NEWS – Pope Francis Greets American Methodist Bishops, MEOR Director

Pope Francis met a delegation of 10 bishops from the United States from three different Methodist churches on Wednesday, 6 March 2024, following the weekly General Audience. Each bishop was greeted individually by Pope Francis and had a few moments to speak to him.

The bishops come the African Methodist Episcopal Church, the Christian Methodist Episcopal Church, and The United Methodist Church, all members of the World Methodist Council.

Along with the bishops, Director Matthew A. Laferty, Dr. Jean Hawxhurst, and Mrs. Melissa Beard were greeted by Pope Francis as well.

Read more about the bishops’ entire study pilgrimage in a related story (click here).

Photos by Vatican Media. All rights reserved.

The bishops who participated in the study pilgrimage were:

  • African Methodist Episcopal Church
    Bishop Jeffrey N. Leath, AME ecumenical officer
  • Christian Methodist Episcopal Church
    Bishop Lawrence L. Reddick III of the Eighth Episcopal District (Texas and Jamaica) and senior bishop of the Christian Methodist Episcopal Church
    Bishop Teresa Snorton, CME ecumenical and development officer
    Bishop Marvin Frank Thomas, Sr. of the First Episcopal District (Arkansas and Tennessee)
    Bishop Sylvester Williams, Sr. of the Third Episcopal District (the Midwest)
  • The United Methodist Church
    Bishop Sally Dyck, ecumenical officer of the Council of Bishops
    Bishop Tracy Smith Malone of the Ohio East Episcopal Area and incoming president of the Council of Bishops of The United Methodist Church
    Bishop Jonathan Holston of the Columbia Episcopal Area (South Carolina)
    Bishop Frank Beard of the Illinois Episcopal Area
    Bishop Cynthia Moore-Koikoi of the Pittsburgh Episcopal Area

The delegation was also accompanied by Director Matthew A. Laferty, Dr. Jean Hawxhurst, and Mrs. Melissa Beard.

VIDEO – Recap from the ‘Together’ Weekend and Ecumenical Vigil of Prayer

From 29 September through 1 October, thousands of young adults from across Europe and the world converged on Rome for an ecumenical weekend of prayer, learning, fellowship, and pilgrimage. The event was called ‘Together’. The ecumenical vigil of prayer on St. Peter’s Square, which brought together leaders from all the major Christian world communions, was the highlight of the weekend.

The Methodist Chuch in Britain sent 8 young people from England and Wales. They released this recap video at the end of January 2024. Director Matthew A. Laferty who was a member of the ‘Together’ coordinating committee is interviewed in the video.

NEWS – From National Catholic Reporter: “Rome celebrates Christian unity week with joint prayers, and a woman preaching” on 25 January

By Christoper White
National Catholic Reporter
25 January 2024

Just next to the Basilica of Sts. Celso and Giuliano — a popular spot for the traditional Latin Mass here in the Eternal City — is Ponte Sant’Angelo Methodist Church, an English language congregation that proudly boasts, “Everyone is welcome, whatever their background.”

And on Jan. 21, the church gave lived expression to that when Xavière Sr. Nathalie Becquart, a No. 2 official at the Vatican’s synod office, preached during its Sunday service.

Becquart’s invitation to preach was part of a flurry of events taking place here in Rome this week during the annual Week of Prayer for Christian Unity, an octave-long celebration that’s been taking place for over a century.

As the Rev. Matthew Laferty, director of the Methodist Ecumenical Office in Rome, explained to me, the congregation has a custom of inviting a preacher or preachers from non-Methodist Christian traditions to preach on the Sunday of the annual week dedicated to praying for Christian unity.

That may be tradition, but there was a novelty about it, too.

“It certainly would have been the first time that a high-ranking Vatican official, who is a woman, preached at Ponte Sant’Angelo,” observed Laferty.

During her remarks, Becquart, a French sister, reflected on the Gospel passage of the good Samaritan.

Laferty recalled that Becquart reminded the congregation that the Gospel asks the question: “Who do we identify as our sister and brother?”

“In recognizing each other in our common baptism as Christians, and seeing the text from that perspective … that leads us into the action of the good Samaritan,” said Laferty, who said that Becquart’s words served as a reminder that “the path of Christ is also the path of unity.”

Across town, on the evening of Jan. 25, Pope Francis and the archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby, will preside over a prayer service commissioning a group of 50 Anglican and Catholic bishops to go out into the world to be witnesses of Christian unity.

The commissioning service will take place at the Papal Basilica of St. Paul Outside the Walls — not only the site of the tomb of the apostle Paul, but also the very location where on Jan. 25, 1959, Pope St. John XXIII announced that he intended to call an ecumenical council.

The pope’s plans for the Second Vatican Council, which surprised the cardinals gathered that day at the chapter room of the Benedictine abbey attached to the basilica, set into motion what would later be recognized as a historic turning point in relations among Christians, where unity was identified as a top priority.

Slowly and steadily, that work has continued, literally moving from Rome onward.

While the Anglican and Catholic bishops have assembled first here this week from over 25 countries, they will then continue on pilgrimage together to England, on a trip that will culminate in a choral Eucharist at Canterbury Cathedral on Jan. 28, where Hong Kong Cardinal Stephen Chow will preach.

The gathering of the bishops has been organized by the International Anglican-Roman Catholic Commission for Unity and Mission (IARCCUM) to “give flesh and visible expression to what has been achieved in our theological dialogues,” said Benedictine Fr. Martin Browne, who serves as an official at the Vatican’s Dicastery for Christian Unity. 

“Visiting the mother churches of our two traditions is a beautiful thing to do together. Doing so in pairs also helps nurture personal friendships between the leaders,” Browne told me. “These friendships are key foundations for working together.” 

Along with the Anglicans and Methodists, other ecumenical initiatives have been ongoing during this week, including the Joint International Commission for Theological Dialogue Between the Catholic Church and the Oriental Orthodox Churches; the German Catholic and German Lutheran communities; and, the “Churches Together in Rome,” a consortium of Protestant, Anglican and Catholic communities seeking to promote Christian unity.

“Our division is scandalous to us and the church, let alone to the world, particularly in light of Jesus’ prayer that they all may be one,” said Laferty. “The Week of Prayer for Christian Unity is an annual reminder and call for the church for visible unity.”

Reflecting on the experience of the week thus far, Browne said that he had been personally moved by watching the bishops get to know each other.

“Some are already deeply involved in working together, some are just starting out on that journey. But their openness to each other and to the walking, praying and working together that IARCCUM seeks to encourage has been quite something to hear and has been hugely encouraging,” he said.

“Morning prayer on the first day, when with minimal preparation and no organ or other accompaniment was a moving foretaste of this,” Browne continued. “The bishops sang together, loudly and well! At its heart, that’s what this meeting is about.”

At a meeting with ecumenical church leaders from Finland on Jan. 19 that helped kick off the week’s activities, Francis received a pair of winter gloves from Bishop Bo-Göran Åstrand of the country’s Evangelical Lutheran Church.

Åstrand went on to describe them as “a modest gift, to warm the pope’s hands in an otherwise cold world.”

Even so, here in Rome this week, the annual Week of Prayer for Christian Unity is seeking to accelerate the thaw in ecumenical relations, so that those gloves might not be necessary.

The original article appears on the NCR website.

Pictured is Pope Francis with Director Laferty, far left, and other church leaders on 25 January 2024 at the Basilica of St. Paul’s Outside the Walls for the Papal Vespers to conclude the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity. Photo (c) Vatican Media.