Weblog: Pope Warns Archbishop of Canterbury of Unity 'Difficulties'
"Meanwhile, Rowan Williams speaks of a clear sense of limits in the Anglican Communion"
Ted Olsen | posted 10/01/2003 12:00AM
Pope to Anglican head: "New and serious difficulties have arisen on the path to unity"
In comments universally seen as critical of the Episcopal Church USA's confirmation of a gay bishop, Pope John Paul II Saturday warned Archbishop Rowan Williams that ecumenical efforts between the two leaders' churches were in danger.
"As we give thanks for the progress that has already been made we must also recognize that new and serious difficulties have arisen on the path to unity," the Pope said.
These difficulties are not all of a merely disciplinary nature; some extend to essential matters of faith and morals. In light of this, we must reaffirm our obligation to listen attentively and honestly to the voice of Christ as it comes to us through the Gospel and the Church's Apostolic Tradition. Faced with the increasing secularism of today's world, the Church must ensure that the deposit of faith is proclaimed in its integrity and preserved from erroneous and misguided interpretations. …
The world needs the witness of our unity, rooted in our common love for and obedience to Christ and his Gospel. It is fidelity to Christ which compels us to continue to search for full visible unity and to find appropriate ways of engaging, whenever possible, in common witness and mission.
These comments came during the public portion of the two leaders' meeting. Privately, the two men met for only 10 minutes, but a papal aide told Reuters that the pontiff began by asking directly about "the situation in your church."
(In a surprise act, after the Williams kissed the Pope's ring, the Pope returned the act, kissing a ring that Pope Paul VI had given to former Archbishop of Canterbury Michael Ramsey.)
Cardinal Walter Kasper, who heads the Vatican's council on ecumenism, was even more direct than the Pope. "Until recently, one could state with relative confidence that Catholics and Anglicans shared the same moral principles regarding human sexuality," he said. "We hope that it will remain so, for the world today needs our common witness." The Anglican Communion's approval of gay priests, Kasper said, "concerns us not a little. … Such decisions, depending on how the situation is resolved, could cause new problems in our relations."
In his comments with the Pope, Williams spoke only vaguely of "possibilities and challenges of our way forward together," but was more direct during a press conference after the meeting.
"We are conscious of the ecumenical implications of what has been done. We shall need to consider them very carefully," he said. "In these days [at the Vatican] we have listened hard to what has been said to us. … I hope that none of what we have achieved over these many years of friendship will be lost."
Among news coverage Weblog has seen, only The Daily Telegraph picked up on comments by Williams that suggest he's willing to crack down on the Episcopal Church USA.
"Very few primates" want to see the Anglican Communion split, Williams said.
But if it is not to, we have a good deal of work to do to find the right mechanisms, the right language, to hold this without fudging the questions about boundaries which we are certainly facing.
The biggest challenge before us as primates is to find two things. One is a clear sense of the limits of what the Communion can stand at any one moment—the obvious difficulty created by one province moving in a different direction.
And secondly, how we actually make real a sense of responsibility to one another and therefore some mechanisms for better decision-making in common.
October (Web-only) 2003, Vol. 47