Living Theology
in the Metropolitan Chicago Synod
Evangelical Lutheran Church
In America
Volume 5, Number 1
Lent 2000
Celebration of the Signing of the
Joint Declaration
on the Doctrine of Justification
Frank C.
Senn and Scott Hebden
On October 31, 1999,
in Augsburg, Germany, representatives of the Roman Catholic Church and the
Lutheran World Federation signed the Joint Declaration on the Doctrine of
Justification. A Joint Celebration by
sponsored by the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Chicago and the Metropolitan
Chicago Synod of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America at Immanuel
Lutheran Church in Chicago, in which Francis Cardinal George and Bishop Ken
Olsen led the five hundred-plus people in attendance through a recital of those
statements in the Joint Declaration that “we confess together.” Rather than a sermon, an address was given
following the Office of Vespers by Pastor Frank Senn and Father Scott Hebden on
the significance and implications of JDDJ.
That joint address is printed here.
JOINT
ADDRESS:
PART
I: THE SIGNIFICANCE OF
THE JOINT DECLARATION ON THE DOCTRINE OF
JUSTIFICATION
Pastor
Frank Senn
The deed has been done. Earlier
today in Augsburg, Germany – the site where the Augsburg Confession was
presented in 1530 before the Emperor Charles V and the Estates of the Holy
Roman Empire – representatives of the Lutheran World Federation and the Roman
Catholic Church at its highest level signed a Joint Declaration on the Doctrine
of Justification. Today, in local
communities all around the world, Lutherans and Roman Catholics are gathering together,
like we are doing tonight, to affirm and give thanks for this major step
forward in our long road toward reconciliation. We are very grateful to Pastor Robert Goldstein and the
congregation of Immanuel Lutheran Church for hosting this celebration
tonight. This is an appropriate site for
our celebration because this is a church which was committed to ecumenical
cooperation even before it became fashionable.
Almost as a kind of pilgrimage, I invite you to visit the statues of
Pope John XXIII and Archbishop Nathan Söderblom, two pioneers in ecumenical
outreach, which have stood side by side in this sanctuary for many years.
At Augsburg in 1530, the Lutheran princes and their theologians
proposed, as a message of comfort to consciences uncertain about the status of
their salvation, that “we cannot obtain forgiveness of sin and righteousness
before God by our own merits, works, or satisfactions, but that we receive
forgiveness of sin and become righteous before God by grace, for Christ's sake,
through faith, when we believe that Christ suffered for us and that for his
sake our sin is forgiven and righteousness and eternal life are given to us.”[1] This idea of justification by faith – that
God, by grace, justifies unjustifiable sinners for the sake of Christ and
grants them forgiveness and eternal salvation apart from any merit or effort on
their part – had a profound affect on many Christian beliefs and church
practices. New understandings of one’s
relationship with God, of Christian responsibility in church and society, and
of the Christian hope altered a world view and culture.
The Council of Trent, meeting intermittently between 1545 and 1563, had
to respond to this doctrine of justification by faith alone and the whole
Reformation agenda. It corrected many
of the abuses that had earned the scorn of both reformers and humanists. But of the doctrine of justification, Martin
Luther had said that no concession or compromise could be made. “This is the
article on which the church stands or falls,” he wrote. The Tridentine fathers agreed that justification
is important, but as one article of doctrine among others. Furthermore, they believed that the
reformers were ignoring the role of the transforming grace of the Holy Spirit
in human life. Even though the reformers had spoken of faith active in deeds of
love, the Council of Trent affirmed that only by the power of infused grace can
Christians perform good works and grow in holiness. There was a great theological divide between the ideas of the
Christian being declared justified by God and covered with the “alien
righteousness” of Christ in Baptism versus the transforming grace that enables
Christians to cooperate with God in meriting their salvation. This divide had church-dividing
consequences. Not surprisingly,
Lutherans and Catholics condemned one another’s teachings. It was fortunate that theological positions
rather than persons were condemned, because the condemnations did not always
hit the mark. There were also
theological developments, such as the teaching about the use of the commandments
as a moral guide (the so-called “third use of the law”) in the Lutheran Formula
of Concord in 1577, that might have opened up new possibilities of dialogue.[2] But the hardening of theological, political,
and cultural differences made productive dialogue all but impossible in the
sixteenth century – and for four centuries after that. Only in the second half of the twentieth
century have Christians learned how to listen respectfully to one another.
