The following statement is the product of consultation, beginning in September 1992, between Evangelical Protestant and Roman Catholic Christians. Appended to the text is a list of participants in the consultation and of others who have given their support to this declaration.
Introduction
We are Evangelical Protestants and Roman
Catholics who have been led through prayer, study, and discussion
to common convictions about Christian faith and mission. This
statement cannot speak officially for our communities. It does
intend to speak responsibly from our communities and to our communities.
In this statement we address what we have discovered both about
our unity and about our differences. We are aware that our experience
reflects the distinctive circumstances and opportunities of Evangelicals
and Catholics living together in North America. At the same time,
we believe that what we have discovered and resolved is pertinent
to the relationship between Evangelicals and Catholics in other
parts of the world. We therefore commend this statement to their
prayerful consideration.
As the Second Millennium draws to a close, the Christian mission
in world history faces a moment of daunting, opportunity and responsibility.
If in the merciful and mysterious ways of God the Second Coming
is delayed, we enter upon a Third Millennium that could be, in
the words of John Paul II, a springtime of world missions.(Redemptoris
Missio)
As Christ is one, so the Christian mission is one. That one mission
can be and should be advanced in diverse ways. Legitimate diversity,
however, should not be confused with existing divisions between
Christians that obscure the one Christ and hinder the one mission.
There is a necessary connection between the visible unity of Christians
and the mission of the one Christ. We together pray for the fulfillment
of the prayer of Our Lord: May they all be one, as you,
Father, are in me, and I in you, so also may they be in us, that
the world may believe that you sent me.(John 17) We together,
Evangelicals and Catholics, confess our sins against the unity
that Christ intends for all his disciples.
The one Christ and one mission includes many other Christians,
notably the Eastern Orthodox and those Protestants not commonly
identified as Evangelical. All Christians are encompassed in the
prayer, May they all be one. Our present statement
attends to the specific problems and opportunities in the relationship
between Roman Catholics and Evangelical Protestants.
As we near the Third Millennium, there are approximately 1.7 billion
Christians in the world. About a billion of these are Catholics
and more than 300 million are Evangelical Protestants. The century
now drawing to a close has been the greatest century of missionary
expansion in Christian history. We pray and we believe that this
expansion has prepared the way for yet greater missionary endeavor
in the first century of the Third Millennium.
The two communities in world Christianity that are most evangelistically
assertive and most rapidly growing are Evangelicals and Catholics.
In many parts of the world, the relationship between these communities
is marked more by conflict than by cooperation, more by animosity
than by love, more by suspicion than by trust, more by propaganda
and ignorance than by respect for the truth. This is alarmingly
the case in Latin America, increasingly the case in Eastern Europe,
and too often the case in our own country.
Without ignoring conflicts between and within other Christian
communities, we address ourselves to the relationship between
Evangelicals and Catholics, who constitute the growing edge of
missionary expansion at present and, most likely, in the century
ahead. In doing so, we hope that what we have discovered and resolved
may be of help in other situations of conflict, such as that among
Orthodox, Evangelicals, and Catholics in Eastern Europe. While
we are gratefully aware of ongoing efforts to address tensions
among these communities, the shameful reality is that, in many
places around the world, the scandal of conflict between Christians
obscures the scandal of the cross, thus crippling the one mission
of the one Christ. As in times past, so also today and in the
future, the Christian mission, which is directed to the entire
human community, must be advanced against fotmidable opposition.
In some cultures, that mission encounters resurgent spititualities
and religions that are explicitly hostile to the claims of the
Christ. Islam, which in many instances denies the freedom to witness
to the Gospel, must be of increasing concern to those who care
about religious freedom and the Christian mission. Mutually respectful
conversation between Muslims and Christians should be encouraged
in the hope that more of the world will, in the oft-repeated words
of John Paul II, open the door to Christ. At the same
time, in our so-called developed societies, a widespread secularization
increasingly descends into a moral, intellectual, and spiritual
nihilism that denies not only the One who is the Truth but the
very idea of truth itself.
We enter the twenty-first century without illusions. With Paul
and the Christians of the first century, we know that we
are not contending against flesh and blood, but against the principalities,
against the powers, against the world rulers of this present darkness,
against the spiritual hosts of wickedness in the heavenly places.
