He was supportive of me when I was received into the Orthodox Church at a parish of the Moscow Patriarchate in Amsterdam. Not every Catholic priest I was close to at the time viewed this as a positive event. Dan teased me: “This kind of thing can happen when you love your enemies.” He was referring to my frequent trips to Soviet Russia in the 1980s and the two books that came out of those journeys.
Source: Jim Forest - "Father Daniel Berrigan, SJ: Why Should an Orthodox Christian be Interested in Him?", Orthdoxy In Dialogue, 12 Dec 2017
https://orthodoxyindialogue.com/2017/12/12/father-daniel-berrigan-sj-why-should-an-orthodox-christian-be-interested-in-him-by-jim-forest/
Matt Maher @ Onething
We need everybody. There was a season when we needed Billy Grahams, and we needed individual evangelists and people with platforms. That's not what we need now. What we need is everybody, everybody together. … We need everyone to come together, be together, and I think that's where the beauty shines the most.
Source: Matt Maher - Worship Leader Q&A Panel, Catholic/Ecumentical Track, Onething 2016, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c_pesyj1nVo
Breaking the Barrier of Silence
The March of Life organization was founded nine years ago in a bid to commemorate the Holocaust and fight anti-Semitism. It encourages young Germans to investigate their families’ past, break the barrier of silence and uncover the acts committed by their grandparents in the Holocaust.
“For years, no one in Germany discussed what had happened only several meters from the German city centers, “explains Heinz Reuss, the organization’s international director. “Not only was there no public debate, there were no family conversations about the past either. People didn’t talk about what they did in the war. We started investigating our family’s past, started asking questions. Many of us discovered that they grandparents were Nazi criminals. We were shocked.”
Source: Itay Ilnai - "Nazis’ descendants sing ‘Hatikva’ to Holocaust survivors", Ynet News, 6 Jan 2017, http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-4902914,00.html
Catholics & Anglicans in Rome
As Catholics and Anglicans, we are humbly grateful that, after centuries of mutual mistrust, we are now able to recognize that the fruitful grace of Christ is at work also in others. We thank the Lord that among Christians the desire has grown for greater closeness, which is manifested in our praying together and in our common witness to the Gospel, above all in our various forms of service. At times, progress on our journey towards full communion may seem slow and uncertain, but today we can be encouraged by our gathering. For the first time, a Bishop of Rome is visiting your community. It is a grace and also a responsibility: the responsibility of strengthening our ties, to the praise of Christ, in service of the Gospel and of this city.
Source: Pope Francis - Address to the Anglican Parish of All Saints in Rome, as reported by Vatican Radio, 26 Feb 2017, http://en.radiovaticana.va/news/2017/02/26/pope_catholics_and_anglicans,_brothers_and_sisters_in_chris/1295193
Vatican II - "a Sea Change of Huge Proportion"
True Significance [of Vatican II] Is:
That it was fundamentally altering three convictions central to historic Evangelical objections, which understood (whether accurately or not) Roman Catholicism to hold:
1. an exaggerated exaltation of the Catholic Church as an institution whereby it communicated that the institutional Catholic Church was in itself a salvific agency serving, in an exaggerated way, as a continuation of the ministry of Jesus;
2. an exaggerated view of its sacramental ministry, seen to be the key to ministering salvation (either in baptism or in penance (described as “necessary”, D. 839, 894-896, albeit with the usual emergency alternative of the “desire of the sacrament,” D 898) or in the Eucharist);
3. “Rome never changes” and hence, until the Council of Trent’s decrees are explicitly renounced, all appearances of change are superficial at best.
All three points are implicated in one single decision taken at Vatican II: its acceptance that Protestants who had no membership in and no sacramental ministry from the Catholic Church were yet regenerated Christians. When one considers the change in the first point alone – termed by some as the Catholic “tendency most suspect to Protestants” – this is a sea change of huge proportion. With this change the focus has been removed from the institution itself as a salvific institution and switched back to the underlying Gospel message.
Source: Paul Miller - "Evangelicals Cooperatively Evangelising & Discipling with Catholics in Faithfulness to Evangelical Distinctives", by Paul Miller
March of Life, Germany
“The March of Life insists that we don’t keep silent again,” says Reuss, “that we speak publicly about what our forefathers did. The goal is to bring together the Nazi criminals’ descendants with the Holocaust survivors and the victims of the Holocaust. The meeting between them is part of our message – to remember what happened not just through figures and data, but through personal stories too.”