Father Hebden will speak about the convergence of views on the doctrine
of justification that have taken place in the Lutheran-Catholic Dialogues of
the last several decades.
PART
II: HOW ECUMENICAL DIALOGUE ON JUSTIFICATION
REVISITED
THE QUESTIONS OF THE REFORMATION PERIOD
Father
Scott Hebden
The dialogue process began with Pope John Paul II's visit to Germany in
1980 and his discussion of the need for dialogue concerning liturgical and
sacramental practice with Bishop Eduard Lohse of the Evangelical Church in
Germany. In 1981 the Joint Ecumenical
Commission in Germany was established.
As the Commission themselves stated: “It was soon pointed out that these
burning practical problems could not be dealt with unless the fundamental and
hitherto insufficiently clarified theological questions were also clarified.” Thus began a series of study groups
monitored by the Lutheran World Federation and the Pontifical Council for
Promoting Christian Unity, which have resulted in the current Declaration.
As the theologians involved in the study groups reexamined the
theological questions of the Reformation period, they brought with them several
new perspectives which facilitated arriving at a common theological statement.
First, they were able to abandon the polemical theological method of
the past, the method of defining one's doctrinal position by refuting the
errors of one's opponent. The polemical
method particularly characterized the theology of the Reformation and
Counterreformation period, exemplified in the Controverstheologie of
sixteenth and seventeenth century Germany and the model of theological method
in Robert Bellarmine's Controversies.[3] On the Catholic side, this polemical method
reached its peak in the 1940s during the Modernist Controversy. It was finally abandoned by the Second
Vatican Council which was, notably, a Council which did not produce anathemas
or doctrinal condemnations.
So the dialogue did not proceed by means of the identification of
error, but by means of appreciation of the positive theological insights of
both sides. Thus the Joint Declaration
states very significantly that the condemnations of the past do not apply to
the theological views of Lutherans and Catholics as presently taught. At the same time, the Declaration
appreciated the fact that the past condemnations on both sides sought to
identify theological errors which may possibly continue to exist throughout
history and of which we must always be wary.
Second, the theologians involved in the dialogues came to their work
with the advantage of historical distance and an appreciation of how paradigms
function in the process of understanding.
We come to understanding by placing what we know into a framework or
system of thought, a paradigm which enables us to understand and which may have
to be revised as the process of understanding moves forward. We proceed in this way because of the always
limited character of human understanding.
Now, from our vantage point in history, we see clearly that the
Lutheran and Catholic theology of the Reformation operated out of different
paradigms through which they attempted to articulate the same theological
insights. The Catholic paradigm is
often called a “metaphysical” paradigm which tried to describe the action of
grace in the world using philosophical categories: how grace acts in human life
and how we receive it. The Lutheran
paradigm is often called an “existential” paradigm which tried to describe the
reality of the human condition under the power of sin and its solution: how we
are totally dependent on God's initiative to save us from our sinful condition.[4]
In the light of historical distance, we also see that these paradigms
were significantly influenced by the historical moment and social conditions
under which they were developed. The
Catholic paradigm arose during the medieval period in which the world was
viewed as essentially a Christian kingdom in which people lived as
subjects. The Reformation paradigm grew
up as that medieval world collapsed and human freedom moved into a new phase of
development in the formation of independent nations and the idea of individual
personal identity.
When we combine our appreciation of the role of paradigms in human
thought with the Bible principle of the complementarity of gifts in the Church,
we are given one of the basic principles of all ecumenical dialogue: “There may
be a distinction between the doctrines of the faith and the manner in which
these doctrines are expressed.
