NEWS – Methodist-Roman Catholic International Commission Meets in Hybrid Format, October/November 2023

The Methodist-Roman Catholic International Commission (MERCIC), formally called the Joint International Commission for Dialogue between the World Methodist Council and the Roman Catholic Church, held a plenary commission meeting in hybrid format from 30 October through 3 November 2023. Due to a late change in meeting location, some commission members were able to gather in Rome at the Istituto Maria Bambina near St. Peter’s Square, while others joined the proceedings online. The plenary meeting was the second session of the 12th round of the dialogue.

The meeting was originally scheduled to meet at the Tantur Ecumenical Institute in Jerusalem, but the deadly Hamas terrorist attacks and devastating Israeli military action in Gaza prevented the commission members from gathering in Jerusalem. The Commission held two prayer services for peace in Israel and Palestine during its meeting.

The Commission welcomed the Rev. Prof. Blanches de Paula as a new Methodist commission member. Prof. de Paula is a minister of the Methodist Church in Brazil and a professor of Practical Theology at the Methodist University of Sao Paulo. The Commission is comprised of 16 members – 8 Catholic members appointed by the Dicastery for Promoting Christian Unity and 8 Methodist members appointed by the World Methodist Council. Prof. de Paula replaced Bishop Lizette Gabriel Montalvo of the Methodist Church in Puerto Rico, who resigned due to increasing demands on her episcopal office.

In light of the reduced number of members physically present, the Commission had only one official public engagement during the 2023 plenary. The members who were present in Rome were received by H.E. Cardinal Kurt Koch, Prefect of the Dicastery for Promoting Christian Unity, at the Dicastery’s offices, in order to brief him about the Commission’s work on unity and mission as well as to discuss with Cardinal Koch the themes of unity and diversity in the church.

The commission co-chairs – Rev. Prof. Edgardo Colón-Emeric and Bishop Shane Mackinlay – led the Commission in its opening prayer service, using An Ecumenical Liturgy of Repentance and Reconciliation. The liturgy was published by the Commission in God in Christ Reconciling: On the Way to Full Communion in Faith, Sacraments, and Mission in May 2022 as a resource for Catholics and Methodists in their pursuit of reconciliation and unity.

The Commission received updates on the first session of the 16th Ordinary General Assembly of the Synod of Bishops of the Catholic Church, which met from 4-29 October 2023 in Rome under the theme of Synodality. Two commission members – Bishop Shane Mackinlay of Australia and Prof. Catherine Clifford of Canada – are members of the Synod. Prof. Clifford and Bishop Mackinlay reported on their synodal experiences with special attention to the ecumenical implications of the Synod’s work. Additionally, a MERCIC working group reviewed the ecumenical/Christian unity responses submitted from around the world during the Synod’s National Phase and brought a report and summary to the commission plenary.

The Commission received several draft reports and papers from the Commission’s working groups. The 12th round of dialogue is focused broadly on the theme of unity and mission and seeks to build upon the Commission’s continuous work since 1967. With the 1700th anniversary of the Council of Nicaea in 2025, the Commission resolved to publish an updated version of Together To Holiness, a synthesis document of the Commission’s work from 1967-2006, adding further material from the Commission’s three subsequent reports from 2011, 2016, and 2022. This revised synthesis document will redemonstrate the unity already shared by Methodists and Catholics through their common baptism and shared Christian faith. In light of the Church’s calling to preach the Good News, the Commission also held long discussions on the theme of communion and explored the nature and meaning of unity and diversity within the Church. Several papers on models of unity, drawing from the experiences of Catholics and Methodists, were presented, serving as tools to explore important issues of communion. Furthermore, the Commission held discussions on the principles of dialogue, examining what principles Methodists and Catholics must hold in common as they approach greater and fuller unity.

From the plenary, the Commission through its Executive Committee set forth a plan to chart the Commission’s work during the next years. The plan calls for further work on the context of mission and unity, the Missio Dei and ecclesiology, and mission and its practical implications.

The Commission’s next plenary session is scheduled for 21-29 September 2024 in Seoul, South Korea.

