Anglican-Catholic Ecumenical Working
Group Launched
A 35-Year Dialogue Continues
VATICAN CITY, NOV. 27, 2001 (Zenit.org).-
Ecumenical dialogue took another step forward when John Paul II gave his backing
to the new Anglican-Roman Catholic Working Group, which held its inaugural
meeting in Rome last weekend.
Before going to Rome, the group's members, bishops of the two Christian
confessions, met in London with Anglican Archbishop George Carey of Canterbury.
When John Paul II received the participants in this new initiative on Saturday,
he referred to "the many genuine advances of ecumenism in recent years, of
which the new group gives evidence."
The Pontiff recalled that the first such working group began in 1966, at the
initiative of Paul VI and Anglican Archbishop Michael Ramsey, and resulted in
the establishment of the Anglican and Roman Catholic International Commission (ARCIC).
Following his visit to Canterbury in 1982, John Paul II and Anglican Archbishop
Robert Runcie established a second ARCIC.
The third ecumenical step was taken in 1996, when the Pope and the present
Archbishop of Canterbury published a Joint Declaration, inviting Catholics and
Anglicans "to repent of the past, to pray for the grace of unity, and to
open themselves to God's transforming power."
In May 2000, a decisive meeting of Anglican and Catholic Bishops took place in
Mississauga, Ontario, when it was decided to create the new ecumenical working
group. It was that group that came into being this past weekend.
The Pope told the bishops that they "are especially well qualified to
consider the next practical steps that might be taken, not only to consolidate
the gains already made, but also to lead us to new depths of communion on the
way to that fullness of unity that is the will of Christ."
"It is clear that disunity has impaired our mission in the world," the
Holy Father said. "In these troubled times, the world needs more than ever
the common witness of Christians in every area, from the defense of human life
and dignity to the promotion of justice and peace."
"When discouragement threatens or new difficulties arise, we need to focus
once more upon the Spirit's power to do what seems to us impossible," he
added. "At times of apparent pause, we must wait for the Holy Spirit to do
what we ourselves cannot do."
Last January, the names of the members of the new working group were published.
The team will work under the chairmanship of Bishop David Beetge, Anglican
bishop of the Highveld, South Africa; and Catholic Archbishop John Bathersby of
Brisbane, Australia.
The other Catholic members are Archbishop Alexander Brunett of Seattle,
Washington; Bishop Anthony Farquhar of the Down and Connor Diocese of Ireland;
Bishop Crispian Hollis of Portsmouth, England; Bishop Lucius Ugorji of Umuahia,
Nigeria; and Father Peter Cross of Melbourne, Australia.
Monsignor Timothy Galligan of the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian
Unity is Catholic co-secretary.
The other Anglican members are Archbishop Peter Carnley of Perth, primate of the
Anglican Church of Australia; Bishop Edwin Gulick of Kentucky; Archbishop Peter
Kwong, primate of Hong Kong; Bishop Michael Nazir-Ali of Rochester, England; and
Dr. Mary Tanner of England.
The Anglican co-secretary is Canon David Hamid of the Anglican Communion Office
in London.
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