Differences in expression are not necessarily contradictory or mutually
exclusive.”[5]
Finally, the theologians involved in the dialogues brought with them
the fruits of Biblical studies as they revisited Reformation questions. Protestants led the way in the development
of Biblical studies and Catholics followed after the end of the Modernist
controversy in the 1940s. The process
of reaching consensus was served by viewing the two doctrinal traditions once
again in the light of Scripture.
Scripture study has given us a deeper perspective on how the theme of
justification is related to other themes in the writings of Paul and also to
the whole of Biblical revelation.
In the light of these new perspectives on the doctrine of
justification, the Joint Declaration states the consensus that is reached:
“Together we confess: By grace alone in faith in Christ's saving work and not
because of any merit on our part, we are accepted by God and receive the Holy
Spirit, who renews our hearts while equipping and calling us to good works.”
(JD 15)
PART
III: THE IMPLICATIONS OF THE JOINT DECLARATION
FOR LUTHERANISM AND FOR CHRISTIAN UNITY
GENERALLY
Pastor
Frank Senn
We have achieved a basic consensus on the doctrine of justification
that we are able to “confess together”.
We have clarified how our respective teachings related to justification can
be understood in relation to this central affirmation. Our Churches have declared that positions
condemned by the Confessions and Canons of the sixteenth century do not apply
to how justification is taught in our Churches today. The Joint Declaration will now have to be received by our
Churches at all levels. People will
have to determine whether what “we confess together” represents our
contemporary faith, not how adequately it represents the faith of sixteenth
century Christians. Is this what we actually
believe, teach, and confess? And the
Churches which officially subscribed to this Joint Declaration will have to be
held accountable by each other to its faith-statements.
There don’t seem to be any practical consequences of signing this
Declaration. We’re not becoming one
Church; we aren’t entering into full communion; we aren’t even at the point yet
where we can officially share the Eucharist at one another’s altars.
But this doesn’t mean there aren’t profound implications of this Joint
Declaration. First of all, we need to
admit that the mutual animosities over the last four-and-a-half centuries have
often led to war and bloodshed as well as caricatures of our respective
teachings. Let this Joint Declaration
clarify, first of all to our own people, what we teach in our own traditions as
well as what we can confess together.
Let this be a teaching document that we can study together in our
parishes and explore with each other the mystery of our salvation in Christ.
This Joint Declaration gives us an opportunity to move forward in our
official dialogues from a new shared position.
Relationships between our Churches have warmed considerably over the
last quarter century. At the local
level we have experienced tremendous cooperation in ministries and missions
through covenants such as the one we enjoy between the Metropolitan Chicago
Synod and the Archdiocese of Chicago.
But this Joint Declaration is the first act of agreement on a global
level. It sends a powerful signal to
our people that a new day has dawned in Lutheran-Catholic relationships around
the world.
For Lutherans this agreement must cause special soul-searching. We have said that justification is “the
article on which the church stands or falls.”[6] We agree now that this doctrine takes its
place along with other articles of faith, such as the Trinity, Christology, and
the means of grace (which is certainly the case in our Confessions). But if we agree on this article, then we
must affirm that the Roman Catholic Church is a standing church, not a fallen
one. And we must ask, from our point of
view, whether other issues need to be church-dividing?
In the euphoria of this day, I believe we are entitled to envision the
future of Lutheran-Catholic relationships on the basis of the conclusions
reached in dialogues on other theological topics. Are there other issues that
were church-dividing in the sixteenth century on which sufficient study has
been done to enable similar joint declarations to be crafted? I personally believe such a statement would
be possible on the eucharistic presence and sacrifice.[7] Can we also envision a conversation on the
papal office that builds on Philipp Melanchthon's statement, in a codicil to
the Smalcald Articles in 1537, that if the pope would allow the Gospel “we,
too, may concede to him that superiority over the bishops which he possesses by
human right, making this concession for the sake of peace and general unity
among the Christians who are now under him and who may be in the future,”[8]
and the invitation of Pope John Paul II, in his encyclical on Christian Unity, Ut
Unam Sint, to join in finding a way “of exercising the primacy which, while
in no way renouncing what is essential to its mission, is nonetheless open to a
new situation?” (Par. 95) Can we
imagine the model of full communion, which we in the Evangelical Lutheran
Church in America are working out with other Reformation Churches, serving as a
way of expressing unity in faith and mission with the Bishop and Church of
Rome? As I said, this is a day for
dreaming. But the dreams no longer seem
quite so impossible.