Source: Heinz Reuss - Quoted by Itay Ilnai in "Nazis’ descendants sing ‘Hatikva’ to Holocaust survivors", Ynet News, 6 Jan 2017, http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-4902914,00.html
JPII - "Sins Against Unity"
In his apostolic exhortation of 1994, Tertio Millennio Adveniente, John Paul II called for a confession of Catholic sins in the past, including sins against unity. "Among the sins which require a greater commitment to repentance and conversion should certainly be counted those which have been detrimental to the unity willed by God for his people."
Source: Pope John Paul II - Tertio Millennio Adveniente, 34
Pope Francis in Northern Ireland
... it's highly possible that Pope Francis will visit Northern Ireland [in the summer of 2018]. ... Back in the parish hall, Fr. Martin Magill is excited about the prospect of seeing Pope Francis in a place where sectarian fighting prevented his predecessor from coming.
Source: Chris Page - BBC Newshour, 3 January 2017, http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p04kxn3l#play
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p04kxn3l#play
When Christians Look Radically Different
And frankly, I think the church in the United States, the more it embeds with politics… Europeans understand where that goes. When the church and the state are seen like this [joins hands], and then the state proves what it is - a flawed and sometimes corrupt system - then the church is judged by this, and rejected. There are countries in Europe where the church is set back for decades and decades, because they have been stained by how they sold their soul for power, I would say. As the United States grows more and more secular, I tell the people there: ‘We are becoming more like the fertile soil in which the early church did best’. Like the Roman Empire, this was a pagan and hostile society in which Christians stood out by being different. When you are in a place like the United States or Europe in its recent past, where the majority will claim to be Christians, but then they look like everyone else, then the people do not understand what the gospel is. But when Christians look radically different from the world around them, then the people can see the difference.
Source: Philip Yancey - "Philip Yancey: US evangelicals should learn from Europe’s history of religion and power", Evangelical Focus Newsletter, 23 September 2016, http://evangelicalfocus.com/world/1951/Philip_Yancey_US_evangelicals_should_learn_from_Europes_history_of_religion_and_power_
Protestant & Catholic, Black & White
"There were many beautiful Holy Spirit moments at our kickoff," the Atlanta leader said, "but something that really delighted my heart was seeing Protestant and Catholic, black and white coming together in prayer to seek God's heart and pray for our community. Already this shows the healing power of God that He longs to pour out everywhere!"
Source: Shawn D. Carney - Quoting the Atlanta leader of 40 Days for Life in "Day 3: The Lord's Call for Unity" eNewsletter, https://yh125.infusionsoft.com/app/hostedEmail/92618968/0dae2e849b01799c
From Iraq - "Think About This"
“Here in Iraq we Christians cannot afford to throw out words carelessly as the media in the West can do,” he added. “I would ask those in the media who use every issue to stir up division to think about this.”
Source: Archbishop Bashar Warda - Catholic Archbishop of Erbil, Iraq, as quoted in Archbishop to Anti-Trump Protesters: "Where Were You When Muslim Terrorists Were Slaughtering And Persecuting Christians?", Freedom Outpost, http://freedomoutpost.com/archbishop-to-anti-trump-protesters-where-were-you-when-muslim-terrorists-were-slaughtering-and-persecuting-christians/
Robert Schuman
Too often we forget that Hitler’s demise did not automatically guarantee peace to a traumatised and broken Europe. Euphoric scenes of Allied soldiers giving out chocolates, cigarettes and kisses to flag-waving crowds quickly gave way to the daunting reality of rebuilding a devastated and divided Europe. It’s one thing to win a war. But how do you win the peace?
Chaos threatened on all sides. Hatred and bitterness towards the enemy and collaborators poisoned grass-roots attitudes among victor and defeated alike. Families had been separated, divided and destroyed. Deep wounds festered physically, psychologically and spiritually. Hunger, poverty and unemployment added to the miseries of injury and upheaval, totally eclipsing anything we are currently experiencing in Europe today. The Cold War was about to begin. Today’s generations have never known the climate of mistrust and suspicion, crisis and conflict that dominated Europe over the five years following the war.
