Do you always ask fifty cent questions in a ten cent conversation?
Ecumenism is first and foremost a seeking of unity in Christ, in light of John 17 - “I pray, Father, that all may be one…”
Unity in Christ is accomplished by the heretics and schismatics renouncing their errors and returning to the Catholic Church which their unfortunate forerunners left. That is the only way to achieve unity, as explained by Pope Pius XI in Mortalium Animos.
Pope Pius XI, 1928: “the union of Christians can only be promoted by promoting the return to the one true Church of Christ of those who are separated from it, for in the past they have unhappily left it”. (Mortalium Animos #10)
The current ecumenical movement no longer seeks to convert the heretics and schismatics. Instead, it seeks to unite with them without thier converting. It seeks to build what I call a “Big Tent” religion - one that “unites” Catholics with heretics and schismatics into one big “Church”. Do you doubt me? If so, allow me to quote the point man for ecumenism, Cardinal Walter Casper. John Paul II appointed him as the President of the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity. If anyone would know the mind of the Pope on this matter, it would be him. This is how he described the ecumenical movement since Vatican II
Cardinal Kasper: **“The decision of Vatican II, to which the Pope adheres and spreads, is absolutely clear: Today we no longer understand ecumenism in the sense of the ecumenism of a return, by which the others would ‘be converted’ and return to being ‘Catholics.’ This was expressly abandoned by Vatican II. **Today ecumenism is considered as the common road: all should be converted to the following of Christ, and it is in Christ that we will find ourselves in the end… Even the Pope, among other things, describes ecumenism in Ut unum sint as an exchange of gifts. I think this is very well said: **each Church has its own riches and gifts of the Spirit, and it is this exchange that unity is trying to be achieved and not the fact that we should become ‘Protestants’ or that the others should become ‘Catholics’ in the sense of accepting the confessional form of Catholicism.” **(Adista, Rome, February 26, 2001, p. 9 - Emphasis mine)
The model for this is the heretical Tiaze Community, which is a religious community consisting of heretics and Catholics living as “one”. Truth and error, fire and water, Christ and Belial living together in a true modern ecumenical community.
The Church had a good long history since Trent of defending it’s doctrine, often in ways that simply caused the divide between the Catholic Church and Protestants to harden and widen.
Jesus said “I came not to bring peace, but the sword”. What did he mean by that? He meant that the truth he came to bring would divide - it would divide those who accepted it (the Catholics), from those who rejected it (the heretics).
You said that the Catholic Church had a long history since the Council of Trent defending its doctrines. Correction, the Church had a long history since day one defening its doctrines and offending those who rejected them.
The false ecumenical movement seeks to water down the truth in order to not offend the heretics.
It was the intent of John Paul 2 to work on ecumenical relations, and it is further the intent of Benedict 16 to do so. The first goal has, from what one could deduce from the time and work spent, focused on the Orthodox Church, something that seems to be moving forward better under this pope than the last.
So, did the ecumenism of John Paul II sek to bring the Orthodox into the Catholic Church, or did it seek to unite with them without them renouncing their errors?
The answer is found in the Bellamand Agreement, which was accepted by John Paul II. In the Bellamand Agreement, it states that the Orthodox heretics, who deny Papal Infallibility and the past 13 Church councils, are part of the one true Church and do not need to convert. If you doubt me, do a google search for the Bellamand Agreement and read it for yourself. It is much worse that what I have said here, but it fits in perfectly with what Cardincal Kasper said above. I’ll give just one quote:
Balamand Agreement: "Pastoral activity in the Catholic Church, Latin as well as Eastern,
no longer aims at having the faithful of one Church pass over to the other; that is to say, it no longer aims at proselytizing among the Orthodox. It aims at answering the spiritual needs of its own faithful and
it has no desire for expansion at the expense of the Orthodox Church.
continue…