It’s almost more difficult to imagine how the world’s Lutherans, in
their autonomous church bodies, could act together on such an issue than to
imagine the possibility of full communion between Lutheran and the Roman
Catholic Churches. But the very process
of endorsing the Joint Declaration has pushed the member churches of the
Lutheran World Federation into a closer realization of being a Communion of
Churches than existed before. Never
before have we, as a global family of faith, established doctrinal agreement
with another worldwide faith-community.
Now we know how to do it.
Finally, since justification concerns the message of salvation, being
able to speak the same message in our world will advance the Christian
witness. Father Hebden will speak to
the significance of the Joint Declaration for the Roman Catholic Church, but
also to its impact on the Christian witness in the contemporary world.
PART
IV: THE SIGNIFICANCE OF THE JOINT DECLARATION
FOR
THE ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH
AND FOR ECUMENICAL WITNESS TO CHRIST
Father
Scott Hebden
The Joint Declaration is significant for the Roman Catholic Church
first of all because it is an expression of the ecumenical vision of the Second
Vatican Council. We are in the process
of reception of that great Council and Catholics must continue to strive
seriously to understand what it means to be a Church of the Second Vatican
Council.
Second, I think that the Joint Declaration calls Catholics back to an
appreciation of the very best in our theological tradition. The heart of the theological question about
justification involves the interaction of two great truths: the sovereignty of
God in giving the gifts of grace to humans on the one hand, and the great
dignity of human freedom on the other and humanity's vocation to cooperate with
and to actively receive God's grace.
Catholics may remember our own theological history and the
controversies about grace that took place within Catholic theology during the
sixteenth-eighteenth centuries. We may
remember, too, that these controversies were never resolved. The Church never took an official position
in favor of those theologians who advocated for the sovereignty of God on the
one hand, or for the centrality of human freedom on the other. The reason for this is that we are face to
face here with one of the fundamental mysteries of the Christian faith. God is absolutely sovereign and complete,
but out of love God desires to share the divine life with human persons who are
created in the divine image and are given the unique dignity of freedom and
participation in the workings of God's grace.
We must always hold both of these truths together if we are to be true
to the mystery of faith and to the worship of God who always appears to us as a
coincidence of opposites, uniting all things in divine love.
I would also like to suggest that for Catholics the Joint Declaration
reminds us that it is still relevant to talk about soteriology. Soteriology in theology is the truth of how
we are saved. It would be a mistake to
think that the Joint Declaration merely allows us to lay aside some dusty old
theological problems so that we can get on with the practical issues that are
really important to us. Remember that
the justification dialogue began with practical concerns and it was determined
that the practical issues could only be resolved on the foundation of
soteriology – a clear apprehension of the truth of how we are saved.
The Joint Declaration is made public at a time when Christians in
developed countries are increasingly becoming a minority. We must be able to articulate the truth of
how we are saved for a culture and for a historical moment that increasingly
does not know the gospel of Jesus Christ.
The Joint Declaration can help us put this great truth into words for
our time. In an article in The New
Republic several years ago, Wendy Kaminer described spirituality today as
consisting of “the vaguest intimations of supernatural realities...simply religion
deinstitutionalized and shorn of any exclusionary doctrines.”[9]
The Joint Declaration reminds us that authentic Christian faith IS
grounded in a clear apprehension of supernatural realities and the relationship
of the truth of those realities to the transformation of human society. As Lutherans and Catholics come together as
a result of opportunities created by the Joint Declaration, it is to be hoped
that we will do so in the Spirit of sharing in this common mission to bring
Christ to the world.