(Ephesians 6) As Evangelicals and Catholics, we dare not by needless
and loveless conflict bctween ourselves give aid and comfort to
the enemies of the cause of Christ.
The love of Christ compels us and we are therefore resolved to
avoid such conflict between our communities and, where such conflict
exists, to do what we can to reduce and eliminate it. Beyond that,
we are called and we are therefore resolved to explore patterns
of working and witnessing together in order to advance the one
mission of Christ. Our common resolve is not based merely on a
desire for harmony. We reject any appearance of harmony that is
purchased at the the price of truth. Our common resolve is made
imperative by obedience to the truth of God revealed in the Word
of God, the Holy Scriptures, and by trust in the promise of the
Holy Spirits guidance until Our Lord returns in glory to
judge the living and the dead. The mission that we embrace together
is the necessary consequence of the faith that we affirm together.
We Affirm Together
Jesus Christ is Lord. That is the first and final affirmation that Christians make about all of reality.
He is the One sent by God to be Lord
and Savior of all: And there is salvation in no one else,
for there is no other name under heaven given among men by which
we must be saved. (Acts 4) Christians are people ahead of
time, those who proclaim now what will one day be acknowledged
by all, that Jesus Christ is Lord. (Philippians 2)
We affirm together that we are Justified by grace through faith
on account of Christ. Living faith is active in love that is nothing
less than the love of Christ, for we together say with Paul: I
have been crucified with Christ; it is no longer I who live, but
Christ who lives in me: and the life I now live in the flesh I
live by faith in the Son of Cod, who loved me and gave himself
for me. (Galatians 2)
All who accept Christ as Lord and Savior are brothers and siste
sr in Christ. WEe have not chosen one another, just as we have
not chosen Christ. He has chosen us, and he has chosen us to be
his together. (John 15) However impetfect out communion with one
another, however deep out disagreements with one another, we recognize
that there isbut one church of Christ. There is one church because
there is one Christ and the church is his body. However difficult
the way, we recognize that we are called by God to a fuller realization
of our unity in the body of Christ. Theonly unity to which we
would give expression is unity in the truth, and the truth is
this: There is one body and one Spirit, just as you were
called to the one hope that belongs to your call, one Lord, one
faith, one baptism, one God and Father of us all, who is above
all and through all and in all. (Ephesians 4)
We affirm together that Christians are to teach and live in obedience
to the divinely inspired Scriptures, which are the infallible
Word of God. We further affirm together that Christ has promised
to his church the gift of the Holy Spirit who will lead us into
all truth in discerning and declaring the teaching of Scripture.
(John 16) We recognize together that the Holy Spirit has so guided
his church in the past. In, for instance, the formation of the
canon of the Scriptures, and in the orthodox response to the the
great Christological and Trinitarian controversies of the early
centuries, we confidently acknowledge the guidance of the Holy
Spirit. In faithful response to the Spirits leading, the
church formulated the Apostles Creed, which we can and herebydo
affirm together as an accurate statement of scriptural truth:
I believe in God, the Father almighty, creator of heaven and earth.
I believe in Jesus Christ, his only Son, our Lord. He was conceived by the power of the Holy Spirit and born of the virgin Mary. He suffered under Pontius Pilate, was crucified, died, and was buried. He descended into hell. On the third day he rose again. He ascended into heaven, and is seated at the right hand of the Father. He will come again to judge the living and the dead.
l believe in the Holy Spirit, the holy Catholic Church, the communion of saints, the forgiveness of sins, the resurrection of the body, and the life everlasting. Amen.
We Hope Together
We hope together that all people will
come to faith in Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior. This hope makes
necessary the churchs missionary zeal. But how are
they to call upon him in whom they have not believed? And how
are they to believe in him of whom they have never heard? And
how are they to hear without a preacher? And how can men preach
unless they are sent? (Romans 10) The church is by nature,
in all places and at all times, in mission. Our missionary hope
is inspired by the revealed desire of God that all should
be saved and come to a knowledge of the truth. (I Timothy
2)
The church lives by and for the Great Commission: Go therefore
and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name
of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, teaching
them to observe all that I have commanded you; and lo, I am with
you always, to the close of the age. (Matthew 28)
Unity and love among Christians is an integral part of our missionary
witness to the Lord whom we serve. A new commandment I give
to you, that you love one another: even as I have loved you, that
you also love one another. By this all men will know that you
are my disciples, if you have love for one anothCT. (John
13) If we do not love one another, we disobey his command and
contradict the Gospel we declare.
