FROM
CONFLICT TO
COMMUNION:
.
Lutheran-Catholic
Common Commemoration
of the
Reformation in
2017
.
Chapter 5
Called to Common Commemoration
Baptism: The basis for
unity and common commemoration
219. The church is the body of
Christ. As there is only one Christ, so also he
has only one body. Through baptism, human beings
are made members of this body.
220. The Second Vatican Council
teaches that people who are baptized and believe
in Christ but do not belong to the Roman
Catholic church “have been justified by faith in
Baptism [and] are members of Christ’s body and
have a right to be called Christian, and so are
correctly accepted as brothers by the children
of the Catholic Church” (UR 1.3).(84) Lutheran
Christians say the same of their Catholic fellow
Christians.
221. Since Catholics and Lutherans
are bound to one another in the body of Christ
as members of it, then it is true of them what
Paul says in 1 Corinthians 12:26: “If one member
suffers, all suffer together; if one member is
honored, all rejoice together.” What affects one
member of the body also affects all the others.
For this reason, when Lutheran Christians
remember the events that led to the particular
formation of their churches, they do not wish to
do so without their Catholic fellow Christians.
In remembering with each other the beginning of
the Reformation, they are taking their baptism
seriously.
222. Because they believe that
they belong to the one body of Christ, Lutherans
emphasize that their church did not originate
with the Reformation or come into existence only
500 years ago. Rather, they are convinced that
the Lutheran churches have their origin in the
Pentecost event and the proclamation of the
apostles. Their churches obtained their
particular form, however, through the teaching
and efforts of the reformers. The reformers had
no desire to found a new church, and according
to their own understanding, they did not do so.
They wanted to reform the church, and they
managed to do so within their field of
influence, albeit with errors and missteps.
Preparing for commemoration
223. As members of one body,
Catholics and Lutherans remember together the
events of the Reformation that led to the
reality that thereafter they lived in divided
communities even though they still belonged to
one body. That is an impossible possibility and
the source of great pain. Because they belong to
one body, Catholics and Lutherans struggle in
the face of their division toward the full
catholicity of the church. This struggle has two
sides: the recognition of what is common and
joins them together, and the recognition of what
divides. The first is reason for gratitude and
joy; the second is reason for pain and lament.
224. In 2017, when Lutheran
Christians celebrate the anniversary of the
beginning of the Reformation, they are not
thereby celebrating the division of the Western
church. No one who is theologically responsible
can celebrate the division of Christians from
one another.
Shared joy in the gospel
225. Lutherans are thankful in
their hearts for what Luther and the other
reformers made accessible to them: the
understanding of the gospel of Jesus Christ and
faith in him; the insight into the mystery of
the Triune God who gives Godself to us human
beings out of grace and who can be received only
in full trust in the divine promise; in the
freedom and certainty that the gospel creates;
in the love that comes from and is awakened by
faith, and in the hope in life and death that
faith brings with it; and in the living contact
with the Holy Scripture, the catechisms, and
hymns that draw faith into life. Remembrance and
present commemoration will add additional
reasons to be thankful to this list. This
gratitude is what makes Lutheran Christians want
to celebrate in 2017.
226. Lutherans also realize
that what they are thanking God for is not a
gift that they can claim only for themselves.
They want to share this gift with all other
Christians. For this reason they invite all
Christians to celebrate with them. As the
previous chapter has shown, Catholics and
Lutherans have so much of the faith in common
that they can—and in fact should—be thankful
together, especially on the day of commemoration
of the Reformation.
227. This takes up an impulse that
the Second Vatican Council expressed: “Catholics
must gladly acknowledge and esteem the truly
Christian endowments from our common heritage
which are to be found among our separated
brethren. It is right and salutary to recognize
the riches of Christ and virtuous works in the
lives of others who are bearing witness to
Christ, sometimes even to the shedding of their
blood. For God is always wonderful in His works
and worthy of all praise” (UR 1.4).
Reasons to regret and lament
228. As the commemoration in 2017
brings joy and gratitude to expression, so must
it also allow room for both Lutherans and
Catholics to experience the pain over failures
and trespasses, guilt and sin in the persons and
events that are being remembered.
229. On this occasion, Lutherans
will also remember the vicious and degrading
statements that Martin Luther made against the
Jews. They are ashamed of them and deeply
deplore them. Lutherans have come to recognize
with a deep sense of regret the persecution of
Anabaptists by Lutheran authorities and the fact
that Martin Luther and Philip Melanchthon
theologically supported this persecution. They
deplore Luther’s violent attacks against the
peasants during the Peasants’ War. The awareness
of the dark sides of Luther and the Reformation
has prompted a critical and self-critical
attitude of Lutheran theologians towards Luther
and the Wittenberg Reformation. Even though they
agree in part with Luther’s criticism of the
papacy, nevertheless Lutherans today reject
Luther’s identification of the pope with the
Antichrist.
Prayer for unity
230. Because Jesus Christ before
his death prayed to the Father “that they may be
one,” it is clear that a division of the body of
Christ is opposed to the will of the Lord. It
contradicts also the express apostolic
admonition that we hear in Ephesians 4:3-6: be
“eager to maintain the unity of the Spirit in
the bond of peace. There is one body and one
Spirit—just as you were called to the one hope
that belongs to your call—one Lord, one faith,
one baptism, one God and Father of all, who is
over all and through all and in all.” The
division of the body of Christ is opposed to the
will of God.