From a Catholic perspective, this ongoing articulation of the truth of
salvation also means that the doctrine of justification must be seen in the
light of the Second Vatican Council's declaration that “it pleased God to make
people holy and to save them not merely as individuals without any mutual
bonds, but by making them into a single people.” (Lumen gentium 9) This, too, is critical to our witness to
Christ in the world. It is absolutely
essential, as the world moves toward a global society, that we come to
understand how true human communion, the fruit of salvation, is rooted in the
fundamental Christian teaching on the Trinity. The consensus reached in the
Joint Declaration allows us to turn toward the broader theological issues of
how justification is to be understood within the communal reality of the Church
as people of God and sacrament of salvation, and also within the reality of the
Trinity which is the model and source of the communion of love.
We are pointed in this direction by the clarifications offered in the
Annex to the Joint Declaration. There
it is affirmed that justification “as an indispensable criterion which
constantly serves to orient all the teaching and practice of our Churches to
Christ has its truth and specific meaning within the overall context of the
church's fundamental Trinitarian confession of faith.”[10]
The International Lutheran-Catholic Commission in its 1994 document, Church
and Justification, had already pointed out that, in the light of the Trinity,
both justification and church must be seen as mutually indispensable criteria
for the life of the Church.
“Our faith encompasses
justification and the Church as works of the triune God which can properly be
accepted only in faith in him... We believe in justification and the Church as
mysterium, a mystery of faith, because we believe solely in God, to whom alone
we may completely consign our lives in freedom and love and in whose word alone
which promises salvation, we can establish our whole life with complete
trust. Consequently we can say in
common that justification and the Church both guide us into the mystery of the
triune God and are therefore mysterium, the mystery of faith, hope, and love”
(Church and Justification 5).
The Rev. Dr. Frank
C. Senn is Pastor of Immanuel Lutheran Church in Evanston and Ecumenical
Representative of the Metropolitan Chicago Synod.
The Rev. Scott
Hebden is Associate Pastor of St. Philomena Catholic Church in Chicago and an
adjunct staff person in the Ecumenical Office of the Archdiocese of Chicago.
NOTES
[1] Augsburg Confession 4; The Book of Concord,
ed. and trans. by Theodore G. Tappert et al. (Philadelphia: Fortress Press,
1959), 30.
[2] See “Justification by Faith (Common Statement),” 63; Justification
by Faith: Lutherans and Catholics in Dialogue VII, ed. by H. George
Anderson, T. Austin Murphy, Joseph A. Burgess (Minneapolis: Augsburg Publishing
House, 1985), 38.
[3] See the more detailed historical analysis by George
Tavard in “Ecumenical Implications of Past Condemnations,” Ecumenical Trends
26:4 (April 1997), 57-60.
[4] See Otto H. Pesch, “Existential and Sapiential
Theology: The Theological Confrontation between Luther and Thomas Aquinas,” in
Jared Wicks, ed., Catholic Scholars Dialogue with Luther (Chicago:
Loyola University Press, 1970), 61-81; also John J. McDonnell, “The Agreed
Statement on Justification: A Roman Catholic Perspective,” Ecumenical Trends
28:5 (May 1999), 72-73.
[5] The formulation of the principle is given by Edward
Cardinal Cassidy, “The Meaning of the Joint Declaration on Justification,” Origins
29:18 (October 14, 1999), 282-83.
[6] The phrase is Luther’s. The closest a confessional statement comes to it is in The
Smalcald Articles: “The first and chief article is this, that Jesus Christ
our God and Lord, ‘was put to death for our trespasses and raised again for our
justification’ (Rom. 4:25).... On this article rests all we teach and practice
against the pope, the devil, and the world.” (II, 1:1, 5)
[7] See, for example, The Eucharist. Report of the Lutheran-Roman Catholic Joint
Commission (Geneva: Lutheran World Federation, 1980).
[8] Tappert, 316-17.
[9] Quoted in J. Augustine Di Noia, “Joint Declaration
between Lutherans and Catholics on the Doctrine of Justification: Some
Observations from a Catholic Perspective.”
Address given at the CCET Conference, October 28,
1996.
[10] The Annex clarified the consensus reached in the
Joint Declaration in the light of the resolution on the Declaration by the
Lutheran World Federation of June 16, 1998 and the response by the Catholic
Church of June 25, 1998. See text in Origins
29:6 (June 24, 1999), 87-88.