Reconciliation
Today thoughts of such conflict among EU nations are unthinkable, thank God! Thanks in large part to the story of the stunningly rapid yet lasting Franco-German reconciliation after the Second World War. Central to that story is an unassuming, French lawyer-politician, acknowledged as the ‘Father of Europe’, Robert Schuman. Drawing inspiration from his Christian faith and Catholic social teaching, he searched for an alternative to the old order of competing nation states which had repeatedly led to war. Even while imprisoned by the Nazis early in the war and again after escaping in hiding, he wrote that ‘we French will have to learn to forgive and love the Germans to rebuild post-war Europe’. To many that sounded like treason. After the war, when appointed Foreign Minister, Schuman kept looking for a way to prevent the vicious cycle of war.
Exactly seventy years ago on this Saturday, on May 9, 1950, Schuman announced a plan in a speech lasting a mere three minutes. Surely that was the defining moment of post-war Europe! For that speech laid the foundations of the European House in which today half a billion people in twenty-seven nations live together in peace. From that moment on, there was a plan on the table with the goal, in Schuman’s thinking, of forming a ‘community of peoples deeply rooted in basic Christian values’. These values stemmed directly from the teachings of Jesus, Schuman argued. True democracy was ‘evangelical’, he wrote, rooted in the gospel, embedded in the
Source: Jeff Fountain - "Who Won the Peace?", Weekly Word eNewsletter, 4 May 2020
https://us9.campaign-archive.com/?e=0b86898e11&u=65605d9dbab0a19355284d8df&id=cd6d1b85b2
M. Basilea Schlink
The joyous shout "Who is a God like you, who pardons sin!" was missing in my life - and with it the joy of heaven, which is ours in Jesus. And all because I had forgotten what it means to weep over my sins! That is why my love for Jesus had burned low. It's pardoned sinners who are on fire with love. From bitter experience I know how impoverished a life without daily repentance is. No nearness of heaven. No radiant joy. No worship ascending from a heart overflowing with thanksgiving. No passion for Jesus. No power or anointing or fruitfulness in ministry.
Source: M. Basilea Schlink - Repentance: The Joy-Filled Life, pp. 15-16
The South African Prime Minister, and His Wife
The Dutch Reformed people, however, almost lost the prime minister as a communicant at one point, however. He and his wife were together at the communion service, and an elder approached him. "Mr. Prime Minister," he said, "with all due respect, sir, your wife will not be permitted to take communion with us because she is [a Pentecostal]."
The old man nearly exploded, and was ready to storm out of the church. "This is the last time I will ever come into this place or any like it," he said loudly enough to be heard for several pews around him. But his wife, a truly humble saint, held gently onto his arm, and quieted him. She appealed with all the power within her for him not to turn his back on the church. Despite his anger, he honored her plea the rest of his life.
Source: David du Plessis - From "A Man Called Mr. Pentecost", as told to Bob Slosser, Ch. 7, pp 46-47
Facing Unity - 1985
The international commission's 1985 document "Facing Unity" recommends that Roman Catholics recognize the Augsburg Confession -- the primary confession of faith of the Lutheran church -- as a legitimate profession of faith. "Facing Unity" invites Catholics to recognize Martin Luther as our common teacher, as one whose heritage has been distorted over time.
Source: Thomas Ryan - National Catholic Reporter, "Lutherans and Catholics chart path to unity", 16 Nov 2016, https://www.ncronline.org/news/theology/lutherans-and-catholics-chart-path-unity
Christ in the Center of Ecumenical Activities
Reflecting on the 500th anniversary of the Reformation , he said it’s an opportunity to put Christ back at the centre of their ecumenical relations. Just as the question of a merciful God was the driving force of Luther and the other Reformers, so it must be at the heart of our joint efforts to propose the radical truth of God’s limitless mercy to men and women today.
