examination of the role of the conscience in matters
of belief For people need to be convinced about the teaching they
receive. The words of St Paul come to mind, 'The faith that you
have, have as your own conviction before God' (Rom 14:22).
4.4. What is the role of conscience in matters
of belief? Disciples of Christ and Roman Catholics agree that
what we call human conscience is rightly described by the classical
image of a voice of God, present in the heart of every human being.
This is shown by St Paul's discussion of the position of Gentiles
in relation to the Mosaic law when he writes, 'They show that
what the law requires is written on their hearts, to which their
own conscience bears witness' (Rom 2:15). Conscience may also
be seen as a spiritual perception of what conforms with the dignity
of the 'image of God' and what has to be done according to this
dignity. This first level of conscience is the work of God and,
although sin can cloud conscience, it cannot destroy it.
4.5. The Church has a truth to teach which its
members cannot discover only by themselves: it has been revealed
in the person and work of Jesus Christ and kept in the memory
which is guarded by the community of believers. In order to say
a free human Yes to the Gospel Christians need to know to whom
and to what they are called to say Yes. Indeed they will remain
free to say Yes or No. It is their responsibility to form a conscience
which is open to what God is saying. Nothing can oblige them to
act against their perception of the will of God. Family, school,
friends, and the culture all play a part in influencing human
decisions. Because the Church has received from God the mission
to teach the Gospel, it has a duty to help its members to make
the faith of the Church their own in order to inform their conscience.
This is therefore the second level of Christian conscience - to
make a reasoned response to the revelation of God in Jesus Christ.
4.6. Sometimes in the history of the Church individuals
or groups, acting in obedience to the Word of God as they discerned
it, have disagreed with the prevailing teaching or practice. Disciples
and Roman Catholics respond to this situation differently. Disciples
came into existence because their leaders were unwilling to accept
the restrictions which Presbyterians placed on access to the Lord's
Table. This memory has shaped their attitude towards the issue
of disagreement with prevailing views. The nature of the history
of the Roman Catholic Church means that it has no similar dominant
memory; it also places a strong emphasis on the value of unity.
Further work and reflection is needed on these differences. Nevertheless
Disciples and Roman Catholics agree that certain groups in the
history of the Church have made an important and prophetic witness
which has not immediately been recognized.
4.7. If men and women want to be in harmony with
God, they have to hear and obey the voice of their conscience,
informed and enlightened by the Word of God, assisted by the gifts
of the Holy Spirit and prudent advice, and guided by the teaching
of the Church. Christians respond to the Gospel as the first disciples
responded to the call of Christ; but like those first disciples
they discover the truth of the words of Jesus, 'You did not choose
me but I chose you' (Jn 15:16). In so doing they are led to the
peace and happiness of the Kingdom for which they are created
and redeemed.
4.8. The Commission's discussion has been important
in dispelling old stereotypes, such as the idea that the Roman
Catholic Church has no place for freedom of conscience, or the
idea that Disciples place no limits on the freedom of conscience.
Both communions teach the place of the freedom of conscience and
both see limits to its exercise within the community. This leads
to two important agreements. Disciples and Roman Catholics both
recognize that commitment to the Gospel should be freely made.
They also recognize that living the Christian life is a continuous
process of receiving and; living by the teaching handed on in
the Church and making personal decisions which are themselves
shaped by life in communion with other believers.
Teaching with Authority
4.9. Both Disciples of Christ and Roman Catholics
agree that the faithful and truthful expression of the Gospel
is inherently persuasive, because its authority comes from God.
Members of both communions also agree that the discernment of
the authentic meaning of the revealed Word belongs to the whole
community, and that some members from within the community are
called and empowered by the Spirit to teach the Word of God. These
are the pastors. The Church as Communion in Christ stated that
'the ordained ministry is specifically given the charism. for
discerning, declaring and fostering what lies in the authentic
memory of the church! (§ 45). The ordained ministers have a specific
mission to teach the teaching Church; and their teaching role
is primary among their pastoral duties. Beyond that, Roman Catholics
and Disciples would locate and describe the exercise of ministerial
authority in different ways.
4.10. For Roman Catholics the discernment of the
authentic meaning of the revealed Word is expressed especially
in the charism of ordained ministry. The unity of the ordained
ministry is found in the communion of the bishop with all the
other bishops, a unity sustained by the Bishop of Rome. In this
way the authority to teach is linked intimately with all the churches
in the communion of the Apostolic Tradition. In the sacrament
of Holy Orders bishops are charged to 'preach the Gospel faithfully
and constantly... keeping in its authenticity and its integrity
the deposit of faith according to the tradition always and everywhere
transmitted since the apostles'. Moreover, their service of the
faith extends from their preaching and pastoral care to the celebration
of the sacraments, culminating in the Eucharist.
