INTERNATIONAL
COMMISSION FOR ANGLICAN-ORTHODOX
THEOLOGICAL DIALOGUE PROGRESS REPORT
20 July 2015
Metropolitan
Kallistos of Diokleia
Orthodox
Co-Chairman of the
International
Commission for
Anglican-Orthodox
Theological Dialogue
The
Anglican-Orthodox Theological Dialogue held its first plenary meeting at Oxford
in 1973, and since then it has produced three agreed statements : The Moscow
Agreed Statement (1976), The Dublin Agreed Statement (1984), and The Cyprus
Agreed Statement (2006). The last of these, entitled The Church of the Triune
God' (113 pages), dealt in detail with the doctrine of the Church, and in
particular with the nature of primacy in relation to episcopal collegiality,
and with the different ministries of men and women in ecclesiastical life. All
of these three agreed statements have been published in book form and have been
distributed to the general public.
From
2007 onwards the Anglican-Orthodox Dialogue has entered a new phase. With the
unanimous agreement of both sides, the topic for discussion has moved from the
realm of ecclesiology to that of anthropology. We have been considering the
nature of the human person, with particular reference to the creation of
humankind according to the image and likeness of God. A report on the
theological presuppositions of the doctrine of personhood, running to about
10,000 words, has been prepared by the Commission, and it is hoped that, after
further revision, this can be endorsed by the next plenary session of the
Commission to be held at Buffalo, NY (USA) on 19-25 September 2015.
Having
in this way laid a theological foundation for our understanding of personhood,
we intend to proceed in future meetings to consider the practical consequences
and application of this theological overview, with reference in particular to
the following topics :
(1)
Human responsibility for the environment; our efforts to overcome the current
ecological crisis.
(2)
The views held in our two Churches concerning human sexuality, gender
distinctions and marriage.
(3)
Our respective practices in regard more especially to birth control, abortion,
embryology and research into the foetus.
(4)
Our respective attitudes towards euthanasia and assisted dying.
These
issues are in many ways highly delicate and controversial, and they will need
to be handled with sensitivity and discretion. They also raise questions of a
complex technical character, and so the Commission will as appropriate invite
experts to our meetings, to ensure an informed discussion.
It
is our practice to hold a week-long plenary session of the Commission during
the course of every year. Each of the fourteen Orthodox Patriarchates and
Autocephalous Churches is entitled to send one delegate, and the Anglicans on
their side appoint a corresponding number of fourteen delegates. Allowing for
absentees, this means that our meetings are attended by approximately twenty
persons. We also have an Executive
Committee and a Drafting Committee, which meet as required. At
the last plenary session of the Commission (Jerusalem, 17-24
September 2014), the following Orthodox Churches were
represented : the Ecumenical Patriarchate, Alexandria, Antioch,
Jerusalem, Serbia, Romania, Cyprus. Delegaies from the Churches of Georgia, Greece, Poland, Albania, and the Czech
Lands/Slovakia were unable to attend. The Church of Bulgaria does
not participate in the work of the Commission.
the last plenary session of the Commission (Jerusalem, 17-24
September 2014), the following Orthodox Churches were
represented : the Ecumenical Patriarchate, Alexandria, Antioch,
Jerusalem, Serbia, Romania, Cyprus. Delegaies from the Churches of Georgia, Greece, Poland, Albania, and the Czech
Lands/Slovakia were unable to attend. The Church of Bulgaria does
not participate in the work of the Commission.
The
general spirit of our meetings is warm and friendly. A number of Anglicans on
the Commission are close in their theological outlook to the Orthodox, but
there are others - of the Evangelical and Liberal wings of Anglicanism — whose
viewpoint differs markedly from that of the Orthodox Church. Because of the
many discordant opinions existing within Anglicanism, it would be unrealistic
to imagine that there can be organic union and a restoration of eucharistic
communion between our Churches in the foreseeable future. Yet we are
nonetheless making slow but steady progress in mutual understanding. For this
reason it is my firm opinion that the Orthodox-Anglican dialogue is yielding
positive results and should be continued.
2 σχόλια:
Σπουδαίος θεολόγος ο ιεράρχης Κάλλιστος Γουέαρ. Εύχομαι να δώσει ο Θεός φώτιση να αποδώσει το έργο και οι προσπάθειές του αν και φοβάμαι πως οι διάλογοι με συντεταγμένες χριστιανικές εκκλησίες άλλων δογμάτων δύσκολα μπορεί να αποφέρουν καρπούς! Πολύς χαμένος κόπος και χρόνος τη στιγμή που το ορθόδοξο πλήρωμα παραμένει ακατήχητο σε βασικά θέματα.
Ἔτσι, τούς ἁγίους πού τήρησαν τήν ἐντολή τοῦ Θεοῦ, «ἐξέλθετε ἐκ μέσου αὐτῶν καὶ ἀφορίσθητε, λέγει Κύριος, καὶ ἀκαθάρτου μὴ ἅπτεσθε»,
κάποιοι τους πέταξαν έξω από τον Παράδεισο, και ἀπειλοῦν τοῦς Ορθοδόξους άδελφούς των, με ἐκκλησιαστικές ποινές, έφόσον θελήσουν να μείνουν ἐνωρίως της Πατερικῆς εύσεβείας.
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