Vatican City, 25 January 2016 (VIS) –
Pope Francis, Bishop Munib A. Younan and the Rev. Martin Junge,
respectively president and general secretary of the World Lutheran
Foundation, will preside at a joint commemoration of the Reformation
on 31 October in Lund, Sweden, according to a press release issued
today by the World Lutheran Foundation and the Pontifical Council for
Promoting Christian Unity (PCPCU).
This event, ahead of the 500 th
anniversary of Luther's Reformation in 2017, will highlight the solid
ecumenical developments between Catholics and Lutherans and the joint
gifts received through dialogue and will include common worship based
on the recently published Catholic-Lutheran “Common Prayer”
liturgical guide.
“The LWF is approaching the
Reformation anniversary in a spirit of ecumenical accountability,”
says LWF General Secretary Rev. Dr Martin Junge. “I’m carried by
the profound conviction that by working towards reconciliation
between Lutherans and Catholics, we are working towards justice,
peace and reconciliation in a world torn apart by conflict and
violence.”
Cardinal Koch, President of the PCPCU
explains further: “By concentrating together on the centrality of
the question of God and on a Christocentric approach, Lutherans and
Catholics will have the possibility of an ecumenical commemoration of
the Reformation, not simply in a pragmatic way, but in the deep sense
of faith in the crucified and resurrected Christ.
The Lund event is part of the reception
process of the study document From Conflict to Communion, which was
published in 2013, and has since been widely distributed to Lutheran
and Catholic communities. The document is the first attempt by both
dialogue partners to describe together at international level the
history of the Reformation and its intentions.
Earlier this year, the LWF and PCPCU
sent to LWF member churches and Catholic Bishops’ Conferences a
jointly prepared “Common Prayer”, which is a liturgical guide to
help churches commemorate the Reformation anniversary together. It is
based on the study document From Conflict to Communion:
Lutheran-Catholic Common Commemoration of the Reformation in 2017,
and features the themes of thanksgiving, repentance and commitment to
common witness with the aim of expressing the gifts of the
Reformation and asking forgiveness for the division which followed
theological disputes.
The year 2017 will also mark 50 years
of the international Lutheran-Catholic dialogue, which has yielded
notable ecumenical results, of which most significant is the Joint
Declaration on the Doctrine of Justification (JDDJ). The JDDJ was
signed by the LWF and the Catholic Church in 1999, and affirmed by
the World Methodist Council in 2006. The declaration nullified
centuries’ old disputes between Catholics and Lutherans over the
basic truths of the doctrine of justification, which was at the
centre of the 16th century Reformation.
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