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LETTER OF POPE JOHN PAUL II TO ROBERT
RUNCIE ARCHBISHOP OF CANTERBURY
To the Most Reverend Robert Runcie Archbishop of Canterbury
The long but necessary task of evaluating the Final Report of the first
Anglican/Roman Catholic International Commission, in which both our Communions
are now engaged, is a vital part of that journey of faith on which we have
embarked together in our efforts to re-establish full ecclesial communion. It
has been a joy to learn how seriously this task is being taken in so many
countries, and how this study is frequently associated with joint action and
common witness which express, as far as possible, the degree of communion which
has already been brought about between us by the grace of God.
This degree of communion, indeed God’s very call to us to be one, also bids us
face frankly the differences which still separate us. While the Catholic Church
must always be sensitive to the heritage which she has in common with other
Christians, she must nevertheless base frank and constructive dialogue upon
clarity regarding her own positions.
It was in this spirit that, in an important exchange of letters in 1975-1976,
Pope Paul VI affirmed to Archbishop Coggan the position of the Catholic Church
concerning the admission of women to priestly ordination, a step at that time
being considered by several Churches of the Anglican Communion. The reasons that
he then stated briefly for the Catholic Church’s adherence to the long tradition
on this matter were set out at length by the Sacred Congregation for the
Doctrine of the Faith in the Declaration “Inter Insigniores” of 15 October 1976.
This same position was again stated clearly by observers from the Secretariat
for Promoting Christian Unity during the hearing on this subject at the Lambeth
Conference of 1978.
I know that Your Grace is well aware of the position of the Catholic Church and
of the theological grounds which lead her to maintain it; indeed I am grateful
that, in the recent debate in the General Synod of the Church of England, you
referred to the implications of this question for Anglican relations with the
Catholic and Orthodox Churches. But the outcome of that debate prompts me to
reaffirm with all brotherly frankness the continuing adherence of the Catholic
Church to the practice and principles so clearly stated by Pope Paul VI
With his well-known affection for the Anglican Communion and his deep desire for
Christian unity, it was with profound sadness that Pope Paul VI contemplated a
step which he saw as introducing into our dialogue “an element of grave
difficulty”, even “a threat”. Since that time we have celebrated together the
progress towards reconciliation between our two Communions. But in those same
years the increase in the number of Anglican Churches which admit, or are
preparing to admit, women to priestly ordination constitutes, in the eyes of the
Catholic Church, an increasingly serious obstacle to that progress.
Pope Paul VI stated that “obstacles do not destroy mutual commitment to a search
for reconciliation”. We too were “encouraged by our reliance on the grace of God
and by all that we have seen of the power of that grace in the ecumenical
movement of our time” when we set up the new Commission, whose task includes
study of “all that hinders the mutual recognition of the ministries of our two
Communions”. It is in that same hope, in the charity that “hopes all things”
but which seeks the unity of Christ’s Body by “speaking the truth in love” ,
that I write these words to you, my dear Brother, as we celebrate the Birth of
the Lord who came in “the fullness of time to unite all things” .
From the Vatican, 20 December 1984.
IOANNES PAULUS PP. II
© Copyright 1984 - Libreria Editrice Vaticana
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