What does the Pope say a proper church is?
Continuing the theme of the essential nature of the church, the Pope has offered
his perspective
J.
Here
is an article from The Times.
From
The
Times
July
11, 2007
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/faith/article2056515.ece

The
Anglican leaders reacted
with dismay, accusing the Roman Catholic Church of paradoxical behaviour. They
said that the new 16-page document outling the “defects” of non-Catholic
churches constituted a major obstacle to ecumenism.
The document said that the
Orthodox church suffered from a “wound” because it did not recognise the primacy
of the Pope. The wound was “still more profound” in Protestant denominations, it
added.
It was “difficult to see
how the title of ‘Church’ could possibly be attributed to them”, said the
statement from the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. Roman Catholicism
was “the one true
The language echoes
earlier statements by the same body, headed by Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger until
he became Pope. The statement appears to be at odds with attempts to soften Pope
Benedict’s image as a doctrinal hardliner and to present him as a more human
figure reaching out to other faiths. And it risks undermining his own efforts
for Christian unity.
Protestants at the extreme
evangelical end of the Anglican spectrum accused
Lambeth Palace, the office
of the Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr Rowan Williams, was more diplomatic. A
spokesman issued a statement that lacked any formal welcome, describing the
document as “significant”.
Father Augustine Di Noia,
a senior doctrinal official at the
The document said that the
Second Vatican Council’s opening to other faiths – including “ecclesial
communities originating with the Reformation” – had recognised there were “many
elements of sanctification and truth” in other Christian denominations, but had
also emphasised that only Catholicism was fully Christ’s Church.
The document said that
other Christian faiths “lack elements considered essential to the Catholic
Church”.
The disappointment of the
Anglicans was evident in the response of Canon Gregory Cameron, Dr Williams’s
former chaplain in
Canon Cameron said: “In
the commentary of this document we are told that ‘Catholic ecumenism’ appears
‘somewhat paradoxical’. It is paradoxical for leaders of the Roman Catholic
Church to indicate to its ecumenical partners that it no longer expects all
other Christians merely to return to the true (Roman Catholic) Church, but then
for Rome to say that it alone has ‘full identity’ with the Church of Christ, and
that all others of us are lacking.”
He said Anglican bishops
had indicated in 1997 that such a position constituted “a major ecumenical
obstacle”.
The Rev David Phillips,
General Secretary of the Church Society, said: “Nothing new is said, but it does
clarify the way in which the
“These claims cannot be
justified, biblically, or historically, yet they have been used not only to
divide Christians but to persecute them and put them to death.
“We are grateful that the