As Evangelicals and Catholics, we pray that our unity in the love
of Christ will become ever more evident as a sign to the world
of Gods reconciling power. Our communal and ecclesial separations
are deep and long standing. We acknowledge that we do not know
the schedule nor do we know the way to the greater visible unity
for which we hope. We do know that existing patterns of distrustful
polemic and cnnflict are not the way. We do know that God who
has brought us into communion with himself through Christ intends
that we also be in communion with one another. We do know that
Christ is the way, the truth, and the life (John 14) and as we
are drawn closer to himwalking in that way, obeying that
truth, living that lifewe are drawn closer to one another.
Whatever may be the future form of the relationship between our
communities, we can, we must, and we will begin now the work required
to remedy what we know to be wrong in that relationship. Such
work requires trust and understanding, and trust and understanding
require an assiduous attention to truth. We do not deny but clearly
assert that there are disagreements between us. Misunderstandings,
mis representations, and caricatures of one another, however,
are not disagreements. These distortions must be cleared away
if we are to search through our honest differences in a manner
consistent with what we affirm and hope together on the basis
of Gods Word.
We Search Together
Together we search for a fuller and
clearer understanding of Gods revelation in Christ and his
will for his disciples. Because of the limitations of human reason
and language, which limitations are compounded by sin, we cannot
understand completely the transcendent reality of God and his
ways. Only in the End Time will we see face to face and know as
we are known. (1 Corinthians 13) We now search together in confident
reliance upon Gods sell-revelation in Jesus Christ, the
sure testimony of Holy Scripture, and the promise of the Spirit
to his church. In this Search to understand the truth more fully
and clearly, we need one another. We are both informed and limited
by the histories of our communities and by our own experiences.
Across the divides of communities and experiences, we need to
challenge one another, always speaking the truth in love building
up the Body. (Ephesians 4)
We do not presume to suggest that we can resolve the deep and
longstanding differences between Evangelicals and Catholics. Indeed
these differences may never be resolved short of the Kingdom Come.
Nonetheless, we are not permitted simply to resign ourselves to
differences that divide us from one another. Not all differences
are authentic disagreements, nor need all disagreements divide.
Differences and disagreements must be tested in disciplined and
sustained conversation. In this connection we warmly commend and
encourage the formal theological dialogues of recent years between
Roman Catholics and Evangelicals.
We note some of the differences and disagreements that must be
addressed more fully and candidly in order to strengthen between
us a relationship of trust in obedience to truth. Among points
of difference in determine, worship, practice, and piety that
are frequently thought to divide us are these:
The church as an integral part of the
Gospel or the church as a communal consequence of the Gospel.
The church as visible communion or invisible fellowship of true
believers.
The sole authority of Scripture (sola scriptura) or Scripture
as authoritatively interpreted in the church.
The soul freedom of the individual Christian or the
Magisterium (teaching authority) of the community.
The church as local congregation or universal communion.
Ministry ordered in apostolic succession or the priesthood of
all believers.
Sacraments and ordinances as symbols of grace or means of grace.
The Lords Supper as eucharistic sacrifice or memorial meal.
Remembrance of Mary and the saints or devotion to Mary and the
saints.
Baptism as sacrament of regeneration or testimony to regeneration.
This account of differences is by no
means complete. Not is the disparity between positions always
so sharp as to warrant the or in the above formulations.
Moreover, among those recognized as Evangelical Protestants there
are significant differences between, for example, Baptists, Pentecostals,
and Calvinists on these questions. But the differences mentioned
above reflect disputes that are deep and long standing. In at
least some instances, they reflect authentic disagreements that
have been in the past and are at present barriers to full communion
between Christians.
On these questions, and other questions implied by them, Evangelicals
hold that the Catholic Church has gone beyond Scripture, adding
teachings and practices that detract from or compromise the Gospel
of Gods saving grace in Christ. Catholics, in turn, hold
that such teachings and practices are grounded in Scripture and
belong to the fullness of Gods revelation. Their rejection,
Catholics say, results in a truncated and reduced understanding
of the Christian reality.
