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COMMON DECLARATION OF
HIS HOLINESS PAUL VI AND HIS GRACE MICHAEL RAMSEY, ARCHBISHOP OF
CANTERBURY
Monastery of St Paul Thursday, 24 March 1966
In this city of Rome, from which St. Augustine was sent by
St. Gregory to England and there founded the cathedral see of Canterbury,
towards which the eyes of all Anglicans now turn as the centre of their
Christian Communion, His Holiness Pope Paul VI and His Grace Michael Ramsey,
Archbishop of Canterbury, representing the Anglican Communion, have met to
exchange fraternal greetings.
At the conclusion of their meeting they give thanks to
Almighty God who by the action of the Holy Spirit has in these latter years
created a new atmosphere of Christian fellowship between the Roman Catholic
Church and the Churches of the Anglican Communion.
This encounter of the 23rd March 1966 marks a new stage in
the development of fraternal relations, based upon Christian charity, and of
sincere efforts to remove the causes of conflict and to re-establish unity.
In willing obedience to the command of Christ who bade his
disciples love one another, they declare that, with His help, they wish to leave
in the hands of the God of mercy all that in the past has been opposed to this
precept of charity, and that they make their own the mind of the Apostle which
he expressed in these words: «Forgetting those things which are behind, and
reaching forth unto those things which are before, I press towards the mark for
the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus» (Phil. 3, 13-14).
They affirm their desire that all those Christians who
belong to these two Communions may be animated by these same sentiments of
respect, esteem and fraternal love, and in order to help these develop to the
full, they intend to inaugurate between the Roman Catholic Church and the
Anglican Communion a serious dialogue which, founded on the Gospels and on the
ancient common traditions, may lead to that unity in truth, for which Christ
prayed.
The dialogue should include not only theological matters
such as Scripture, Tradition and Liturgy, but also matters of practical
difficulty felt on either side. His Holiness the Pope and His Grace the
Archbishop of Canterbury are, indeed, aware that serious obstacles stand in the
way of a restoration of complete communion of faith and sacramental life;
nevertheless, they are of one mind in their determination to promote responsible
contacts between their Communions in all those spheres of Church life where
collaboration is likely to lead to a greater understanding and a deeper charity,
and to strive in common to find solutions for all the great problems that face
those who believe in Christ in the world of today.
Through such collaboration, by the grace of God the Father
and in the light of the Holy Spirit, may the prayer of Our Lord Jesus Christ for
unity among His disciples be brought nearer to fulfilment, and with progress
towards unity may there be a strengthening of peace in the world, the peace that
only He can grant who gives «the peace that passeth all understanding», together
with the blessing of Almighty God, Father, Son and Holy Spirit, that it may
abide with all men for ever.
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