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WASHINGTON (October 28, 2004) — The North
American Orthodox-Catholic Theological Consultation continued its
reflection on primacies and conciliarity in the two churches when it met
at St. Paul’s College here from October 21 to 23, 2004. The meeting –
the 67th since the Consultation was founded in 1965 – was co-chaired by
Archbishop Daniel Pilarczyk of Cincinnati and Metropolitan Maximos of
Pittsburgh.
The session began with an update on the Consultation’s Agreed Statement,
“The Filioque: A Church-Dividing Issue?” that was released one year ago.
A Spanish translation has just been finished and posted on the USCCB and
SCOBA websites. In addition, the members decided to introduce a
modification in the middle of the tenth paragraph of the document
regarding the reference to the work of Hilary of Poitiers. The sentence
will now read: “Hilary of Poitiers, in the mid-fourth century, in the
same work speaks of the Spirit as ‘coming forth from the Father’ and
being ‘sent by the Son’ (12:55); as being ‘from the Father through the
Son’ (12:56); and as ‘having the Father and the Son as his source’
(2.29). In another passage….” This modification was accepted as a
friendly amendment suggested by an expert in the field that does not
change the meaning of the text but increases the clarity and accuracy of
the reference to Hilary’ position.
The Consultation heard a number of presentations in view of its study of
conciliarity and primacies in the Church. Rev. Brian Daley, SJ, offered
an analysis of the contents of Pope John Paul II’s 1995 encyclical Ut
Unum Sint. Metropolitan Maximos read his paper examining the theology of
John Zizioulas, now the Metropolitan of Pergamon, entitled “The Unity of
the Church: An Orthodox Perspective.” Rev. Alexander Golitzin offered
his own reflections on Zizioulas’ ecclesiology, and Rev. Ronald
Roberson, CSP, presented a brief paper on a Romanian Orthodox theologian
entitled, “Dumitru Staniloae on Primacy and Conciliarity.” Rev. John
Long, SJ, gave an overview of the recent book by John L. Allen, Jr.,
“All the Pope’s Men: The Inside Story of How the Vatican Really Thinks.”
The Consultation also devoted one session to major events in the lives
of the two churches and recent developments in Orthodox-Catholic
relations. Topics included the resolution of the dispute between the
Church of Greece and the Ecumenical Patriarchate; the “Christian
Churches Together in the USA” initiative; Foundation for Faith and
Order; Developments in SCOBA; the prospect of a Ukrainian Greek Catholic
Patriarchate; the 2004 Clergy-Laity Congress of the Greek Orthodox
Archdiocese; the visit of the Ecumenical Patriarch to Rome in June 2004;
the establishment of the “St. Irenaeus Joint Orthodox-Catholic Working
Group at the Johann-Adam Möhler Institute in Paderborn, Germany; the
return of the Icon of the Mother of God of Kazan to Moscow; the death of
Patriarch Petros VII of Alexandria and All Africa and the election of
Patriarch Theodoros II; and the very recent decision of the Orthodox
Church of Greece to restore the order of deaconesses.
Archbishop Pilarczyk welcomed a new Catholic member of the Consultation,
Rev. Joseph Komonchak of the School of Theology and Religious Studies at
the Catholic University of America in Washington. Fr Komonchak has
extensive background in 19th and 20th century Roman Catholic
ecclesiology which should be particularly useful in the next phase of
the dialogue.
The members of the Consultation were grateful for the hospitality of the
Paulist community at St. Paul’s College, and attended a Mass in the
community chapel on the morning of October 22 presided over by
Archbishop Pilarczyk.
The 68th meeting of the Consultation was scheduled to take place on June
6-8, 2005, at St. Vladimir’s Orthodox School of Theology in Crestwood,
New York.
The North American Orthodox-Catholic Theological Consultation is
sponsored jointly by the Standing Conference of Canonical Orthodox
Bishops in the Americas (SCOBA), the Bishops' Committee for Ecumenical
and Interreligious Affairs of the United States Conference of Catholic
Bishops (USCCB), and the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops. Since
its establishment in 1965, the Consultation has now issued 22 agreed
statements on various topics. All these texts are now available on the
website of the USCCB at: http://www.usccb.org/seia/dialogues.htm and on
the SCOBA website at: http://www.scoba.us/resources/index.asp In
addition to the two co-chairmen, the Orthodox members of the
Consultation include Father Thomas FitzGerald (Secretary), Archbishop
Peter of New York, Father Nicholas Apostola, Prof. Susan Ashbrook
Harvey, Father James Dutko, Prof. Paul Meyendorff, Father Alexander
Golitzin, Father Emmanuel Gratsias, Dr. Robert Haddad, Father Paul
Schnierla, Father Robert Stephanopoulos, and Bishop Dimitrios of Xanthos,
General Secretary of SCOBA (staff). The additional Catholic members are
Father Brian Daley, SJ (secretary), Msgr. Frederick McManus, Prof.
Thomas Bird, Father Peter Galadza, Msgr. John D. Faris, Father John
Galvin, Sister Jean Goulet, CSC, Father Sidney Griffith, ST, Father
Joseph Komonchak, Father John Long, SJ, Father David Petras, and Father
Ronald Roberson, CSP (staff).
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