For nearly a year, I have had the great privilege to work alongside three other bishops to form the Catholic Bishops' Forum, a collaborative association of Independent Catholic and Old Catholic bishops. It has been a joy to meet together, to learn more about each other and our churches, to deepen relationships, and to discover how much more we have in common with we each other than any of us might first understand.
In our work together, we sought to understand how we might call each other and others to the table for the sake of the reign of God. How do we invite? Whom do we invite? A very daunting and perhaps overwhelming tasks given the sheer number in this nation of bishops, clergy, and communities who self identify as Independent Catholic or Old Catholic. We naturally were drawn to some very sensible and welcoming principles that helped us to a living invitation to better unity with one another. Our organizer, Bp. Francis Krebs of the Ecumenical Catholic Communion, brought our discussion to words, "Ways to Think About Unity Across Churches," which follow.
"In Essentials, Unity; in Doubtful Matters, Liberty; in All Things, Charity"
John XXIII's first encyclical, Ad Petri Cathedram of 1959 included this famous quote but did not attribute it to anyone in particular. “But the common saying, expressed in various ways and attributed to various authors, must be recalled with approval: in essentials, unity; in doubtful matters, liberty; in all things, charity.” (paragraph 72)
Differentiated Consensus
The following is excerpted from The Church and Ecclesial Communion, Report of the International Roman Catholic-Old Catholic Dialogue Commission (12/5/2009). It explains how the above ancient maxim can be applied practically in dialogue:
The wide-ranging consensus in the understanding and confession of the traditional catholic faith established here (cf. 26 above) was worked through methodologically according to the more recent principles of ecumenical hermeneutics. These principles are founded on the recognition that the sought-for unity in the faith does not mean uniformity, but rather a diversity in which any remaining differences beyond the fundamental consensus are not accorded church-dividing force. Accordingly the goal of dialogue is not doctrinal consensus in the form of congruence, but a differentiated consensus consisting of two components which are to be differentiated from one another:
The Chicago Lambeth Quadrilateral
The Statement of the four Anglican essentials for a reunited Christian Church. It concerns:
“The Five Hinges on the Door”[i]
This is a term our steering committee, my fellow bishops, came up with to single out essential features of being Catholic mentioned in the document Uppsala and Utrecht which paved the way to full communion between the Union of Utrecht and the Church of Sweden in 2013. While these features do not exhaust the profound Old Catholic sense of “Catholicity,” these features do show a remarkable similarity of the Quadrilateral with the addition of the conciliar nature of the Church.
God's peace and every blessing, in Christ!
[i] “As the Roman Catholic Church still determines the image of catholic Christianity in the public consciousness, the use of the term “catholic” requires explanation. When the word is used without further qualification, it is here a phenomenological description referring to a number of aspects of theology and life which are shared by a number of churches, for example a desire to be in continuity with the church through the ages, the role of sacraments and liturgical worship, the presence of episcopal ministry etc.” Source: Utrecht and Uppsala on the Way to Communion, report from the official dialogue between the Old Catholic Churches of the Union of Utrecht and the Church of Sweden, 2013, p. 6
“Episcopacy is part of the threefold apostolic ministry: bishop, presbyter (usually called priest) and deacon. This internal differentiation of the one (ordained) ministry is the outcome of developments in the first two or three centuries of the church. Though Old Catholics acknowledge the fact that this ministry underwent great fluctuations in the course of history, it is considered to be as binding as the canon of Holy Scripture, the creeds of the ancient church (ie.the Niceno-Constantinopolitan as well as the Apostolic) and the nascent conciliar system of common witness and decision-making of the church” [referred to often as synodality].
In our work together, we sought to understand how we might call each other and others to the table for the sake of the reign of God. How do we invite? Whom do we invite? A very daunting and perhaps overwhelming tasks given the sheer number in this nation of bishops, clergy, and communities who self identify as Independent Catholic or Old Catholic. We naturally were drawn to some very sensible and welcoming principles that helped us to a living invitation to better unity with one another. Our organizer, Bp. Francis Krebs of the Ecumenical Catholic Communion, brought our discussion to words, "Ways to Think About Unity Across Churches," which follow.
"In Essentials, Unity; in Doubtful Matters, Liberty; in All Things, Charity"
John XXIII's first encyclical, Ad Petri Cathedram of 1959 included this famous quote but did not attribute it to anyone in particular. “But the common saying, expressed in various ways and attributed to various authors, must be recalled with approval: in essentials, unity; in doubtful matters, liberty; in all things, charity.” (paragraph 72)
Differentiated Consensus
The following is excerpted from The Church and Ecclesial Communion, Report of the International Roman Catholic-Old Catholic Dialogue Commission (12/5/2009). It explains how the above ancient maxim can be applied practically in dialogue:
The wide-ranging consensus in the understanding and confession of the traditional catholic faith established here (cf. 26 above) was worked through methodologically according to the more recent principles of ecumenical hermeneutics. These principles are founded on the recognition that the sought-for unity in the faith does not mean uniformity, but rather a diversity in which any remaining differences beyond the fundamental consensus are not accorded church-dividing force. Accordingly the goal of dialogue is not doctrinal consensus in the form of congruence, but a differentiated consensus consisting of two components which are to be differentiated from one another:
- A clear statement on the consensus reached in the fundamental and essential content of a previously controversial doctrine.
- A declaration that and why the remaining doctrinal differences, which are also to be clearly named, can be considered admissible and thus do not call into question the consensus in the fundamentals and essentials.
The Chicago Lambeth Quadrilateral
The Statement of the four Anglican essentials for a reunited Christian Church. It concerns:
- the Scriptures,
- Creeds,
- Sacraments,
- and the historic episcopate.
“The Five Hinges on the Door”[i]
This is a term our steering committee, my fellow bishops, came up with to single out essential features of being Catholic mentioned in the document Uppsala and Utrecht which paved the way to full communion between the Union of Utrecht and the Church of Sweden in 2013. While these features do not exhaust the profound Old Catholic sense of “Catholicity,” these features do show a remarkable similarity of the Quadrilateral with the addition of the conciliar nature of the Church.
- The Sacred Scriptures
- The Creeds
- The Sacraments and liturgical worship
- The threefold Apostolic Ministry: bishop, presbyter, and deacon
- Synodality."
God's peace and every blessing, in Christ!
[i] “As the Roman Catholic Church still determines the image of catholic Christianity in the public consciousness, the use of the term “catholic” requires explanation. When the word is used without further qualification, it is here a phenomenological description referring to a number of aspects of theology and life which are shared by a number of churches, for example a desire to be in continuity with the church through the ages, the role of sacraments and liturgical worship, the presence of episcopal ministry etc.” Source: Utrecht and Uppsala on the Way to Communion, report from the official dialogue between the Old Catholic Churches of the Union of Utrecht and the Church of Sweden, 2013, p. 6
“Episcopacy is part of the threefold apostolic ministry: bishop, presbyter (usually called priest) and deacon. This internal differentiation of the one (ordained) ministry is the outcome of developments in the first two or three centuries of the church. Though Old Catholics acknowledge the fact that this ministry underwent great fluctuations in the course of history, it is considered to be as binding as the canon of Holy Scripture, the creeds of the ancient church (ie.the Niceno-Constantinopolitan as well as the Apostolic) and the nascent conciliar system of common witness and decision-making of the church” [referred to often as synodality].