[faithandlife] Papal deeds speak louder

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From: "Charles Scott" <crscott@...>
Date: Wed, 13 Nov 2002 13:07:38 +0000
Here is an interesting take on the what the Pope does vs. what RC tradition 
says in regard to ecumenical affairs.

Charles
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Papal deeds speak louder
By JOHN L. ALLEN JR.
Rome
It’s the nature of the office that a pope has to watch what he says.
Ironically, the 1870 declaration of infallibility at the First Vatican 
Council has probably inhibited papal freedom of speech more than any king or 
emperor ever could. Since even his “ordinary magisterium,” or regular 
teaching expressed in audiences and letters, is considered to enjoy a divine 
seal of approval, popes feel compelled to sweat over every phrase. Once it 
drops from his lips, it passes into tradition, and hence it must be “just 
so.”
That’s inevitably a prescription for caution. Popes rarely speak off the 
cuff, and when they do, pulse rates in Vatican offices head for the sky.
Gestures, on the other hand, are by definition far more ambiguous. A pope 
can be himself in his actions in a way he never can be with his words. For 
that reason, often what a pope does is a better indicator of where his heart 
is than what he says. The pontificate of John Paul II illustrates the point.
Consider, for example, the December 1996 visit of the Archbishop of 
Canterbury, then George Carey, and several of his brother Anglican bishops 
to Rome. On the occasion, John Paul II gave Carey a gold pectoral cross, the 
same gift he offers to Catholic archbishops on their ad limina visits. He 
offered silver pectoral crosses to the other Anglicans.
It was a kind gesture with just one glitch: According to Catholic theology, 
Anglican bishops aren’t the real deal, and hence have no business sporting 
the symbols of the bishop’s office. Most recently, the Congregation for the 
Doctrine of the Faith made this point in a commentary on the 1998 document 
Ad Tuendam Fidem. It pointed to the invalidity of Anglican ordinations as an 
example of not-yet-declared infallible church teaching.
Notre Dame theologian Fr. Richard McBrien has argued that this leaves two 
possibilities. Either the pope holds a different view about the validity of 
Anglican ordinations, or he is guilty of the canonical offense of falsifying 
the sacrament of holy orders by complicity in the fiction that the Anglicans 
really are bishops.
Most observers believe John Paul was trying to encourage unity between 
Catholics and Anglicans, whose dialogue since the Second Vatican Council 
(1962-65) has been a model of civility, even ahead of an ability to spell 
out quite yet the theological basis for that unity.
Other examples of actions speaking louder than words might include the 
pope’s respectful, prayerful visit to the Grand Omayyad Mosque in Damascus 
in May 2001, not long after the Vatican document Dominus Iesus had asserted 
that non-Catholics are in a “gravely deficient situation”; or his March 2000 
visit to the Western Wall in Jerusalem amid acrimonious debates between Jews 
and Catholics.
Recent weeks in Rome have offered two more examples of the pope’s “watch 
what I do, not always what I say” style.
On Oct. 4, in conjunction with an international conference marking the 700th 
anniversary of the birth of St. Bridget of Sweden, John Paul II took part in 
a gala vespers service in St. Peter’s Basilica.
Present for the occasion were 13 Roman Catholic bishops, plus nine Lutheran 
bishops from Sweden, Norway and Denmark, one other Lutheran clergyman, and 
three non-Catholic prelates (two Orthodox, one Anglican). There were, in 
other words, an equal number on both sides.
The two sets of prelates were dressed in liturgical vestments, and they 
processed in and sat down with equal dignity. It was difficult to avoid the 
impression that the pope was recognizing some kind of brotherhood in holy 
orders for the Lutheran and Anglican prelates that official Catholic 
theology would struggle to explain. Privately, several of the Lutherans said 
that they experienced the event as an unofficial form of papal recognition.
John Paul’s public comments on the occasion were not so daring. “In a spirit 
of brotherhood and friendship I greet the distinguished representatives of 
the Lutheran churches,” he said. “Your presence at this prayer is a cause of 
deep joy. I express the hope that our meeting together in the Lord’s name 
will help to further our ecumenical dialogue and quicken the journey towards 
full Christian unity.”
At the level of symbolism, however, the pope seemed to be saying more.
Two days later, Patriarch Teoctist of the Romanian Orthodox church arrived 
in Rome for the start of a weeklong visit, reciprocating the pope’s May 7-9, 
1999, visit to Bucharest. John Paul welcomed Teoctist to the public Mass of 
thanksgiving for the canonization of Opus Dei founder Josemaria Escriva Oct. 
6, standing to embrace him in brotherly fashion before a crowd of 200,000, 
then ensuring that Teoctist was seated in an exact duplicate of the papal 
throne.
It was not the behavior of someone worried about underscoring his own 
primacy.
In fact, all the week’s choreography seemed designed to make the two 
prelates seem like equally eminent heads of churches. The high point came 
with the signing of a joint declaration between John Paul and Teoctist on 
Saturday, Oct. 12.
The text of the declaration was itself interesting. “Our aim and our ardent 
desire is full communion, which is not absorption, but communion in love. It 
is an irreversible path that has no alternative: It is the way of the 
church,” the declaration reads.
It gets down to brass tacks, calling for a relaunch of the international 
Catholic-Orthodox dialogue, currently in a deep freeze after a disastrous 
session in Baltimore in July 2000. Those talks were paralyzed by accusations 
of proselytism against Catholics in Orthodox nations, debates over Eastern 
churches in communion with Rome, and most notoriously, differing views of 
the limits of papal power.
More important than the wording, however, may be the way the declaration was 
issued. The pope’s repeated gestures of humility and fraternity, always 
careful to treat Teoctist like an ecclesiastical equal, were designed to 
assuage Orthodox fears about a Roman “imperial papacy.” In that sense, John 
Paul’s conduct reflected a reformed papacy that Catholic theological 
language is not yet able to describe.
To understand what the pope is trying to communicate, therefore, sometimes 
it’s a good idea to keep the pictures but turn down the sound.
John L. Allen Jr. is NCR Rome correspondent. His e-mail address is 
jallen@...
National Catholic Reporter, November 08, 2002




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