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Methodists Adopt
Catholic-Lutheran Declaration on Justification
His Eminence Sunday Mbang, World
Methodist
Council (WMC) chairperson at the opening session Jul-24-2006 VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- Methodist, Roman Catholic and Lutheran leaders said their communities will be able to work more closely in proclaiming the Gospel message of salvation after the World Methodist Conference adopted the Catholic-Lutheran joint declaration on justification. "This is a historic day. This is a gift of God. We can be grateful for it," Cardinal Walter Kasper, president of the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity, said at the July 23, 2006 signing ceremony in Seoul, South Korea. The agreement on justification -- how people are made just in the eyes of God and saved by Jesus Christ -- "provides a basis for a more profound common witness before the world," said the cardinal. Delegates to the World Methodist Conference (WMC) voted unanimously July 18 to adopt the declaration, which was approved in 1999 by the Vatican and the Lutheran World Federation. Cardinal Kasper's office at the Vatican released his statement and other texts from the signing ceremony. The Methodists' resolution said the 1999 agreement "expresses a far-reaching consensus in regard to the theological controversy which was a major cause of the split in Western churches in the 16th century" over salvation by grace alone or by grace and good works. The 1999 declaration said, "By grace alone, in faith in Christ's saving work and not because of any merit on our part, we are accepted by God and receive the Holy Spirit, who renews our hearts while equipping us and calling us to good works." The Methodists said the declaration "corresponds to Methodist doctrine," especially its explanation of how each person of the Trinity is involved in salvation. "The Methodist Movement," which grew out of the Anglican Church, "has always understood itself as deeply indebted to the biblical teaching on justification as it was understood by (Martin) Luther and the other reformers," the resolution said. "But it has also always embraced elements of the doctrine of justification which belong to the Catholic tradition of the early church." In the Methodist understanding, it said, human beings cannot cure the effects of original sin and corruption. It said the fact "that people are able to respond to God's call is due only to God's prior work" of grace that helps people accept salvation in Jesus. Accepting salvation leads to healing and love, the Methodist statement said. "'Faith working through love' is seen as the root of all good which results from the lives of those who believe in Jesus Christ. Works of piety and works of mercy are fruits of the Spirit in the lives of those who follow Jesus," it said. The Rev. Ishmael Noko, general secretary of the Lutheran World Federation, also participated in the signing ceremony in Seoul. He called the Methodist resolution "a new ecumenical landmark for which we must thank and praise God together." The 1999 agreement, he said, "was an event which lifted up our shared biblical faith in God's justifying grace, a faith which paradoxically became an area of division in the Western church." By joining together in expressing a common faith, Rev. Noko said, Lutherans, Catholics and Methodists "should not see justification merely as a piece of theological doctrine, but as an expression of the living Gospel itself." A shared witness to how God saves people, he said, "transforms us into a community of hope in a world where hope is in short supply." At the signing ceremony, Cardinal Kasper expressed his hope that the joint agreement would be translated into "a joint commitment to deepen our common prayer; may it encourage us to continue our theological dialogue, and building on our common foundations, may it lead to an increase in joint witness to the Gospel of Jesus Christ." Methodists Adopt Lutheran-Catholic Justification
Declaration The World Methodist Council adopted the Lutheran-Catholic "Joint Declaration on the Doctrine of Justification" (Origins, the edition dated July 16, 1998) during its July 20-24 world conference in Seoul, South Korea. In a statement made available in Seoul at the time of a July 23 Catholic-Lutheran-Methodist signing ceremony, the Methodist council said that the declaration "expresses a far-reaching consensus in regard to the theological controversy which was a major cause of the split in Western churches in the 16th century," involving issues such as salvation by grace alone or by grace and good works, and whether people can merit salvation. "The Methodist movement has always understood itself as deeply indebted to the biblical teaching on justification as it was understood by Luther and the other reformers, and then again by the Wesleys. But it has also always embraced elements of the doctrine of justification which belong to the Catholic tradition of the early church, both East and West," the Methodist statement said. It said, "Works of piety and works of mercy are fruits of the Spirit in the lives of those who follow Jesus . . . But all such works are the work of God's grace; or, as John Wesley in his sermon on 'Working Out Our Own Salvation' . . . puts it: 'God works, therefore you can work. God works, therefore you must work.'" The Methodist statement and the official common affirmation attached to it appear here. After official approval of the Lutheran World Federation and of the Roman Catholic Church, the official common statement by the Lutheran World Federation and the Roman Catholic Church was signed by the two partners on Oct. 31, 1999, thereby confirming the Joint Declaration on the Doctrine of Justification. Articulating