Catholics and Methodists: Walking together in service
to the world
(Vatican Radio) Pope Francis
said on Thursday that Catholics and Methodists have much to learn from one
another as they work together in loving service to the world. His words came in an audience with leaders of the World
Methodist Council, the Methodist Council of Europe and the Methodist Church in
Britain who here for the opening of a new ecumenical centre in Rome.
“If we cannot as yet think alike in all
things, at least we may love alike”. Those words were written by John Wesley,
one of the founders of the Methodist movement, in his ‘Letter to a Roman Catholic’ in the mid-18th century. Wesley also stressed that
Catholics and Methodists are called “to help each other in whatever…leads to
the Kingdom”.
In his meeting with the global Methodist
leadership, Pope Francis said it’s true we do not as yet think alike in all
things, noting that especially on issues of ordained ministry and ethics, much
work remains to be done. But, he stressed, none of these differences
constitutes such an obstacle as to prevent us from loving in the same way and
offering a common witness to the world.
50 years of
Catholic-Methodist dialogue
Half a century since the joint
Catholic-Methodist dialogue commission began its work, its members are
preparing to publish a new document on ‘The
Call to Holiness’, an area where the Pope said members
of the two Churches have much to learn from one another. We must both do what
we can, he said, to ensure that members of our respective congregations meet
together and encourage each other. Even where differences remain, he added,
these can and must become the impetus for further reflection and dialogue.
New Ecumenical Office
in Rome
Welcoming the opening of the new Methodist
Ecumenical Office in Rome, the Pope said it’s a sign of growing
closeness and of our shared desire to overcome all that stands in the way of
our full communion.
Rev. Robert Gribben is a minister of the Uniting Church of Australia andchair of the World Methodist Council’s committee on
ecumenical relationships. At this important
moment in the life of the global community, he shared some thoughts on the
importance of working for Christian unity and the significance – for Methodists
– of this Jubilee year of mercy.
Gribben says he believes the theologians
have done "a wonderful job in clearing the way for us to walk
together...."
One of the obstacles, he says, is
peoples' inability to move - or "mabye their inability to believe that
such good things have actually happened..."
Getting the local church structures to
change is an enormous challenge, he notes, especially in a world where
Christian faith is under attack we tend to be defensive and hang onto what we
know...
Gribben says that the word 'mercy'
features prominently in the hymns of Charles Wesley....apart from the word
'love', he says, "there could hardly be a more important word in all
Christian doctrine and practice".

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