Again, we cannot resolve these disputes here. We can and do affirm
together that the entirety of Christian faith, life, and mission
finds its source, center, and end in the crucified and risen Lord.
We can and do pledge that we will continue to search together
through study, discussion, and ptayerfor a better understanding
of one anothers convictions and a more adequate comprehension
of the truth of God in Christ. We can testify now that in our
searching together we have discovered what we can affirm together
and what we can hope together and, therefore, how we can contend
together.
We Contend Together
As we are bound together by Christ and
his cause, so we are bound together in contending against all
that opposes Christ and his cause. We are emboldened not by illusions
of easy triumph but by faith in his certain triumph. Our Lord
wept over Jerusalem, and he now weeps over a world that does not
know the time of its visitation. The raging of the principalities
and powers may increase as the End Time nears, but the outcome
of the contest is assured.
The cause of Christ is the cause and mission of the church, which
is, first of all, to proclaim the Good News that God was
in Christ reconciling the world to himself, not counting their
trespasses against them, and entrusting to us the message of reconciliation.
(2 Corinthians 5) To proclaim this Gospel and to sustain the community
of faith, worship, and discipleship that is gathered by this Gospel
is the first and chief responsibility of the church. All other
tasks and responsibilities of the church are derived from and
directed toward the mission of the Gospel.
Christians individually and the church corporately also have a
responsibility for the right ordering of civil society. We embrace
this task soberly; knowing the consequences of human sinfulness,
we resist the utopian conceit that it is within our powers to
build the Kingdom of God on earth. We embrace this task hopefully;
knowing that God has called us to love our neighbor, we seek to
secure for all a greater measure of civil righteousness and justice,
confident that he will crown our efforts when he rightly orders
all things in the coming of his Kingdom.
In the exercise of these public responsibilities there has been
in recent years a growing convergence and cooperation between
Evangelicals and Catholics. We thank God for the discovery of
one another in contending for a common cause. Much more important,
we thank God for the discovery of one another as brothers and
sisters in Christ. Our cooperation as citizens is animated by
our convergence as Christians. We promise one another that we
will work to deepen, build upon, and expand this pattern of convergence
and cooperation.
Together we contend for the truth that politics, law and culture
must be secured by moral truth. With the Founders of the American
experiment, we declare, We hold these truths. With
them, we hold that this constitutional order is composed not just
of rules and procedures but is most essentially a moral experiment.
With them, we hold that only a virtuous people can be free and
just, and that virtue is secured by religion. To propose that
securing civil virtue is the purpose of religion is blasphemous.
To deny that securing civil virtue is a benefit of religion is
blindness.
Americans are drifting away from, are often explicitly defying,
the constituting truths of this experiment in ordered liberty.
Influential sectors of the culture are laid waste by relativism,
anti-intellectualism, and nihilism that deny the very idea of
truth. Against such influences in both the elite and popular culture,
we appeal to reason and religion in contending for the foundational
truths of out constitutional order.
More specifically, we contend together for religious freedom.
We do so for the sake of religion, but also because religious
freedom is the first freedom, the source and shield of all human
freedoms. In thcir relationship to God, persons have a dignity
and responsibility that transcends, and thereby limits, the authority
of the state and of every other merely human institution.
Religious freedom is itself grounded in and is a product of religious
faith, as is evident in the history of Baptists and others in
this country. Today we rejoice together that the Roman Catholic
Churchas affirmed by the Second Vatican Council and boldly
exemplified in the ministry of John Paul IIis strongly committed
to religious freedom and, consequently, to the defense of all
human rights. Where Evangelicals and Catholics are in severe and
sometimes violent conflict, such as parts of Latin Ametica, we
urge Christians to embrace and act upon the imperative of religious
freedom. Religious freedom will not be respected by the state
if it is not respected by Christians or, even worse, if Christians
attempt to recruit the state in repressing religious freedom.
In this country, too, freedom of religion cannot be taken for
granted but requires constant attention. We strongly affirm the
separation of church and state, and just as strongly protest the
distortion of that principle to mean the separation of religion
from public life. We are deeply concerned by the courts
narrowing of the protections provided by the free exercise
provision of the First Amendment and by an obsession with no
establishment that stifles the necessary role of religion
in American life. As a consequence of such distortions, it is
increasingly the case that wherever government goes religion must
retreat, and government increasingly goes almost everywhere. Religion,
which was privileged and foundational in our legal order, has
in recent years been penalized and made marginal. We contend together
for a renewal of the constituting vision of the place of religion
in the American experiment.