Evaluating the
past
231. When Catholics and Lutherans
remember together the theological controversies
and the events of the sixteenth century from
this perspective, they must consider the
circumstances of the sixteenth century.
Lutherans and Catholics cannot be blamed for
everything that transpired since some events in
the sixteenth century were beyond their control.
In the sixteenth century, theological
convictions and power politics were frequently
interwoven with one another. Many politicians
often used genuine theological ideas to attain
their ends, while many theologians promoted
their theological judgments by political means.
In this complex arena of numerous factors, it is
difficult to ascribe responsibility for the
effects of specific actions to individual
persons and to name them as the guilty parties.
232. Sixteenth-century divisions
were rooted in different understandings of the
truth of the Christian faith and were
particularly contentious since salvation was
seen to be at stake. On both sides, persons held
theological convictions that they could not
abandon. One must not blame someone for
following his or her conscience when it is
formed by the Word of God and has reached its
judgments after serious deliberation with
others.
233. How theologians presented
their theological convictions in the battle for
public opinion is quite another matter. In the
sixteenth century, Catholics and Lutherans
frequently not only misunderstood but also
exaggerated and caricatured their opponents in
order to make them look ridiculous. They
repeatedly violated the eighth commandment,
which prohibits bearing false witness against
one’s neighbor. Even if the opponents were
sometimes intellectually fair to one another,
their willingness to hear the other and to take
his concerns seriously was insufficient. The
controversialists wanted to refute and overcome
their opponents, often deliberately exacerbating
conflicts rather than seeking solutions by
looking for what they held in common. Prejudices
and misunderstandings played a great role in the
characterization of the other side. Oppositions
were constructed and handed down to the next
generation. Here both sides have every reason to
regret and lament the way in which they
conducted their debates. Both Lutherans and
Catholics bear the guilt that needs to be openly
confessed in the remembrance of the events of
500 years ago.
Catholic confession of sins
against unity
234. Already in his message to the
imperial diet in Nuremberg on 25 November 1522,
Pope Hadrian VI complained of abuses and
trespasses, sins and errors insofar as church
authorities had committed them. Much later,
during the last century, Pope Paul VI, in his
opening speech at the second session of the
Second Vatican Council, asked pardon from God
and the divided “brethren” of the East. This
gesture of the pope found expression in the
Council itself, above all in the Decree on
Ecumenism85 and in the Declaration on
Relationship of the Church to Non-Christian
Religions (Nostra
Acetate).(86)
235. In a Lenten sermon, “Day of
Pardon,” Pope John Paul II similarly
acknowledged guilt and offered prayers for
forgiveness as part of the observance of the
2000 Holy Year.(87) He was the first not simply
to repeat the regret of his predecessors Paul VI
and the council fathers regarding the painful
memories, but actually to do something about it.
He also related the request for forgiveness to
the office of bishop of Rome. In his encyclical
Ut
Unum Sint, he alludes to his visit
to the World Council of Churches in Geneva on 12
June 1984, admitting, “the Catholic conviction
that in the ministry of the bishop of Rome she
has preserved in fidelity to the Apostolic
Tradition and faith of the Fathers, the visible
sign and guarantor of unity constitutes a
difficulty for most other Christians, whose
memory is marked by certain painful
recollections.” He then added, “As far as we are
responsible for these, I join with my
predecessor Paul VI in asking forgiveness.”(88)
Lutheran confession of sins
against unity
236. At its fifth Assembly in
Evian in 1970, the Lutheran World Federation
declared in response to a deeply moving
presentation by Jan Cardinal Willebrands “that
we as Lutheran Christians and congregations
[are] prepared to acknowledge that the judgment
of the Reformers upon the Roman Catholic Church
and its theology was not entirely free of
polemical distortions, which in part have been
perpetuated to the present day. We are truly
sorry for the offense and misunderstanding which
these polemic elements have caused our Roman
Catholic brethren. We remember with gratitude
the statement of Pope Paul VI to the Second
Vatican Council in which he communicates his
plea for forgiveness for any offense caused by
the Roman Catholic Church. As we together with
all Christians pray for forgiveness in the
prayer our Lord has taught us, let us strive for
clear, honest, and charitable language in all
our conversations.” (89)
237. Lutherans also confessed
their wrongdoings with respect to other
Christian traditions. At its eleventh Assembly
in Stuttgart in 2010, the Lutheran World
Federation declared that Lutherans “are filled
with a deep sense of regret and pain over the
persecution of Anabaptists by Lutheran
authorities and especially over the fact that
Lutheran reformers theologically supported this
persecution. Thus, the Lutheran World
Federation… wishes to express publicly its deep
regret and sorrow. Trusting in God who in Jesus
Christ was reconciling the world to himself, we
ask for forgiveness—from God and from our
Mennonite sisters and brothers—for the harm that
our forbears in the sixteenth century committed
to Anabaptists, for forgetting or ignoring this
persecution in the intervening centuries, and
for all inappropriate, misleading and hurtful
portraits of Anabaptists and Mennonites made by
Lutheran authors, in both popular and scholarly
forms, to the present day.”(90)
See next > Five
Ecumenical Imperatives
Full
text of the
report, From
Conflict to
Communion:
Lutheran-Catholic
Common
Commemoration of
the
Reformation in
2017,
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