4.11. For Disciples this teaching is the function
of theologically educated, ordained ministers. These are faithful
persons, possessing the qualifications required to hand on the
apostolic records of Christ's teachings, and to teach correctly
what they contain. Alexander Campbell stated that 'it is indeed
the Holy Spirit and not the congregations, which creates Bishops
and Deacons. The Spirit gives the qualifications both natural
and acquired' (The Christian System, p. 185). The office
of what the first generation of Disciples called bishops (although
the title was afterwards abandoned) or elders is specifically
related to teaching and oversight within a particular local congregation.
This office developed differently in different countries.5
Local ministers do not teach alone but in consultation with
their colleagues. They use teaching materials prepared regionally,
nationally or internationally, often in collaboration with other
churches.
4.12. In the Roman Catholic Church the bishops
in communion with the Bishop of Rome are responsible for the ordinary
teaching of the Church. The purpose of such teaching is not only
to inform the faithful, but also to form their consciences so
that they may take responsible decisions, confident that they
are acting in accordance with the will of God. The special charism
of the bishop is to keep the church in his care in communion with
the whole Church. Thus individual bishops are sometimes necessarily
cautious in responding to new expressions of the faith. The Roman
Catholic Church has a clearly identified teaching office which
especially in contemporary times has articulated, with due regard
for consultation, an increasingly large number of positions on
new challenges or questions. Part of Roman Catholic life includes
understanding these explanations of current magisterial teaching
and also understanding the different levels of authority with
which they are taught. Thus for Roman Catholics the authenticity
of the faith is assured when bishops teach in communion with the
Bishop of Rome and the other bishops.
4.13. Among Disciples the teaching of the Church
is in the hands of ministers of local congregations, and the whole
community is encouraged to read and study the scriptures daily.
Following the confession of Christ celebrated in baptism, members
are nurtured by regular church attendance and participation in
the Lord's Supper. Disciples expect ordained ministers to teach
a common faith, taking account of the ecumenical consensus shared
by other churches with whom they are in fellowship. Those persons
with regional oversight also seek to keep their congregations
in communion with the whole Disciple fellowship and they are responsible
for exercising a prudent approach to the teaching of new ideas.
But Disciples are more reluctant than Roman Catholics to provide
official teaching on a wide range of matters. They often do not
seek to articulate an official position when a question is under
debate, preferring at times to leave the question open until time,
debate and continuation in eucharistic fellowship lead to a consensus.
This is an important difference in teaching practice. Beyond that,
church members have a significant measure of freedom and personal
responsibility to work out their own pattern of discipleship according
to their conscience.
4.14. Among both Disciples and Roman Catholics
teaching takes place within a set of limits or boundaries accepted
by the community. However, there are differences of emphasis.
Roman Catholics have emphasized that individuals cannot ignore
the faith which the Church has received through the Holy Spirit
when proposing a new understanding of some point. Since the community
of faith precedes the individual, anyone proposing new understandings
of Christian teaching must be prepared to accept the community's
discernment of those understandings. This communal discernment,
in which the teaching office has a special role, acts as a discipline
within which the theologian must work. Gradually a new consensus
may emerge. The Disciples' process encourages continued conversation
as the Church seeks to identify those expressions of the faith
that best show a clear relationship to the faith witnessed in
the New Testament. When responding to people whose views or practice
of the faith seem outside the common norms, the process is primarily
pastoral.
4.15. In both communions, especially when crucial
doctrinal and pastoral issues are at stake, it is the authority
of the pastors, guided by the Holy Spirit, which is the instrument
of God to keep the community in the right direction. It is their
responsibility to show how their teaching is in communion with
the faith of previous generations. Nevertheless bishops and pastors
have not only to be aware of the needs of the community but also
to weigh the various insights of the people and to 'receive' those
insights that are an authentic expression of the sensus fidei
(sense of the faith) of the whole Church of God. Their pastoral
charism implies what the Catholic tradition designates as 'pastoral
prudence' enabling them to take into consideration inseparably
the authentic evangelical truth and the concrete situation of
their flock within the whole People of God. Disciples have used
the term 'common sense', that is, the sense common to the believing
community. This prudence and common sense oblige the pastors to
teach always within the common faith of all the Christian communities,
with which they are in communion.
