Pope's visit to Sweden hails new era in
Catholic-Lutheran relations
(Vatican
Radio) Pope Francis arrived back in Rome on Tuesday afternoon at the conclusion
of his 17th Apsotolic journey abroad which took him to the southern Swedish
cities of Lund and Malmo. Earlier in the day he celebrated Mass for the local
Catholic community, urging them to follow in the footsteps of the saints of the
past.
But
the two key events of trip took place the previous day, as the Pope joined
Lutheran leaders for a common commemoration of the Protestant Reformation that
divided Europe five centuries ago.
Philippa
Hitchen reports on the lasting impact this visit may have on the future of
Lutheran-Catholic relations…
While
we can’t change the past, we can profoundly transform the way we remember it.
That’s the message of the joint statement signed in Lund cathedral on Monday by
Pope Francis and by Bishop Younan, president of the World Lutheran Federation.
It’s
also a theme at the heart of a 2013 Catholic-Lutheran publication called ‘From
Conflict to Communion’ which laid the foundation for Monday’s historic
events. In six short chapters, the book summarises ways in which historians
have looked anew at the Reformation and seen how Luther didn’t want to divide
the Church, but rather to reform and clean up what he saw as corrupt, clerical
practises. A call that seems strikingly similar to Pope Francis’ denunciation
of corruption and clericalism in the Church today. (Perhaps that’s why his
critics like to call him ‘the Protestant Pope’).
The
roots of this joyful yet poignant common commemoration stretch back over
decades of patient, theological dialogue between what one Lutheran leader
called ‘the bold prophets’ of the past. Those who worked tirelessly to overcome
conflict and division, sometimes at the cost of their own lives.
The
divisions of five centuries ago, of course, don’t mean much to the thousands of
young people who cheered and sang as their Church leaders entered the packed
arena. They’re struggling with the modern conflicts that are still tearing
apart communities and taking lives in the Middle East, in Africa, in Asia or in
Latin America. Five Catholics and Lutherans, men and women from those different
continents spoke publically about the way their faith has given them courage to
continue the struggle in the most difficult and dangerous circumstances. The
Pope and the Lutheran president thanked them for their examples of commitment
and service to those most in need.
Both
the prayer service in the cathedral and the public event in the arena were
moving and uplifting occasions – described by Bishop Younan as “a modern
miracle of the Holy Spirit” who touched the hearts of the first disciples two
thousand years ago in his native Jerusalem.
So
do these events mean that Christian unity is just around the corner? That
differences around our visions of Church, Eucharist and Ministry are suddenly
overcome? That new arguments over women’s ordination or same-sex relationships
are no longer important? No, these old and new issues will require the patient,
unglamorous work of theologians for many years to come. But I do believe that
Monday’s events model a new way of working together, a new style of
engaging with differences and a new sense of shared Christian service, so
desperately needed in today’s divided and suffering world.
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