Catholic and Orthodox find common ground in early Church understanding, Member of ecumenical panel explains why the dialogue's latest document is significant
The group of scholars and Church leaders trying to forge a way
towards the restoration of full communion between the Catholic and
Orthodox Churches has come to a common understanding of the relationship
between synodality and primacy in the Church in the first 1000 years of
Christianity, with particular reference to the role of the Bishop of
Rome. A document they agreed upon at a recent meeting in the Italian
town of Chieti acknowledges the primacy of Rome among the original five
patriarchal sees of the Church.
The Chieti document, “Synodality and Primacy During the First Millennium: Towards a Common Understanding in Service to the Unity of the Church,”also
gives Catholic-Orthodox dialogue a common basis on which to build, says
Msgr. Paul McPartlan, a member of the Joint International Commission
for Theological Dialogue between the Roman Catholic Church and the
Orthodox Church that hammered out the agreement.
Their document explores both the primacy of the bishop, the
metropolitan or patriarch, and the pope, and “synodality”—the collegial
relations among bishops rooted in the communion of all the faithful in
the Church.
Msgr. McPartlan, professor of systematic theology and ecumenism at
the Catholic University of America, spoke with Aleteia about the
document and its significance in advancing the hoped-for unity of
Catholic and Orthodox.
The meeting in Chieti, which was the
commission’s 14th plenary session, released its document Sept. 22. Would
you summarize its document?
I think the document is very significant because it’s nine years
since the last Catholic-Orthodox agreed statement—agreed at Ravenna in
2007—and in that time we have been working on what everybody knows is
the most difficult issue of all between us, which is the relationship
between synodality and primacy at three levels in the Church’s
life—local, regional and universal—but especially wanting to address the
universal level, where, of course, the major difficulties between East
and West have occurred in history, with regard to the role of the pope
as universal primate.
Two previous draft documents failed, in Vienna (2010) and Amman
(2014), so this present agreement, at the third attempt, is very
important. It’s quite a short document, but I think it’s quite
substantial. It establishes that the basis for synodality in the Church
is the life of God, the Holy Trinity, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. So
we have a very theological core to the text, and it says that primacy
and synodality are interrelated and complementary at all levels of the
life of the Church. It treats the local level, with the local Church
around its bishop, then the regional level, where you have the
metropolitan or the patriarch with the bishops of a region or a
territory.
And then it goes to the universal level, and acknowledges the ancient taxis (the
canonical order of bishops) of the five patriarchal sees [Rome,
Constantinople, Alexandria, Antioch, and Jerusalem], with Rome in the
first place. So Rome is acknowledged as having a universal primacy, but
very much in the context of synodality, and it tries to indicate from
the first millennium, which is the era that Catholics and Orthodox agree
we are looking to for guidance, some very significant aspects of how
the pope, as bishop of Rome, related to the wider Church. There are
three things in particular that it mentions there:
- It talks about the involvement of the pope in the ecumenical councils. The bishop of Rome never attended ecumenical councils in the first millennium, but it was always the case that either he had delegates at the council or he accepted the council’s teaching post-factum. The second Council of Nicaea in 787 gave some criteria for an ecumenical council and acknowledged that the involvement of the bishop of Rome was essential for a council to be recognized as ecumenical. So popes are always involved somehow in an ecumenical council.
- Then it talks about the role of the pope that we find in the first millennium as a court of appeal, because appeals were made to the bishop of Rome even from the Church in the East in the first millennium (along with appeals to other major sees). The rules for that were very carefully clarified at the Council of Sardica in 343. It’s clear there was no recognition that the pope had direct jurisdiction in the East, but nevertheless bishops from the East could make an appeal to him, and so, what we say is that that practice manifested the communion of the Church. The bishop of Rome has a special role in the communion of the Church.
