FROM
CONFLICT TO
COMMUNION:
.
Lutheran-Catholic
Common Commemoration
of the
Reformation in
2017
.
Chapter
6
Five Ecumenical Imperatives
238. Catholics and Lutherans
realize that they and the communities in which
they live out their faith belong to the one body
of Christ. The awareness is dawning on Lutherans
and Catholics that the struggle of the sixteenth
century is over. The reasons for mutually
condemning each other’s faith have fallen by the
wayside. Thus, Lutherans and Catholics identify
five imperatives as they commemorate 2017
together.
239. Lutherans and Catholics are
invited to think from the perspective of the
unity of Christ’s body and to seek whatever will
bring this unity to expression and serve the
community of the body of Christ. Through baptism
they recognize each other mutually as
Christians. This orientation requires a
continual conversion of heart.
The first imperative:
Catholics and Lutherans should always begin
from the perspective of unity and not from
the point of view of division in order to
strengthen what is held in common even
though the differences are more easily seen
and experienced.
240. The Catholic and Lutheran
confessions have in the course of history
defined themselves against one another and
suffered the one-sidedness that has persisted
until today when they grapple with certain
problems, such as that of authority. Since the
problems originated from the conflict with one
another, they can only be solved or at least
addressed through common efforts to deepen and
strengthen their communion. Catholics and
Lutherans need each other’s experience,
encouragement, and critique.
The second imperative:
Lutherans and Catholics must let themselves
continuously be transformed by the encounter
with the other and by the mutual witness of
faith.
241. Catholics and Lutherans have
through dialogue learned a great deal and come
to appreciate the fact that communion among them
can have different forms and degrees. With
respect to 2017, they should renew their effort
with gratitude for what has already been
accomplished, with patience and perseverance
since the road may be longer than expected, with
eagerness that does not allow for being
satisfied with the present situation, with love
for one another even in times of disagreement
and conflict, with faith in the Holy Spirit,
with hope that the Spirit will fulfill Jesus’
prayer to the Father, and with earnest prayer
that this may happen.
The third imperative:
Catholics and Lutherans should again commit
themselves to seek visible unity, to
elaborate together what this means in
concrete steps, and to strive repeatedly
toward this goal.
242. Catholics and Lutherans
have the task of disclosing afresh to fellow
members the understanding of the gospel and the
Christian faith as well as previous church
traditions. Their challenge is to prevent this
rereading of tradition from falling back into
the old confessional oppositions.
The fourth imperative:
Lutherans and Catholics should jointly
rediscover the power of the gospel of Jesus
Christ for our time.
243. Ecumenical engagement for the
unity of the church does not serve only the
church but also the world so that the world may
believe. The missionary task of ecumenism will
become greater the more pluralistic our
societies become with respect to religion. Here
again a rethinking and metanoia are required.
The fifth imperative:
Catholics and Lutherans should witness
together to the mercy of God in proclamation
and service to the world.
244. The ecumenical journey
enables Lutherans and Catholics to appreciate
together Martin Luther’s insight into and
spiritual experience of the gospel of the
righteousness of God, which is also God’s mercy.
In the preface to his Latin works (1545), he
noted that “by the mercy of God, meditating day
and night,” he gained new understanding of
Romans 1:17: “here I felt that I was altogether
born again and had entered paradise itself
through open gates. Thereupon a totally other
face of the entire Scripture showed itself to
me… Later I read Augustine’s The Spirit and the
Letter, where contrary to hope I found that he,
too, interpreted God’s righteousness in a
similar way, as the righteousness with which God
clothes us when he justifies us.”(91)
245. The beginnings of the
Reformation will be rightly remembered when
Lutherans and Catholics hear together the gospel
of Jesus Christ and allow themselves to be
called anew into community with the Lord. Then
they will be united in a common mission which
the Joint
Declaration on the Doctrine of Justification
describes: “Lutherans and Catholics share the
goal of confessing Christ in all things, who
alone is to be trusted above all things as the
one Mediator (1 Tim. 2:5f) through whom God in
the Holy Spirit gives himself and pours out his
renewing gifts” (JDDJ 18). .
See also > Called
to Common Commemoration
Full
text of the
report, From
Conflict to
Communion:
Lutheran-Catholic
Common
Commemoration of
the
Reformation in
2017,
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