Religion and religiously grounded moral conviction is not an alien
or threatening force in our public life. For the great majority
of Americans, morality is derived, however variously and confusedly,
from religion. Tle argument, increasingly voiced in sectors of
our political culture, that religion should be excluded from the
public square must be recognized as an assault upon the most elementary
principles of democratic governance. That argument needs to be
exposed and countered by leaders, religious and other, who care
about the integrity of our constitutional order.
The pattern of convergence and cooperation between Evangelicals
and Catholics is, in large part, a result of common effort to
protect human life, especially the lives of the most vulnerable
among us. With the Founders, we hold that all human beings are
endowed by their Creator with the right to life, liberty, and
the pursuit of happiness. The statement that the unborn child
is a human life thatbarring natural misfortune or lethal
interventionwill become what everyone rcognizes as a human
baby is not a religious assertion. It is a statement of simple
biological fact. That the unborn child has a right to protection,
including the protection of law, is a moral statement supported
by moral reason and biblical truth.
We, therefore, will persist in contendingwe will not be
discouraged but will multiply every effortin order to secure
the legal protection of the unborn. Our goals are: to secure due
process of law for the unborn, to enact the most protective laws
and public policies that are politically possible, and to reduce
dramatically the incidence of abortion. We warmly commend those
who have established thousands of crisis pregnancy and postnatal
care centers across the country, and urge that such efforts be
multiplied. As the unborn must be protected, so also must women
be protected from their current rampant exploitation by the abortion
industry and by fathers who refuse to accept responsibility for
mothers and children. Abortion on demand, which is the current
rule in America, must be recognized as a massive attack on the
dignity, rights, and needs of women.
Abortion is the leading edge of an encroaching culture of death.
The helpless old, the radically handicapped. and others who cannot
effectively assert their rights are increasingly treated as though
they have no rights. These are the powerless who are exposed to
the will and whim of those who have power over them. We will do
all in our power to resist proposals for euthanasia, eugenics,
and population control that exploit the vulnerable, corrupt the
integtity of medicine, deprave our culture, and betray the moral
truths of our constitutional order.
In public education, we contend together for schools that transmit
to coming generations our cultural heritage, which is inseparable
from the formative influence of religion, especially Judaism and
Christianity. Education for responsible citizenship and social
behavior is inescapably moral education. Every effort must be
made to cultivate the morality of honesty, law, observance, work,
caring, chastity, mutual respect between the sexes, and readiness
for marriage, parenthood, and family. We reject the claim that,
in any or all of these areas, tolerance requires the
promotion of moral equivalence between the normative and the deviant.
In a democratic society that recognizes that parents have the
primary respcynsibility for the formation of their children, schools
are to assist and support, not oppose and undermine, parents in
the exercise of their responsibility.
We contend together for a comprehensive policy of parental choice
in education. This is a moral qtiestion of simple justice. Parents
are the primary educators of their children; the state and other
institutions should be supportive of their exercise of that responsibility.
We affirm policies that enable parents to effectivrly exercise
their right and responsibility to choose the schooling that they
consider best for their children.
We contend together against the widespread pornography in our
society, along with the celebration of violence, sexual depravity,
and antireligious bigotry in the entertainment media. In resisting
such cultural and moral debasement, we recognize the legitimacy
of boycotts and other consumer actions, and urge the enforcement
of existing laws against obscenity. We reject the self-serving
claim of the peddlers of depravity that this constitutes illegitimate
censorship. We reject the assertion of the unimaginative that
artistic creativity is to be measured by the capacity to shock
or outrage. A people incapable of defending decency invites the
rule of viciousness, both public and personal.
We contend for a renewed spirit of acceptance, understanding,
and cooperation across lines of religion, race, ethnicity, sex,
and class. We are all created in the image of God and are accountable
to him. That truth is the basis of individual responsibility and
equality before the law. The abandonment of that truth has resulted
in a society at war with itself, pitting citizens against one
another in bitter conflicts of group grievances and claims to
entitlement. justice and social amity requite a redirection of
public aititudes and policies so that rights are joined to duties
and people ate rewarded according to their character and competence.
