June 16, 2005
Pope: Search for Unity 'Irreversible'
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Filed at 7:55 a.m. ET
VATICAN CITY (AP) -- Pope Benedict XVI said Thursday the search for unity between the Roman Catholic Church and other Christians was ''irreversible,'' underlining his desire to improve relations and heal the 1,000-year-old rift with the Orthodox Church.
Benedict made the comments in a meeting with the Rev. Samuel Kobia, the leader of the World Council of Churches, the fellowship of more than 300 churches from nearly all Christian traditions, including Protestants and the Orthodox. The Roman Catholic Church is not a member, but cooperates with the WCC.
In his remarks, Benedict repeated his pledge that his ''primary task'' as pope would be to work tirelessly to rebuild unity of all Christians with ''concrete gestures'' and not just words.
''The commitment of the Catholic Church to the search for Christian unity is irreversible,'' Benedict said.
Kobia, too, stressed the importance of unity, saying faith ''is more effective and vibrant when it is lived out together with our brothers and sisters in Christ.''
He said he greatly appreciated Benedict's commitment to ecumenism and invited the pope to visit the World Council of Churches in Geneva.
In an interview with The Associated Press ahead of the audience, Kobia said he was hoping for progress in one area in particular that has vexed some Protestant members of the World Council. The issue stems from a 2000 document from the Vatican's Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, which was headed by the pope when he was Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger.
The document, ''Dominus Iesus,'' which Ratzinger signed, framed the role of the Catholic Church in human salvation in an exclusive manner. It suggested that non-Catholic ''ecclesiastical communities'' were ''not churches in the proper sense.''
''There are many Protestant churches that are members of the WCC and are concerned that they are defined as 'ecclesiastic communities' and not full churches,'' Kobia said.
He said he wasn't looking for Benedict to renounce the 2000 document, but said he hoped the two sides could ''move beyond it.''
''I would seek understanding that in order to progress on unity, it would be important to speak another language, moving beyond what has been said,'' he said.
Kobia referred indirectly to the issue in his remarks to Benedict, who was a member of a joint Catholic-World Council commission on faith from 1968-75.
Kobia said Orthodox members of the World Council of Churches are asked to reflect on whether there was ''space'' for other churches in Orthodox doctrine.
''Responses to these fundamental ecclesiological questions will certainly affect whether or not our member churches recognize each other's baptism, as well as their ability or inability to recognize one another as churches,'' Kobia said.
He said he encouraged discussion on the topic within the World Council ''but also in our relationships with all our ecumenical partners.''
Benedict's prepared remarks made no mention of the issue.
Kobia's delegation included Bishop Eberhardt Renz from the Evangelical Church in Germany and Archbishop Makarios of Kenya and Irinoupolis, from the Greek Orthodox Patriarchate of Alexandria and all Africa.
Benedict has emphasized his pledge to ecumenism on several occasions in his nearly 2-month-old papacy. In his first homily as pope, on April 20, he said his ''primary'' task would be to work tirelessly to unify all followers of Christ.
He repeated that pledge May 29 in Italy's Adriatic seaport of Bari -- a pilgrimage site for many Russian Orthodox -- and called on ordinary Catholics to also take up the ecumenical cause.
Tensions between the Catholic and Orthodox churches have focused on charges by some Orthodox that the Catholic Church is encroaching on its territory. The rift prevented the late Pope John Paul II from fulfilling a long-held wish to visit Russia, the world's most populous Orthodox nation.