I think I can agree that we are all members of Christ’s Church, but disagreement on doctrine seems contrary to full unity.=Lek;12383038]Christian unity will never come about by one side fully accepting the beliefs of the other. Unity will only occur if we can come to together as a body and accept that we have different opinions concerning doctrine, but are still all members of Christ’s church.
Well, maybe except for one really big schism in the 11th century.A large number of protestants can accept this concept, but I don’t think the catholic church will ever come to that point. If it hadn’t been for the secular power of the CC, I feel pretty certain that there would have been numerous break offs long prior to Luther’s time. Prior to Luther the CC was able to put a stop to any such attempts.
Full unity doesn’t come from someone “abandoning” a teaching. It comes from being guided by the Spirit in prayerful dialogue, and the steps taken these last 50 years between Lutheran and Catholics have been significant, even in these two areas.Concerning possible unity between the CC and the Anglicans and Lutherans: On the outside they appear similar in many ways, but on the inside the differences are very profound, especially pertaining to the Lutherans. I would be fine with seeing a reunion, but it surprises me that anyone would think that there’s a chance that Lutherans would abandon sola scriptura and “faith alone”.
There’s lots out there now - not doctrinal agreement - but dialogue-based groeing convergence on such topics. Example:
vatican.va/roman_curia/pontifical_councils/chrstuni/lutheran-fed-docs/rc_pc_chrstuni_doc_2013_dal-conflitto-alla-comunione_en.html#Scripture_and_tradition
Now, there’s a good bit here that needs lots of work, and I’m not trying to paint a rosy picture, but the chance of reconciliation between Lutherans and Catholics may be as strong as between Anglicans and Catholics, or Orthodox and Catholics.
Jon
