An Agreed Statement of the North American Orthodox-Catholic Theological Consultation
The North American Orthodox-Catholic Theological Consultation concluded a
four-year study of the Filioque on October 25, when it unanimously
adopted an agreed text on this difficult question that has divided the
two communions for many centuries. This important development took place
at the 65th meeting of the Consultation, held at St. Paul’s College in
Washington, DC, under the joint chairmanship of Metropolitan Maximos of
the Greek Orthodox Metropolis of Pittsburgh and Archbishop Pilarczyk of
Cincinnati.
The original version of the Creed most Christian churches accept as the
standard expression of their faith dates from the First Council of
Constantinople, in 381, and has been used by Orthodox Christians since
that time. Towards the end, this Creed states that the Holy Spirit
"proceeds from the Father." The word Filioque ("and the Son") was later
added to the Latin version of this Creed used in the West, so that the
phrase as most western Christians know it reads that the Holy Spirit
"proceeds from the Father and the Son." This modification appeared in
some areas of western Europe as early as the 6th century but was
accepted in Rome only in the 11th century. This change in the wording of
the Creed and the underlying variations in understanding the origin and
procession of the Holy Spirit within the Trinity have long been
considered a church-dividing issue between Catholics and Orthodox. The
Consultation had been studying this question since 1999 in the hope of
eventually releasing an agreed statement.
Entitled “The Filioque: A Church-Dividing Issue?”, the ten-thousand word
text has three major sections. The first, “The Holy Spirit in the
Scriptures,” summarizes references to the Spirit in both the Old and New
Testaments. The more lengthy second section, “Historical
Considerations,” provides an overview of the origins of the two
traditions concerning the eternal procession of the Spirit and the slow
process by which the Filioque was added to the Creed in the West. It
also shows how this question concerning Trinitarian theology became
entwined with disputes regarding papal jurisdiction and primacy, and
reviews recent developments in the Catholic Church which point to a
greater awareness of the unique and normative character of the original
Greek version of the Creed as an expression of the faith that unites the
Orthodox East and Catholic West. The third section, “Theological
Reflections,” emphasizes our limited ability to speak of the inner life
of God, points out that both sides of the debate have often caricatured
the positions of the other, and lists areas in which the traditions
agree. It then explores the differences that have developed regarding
terminology, and identifies both theological and ecclesiological
divergences that have arisen over the centuries.
In a final section, the Consultation makes eight recommendations to the
members and bishops of the two churches. It recommends that they “enter
into a new and earnest dialogue concerning the origin and person of the
Holy Spirit.” It also proposes that in the future both Catholics and
Orthodox “refrain from labeling as heretical the traditions of the other
side” on this subject, and that the theologians of both traditions make
a clearer distinction between the divinity of the Spirit, and the
manner of the Spirit’s origin, “which still awaits full and final
ecumenical resolution.” The text also urges theologians to distinguish,
as far as possible, the theological issues concerning the origin of the
Holy Spirit from ecclesiological issues, and suggests that attention be
paid in the future to the status of councils of both our churches that
took place after the seven ecumenical councils of the first millennium.
And finally, in view of the fact that the Vatican has affirmed the
“normative and irrevocable dogmatic value of the Creed of 381” in its
original Greek version, the Consultation recommends that the Catholic
Church use the same text (without the Filioque) “in making translations
of that Creed for catechetical and liturgical use,” and declare that the
anathema pronounced by the Second Council of Lyons against those who
deny that the Spirit proceeds eternally from the Father and the Son is
no longer applicable.
At this meeting the members also took time to review major developments
in the lives of their churches. Among the items discussed were the
seminar on Petrine Ministry that was held in the Vatican in May; the
granting of autonomous status to the Antiochian Orthodox Christian
Archdiocese of North America; the Orientale Lumen Conference held in
Washington, DC, last June; the recent Patriarchal Assembly of the
Maronite Catholic Church; the presence of a delegation from the
Ecumenical Patriarchate in Rome in late June for the feast of Sts. Peter
and Paul headed by Archbishop Demetrios of America; the seminar
sponsored by Pro Oriente on the union of Transylvanian Orthodox with
Rome in Cluj, Romania, last July; the Faith and Order response to Ut
Unum Sint; statements by the two churches on same-sex marriages; and the
recent meeting of the Joint Committee of Orthodox and Catholic Bishops
in Baltimore.
The 66th meeting of the Consultation is scheduled to take place from
June 1 to 3, 2004, at Holy Cross Greek Orthodox School of Theology in
Brookline, Massachusetts, and the 67th meeting from October 21 to 23,
2004.
The North American Orthodox-Catholic Theological Consultation is
sponsored jointly by the Standing Conference of Canonical Orthodox
Bishops of the Americas (SCOBA), the Bishops’ Committee for Ecumenical
and Interreligious Affairs of the USCCB, and the Canadian Conference of
Catholic Bishops. Since its establishment in 1965, the Consultation has
now issued 22 agreed statements on various topics.
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
John Long, SJ, Father David Petras, Prof. Robin Darling Young, and
Father Ronald Roberson, CSP (staff).
The full text of the agreed statement of the North American
Orthodox-Catholic Theological Consultation on the Filioque can be read
by visiting the Resources and Texts section of the SCOBA web site:
http://www.scoba.us/resources/filioque-p01.asp