Meeting of North American Orthodox-Catholic Theological Consultation Held in Brookline, MA
SCOBA
The Standing Conference of the Canonical Orthodox Bishops in the Americas
8 East 79th Street, New York, NY 10021
Contact:
Bishop Dimitrios of Xanthos
212-570-3593
The North American Orthodox-Catholic Theological Consultation evaluated
reactions to its Agreed Statement on the Filioque and decided to focus
the next stage of its reflection on conciliarity/synodality and
primacies in their churches when it met at Holy Cross Greek Orthodox
School of Theology in Brookline, Massachusetts, from June 1-3, 2004.
The meeting was co-chaired by Metropolitan Maximos of Pittsburgh and
Archbishop Daniel Pilarczyk of Cincinnati.
In general the members have received positive reactions to the agreed
statement on the filioque, and more substantive theological evaluations
are awaited. The document is being translated into several languages
and is already available on the USCCB and SCOBA websites in French,
Greek and Romanian. In particular the members were gratified to learn
that His Holiness Bartholomew I, the Ecumenical Patriarch of
Constantinople, noted the work of our Consultation in a speech he gave
at the Orientale Lumen Conference in Istanbul on May 12, 2004. The
Patriarch said that "the theologians [of the Consultation] have provided
a number of valuable recommendations to our churches to resolve this
historic point of difference. We propose that these significant
recommendations be studied formally by our churches so that this issue
can be finally resolved."
In view of the next phase of the Consultation's work, which is to focus
on conciliarity/synodality and primacies in the Church, the members
reviewed first of all two previous statements by the Consultation on
related questions: "Apostolicity as God's Gift in the Life of the
Church" (November 1, 1986), and "An Agreed Statement on Conciliarity and
Primacy in the Church" (October 28, 1989). Metropolitan Maximos
presented his paper, "The 'Petrine Ministry': A Brief Response to the
Papal Encyclical Ut Unum Sint," and Fr Brian Daley, SJ, provided a
summary of his reflections on the papal encyclical, "The Ministry of
Primacy and the Communion of Churches." Fr John Long, SJ, brought out
the main points of "Petrine Ministry: A Working Draft," a synthesis of
reactions to the papal invitation to reflect on the nature of the
petrine office that was provided by the Pontifical Council for Promoting
Christian Unity, and Dr Paul Meyendorff presented a reaction to that
text which was prepared by the Faith and Order Commission of the
National Council of Churches of Christ in the USA. Reflecting further
on this topic, Fr John Galvin evaluated a paper by Metropolitan John
Zizioulas of Pergamon, "Primacy in the Church: An Orthodox Approach,"
and Dr Thomas Bird summarized the Opening Address given by Cardinal
Walter Kasper at a seminar on petrine ministry held in the Vatican in
May 2003. Fr Nicholas Apostola spoke about "Recent Discussions on
Primacy in Orthodox Theology," an overview that Metropolitan John
Zizioulas of Pergamon presented at the same Vatican seminar.
As usual, the members also took time to review major events in the lives
of their churches that have taken place since the last meeting. Among
these were the crisis in relations between the Ecumenical Patriarchate
and the Church of Greece, the first meeting of the new Oriental
Orthodox-Roman Catholic international dialogue, the progress of the
Assyrian-Catholic dialogue, the self-governing status of the Antiochian
Orthodox Archdiocese, the visit of a delegation from the Holy See to the
Ecumenical Patriarchate in November 2003, developments in relations
between the Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia and the Moscow
Patriarchate, the "Christian Churches Together" initiative, the
Foundation for Faith and Order, the visit of the Ecumenical Patriarch to
Cuba, developments in the Standing Conference of Canonical Orthodox
Bishops in the Americas (SCOBA), the debate on reception of Communion by
certain Catholic politicians in the United States, Cardinal Kasper's
visit to Moscow, reactions to the prospect of a Ukrainian Greek Catholic
Patriarchate, meetings between the Ukrainian Greek Catholic and
Ukrainian Orthodox bishops of the USA, the restructuring of the Holy
Synod of the Ecumenical Patriarchate, and the visit of the Ecumenical
Patriarch to the United States.
The 67th meeting of the Consultation is scheduled to take place October 21-23, 2004, at St. Paul's College in Washington, DC.
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
John Long, SJ, Father David Petras, and Father Ronald Roberson, CSP
(staff).