We contend for a free society, including a vibrant market economy.
A free society requires a careful balancing between economics,
politics, and culture. Christianity is not an ideology and therefore
does not prescribe precisely how that balance is to be achieved
in every circumstance. We affirm the importance of a free economy
not only because it is more efficient but because it accords with
a Christian understanding of human freedom. Economic freedom,
while subject to grave abuse, makes possible the patterns of creativity,
cooperation, and accountability that contribute to the common
good.
We contend together for a renewed appreciation of Western culture.
In its history and missionary reach, Christianity engages all
cultures while being captive to none. We are keenly aware of,
and grateful for, the role of Christianity in shaping and sustaining
the Western culture of which we are part. As with all of history,
that culture is marred by human sinfulness. Alone among world
cultures, however, the West has cultivated an attitude of self-criticism
and of eagerness to learn from other cultures. What is called
multiculturalism can mean respectful attention to human differences.
More commonly today, however, mtiltictilturalism means affirming
all cultures but our own. Welcoming the contributions of other
cultures and being ever alert to the limitations of our own, we
receive Western culture as our legacy and embrace it as out task
in order to transmit it as a gift to future generations.
We contend for public policies that demonstrate renewed respect
for the irreplaceable role of mediating structures in socictynotably
the family, churches, and myriad voluntary associations. The state
is not the society, and many of the most important functions of
society are best addressed in independence from the state. The
role of churches in responding to a wide variety of human needs,
especially among the poor and marginal, needs to be protected
and strengthened. Moreover, society is not the aggregate of isolated
individuals bearing rights but is composed of communities that
inculcate responsibility, sustain shared memory, provide mutual
aid, and nurture the habits that contribute to both personal wellbeing
and the common good. Most basic among such communities is the
community of the familv. Laws and social policies should be designed
with particular care for the stability and flourishing of families.
While the crisis of the family in America is by no means limited
to the poor or to the underclass, heightened attention must be
paid those who have become, as a result of wellintended
but misguided statist policies, virtual wards of the government.
Finally, we contend for a realistic and responsible understanding
of Americas part in world affairs. Realism and responsibility
require that we avoid both the illusions of unlimited power and
righteousness, on the one hand. and the timidity and selfishness
of isolationism, on the other. U.S. foreign policy should reflect
a concern for the defense of democracy and, wherever prudent and
possible, the protection and advancement of human rights, including
religious freedom.
The above is a partial list of public responsibilities on which
we believe there is a pattern of convergence and cooperation between
Evangelicals and Catholics. We reject the notion that this constitutes
a partisan religious agenda in American politics.
Rather, this is a set of directions oriented to the common good
and discussable on the basis of public reason. While our sense
of civic responsibility is informed and motivated by Christian
faith, our intention is to elevate the level of political and
moral discourse in a manner that excludes no one and invites the
participation of all people of good will. To that end, Evangelicals
and Catholics have made an inestimable contributiion in the past
and, it is our hope, will contribute even more effectively in
the future.
We are profoundly aware that the American experiment has been,
all in all, a blessing to the world and a blessing to us as Evangelical
and Catholic Christians. We are determined to assume our full
share of responsibility for this one nation under God,
believing it to be a nation under the judgment, mercy, and providential
care of the Lord of the nations to whom alone we render unqualified
allegiance.
We Witness Together
The question of Christian witness unavoidably
returns us to points of serious tension between Evangelicals and
Catholics. Bearing witness to the saving power of Jesus Christ
and his will for our lives is an integral part of Christian discipleship.
The achievement of good will and cooperation between Evangelicals
and Catholics must not be at the price of the urgency and clarity
of Christian witness to the Gospel. At the same time, and as noted
earlier, Our Lord has made clear that the evidence of love among
his disciples is an integral part of that Christian witness.
Today, in this country and elsewhere, Evangelicals and Catholics
attempt to win converts from one anothers folds.
In some ways, this is perfectly understandable and perhaps inevitable.
In many instances, however, such efforts at recruitment undermine
the Christian mission by which we are bound by Gods Word
and to which we have recommitted ourselves in this statement.
It should be clearly understood between Catholics and Evangelicals
that Christian witness is of necessity aimed at conversion. Authentic
conversion isin its beginning, in its end, and all along
the wayconversion to God in Christ by the power of the Spirit.
