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Protestant Churches Accept Papal Authority
Holy Roman Empire Rising Again
By John Thavis
VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- In a brief document, the Vatican's doctrinal
congregation reaffirmed that the Catholic Church is the one, true
church, even if elements of truth can be found in separated churches and
communities.
Touching an ecumenical sore point, the document said some of the
separated Christian communities, such as Protestant communities, should
not properly be called "churches" according to Catholic doctrine because
of major differences over the ordained priesthood and the Eucharist.
The Vatican released the text July 10. Titled "Responses to Some
Questions Regarding Certain Aspects of the Doctrine on the Church," it
was signed by U.S. Cardinal William J. Levada, prefect of the
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, and approved by Pope
Benedict XVI before publication.
In a cover letter, Cardinal Levada asked the world's bishops to do all
they can to promote and present the document to the wider public.
The text was the latest chapter in a long-simmering discussion on what
the Second Vatican Council intended when it stated that the church
founded by Christ "subsists in the Catholic Church," but that elements
of "sanctification and truth" are found outside the Catholic Church's
visible confines.
The related discussion over the term "churches" surfaced publicly in
2000, when the doctrinal congregation -- then headed by Cardinal Joseph
Ratzinger, now Pope Benedict -- said the term "sister churches" was
being misused in ecumenical dialogue.
In a format of five questions and answers, the new document stated that
Vatican II did not change Catholic doctrine on the church. It said use
of the phrase "subsists in" was intended to show that all the elements
instituted by Christ endure in the Catholic Church.
The sanctifying elements that exist outside the structure of the
Catholic Church can be used as instruments of salvation, but their value
derives from the "fullness of grace and truth which has been entrusted
to the Catholic Church," it said, quoting from Vatican II's "Decree on
Ecumenism."
The text said the Second Vatican Council used the term "church" in
reference to Orthodox churches because, although separated from the
Catholic Church, they have preserved apostolic succession, the ordained
priesthood and the Eucharist. Nevertheless, they "lack something in
their condition as particular churches" because they are not in union
with the pope, it said.
The Christian communities born out of the Reformation, on the other
hand, do not enjoy apostolic succession -- the unbroken succession of
bishops going back to St. Peter -- and therefore "cannot, according to
Catholic doctrine, be called 'churches' in the proper sense," it said.
In his cover letter, Cardinal Levada said the document came in response
to critical reactions to the teaching of "Dominus Iesus," another
doctrinal congregation document of 2000, which said the Catholic Church
was necessary for salvation, and to ongoing confusion over
interpretations of the phrase "subsists in."
An authoritative commentary published July 10 in the Vatican newspaper,
L'Osservatore Romano, said the congregation had acted to protect the
unity and uniqueness of the church. The document, the commentary said,
took aim at the notion that the "church of Christ" was "the sum total of
the churches or the ecclesial communities" or that it exists only as a
future goal.
"If this were the case, the church of Christ would not any longer exist
in history, or would exist only in some ideal form emerging either
through some future convergence or through the reunification of the
diverse sister churches," it said.
What Vatican II intended was to recognize ecclesial elements in
non-Catholic communities, it said.
"It does not follow that the identification of the church of Christ with
the Catholic Church no longer holds, nor that outside the Catholic
Church there is a complete absence of ecclesial elements, a 'churchless
void,'" it said.
The council's wording does not signify that the Catholic Church has
ceased to regard itself as the one true church of Christ but that it
recognizes that true ecclesial realities exist beyond its own visible
boundaries, it said.
Regarding the doctrinal congregation's insistence that communities
originating from the Reformation are not churches, the article said:
"Despite the fact that this teaching has created no little distress in
the communities concerned and even among some Catholics, it is
nevertheless difficult to see how the title of 'church' could possibly
be attributed to them, given that they do not accept the theological
notion of the church in the Catholic sense and that they lack elements
considered essential to the Catholic Church."
The commentary said that, at first glance, Catholic ecumenism might seem
somewhat paradoxical, because it holds that the Catholic Church has the
"fullness" of the means for salvation, but recognizes the value of
elements in other churches.
The Catholic Church's teaching, it said, is that the fullness of the
church "already exists, but still has to grow in the brethren who are
not yet in full communion with it and also in its own members who are
sinners."
U.S. Dominican Father J. Augustine Di Noia, undersecretary of the
doctrinal congregation, said the document does not call into question
Pope Benedict's pledge to work for ecumenical progress.
"The church is not backtracking on its ecumenical commitment. But ... it
is fundamental to any kind of dialogue that the participants are clear
about their own identity," he told Vatican Radio.
Father Di Noia said the document touches on a very important
experiential point: that when people go into a Catholic church and
participate in Mass, the sacraments and everything else that goes on
there, they will find "everything that Christ intended the church to
be."
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