http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/faith/article2056515.ece

TIMES
on line

July 11, 2007


  If it isn’t Roman Catholic then it’s not a proper Church, Pope tells
  Christians


Richard Owen and Ruth Gledhill

The Vatican has described the Protestant and Orthodox faiths as “not 
proper Churches” in a document issued with the full authority of the Pope.

Anglican leaders reacted with dismay, accusing the Roman Catholic Church 
of paradoxical behaviour. They said that the new 16-page document 
outling the “defects” of non-Catholic churches constituted a major 
obstacle to ecumenism.

The document said that the Orthodox church suffered from a “wound” 
because it did not recognise the primacy of the Pope. The wound was 
“still more profound” in Protestant denominations, it added.

It was “difficult to see how the title of ‘Church’ could possibly be 
attributed to them”, said the statement from the Congregation for the 
Doctrine of the Faith. Roman Catholicism was “the one true Church of 
Christ”.

The language echoes earlier statements by the same body, headed by 
Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger until he became Pope. The statement appears to 
be at odds with attempts to soften Pope Benedict’s image as a doctrinal 
hardliner and to present him as a more human figure reaching out to 
other faiths. And it risks undermining his own efforts for Christian unity.

Protestants at the extreme evangelical end of the Anglican spectrum 
accused Rome of a “lust for power”, while welcoming the honesty of the 
document.

Lambeth Palace, the office of the Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr Rowan 
Williams, was more diplomatic. A spokesman issued a statement that 
lacked any formal welcome, describing the document as “significant”.

Vatican sources said that the document was an attempt to resolve 
“confusion” caused by the apparent conflict between the Pope’s assertion 
on his election two years ago that Christian unity was a priority and 
his insistence in “Dominus Iesus”, issued in 2000 when he was Cardinal 
Joseph Ratzinger – that Anglican, Protestant and Orthodox Christians did 
not belong to “proper” churches.

Father Augustine Di Noia, a senior doctrinal official at the Vatican, 
insisted that the Catholic Church was not “backtracking on ecumenical 
commitment. But it is fundamental to any kind of dialogue that the 
participants are clear about their own identity. That is, dialogue 
cannot be an occasion to accommodate or soften what you understand 
yourself to be.”

Vatican officials insist that the Pope’s attachment to bedrock 
traditional values is compatible with dialogue with other Christians. 
Yesterday’s document said that such dialogue remained “one of the 
priorities of the Catholic Church”.

The document said that the Second Vatican Council’s opening to other 
faiths – including “ecclesial communities originating with the 
Reformation” – had recognised there were “many elements of 
sanctification and truth” in other Christian denominations, but had also 
emphasised that only Catholicism was fully Christ’s Church.

The document said that other Christian faiths “lack elements considered 
essential to the Catholic Church”.

The disappointment of the Anglicans was evident in the response of Canon 
Gregory Cameron, Dr Williams’s former chaplain in Wales and a leading 
canonical lawyer and scholar who is now ecumenical officer of the 
Anglican Communion.

Canon Cameron said: “In the commentary of this document we are told that 
‘Catholic ecumenism’ appears ‘somewhat paradoxical’. It is paradoxical 
for leaders of the Roman Catholic Church to indicate to its ecumenical 
partners that it no longer expects all other Christians merely to return 
to the true (Roman Catholic) Church, but then for Rome to say that it 
alone has ‘full identity’ with the Church of Christ, and that all others 
of us are lacking.”

He said Anglican bishops had indicated in 1997 that such a position 
constituted “a major ecumenical obstacle”.

The Rev David Phillips, General Secretary of the Church Society, said: 
“Nothing new is said, but it does clarify the way in which the Vatican 
has torn apart Christianity because of its lust for power. They remind 
us that in their view that to be a true church one has to accept the 
ludicrous idea that the Pope is in some special way the successor of the 
apostle Peter and the supreme earthly leader of the Church.

“These claims cannot be justified, biblically, or historically, yet they 
have been used not only to divide Christians but to persecute them and 
put them to death.

“We are grateful that the Vatican has once again been honest in 
declaring their view that the Church of England is not a proper Church. 
Too much dialogue proceeds without such honesty. Therefore, we would 
wish to be equally open; unity will only be possible when the papacy 
renounces its errors and pretensions.”

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