In this connection, we embrace as our own the explanation of the
BaptistRoman Catholic International Conversation (1988):
Conversion is turning away from all that is opposed to God, contrary to Christs teaching, and turning to God, to Christ, the Son, through the work of the Holy Spirit. It entails a turning from the self-centeredness of sin to faith in Christ as Lord and Savior. Conversion is a passing from one way of life to another new one, marked with the newness of Christ. It is a continuing process so that tire whole life of a Cliristian should be a passage from death to life, from error to truth, from sin to grace. Out life in Christ demands continual growth in Gods grace. Conversion is personal but not private. Individuals respond in faith to Gods call but faith comes from hearing the proclamation of the word of God and is to be expressed in the life together in Christ that is the Church.
By preaching, teaching, and life example, Cliristians witness to Christians and non-Christians alike. We seek and pray for the conversion of others, even as we recognize our own continuing need to be fully converted. As we strive to make Christian faith and lifeour own and that of othersever more intentional rather than nominal, ever more committed rather than apathetic, we also recognize the different forms that authentic discipleship can take. As is evident in the two thousand year history of the church, and in our contemporary experience, there are different ways of being Christian, and some of these ways are distinctively marked by communal patterns of worship, piety, and catechesis. That we are all to be one does not mean that we are all to be identical in our way of following the one Christ. Such distinctive patterns of discipleship, it should be noted, are amply evident within tire communion of the Catholic Church as well as within the many worlds of Evangclical Protestantism.
It is understandable that Christians
who bear witncss to the Gospel try to persuade others that their
communities and traditions are more fully in accord with the Gospel.
There is a necessary distinction between evangelizing and what
is today commonly called proselytizing or sheep stealing.
We condemn the practice of recruiting people from another community
for the purposes of denominational or institutional aggrandizement.
At the same time, our commitment to full religious freedom compels
us to defend the legal freedom to proselytize even as we call
upon Christians to refrain from such activity.
Three observations are in order in connection with proselytizing.
First, as much as we might believe one community is more fully
in accord with the Gospel than another, we as Evangelicals and
Catholics affirm that opportunity and means for growth in Christian
discipleship are available in our several communities. Second,
the decision of the committed Christian with respect to his communal
allegiance and participation must be assiduously respected. Third,
in view of the large number of non-Christians in the world and
the enormous challenge of our common evangelistic task, it is
neither theologically legitimate nor a prudent use of resources
for one Christian community to proselytize among active adherents
of another Christian community.
Christian witness must always be made in a spirit of love and
humility. It must not deny but must readily accord to everyone
tire full freedom to discern and decide what is Gods will
for his life. Witness that is in service to the truth is in service
to such freedom. Any form of coercionphysical, psychological,
legal, economiccorrupts Christian witness and is to be unqualifiedly
rejected. Similarly, bearing false witness against other persons
and communities, or casting unjust and uncharitable suspicions
upon them, is incompatible with the Gospel. Also to be rejected
is the practice of comparing the strengths and ideals of one community
with the weaknesses and failures of another. In describing the
teaching and practices of other Christians, we must strive to
do so in a way that they would recognize as fair and accurate.
In considering the many corruptions of Christian witness, we,
Evangelicals and Catholics, confess that we have sinned against
one another and against God. We must earnestly ask the forgiveness
of Cod and one another, and pray for the grace to amend our own
lives and that of our communities.
Repentance and amendment of life do not dissolve remaining differences
between its. In the context of evangelization and reevangelization,
we encounter a major difference in our understanding of the relatioiisliip
between baptism and the new birth in Christ. For Catholics, all
who are validly baptized are born again and are truly, however
imperfectly, in communion with Christ. That baptismal grace is
to be continuingly reawakened and revivified through conversion.
For most Evangelicals, but not all, the experience of conversion
is to be followed by baptism as a sign of new birth. For Catholics,
all the baptized are already members of the church, however dormant
their faith and life; for many Evangelicals, the new birth requires
baptismal initiation into the community of the born again. These
differing beliefs about the relationship between baptism, new
birth and membership in the church should be honestly presented
to the Christian who has undergone conversion. But again, his
decision regarding communal allegiance and participation must
be assiduously respected.
There are, then, differences between us that cannot be resolved
here. But on this we are resolved: All authentic witness must
be aimed at conversion to God in Christ by the power of the Spirit.