4.16. For both Roman Catholics and Disciples the
authority of the Church's teaching derives from a combination
of elements: the truths of revelation, the theological arguments
based upon them to guide human thought and behavior, the position
and experience of those responsible for teaching, and reception
by the whole Church. However, the relative weight attached to
the elements differs between Roman Catholics and Disciples. Thus
the claims made for the authority of the Church in matters of
conscience differ in our two communities. In the Roman Catholic
Church those with episcopal or primatial oversight, who hold the
apostolic teaching office conferred by ordination, can at times
make decisions binding on the conscience of Roman Catholics. For
Disciples ultimate oversight rests with a General Assembly or
Conference (comprising both ministers and other church members),
but their decisions do not bind the conscience of individual members.
The Commission needs to reflect further on whether these different
emphases can be held together within the one Body of Christ.
5. Handing on the Faith: The Mission of the Whole Church
Equipping the Faithful for Evangelization
5.1. Christ gave the whole Church the commission
to transmit, teach and nurture the faith. Through baptism all
members of the Body of Christ become partakers in the dignity
and mission of Christ - prophet, priest and king. Hence they are
called continually to receive and understand rightly the Word
of God. Furthermore, as the Commission stated in The Church
as Communion in Christ, the members of the Church, because
they are bound into a communion with the Father and with one another,
'are called to live in such a way that, in spite of their failures
and their weakness, this communion becomes visible and is constantly
in search of a more perfect realization (§ 47).
5.2. Being bound together in a common mission
undergirds our joint understanding that no teaching of the faith
can ever be a completely solitary task. Teaching the faith occurs
in many contexts: the loving mother or father showing a child
how to pray, Sunday School teachers and catechists struggling
to respond to the questions posed by young people and adults,
university and seminary professors instructing future ministers
and lay leaders, Roman Catholic bishops exercising their office
as teachers of the faith, Disciples leaders with regional oversight
guiding congregations through a church controversy, and many more.
All these experiences of teaching and learning deepen and strengthen
the ecclesial communion we have in Christ. This vision of the
whole Church's commission is crucial for our two communions.
5.3. Faith is normally taught to the younger generation
in the family, especially through the charisms God bestows on
faithful parents. It is their responsibility to give a child the
first experiences of love and constancy of care. These experiences
can help that child see himself or herself as a child of God.
When parents explicitly teach Christian truth to their children
and when they help them to be formed in virtue, they are working
to form in them a Christian conscience. But they do this also
through the examples they themselves offer of their own visible
struggle to live lives that are faithful to the Gospel and by
presenting to their children opportunities to learn about other
witnesses to faithful Christian living. Catholics and Disciples
agree in considering that the function of parents is rooted in
the grace of God. The Catholic Church emphasizes that this grace
is a particular gift of the sacrament of matrimony, and accordingly
is integral to the sacramental life of the Church.
5.4. In Catholic and Disciple congregations, systematic
initiation and education in the essential matters of faith (catechesis)
plays an important role, through Sunday Schools and catechetical
programs. For the Roman Catholic Church a very important part
is played by church schools, which have often been founded and
staffed by religious orders or congregations with the official
approval of the bishops or of the See of Rome. The Catechism of
the Catholic Church, an authoritative exposition of the one apostolic
tradition and a sure norm for teaching the faith, is used by local
episcopal conferences in ways adapted to the local situation,
but always in conformity with the common teaching of all the local
churches in communion with the See of Rome. The discipline of
the sacrament of penance and of participation in the eucharistic
liturgy, following the course of the Christian liturgical year,
with the example of Mary and the saints constantly presented,
is also a major occasion of catechetical instruction in the context
of prayer. Pastoral preparation for baptisms, marriage and death
is another. The responsibility for catechesis shared by all the
baptized is exercised by the bishops in a way unique to their
office. Among Disciples the regular pattern of worship, including
the weekly celebration of the Lord's Supper and preaching, provides
opportunity for spiritual growth and instruction. As well as preaching,
ministers teach Sunday School classes and prepare candidates for
baptism. Adult church school classes, and women's and young people's
fellowships form competent persons able to nurture Christian faith.
In different ways, both our traditions enable individuals to explore
the implications of Christian discipleship for themselves and
to share their experience with others.
5.5. In both our communions, professors, theologians
and scholars in universities, seminaries and elsewhere are involved
not only in the search for the right understanding of the sources
of the faith or the history of their transmission, but also in
teaching the teachers. An important contribution can also be made
to the life of the faithful by spiritual writers.