The Commission is made up of:

Methodist Members
Rev. Prof. Edgardo A. Colón–Emeric (Co-Chair), USA
Rev. Matthew A. Laferty (Co-Secretary), Methodist Ecumenical Office, Rome
Dr. Jung Choi, Korea/USA
Rev. Prof. Blanches de Paula, Brazil
Prof. Geordan Hammond, United Kingdom
Rev. Prof. Glen O’Brien, Australia
Rev. Dr. Hermen Shastri, Malaysia
Prof. Lilian Cheelo Siwila, Zambia/South Africa

Catholic Members
Bishop Shane Mackinlay (Co-Chair), Australia
Rev. Martin Browne OSB (Co-Secretary), Dicastery for Promoting Christian Unity, Rome
Prof. Catherine E. Clifford, Canada
Rev. Prof. Gerard Kelly, Australia
Sr. Prof. MarySylvia Nwachukwu DDL, Nigeria
Rev. Prof. Daniel Franklin Pilario CM, Philippines
Rev. Prof. Jorge Scampini OP, Argentina
Dr. Clare Watkins, United Kingdom

EVENT – Symposium on “God in Christ Reconciling” on 23 November

A half day symposium on Thursday, 23 November 2023, to listen to presentations on the ‘eleventh report of the Joint International Commission for Dialogue between the Catholic Church and the World Methodist Council’. It focuses on the theme of reconciliation, from the words of St Paul that “God was in Christ reconciling the world to himself” (2 Cor 5.19) with both corporate and cosmic dimensions experienced especially in the Church.

The Church’s mission as a reconciling community is to become a more perfect sign of the ministry of Christ as reconciler and therefore to further communion between God and humanity, among human beings themselves and with creation. It also calls for Catholics and Methodists to continue in their own ways to “be reconciled to God” (2 Cor 5:20) and grow on the path of unity with each other to further that witness of unity to the world.

Different speakers, two from the Methodist and two from the Catholic tradition, will present and unpack the themes of the joint statement. There will be opportunities for questions and discussion after each presentation, and during the panel at the end of the event. Refreshments are provided.

SCHEDULE

2.15-2.30: Welcome, Introduction and reflection (Archbishop Bernard Longley, Catholic Bishops Conference, Dept of Dialogue and Rev Neil Stubbens- Methodist co-secretary of the British Methodist-Catholic Commission)

2.30: Reflection on the past 50 years of Catholic-Methodist dialogue Rev Matthew Laferty (director, Methodist Ecumenical Office Rome)

2.50: Chapter One- “God’s reconciling work in Christ” Rev Dr Nicola Price-Tebbutt (director, Research and Scholarship for the Methodist Church).

3.15: Chapter Two: “The Church: Reconciled with One Another through Faith in Christ” (Dr Clare Watkins, ecclesiologist and member of the Methodist-Roman Catholic International Commission)

3.40-4.10: Coffee break

4.10: Chapter Three: “Rites and Practices of Reconciliation” (Fr. Tony Currer – formerly of the Dicastery for Promoting Christian Unity, Methodist and Anglican division)

4.35: Chapter 4: “The Church’s Ministry of Reconciliation in the World” Rev Dr Tim Macquiban (former director, the Methodist Ecumenical Office Rome)

5.00-5.30pm: Panel: Discussion

REGISTRATION

Register to participate on Eventbrite.


NEWS – Latest Methodist-Catholic Report Now Translated Into Italian

The latest report from the Methodist-Roman Catholic International Commission – God in Christ Reconciling: On the Way to Full Communion in Faith, Sacraments, and Mission – is now availabe in Italian. The original report was published in May 2022 in English, the working language of the commission.

The report was translated by Rev. Prof. Eric Noffke, professor of New Testament at the Waldensian School of Theology in Rome, with the financial support of the Methodist Churches in Italy (OPCEMI).

The Italian translation is an unofficial translation of the document.