Those convertedwhether understood as having received the
new birth for the first time or as having experienced the reawakening
of the new birth originally bestowed in the sacrament of baptismmust
be given full freedom and respect as they discern and decide the
community in which they will live their new life in Christ. In
such discernment and decision, they are ultimately responsible
to God, and we dare not interfere with the exercise of that responsibility.
Also in our differences and disagreements, we Evangelicals and
Catholics commend one another to God who by the power at
work within us is able to do far more abundantly than all that
we ask or think. (Ephesians 3)
In this discussion of witnessing together we have touched on difficult
and longstanding problems. The difficulties must not be
permitted to overshadow the truths on which we are, by the grace
of Cod, in firm agreement. As we grow in mutual understanding
and trust, it is out hope that out efforts to evangelize will
not jeopardize but will reinforce our devotion to the common tasks
to which we have pledged ourselves in this statement.
Conclusion
Nearly two thousand years after it began,
and nearly five hundred years after the divisions of the Reformation
era, the Christian mission to the world is vibrantly alive and
assertive. We do not know, we cannot know, what the Lord of history
has in store for the Third Millennium. It may be the spring time
of world missions and great Christian expansion. It may be the
way of the cross marked by persecution and apparent marginalization.
In different places and times, it will likely be both. Or it may
be that our Lord will return tomorrow.
We do know that his promise is sure, that we are enlisted for
the duration, and that we are in this together. We do know that
we must affirm and hope and search and contend and witness together,
for we belong not to ourselves but to him who has purchased us
by the blood of the cross. We do know that this is a time of opportunityand,
if of opportunity, then of responsibilityfor Evangelicals
and Catholics to be Christians together in a way that helps prepare
the world for the coming of him to whom belongs the kingdom, the
power, and the glory forever. Amen.
PARTICIPANTS: Mr. Charles Colson, Prison Fellowship; Fr. Juan Diaz-Vilar, S.J. Catholic Hispanic Ministries; Fr. Avery Dulles, S.J. Fordham University; Bishop Francis George, OMI Diocese of Yakima (Washington); Dr. Kent Hill, Eastern Nazarene College; Dr. Richard Land Christian Life Commission of the Southern Baptist Convention; Dr. Larry Lewis, Home Mission Board of the Southern Baptist Convention; Dr. Jesse Miranda, Assemblies of God; Msgr.William Murphy, Chancellor of the Archdiocese of Boston; Fr. Richard John Neuhaus, lnstitute on Religion and Public Life; Mr. Brian OConnell, World Evangelical Fellowship; Mr. Herbert Schlossberg, Fieldstead Foundation; Archbishop Francis Stafford, Archdiocese of Denver; Mr. George Weigel, Ethics and Public Policy Center; Dr. John White, Geneva College and the National Association of Evangelicals
ENDORSED BY. Dr. William Abraham, Perkins School of Theology; Dr. Elizabeth Achtemeier, Union Theological Seminary (Virginia); Mr. William Bentley Ball, Harrisburg. Pennsylvania; Dr. Bill Bright, Campus Crusade for Christ; Professor Robert Destro, Catholic University of America; Fr. Augustine DiNoia, O.P.; Dominican House of Studies; Fr. Joseph P. Fitzpatrick, S.J., Fordham University; Mr. Keith Fournier, American Center for Law and Justice; Bishop William Frey, Trinity Episcopal School for Ministry; Professor Mary Ann Glendon, Harvard Law School; Dr. Os Guinness, Trinity Forum; Dr. Nathan Hatch, University of Notre Dame; Dr. James Hitchcock, St. Louis University; Professor Peter Kreeft, Boston College; Fr. Matthew Lamb, Boston College; Mr. Ralph Martin, Renewal Ministries; Dr. Richard Mouw Fuller Theological Seminary; Dr. Mark Noll, Wheaton College; Mr. Michael Novak, American Enterprise Institute; John Cardinal OConnor, Archdioceses New York; Dr. ThomasOden Drew University; Dr. James J. 1. Packer, Regent College (British Columbia); The Rev. Pat Robertson Regent University; Dr. John Rodgers, Trinity Episcopal School for Ministry; Bishop Carlos A. Sevilla, S.J., Archiocese of San Francisco.