Source: Vatican Radio - "German Catholics and Lutherans take new steps towards unity", 6 Feb 2017, http://en.radiovaticana.va/news/2017/02/06/german_catholics_and_lutherans_take_new_steps_towards_unity/1290682
Fr. Leo Tanner
In addressing the importance of this initial conversion, Fr. Leo Tanner – a regular parish priest who has been officially released by his bishop to dedicate seventy per cent of his time to his wider ministry such as Alpha (see Werder 2003) observed, “Current Catholic language and pastoral work lacks to some extent [this element] of a leading people to a decision for Jesus Christ. We [Catholics] speak of a habitual repentance … and thereby easily forget what Jesus first meant with his call to repentance: a primary, foundational change of life-direction…. Such a fundamental repentance and change of direction does not have anything to do with being more or less religious. [The apostle] Paul was perfectly religious before his conversion. What was fundamentally new for him was to have met Jesus as a living person: a relationship with Jesus Christ…. The pre-requisite for such a change of direction is a meeting with Jesus.” (Tanner 2001, Intro., p. 3)
„In der gängigen katholischen Sprache und Pastoral fehlt teilweise die Hinführung zur Entscheidung für Jesus Christus. Wir reden von der ständigen Umkehr zu ihm – besonders in der Fastenzeit – und vergessen dabei leicht das, was Jesus zuerst mit seinem Umkehrruf gemeint hat: eine primäre grundlegende Richtungsänderung des Lebens, der Beginn der bewussten Nachfolge. Bei einer solchen Richtungsänderung, Grundumkehr geht es nicht darum, mehr oder weniger religiös zu sein. Paulus war vor seiner Bekehrung ein religiös „perfekter” Mensch. Als ihm jedoch Jesus als lebendige Person begegnete, begann für ihn das grundlegende Neue: Eine Beziehung zu Jesus Christus…. Die Voraussetzung für eine solche Richtungsänderung ist eine Begegnung mit Jesus, wie die ersten Jünger dem irdischen Jesus begegnet sind.“
Source: Fr. Leo Tanner - TANNER, L. 2001. Werkmappe für Katholiken: zu „Fragen an das Leben“ Wels: BE Team, as quoted in foonote 37 of "Evangelicals Cooperatively Evangelising & Discipling with Catholics in Faithfulness to Evangelical Distinctives", by Paul Miller
Joint Declaration on the Doctrine of Justification
Why now? Because through 50 years of theological dialogues, Catholics and Lutherans have shown repeatedly that we have the resolve and the capacity to address doctrines and practices that have kept us apart. Through our dialogues, we are renewed in our commitment to continue together on the way to full communion, when we will experience our unity in sharing the Eucharist, in the full recognition of each other’s ministries and of our being Christ’s church.
An outstanding fruit of these dialogues was the Joint Declaration on the Doctrine of Justification. Here Catholics and Lutherans demonstrated how, through sustained theological dialogues and prayer, a major doctrine once deemed to be church-dividing can become a teaching in which we find our unity through reconciled diversity. The JDDJ provided an ecumenical breakthrough in distinguishing divisive mutual condemnations from diversities in theology and piety which need not divide the church, but which can in fact enrich it.
Source: Declaration on the Way - Declaration on the Way: Church, Ministry and Eucharist, Evangelical Lutheran Church in America with the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops Committee for Ecumenical and Interreligious Affairs, http://www.usccb.org/beliefs-and-teachings/ecumenical-and-interreligious/ecumenical/lutheran/upload/Declaration_on_the_Way-for-Website.pdf
Martyrdom of de Chergé
To many people, the death of de Chergé and his fellow monks proves the worst stereotypes of Islam. But to him it was the expected cost of being a peacemaker. To me, it is a stark reminder of the work that must be done world-wide to spread the healing message of forgiveness. In a time when so many people are willing to die in ongoing armed conflicts between the "Christian" West and the supposed "menace" of Islam - whether in Iraq, Afghanistan, Algeria, or anywhere else - where are there men and women who are willing to die for the sake of peace?
Source: Johann Christoph Arnold - Why Forgive?, pp.60
Bread & Wine
A broad spectrum of Christian thinkers and mystics, both ancient and modern, echo and expand this thought in the Bread and Wine anthology, which accompanies the reader throughout Lent and Easter with seventy-two readings divided into sections entitled “Invitation,” “Temptation,” “Passion,” “Crucifixion,” “Resurrection,” and “New Life.” Each piece is chosen for its ability to help us come to a new realization of what Christ did for us, regardless of the writer’s denominational affiliation. Its ecumenical scope alone does away with some of the walls that must be demolished on the way to the cross.
Because no matter our confession, we will meet there. And no matter who we are, it can never become normal to see an image of Jesus’ suffering and walk by unaffected: We must be confronted each time we remember his pain. Our stomachs should constrict and our hearts pound when we see him suffering in the hatred, the confusion, the poverty, the violence of our world.
Source: Erna Albertz - "The Plough Diet: Bread and Wine", a Following Jesus blog post on Bruderhof.com, 14 Feb 2017, http://www.bruderhof.com/en/voices-blog/the-plough-diet-bread-and-wine