Unity Week: Cardinal Koch celebrates a "truly
ecumenical year"
Cardinal Kurt Koch with Pope Francis and the President and General Secretay of the Lutheran World Federation in Lund cathedral on October 31st 2016. - AP. |
(Vatican Radio) As we
mark the annual week of prayer for Christian Unity, Catholics have much to
celebrate because 2016 was “truly an ecumenical year”. That’s the view of
Cardinal Kurt Koch, president of the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian
Unity, who accompanied Pope Francis on all his ecumenical journeys throughout
the past year.
The cardinal was reflecting on the theme for this week of
prayer which is centred on a verse from St Paul’s second letter to the
Corinthians: ‘Reconciliation: the love of Christ compels us’. Members of the
Council of Christian Churches in Germany were asked to prepare material on this
theme which is set in the context of this year’s 500th anniversary of the
Reformation.
Cardinal Koch talked to Philippa Hitchen about this year’s
event and about the many significant steps towards Christian unity which took
place in 2016….
Cardinal Koch says the leitmotif for this week of prayer is
reconciliation, proposed by Christians in Germany, where the Reformation began.
While we have much gratitude for the Reformation and the rediscovery of all
that is in common between Lutherans and Catholics, he says, we must also
recognize the painful history of the last 500 years. Though Luther did not want
to divide the Church, he notes the “horrible confessional wars” that followed
the Reformation “transformed Europe into a red sea of blood”. We must
acknowledge both of these pages, he says, working for repentance and
reconciliation, but also showing gratitude for the gifts of the Reformation.
Commenting on the Pope’s recent visit to Sweden for a joint
commemoration of the Reformation, the cardinal says the meeting in Lund was the
fruit of the dialogue that has been taking place between Lutherans and
Catholics since the Second Vatican Council, in particular the signing of the
Joint Declaration on the Doctrine of Justification in 1999 in Augsburg. Without
this progress at doctrinal level, he says, the event in Lund would not have
been possible. Stressing that the event had two parts, an ecumenical prayer
service in Lund cathedral and a celebration of cooperation between Catholics
and Lutherans in Malmo stadium, the cardinal noted that it’s “very close to the
heart of the Holy Father” that ecumenism is not just about theology but also
about concrete collaboration for all of humankind.
While the Reformation is at the heart of this week of
prayer, the cardinal says there is a great need for reconciliation to mend
relations and heal the splits in other parts of the Church, from the divisions
of the 5th century over doctrinal decisions of the Council of Chalcedon, to the
split between east and west in the 11th century and the divisions with
Anglicans in the 16th century. Reconciliation, he says, is the main
theme of our faith and in Chapter 5 his 2nd letter to the Corinthians St Paul explains
that it is God who reconciles himself with us and, as a consequence, we must be
reconciled with one another.
Cardinal Koch reflects on the events of 2016 which he says
was “truly an ecumenical year” with so many key encounters, beginning with the
historical meeting between the Pope and the Russian Orthodox Patriarch in
Havana, followed by his pilgrimage to Lesbos with Patriarch Bartholomew and the
Greek Orthodox Archbishop Hieronymus of Athens, which he describes as “a very
important sign” that refugees are at the heart of the church. Finally he
stresses the importance of the pan-Orthodox Synod in June, and the new document
produced by the Catholic-Orthodox joint commission in September, as well as the
Pope’s journeys to Armenia, to Georgia and to Sweden.
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