|
Bishops Join New U.S.
Ecumenical Forum
Catholic News Service
November 18, 2004
by Jerry Filteau
The U.S. Catholic
bishops Nov.17 took a historic ecumenical step by joining the new
national ecumenical forum Christian Churches Together in the USA.
It marks the first time that the U.S.
Catholic Church is a partner church in such a national body, although
Catholic churches in about 70 other countries belong to national
councils of churches or similar bodies.
The bishops approved the proposal to
join CCT by a vote of 151-73, slightly more than a 2-to-1 margin.
Bishop Stephen E. Blaire of Stockton,
Calif., chairman of the Committee on Ecumenical and Interreligious
Affairs, presented the proposal to the bishops and urged its adoption,
noting that the Holy See has also encouraged it.
He called the new organization "a forum
for participation" through which Christian churches can "pray
together, grow in understanding together and witness together."
"The purpose of Christian Churches
Together is to enable churches and national Christian organizations to
grow closer together in Christ in order to strengthen our Christian
witness in the world," said a 25-page background report the bishops
had before them in preparation for the debate and vote.
Bishop Blaire emphasized that for the
Catholic Church the ultimate goal of ecumenism is the full, visible
unity of all Christian churches in the one apostolic faith.
In that framework, the church views the
CCT as an "interim process" rather than a final goal, "even though it
is a fresh and creative initiative to broaden the ecumenical table,"
he said.
He said the main focus in the
organization's early years will be to pray together and develop
relations of mutual understanding and friendship.
Bishop Fabian W. Bruskewitz of Lincoln,
Neb., asked if the other churches in the CCT are aware of the
perspective from which the Catholic Church approaches the
organization. Bishop Blaire said not only are the other churches aware
of the Catholic view, but many of them also believe that full, visible
unity is the ultimate goal and that organizations such as the CCT are
only interim steps.
Several bishops expressed concern
whether there are sufficient safeguards in the organizational
structure of the CCT to protect the Catholic Church from being
associated with statements that contradict Catholic beliefs. Bishop
Blaire said such safeguards are in place.
He explained that the CCT will be able
to take positions or issue statements as a body only if all its
members agree: A single "no" vote is sufficient to block a statement.
He also explained that if a member church neither supports nor opposes
a statement, it could "stand aside," neither voting for the statement
nor blocking it.
There is also provision for issuing
statements with separate majority and minority positions attached for
those aspects of a subject on which agreement cannot be reached, he
said.
He told the bishops that their
membership decision was crucial to the survival of the CCT, since it
will not exist without adequate membership from each of the five
"families" of churches — Catholic, Orthodox, historical Protestant,
historical racial and ethnic, and evangelical and Pentecostal.
Bishop Blaire told the bishops that
upon joining Christian Churches Together, the USCCB will be the only
Catholic member as a church. The USCCB president will appoint the
bishops' 10 delegates to the CCT General Assembly and one of those
delegates will be designated as the spokesman for the group, he said.
In response to a question whether other
churches that call themselves Catholic can also be admitted as members
of the "Catholic family," Bishop Blaire said that the bishops'
conference will have sole authority over who is recognized as
Catholic. The conference will be the only church member in that
family, he said.
In addition to Christian denominations,
the CCT permits membership by national Christian organizations, but
they can form no more than 20 percent of the total CCT membership.
Bishop Blaire said the bishops' conference will have final say about
which Catholic organizations may be recognized and admitted to CCT
membership as national Christian organizations.
He said Catholic membership will cost
the bishops' conference about $12,000 to $15,000 a year, which will
come out of the budget of the Committee on Ecumenical and
Interreligious Affairs.
The costs will be kept low because the
organization's staff will consist only of a director and an assistant,
he said. Business will be conducted by the yearly General Assembly
and, between assemblies, by a steering committee. That committee will
be composed of three representatives from each of the five church
families and three at-large members, chosen from among national
Christian organizations according to criteria to be developed by the
steering committee.
CCT began with an invitation sent out
to a number of church leaders in the summer of 2001 by Cardinal
William H. Keeler of Baltimore; the Rev. Robert Edgar, National
Council of Churches general secretary; the Rev. Wesley
Granberg-Michaelson, general secretary of the Reformed Church in
America; and Bishop Tod D. Brown of Orange, Calif., then-chairman of
the bishops' Committee on Ecumenical and Interreligious Affairs.
In response to the invitation 27 church
leaders met Sept. 7-8, 2001, at St. Mary's Seminary and University in
Baltimore to explore the idea of a broader structure under which the
wide diversity of Christian churches could come together to strengthen
their unity in Christ and empower their witness and mission.
There was unanimous agreement on the
value of such an entity and the need for all five major families of
Christian churches to be included among the participants. The group
adopted the name Christian Churches Together in the USA and appointed
an interim steering committee to organize further meetings with wider
participation and chart the initial phases of development.
In subsequent meetings the number of
church leaders involved grew. At a meeting in Houston earlier this
year it was decided that an inaugural assembly could be planned in
2005 because enough churches had already joined or were in the process
of making that commitment.
Cardinal Walter Kasper, president of
the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity, has encouraged
USCCB membership in CCT.
In a June letter to Bishop Blaire the
cardinal said that "one of its strongest points is the effort to bring
into discussion those Christians such as evangelicals and Pentecostals
who are among the fastest growing Christian communities, and who have
not been sufficiently involved in the ecumenical dialogue."
He suggested the new U.S. organization
would likely contribute to the Vatican's own ongoing efforts to build
stronger relations with evangelicals and Pentecostals.
The CCT organizational plan says the
organization "welcomes churches, Christian communities and national
Christian organizations that:
— "Believe in the Lord Jesus Christ as God and savior according to the
Scriptures.
— "Worship and serve the one God, Father, Son and Holy Spirit.
— "Seek ways to work together in order to present a more credible
Christian witness in and to the world." |