Doctrinal Agreement on Christology
approved
by Pope John Paul II and Catholicos Mar Baselius Marthoma Mathews
I
issued June 3rd, 1990
-
In our first meeting which was characterized
by a spirit of concord, mutual trust, fraternal love and desire
to overcome division and misunderstandings inherited from the
past, we found our common ground in the one, holy, catholic
and apostolic faith, held by the one and undivided Church of
the early centuries, the faith in Christ always affirmed by
both sides.
-
Above all we thank the Lord Our God for having
brought us together for a cordial and sincere dialogue on some
doctrinal and pastoral problems which can stand in the way of
our mutual ecclesial relations and communion.
-
In this atmosphere we have worked out this
brief statement to be submitted to our respective church authorities
for their approval, wherein we seek to express our common understanding
of, and our common witness to the great and saving mystery of
Our Lord Jesus Christ, the Word of God Incarnate; we hope, this
statement can lead us to the restoration of full communion between
our churches. Our work was made much easier by the painstaking
documentation and detailed discussions held at an unofficial
level by our theologians during the past twenty-five years.
-
We affirm our common faith in Jesus Christ,
Our Lord and Savior, the Eternal Logos of God, the Second Person
of the Most Holy Trinity, who for us and for our salvation came
down from heaven and was incarnate by the Holy Spirit from the
Blessed Virgin Mary, Mother of God. We believe that Our Lord
Jesus Christ, the Word made flesh, is true God and true man.
The Word of God has taken a human body with a rational soul,
uniting humanity with divinity.
-
Our Lord Jesus Christ is one, perfect in his
humanity and perfect in his divinity at once consubstantial
with the Father in his divinity, and consubstantial with us
in his humanity. His humanity is one with his divinity
without change, without commingling, without division and without
separation. In the Person of the Eternal Logos Incarnate are
united and active in a real and perfect way the divine and human
natures, with all their properties, faculties and operations.
-
Divinity was revealed in humanity. The Glory
of the Father was manifest in the flesh of the Son. We saw the
Father's love in the life of the suffering Servant. The Incarnate
Lord died on the Cross that we may live. He rose again on the
third day, and opened for us the way to the Father and to eternal
life.
-
All who believe in the Son of God and receive
him by faith and baptism are given power to become children
of God. Through the Incarnate Son into whose body they are integrated
by the Holy Spirit, they are in communion with the Father and
with one another. This is the heart of the mystery of the Church,
in which and through which the Father by His Holy Spirit renews
and reunites the whole creation in Christ. In the Church, Christ
the Word of God is known, lived, proclaimed and celebrated.
-
It is this faith which we both confess. Its
content is the same in both communions; in formulating that
content in the course of history, however, differences have
arisen, in terminology and emphasis. We are convinced that these
differences are such as can co-exist in the same communion and
therefore need not and should not divide us, especially when
we proclaim Him to our brothers and sisters in the world in
terms which they can more easily understand.
It is the awareness of our common faith that leads us to pray
that the Holy Spirit of God may remove all remaining obstacles
and lead us to that common goal the restoration of full
communion between our churches.
[Information
Service 73 (1990/II) 39]
|