their common understanding of basic truths of the doctrine of justification by God's grace through faith in Christ, this substantial agreement between Roman Catholics and Lutherans expresses a far-reaching consensus in regard to the theological controversy which was a major cause of the split in Western churches in the 16th century. We, the churches joined together in the World Methodist Council, welcome this agreement with great joy. We declare that the common understanding of justification as it is outlined in the Joint Declaration on the Doctrine of Justification (JDDJ, 15-17) corresponds to Methodist doctrine. We are especially grateful for the Trinitarian approach by which God's work in salvation is explained in these paragraphs: "15. In faith we together hold the conviction that justification is the work of the triune God. The Father sent his Son into the world to save sinners. The foundation and presupposition of justification is the incarnation, death and resurrection of Christ. Justification thus means that Christ himself is our righteousness, in which we share through the Holy Spirit in accord with the will of the Father. Together we confess: By grace alone, in faith in Christ's saving work and not because of any merit on our part, we are accepted by God and receive the Holy Spirit, who renews our hearts while equipping and calling us to good works.We agree also with what Lutherans and Roman Catholics say together about some of the crucial issues in the doctrine of justification which were disputed between them since the time of Reformation (cf. JDDJ, 19, 22, 25, 28, 31, 34, 37). Moreover, we accept the explanations which Lutherans and Catholics respectively give in Paragraphs 20-21, 23-24, 26-27, 29-30, 32-33, 35-36 and 38-39 concerning their respective positions on these issues, and we do not consider these diverse emphases sufficient cause for division between either party and Methodists. The Methodist movement has always understood itself as deeply indebted to the biblical teaching on justification as it was understood by Luther and the other reformers and then again by the Wesleys. But it has also always embraced elements of the doctrine of justification which belong to the Catholic tradition of the early church, both East and West. This gave its own doctrine of justification its distinctive profile. Set in relation to "the remaining differences of language, theological elaboration and emphasis," which are not reckoned to impair the "consensus in basic truths of the doctrine of justification" between Lutherans and Catholics (JDDJ, 40), the Methodist teaching may be described thus: 4.1 According to John Wesley the doctrine of original sin is an essential Christian doctrine. The corruption of human nature cannot be cured by ourselves. The destructive effects of the Fall are countered by the universal availability of prevenient grace (Sermon 85, "On Working Out Our Own Salvation," III.4). That people are able to respond to God's call is due only to God's prior work. According to Wesley, the grace of God "assists" but does not "force" the human response (Sermon 63, "The General Spread of the Gospel," 11). By God's grace believers are commissioned and empowered to tell people that God has reconciled the world to himself and to entreat them on behalf of Jesus Christ to be reconciled to God (2 Cor. 5:20).
4.5 For Methodists both the law and the Gospel are expressions of God's word and God's will. For guidance in the way of life and good (cf. Dt. 30:15-20), God in his love gave the law, which is summarized in the commandment to love God and our neighbors. As human beings we are not able to follow this way on our own. Because we have all failed to do God's will, the law now serves to accuse and convict us of sin (cf. Rom. 3:21). God saves us and gives us life through the love revealed and expressed in the life and the death of Jesus Christ. Although the law no longer has any power to condemn those who believe in Jesus Christ, it remains as summarized in the love commandment an indispensable guide to God's will. As Methodists we are grateful that on the basis of such an agreement as this, Lutheran and Methodist churches in some countries have recognized one another as belonging to the one church of Jesus Christ and have declared full communion of pulpit and altar. It is our deep hope that in the near future we shall also be able to enter into closer relationship with Lutherans in other places and with the Roman Catholic Church in accordance with this declaration of our common understanding of the doctrine of justification. Official Common Affirmation In this statement the World Methodist Council and its member churches affirm their fundamental doctrinal agreement with the teaching expressed in the Joint Declaration on the Doctrine of Justification signed at Augsburg on Oct. 31, 1999, on behalf of the Lutheran World Federation and the Catholic Church. The signing partners of the Joint Declaration on the Doctrine of Justification join together in welcoming the above statement of the World Methodist Council and its member churches, which declares and demonstrates Methodist agreement with the consensus in basic truths of the doctrine of justification as expressed in the Joint Declaration on the Doctrine of Justification. Building on their shared affirmation of basic truths of the doctrine of justification, the three parties commit themselves to strive together for the deepening of their common understanding of justification in theological study, teaching and preaching. The present achievement and commitment are viewed by Catholics, Lutherans and Methodists as part of their pursuit of the full communion and common witness to the world which is the will of Christ for all Christians. Source: Methodist Statement |