5.6. The essential test for the Church's teaching
is its faithfulness to the Gospel. Teaching the faith is more
than communicating the content of a catechism or a book on Bible
history and doctrine. It is inseparable from the witness of a
faithful life and authentic devotion to God and the Church. Here
the authority comes from the baptismal and eucharistic grace at
work in the lives of Christians, especially those whose faithfulness
captures the imagination of the community. Conversion to Christ
is a lifelong process, and in the Church Christians are challenged
repeatedly to receive the fullness of the Gospel.
5.7. The Church itself is also called continually
to receive the fullness of the Gospel. This is normally the fruit
of a long process of interaction within the community. However,
there may be occasions when an immediate decision needs to be
taken for the sake of the Gospel. Such was the decision of the
early Church to admit Gentile Christians without requiring them
to conform to the whole Jewish law; in more recent centuries the
decision of certain Christians to oppose slavery without waiting
for a church consensus might be a similar example. The discernment
process can be enhanced as the voices of other Christian communities
and the insights of ecumenical work are taken into account. The
teaching and living in the Gospel of one communion may bring to
mind an aspect of Christian faith or practice which others have
neglected, and are therefore called to 'receive'. The implications
of this for our understanding of communion require further patient
discussion.
Evangelization by Word and Witness
5.8. In Jesus Christ the truth of God has come
into the world in an historically unsurpassable and definitive
way. The news of this is liberating and life-giving, yet also
demanding; it is simultaneously gift and call. The good news calls
for faith in the one who died and was raised by God to new life;
it calls for repentance and a radical transformation of life.
This proclamation of the good news is what is meant by evangelism
or evangelization. The Church is by nature a missionary community,
a community of those who are sent by God into the world to share
in the proclamation of the good news (Mark 16:15-16). Its proclamation
of the Gospel through preaching and the celebration of the sacraments
requires intentional commitment to the task of evangelization.
The message must be communicated in words to those who have never
heard it, to those who have heard it but are no longer active
in the life of the Church and to those who continue to shape their
lives in and through the Church.
5.9. Speaking and telling are not the only ways
to evangelize. The witness of holy lives, strengthened by the
Eucharist, is also integral to the mission of the Church. God's
good news can be expressed in sacrificial lives and acts of mercy,
before any word is spoken. Authentic witness to the Gospel takes
place through lives of faithfulness to God sustained by prayer,
self-denial and acts of love.
5.10. Evangelization, which brings persons into
life-giving communion with God and with others, requires both
persuasive words and the effective expression of the new life
being offered. Those who are led to profess the Gospel will also
show lives truly turned from concern for self to love of neighbor.
Such love today will issue in witness to the cause of justice.
When the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) in the U.S.A.
and Canada approved new principles for its Division of Overseas
Ministries in 1981, it stated that 'Evangelism is incomplete unless
deed matches proclamation. In fact, in some contexts the deed
is the only possible proclamation'. Pope John Paul II stated that
through the Gospel message, the Church offers a force for liberation
which promotes development precisely because it leads to conversion
of heart and ways of thinking, fosters the recognition of each
person's dignity, encourages solidarity, commitment and service
of one's neighbor, and gives everyone a place in God's plan, which
is the building of his Kingdom of peace and justice, beginning
already in this life' (Redemptoris Missio, § 59). Disciples
and Roman Catholics therefore agree that the Church must be a
community with structures which facilitate evangelization and
one which is a credible witness to the Gospel it proclaims.
5.11. All Christians are called to the work of
evangelization, although some take on special roles. Parents and
teachers hand on the faith to children; religious orders devoted
to evangelization emerge; missionary societies encourage and support
the work; Christian schools, youth movements and lay adult organizations
appear on the scene to do specific tasks. Through all of these
efforts, the work of evangelization is strengthened. Ordained
ministers have the special responsibility to lead and build up
the community. Furthermore, the teaching office supports the work
of evangelization by serving the church's unity in faith and life.
Thus the Church is extended by the establishment of new local
churches of those committed to the cause of evangelization. When
all work together, the Church witnesses to the fact that the Gospel
is not only a dream, that with the grace of the Spirit it is possible
to live according to the Word of God.