Download the report in Italian – In Cristo, Dio ci riconcilia con sé: In cammino verso la piena comunione nella fede, nei sacramenti e nella missione (750 kb)

NEWS – Methodist Leaders Join Pope, Thousands of Young People for an Ecumenical Vigil of Prayer

VATICAN CITY (MEOR) – World Methodist Council president Rev. Prof. Jong Chun Park and Methodist Ecumenical Office Rome director Rev. Matthew A. Laferty joined Pope Francis and other senior church leaders alongside thousands of young people on Saturday, 30 September, for an ecumenical vigil of prayer in St. Peter’s Square in the Vatican.

The initiative came from Br. Alois, head of the Taize Community, during his address to a special assembly of Catholic bishops in October 2021; the special assembly opened a two year-long Catholic global listening project under the theme of synodality. Br. Alois stated on 9 October 2021, “would it be possible that at a certain point, in the course of the synodal process, not only [Catholic] delegates but the whole people of God, not only Catholics but believers from the various Churches, could be invited to a large ecumenical gathering? For in baptism and by the Holy Scriptures, we are sisters and brothers in Christ, united in a communion that is still imperfect but quite real, even when there are theological questions still to be resolved” (read full speech here).

Responding to Br. Alois’ question, Pope Francis asked the brothers of the Taize Community to organize an ecumenical vigil of prayer before the opening of the Catholic bishops’ synod in October 2023 as a sign of all the baptized walking together toward unity in Christ. The Taize brothers worked in close partnership with 60 world communions, church movements, and Christian organizations, including the Methodist Ecumenical Office Rome, to organize the event and the weekend program. Director Laferty served as a member of the event’s organizing committee. MEOR provided office space for the event headquarters as well as accommodation for event staff.

Director Matthew A. Laferty (far right) processing into St. Peter’s Square with church leaders, including Archbishop Urmas Viilma of the Lutheran Church of Estonia, Archbishop Ian Ernest of the Anglican Centre in Rome, and Rev. Christian Krieger of the Protestant Federation of France. Photo by Synod.va. Used by permission.

A companion weekend program called “Together” was also organized for young people ages 18-35 to reflect on relevant themes facing church and society. The Together weekend included a series of workshops and a Christian praise and worship concert in the Basilica of St. John Lateran in Rome. Rev. Park spoke at a workshop on placing the society’s vulnerable at the center of our communities. Eli Ataf from the Methodist Church in Britain was a MC for the concert in the Cathedral of John Lateran. Over 3,500 people registered for the weekend program.

Alongside Rev. Park from the World Methodist Council and Pope Francis, other church leaders present for the prayer vigil were Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby, Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholemew I, and Lutheran World Federation general secretary Anne Burghardt, as well as leaders from Oriental Orthodox, Pentecostal, Baptist, Old Catholic, and Evangelical churches.

During the prayer vigil, music from the Taize community was sung. A special chant “Adsumus Sancte Spiritus” was composed for the vigil, based on a prayer attributed to St Isidore of Seville (c. 560 – 4 April 636) (listen to the chant here); the Isidore prayer has a long history of being used at various Councils, Synods and other meetings throughout the history of the church. Rev. Park, as head of communion, was honored to sit alongside Pope Francis during the prayer vigil. Rev. Park also offered prayers for peace in Korean language, his mother tongue, during the prayer petitions.

Rev. Prof. Jong Chun Park, president of the World Methodist Council, leads prayers during the Ecumenical Vigil of Prayer in St. Peter’s Sqaure in Rome on 30 September. Photo by Synod.va. Used by permission.

Director Laferty, reflecting on the prayer vigil, said, “the ecumenical vigil of prayer was a historic moment in our pursuit of the unity of the church. While it is commonplace to see leaders from different churches pray together, never before have we witnessed the diversity of church leaders representing all major strands of Christian faith pray publicly together. It was a moving, encouraging, and momentous moment.”

According the Taize brothers, 18,000 people attended the ecumenical vigil of prayer in St. Peter’s Square.

Top photo: Heads of churches offering a blessing at the end of the ecumenical vigil of prayer on 30 September . Photo by Synod.va. Used by permission.