- Finally, and perhaps of the greatest importance, is the recognition that the ordering, or taxis, of the patriarchal sees is deeply rooted in the Eucharist. So we go back to the very foundations of our dialogue, the very first document, the Munich document of 1982, which laid a Eucharistic foundation, and adopted a Eucharistic ecclesiology. The Chieti document recognizes that whenever the patriarchs of the Church would come together to celebrate the Eucharist, they would stand in the Eucharist in the order of the taxis, so the taxis is fundamentally related to the celebration which gives the Church its life, namely the Eucharist. Implicitly, therefore, the bishop of Rome as the universal primate, has a very particular link to the Church’s Eucharistic life, and I think that idea is enormously promising for future dialogue and discussion.
In getting to this point, what concessions did each side have to make?
I don’t think that there’s a sense of any concessions, to be honest. I think there’s a genuine effort to find common ground.
I think there’s another very significant aspect of this text.
Everybody knows that the Russian Orthodox Church did not accept the
Ravenna document from 2007, and ever since 2007 it’s been unclear as to
what exactly the common ground between us, Catholics and Orthodox,
therefore was. What this document I think does is to restate, without
referring to the Ravenna document, some of the fundamental gains of that
document: the idea that synodality and primacy are interrelated; the
idea that there are three levels in the Church: local, regional, and
universal; the idea that there is indeed a primacy in each of those
levels and therefore a universal primacy, which Rome has because of
occupying the first place in the taxis. And so effectively what
we’re doing there is reestablishing the common basis of our dialogue
and getting all of the Churches back on the same page. Moscow, of
course, took part in the meeting in Chieti. So we now have a common
basis, clearly, for all of us, as we move forward in the dialogue.
There was a very good spirit in Chieti; there was a good sense of
collaboration and a desire to take a step forward in our discussion.
Will this agreement necessitate that the Catholic Church change Her teaching regarding the role of the Bishop of Rome?
No. We have no mandate as Catholic delegates to the dialogue to
change Catholic doctrine and we cannot possibly go against Catholic
doctrine. We have to be absolutely faithful to Catholic doctrine as the
Orthodox have to be faithful to Orthodox teaching. That’s why the
dialogue process is a very careful one, sometimes a very slow one, of
listening to one another. And I think one of the points that we have
recognized is that the language of jurisdiction, which Catholics often
associate with the pope, is very much a terminology of the second
millennium. So when we look at the first millennium it would be
anachronistic to speak about the universal jurisdiction of the pope.
What instead we have to do is look at the very significant role the pope
played in the communion life of the Church, a role that was recognized
in the East as well as the West. Although it is clear that the pope
related rather differently to the Church in the West than to the Church
in the East, nevertheless the bishop of Rome was recognized in the East
as playing an important role in the Church as a whole.
What must yet be resolved before we can mutually say we are in full communion with each other?
Clearly we have to deal with the second millennium in some way. This
needs to be discussed next year by the joint coordinating committee to
decide exactly what we will do next. We have been looking at the first
millennium and we have established a very good common basis. The Chieti
document says that we must now build upon that common basis from the
first millennium, but the Church’s life continues, there has been a
second millennium, in which there were developments, good and not so
good, on both sides. So we need somehow to address the second
millennium. The Orthodox, and especially the Russian Orthodox, very much
want to address the question of uniatism [Eastern Christians who
entered into union with Rome at various points in the second millennium,
but kept their liturgy and traditions, such as the Ukrainian Greek
Catholic Church]. The theological dialogue already produced an agreed
statement on that important matter in 1993. There may well be more work
we need to do on that. But the precise context in which to do that work
has yet to be agreed.
Somehow we have to reckon with the second millennium, but I hope very
much that we can do so in a positive spirit. We agree that the basis
for our moving forward today is the witness and the life of the
undivided Church in the first millennium, and we have clarified some
important points from the first millennium in the new document. We
mustn’t get too bogged down in the second millennium, which is a very
complex era.
John Burger
John Burger is a news
editor at Aleteia. He formerly worked at the National Catholic Register
and Catholic New York in the Archdiocese of New York. He has also
written for a wide variety of Catholic publications.