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ELCANEWS  April 2001

ELCANEWS April 2001

Subject:

Lutheran-Roman Catholic Dialogue Begins Drafting New Statement

From:

News News <[log in to unmask]>

Reply-To:

[log in to unmask]

Date:

Wed, 18 Apr 2001 10:55:00 -0500

Content-Type:

text/plain

Parts/Attachments:

Parts/Attachments

text/plain (112 lines)

Title: Lutheran-Roman Catholic Dialogue Begins Drafting New Statement
ELCA NEWS SERVICE

April 18, 2001

LUTHERAN-ROMAN CATHOLIC DIALOGUE BEGINS DRAFTING NEW STATEMENT
01-092-FI

     CHICAGO (ELCA) -- The 10th round of talks in the United States
between the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA) and the U.S.
Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) began drafting a statement on
"The Church as Koinonia of Salvation: Its Structures and Ministries"
when representative teams from both churches met March 29-April 1 at St.
Paul's College, Washington, D.C.
     "Koinonia" is an anglicized Greek word that appears several times
in the Christian Bible and is translated as "fellowship, a close mutual
relationship; participation, sharing in; partnership; contribution,
gift." The dialogue is taking up issues of koinonia as they relate to
"ordained ministry and structures of church unity."
     The ELCA has 5.15 million members in 10,851 congregations across
the United States and Caribbean. Those congregations are organized into
65 synods, each headed by a bishop.
     The Roman Catholic Church has more than 62 million members in the
United States. Its 187 dioceses or archdioceses oversee almost 20,000
parishes.
     In this sixth meeting of the round, discussion focused on the
relationships of the congregation, parish, synod and diocese with the
ordained ministries that serve them. The dialogue moved from research
on biblical, historical and theological differences and common faith on
the nature of the church as a "communion of salvation" to the task of
drafting a text for its final report.
     Sections of the draft were prepared, one reviewing the work of
previous dialogues and noting how this report will contribute to full
communion among the Lutheran and Catholic churches.
     The second section included an extended treatment of the two
traditions' common understanding of the church as communion in
Scripture, especially the New Testament.
     The third section of the text will cover the common history from
the biblical church until the Reformation, with a focus on the questions
of ordained ministry and church structure.
     The next section will cover the Reformation and the Council of
Trent and the decisions the church made at that moment about its
structures and ordained ministries.
     A final section will outline the contribution of this dialogue to
the reconciliation of these churches in communion, attempting to
reconcile understandings of how the Church and its ministries are
ordered, with some attention to the universal ministry of the pope --
already treated extensively in earlier Lutheran-Catholic dialogues. In
this section recommendations will be made for next steps in the journey
toward unity.
     "Our conviction is that we are working toward a document that will
provide recommendations for our next steps in the journey toward unity
for our communions," said the Rev. Charles H. Maahs, bishop of the ELCA
Central States Synod, Shawnee Mission, Kan., Lutheran co-chair of the
dialogue. "It is important to the team that our final work will be
received and used by our churches as we seek closer communion with one
another," he said.
     "One of our learnings has been the evolving of similar
interpretations of the material we find in the New Testament in regard
to 'structures and ministries.' We take seriously and depend upon
previous documents and dialogues as we continue our research and
conversations on our topic," said Maahs. "The biblical material and the
historical documents will contribute to the final outcome of our
dialogue."
     The Catholic co-chair is the Most Rev. Richard J. Sklba, auxiliary
bishop of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Milwaukee. "I continue to
be greatly impressed by the wisdom and faith the scholars bring to the
table as we explore the various issues of our communion with God in
Christ," he said.
     "The candor and mutual respect which has marked our dialogue from
the very beginning remains a clear sign of God's grace in our midst as
we seek the unity which Christ wishes for us all," said Sklba. "The
fact that we can laugh together, as well as engage in shared prayer and
study, bodes well for the success for this round in the dialogue. I
consider it a great grace to be a member of the team," he added.
     "After six meetings our group has developed a good style of
working together," said Maahs. "We have learned to respect our
differences as well as to affirm the deep issues we share about our
faith in the gospel of Jesus Christ. This style of doing dialogue in
itself holds great promise for the eventual outcome of our dialogue," he
said.
     The USCCB and the U.S.A. National Committee of the Lutheran World
Federation initiated the first round of the "bilateral" dialogue that
began in 1965. It has produced a number of common statements on such
topics as Scriptures, saints and justification by faith.
     In 1999 the Lutheran World Federation and the Vatican signed the
Joint Declaration on Justification by Faith. The ELCA is one of the
LWF's 131 member churches. The 10th round of talks in the United States
builds on the recommendations, content and method of the Joint
Declaration.
     The Rev. Alvin L. Barry, president of The Lutheran Church-Missouri
Synod, died March 23. The Missouri Synod's observer to the dialogue --
the Rev. Charles P. Arand, chairman of the department of systematic
theology and assistant dean of the faculty, Concordia Seminary, St.
Louis -- was absent from the dialogue meeting to attend Barry's funeral
March 30. The Rev. Lowell G. Almen, ELCA secretary -- a dialogue member
-- was also absent to attend the funeral.
     Other dialogue participants spent part of their meeting time in
prayer for the Missouri Synod, recalling the memory of Barry. The
second largest Lutheran church in the United States, the Missouri Synod
is an observer to the dialogue but did not sign the Joint Declaration.
     In addition to prayers to open and close each day of the meeting,
dialogue members worshiped together March 31 at the Roman Catholic
Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception and April 1
at Resurrection Lutheran Church, Arlington, Va. Maahs brought greetings
at the National Shrine; Sklba preached at Resurrection Lutheran Church.
     Participants meet twice each year. The next meeting will be Dec.
6-9 in Baltimore.

For information contact:
John Brooks, Director (773) 380-2958 or [log in to unmask]
http://listserv.elca.org/archives/elcanews.html

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