5.12. Evangelization and the unity of the Church
go together. The concern to link evangelization and the unity
of the Church is a particular characteristic of Disciples of Christ
and of Roman Catholics. The Decree on Ecumenism of the
Second Vatican Council states that the division among Christians
'is clearly contrary to Christ's will. It is a scandal to the
world and damages the sacred cause of preaching the Gospel to
every creature' (§ 1). Pope John Paul II, in Ut Unum Sint,
said that, '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' (§ 98). Both Thomas and Alexander Campbell and
Baron Stone, as well as later Disciples teachers, expressed in
various ways the importance of Christians being united as they
take up the task of evangelization. Stone, for example, wrote
that Christian unity was 'indispensable to the conversion of the
world' (Christian Messenger, 1936). Thus we agree that
the disunity of the Church undermines the proclamation of the
Gospel.
5.13. The Church invites people into communion
with God and each other, but because of its divisions it fails
to manifest that communion fully. All believers gathered at the
eucharistic celebration are. sent out into the world to proclaim
Christ, but we cannot celebrate the eucharist together. That proclamation
is therefore weakened. In this dialogue, we have increasingly
come to recognize that the structures and instruments for the
visible unity of the Church of God are part of the necessary obedience
to the command of Christ who said, 'Go... and make disciples of
all nations' (Mt 28:19).
6. Future Work
6.1. During this phase the Commission has taken
up only one of the tasks set out in The Church as Communion
in Christ, namely exploring the nature of the rule of faith
in a changing history. The other tasks - exploring issues related
to the understanding of the Eucharist, the structure of the Church
gathered around it, and the primacy of the Bishop of Rome - remain.
As we have grown to understand each other better, we have also
become aware that we often do and say the same things but for
different reasons. There is a need to investigate whether there
is mutual recognition of the legitimacy of different ways of arriving
at the same practices or the same conclusions. We also sometimes
do different things to achieve the same purpose, and there is
a corresponding need to reflect upon the legitimacy of that.
6.2. Because of the centrality of the eucharist
in each of our traditions, we believe that the time may now be
appropriate to return to that topic. Therefore we propose that
there should be a further phase of our dialogue, and that its
focus should be the presence of Christ in the Church, with special
reference to the eucharist. In The Church as Communion in Christ
we said 'Even if we agree on the signification and function
of the Eucharist, we feel that we still have to discuss our traditional
teaching and practice concerning the presence of the Lord in the
celebration of the Supper, its sacrificial nature, the role of
the ordained minister and the role of the community. This is important,
given the emphasis that both Disciples and Roman Catholics put
on the weekly celebration of the Lord's Supper and its link with
the visible unity of Christians' (§ 53a).
6.3. This third phase has seen some significant
changes of membership in our dialogue. The Most Revd. Samuel E.
Carter, SJ, (former Roman Catholic Co-Chairperson) and the Revd
Dr. Kilian McDonnell, OSB, have retired from the Commission. We
have also lost by death the Revd Dr. J.M.R. Tillard, OP, a founding
member of the Commission. We place on record our debt to them
for the contributions they made to our work.
May 22, 2002
Participants
Disciples of Christ
Revd Dr Paul A. Crow Jr. Indianapolis, Indiana, USA (Co-chairman)
Dr M. Eugene Boring, Fort Worth, Texas, USA
Revd Dr Bevis Byfield, Kingston, Jamaica
Dr H. Jackson Forstman, Nashville, Tennessee, USA
Dr Nadia Lahutsky, Fort Worth, Texas, USA
Revd Dr William Tabbernee, Tulsa, Oklahoma, USA
Revd Dr David M. Thompson, Cambridge, England
Revd Dr Robert K. Welsh, Indianapolis, Indiana, USA (Co-secretary,
1999-2002)
Catholics
H.E. Msgr Samuel E. Carter, SJ, Kingston, Jamaica (Co-chairman
1993-1995)
H.E. Msgr Daniel M. Buechlein, OSB, Indianapolis, Indiana (Co-chairman
1996-2002)
H.E. Msgr Basil Meeking, Chicago, USA
Msgr Michael Jackson, Hove, England
Revd Dr Kilian McDonnell, OSB, Collegeville, Minnesota, USA (1993-1998)
Msgr Dr John R Meier, Notre Dame, Indiana, USA
Msgr John Mutiso-Mbinda, Vatican City (Co-secretary)
Dr Margaret O'Gara, Toronto, Canada
Revd Dr J.M.R. Tillard, OP, Ottawa, Canada (1993-2000)
Revd Robert D. Tamer, Helena, Montana, USA (Consultor, 2000-2002)
[Information Service 111 (2002/IV) 241-251]