May
19, 2005
Anglicans
Acquiesce to Catholic Dogma on Mary
by Jon
M. Sweeney
This is no little matter. The doctrinal distinctions may be
blurry or inconsequential for those of us outside the classroom,
but they are significant issues that once separated Anglican
from Roman Catholic.
Or, perhaps more accurately, they once separated Anglican ecumenical
officers from Roman Catholic ecumenical officers.
Their
joint statement/document, released on May 16, is already known
as
the “Seattle Statement.” An international
gathering of delegates from the Vatican’s Pontifical Council
for Promoting Christian Unity and the Anglican Consultative Council
have been meeting off and on for the last five years, but they
most recently completed their work in February 2005 in Seattle,
Washington. Hence, the “Seattle Statement” which
was released today and will be published in book form (Mary:
Grace and Hope in Christ, 96 pp, $14.95) at the end of this
week by Morehouse, a publisher specializing in serving The Episcopal
Church USA (and co-publisher of explorefaith.org books).
Debra K.
Farrington, publisher at Morehouse, told explorefaith.org: “Anglicans
have long looked at Mary through the lens of Scripture, as an
inspiration for discipleship, while Roman Catholics have focused
more on Mary’s ongoing ministry. This important report
recognizes that both approaches are important, both are incomplete,
and they are two sides of the same coin. We have something to
offer each other in our common devotion to Mary, and this report
lays that groundwork.”
Two Catholic dogmas—one adopted as recently as 1854,
and the other in only 1950—have been deemed “consonant” with
the spirit of biblical teachings, according to the Anglican
delegation.
The dogma
of the Immaculate Conception states that the Virgin Mary was
without the taint of original sin. Pope Pius IX defined
this in 1854 as “the doctrine which declares that the most
Blessed Virgin Mary, in the first instant of her conception…in
view of the merits of Jesus Christ…was preserved exempt
from all stain of original sin.” There are very fine distinctions
at work here. It is not that Mary was miraculously conceived,
as was Christ, but that her soul was sanctified by God’s
grace from the moment she became human.
The dogma
of the Assumption (1950) states that Mary holds a special place
in heaven, where her body and soul are believed
to have been assumed after physical death but before any corruption
of the body was permitted to happen. Pope John Paul II often
quoted from a sermon preached by a sixth-century bishop, Theoteknos
of Palestine, to argue this point: “Christ took his immaculate
flesh from the immaculate flesh of Mary. And if he prepared a
place in heaven for the Apostles, how much more then for his
mother? If Enoch and Elijah were translated to heaven, how much
more then should Mary, who like the moon in the midst of stars
shines and excels among all prophets and Apostles?”
Until now,
the Anglican argument has been simply that these dogmas were
extra-biblical and therefore not worthy of widespread
belief. That’s now beside the point, says Australian Anglican
Archbishop Peter Carnley, who was the co-chair of the joint commission
that produced the statement. Carnley explained from Seattle on
May 16: “For Anglicans, that old complaint that these dogmas
were not provable by scripture will disappear.”
But disappear how, exactly? How will this joint statement on
Mary change the perspectives of everyday Anglicans/Episcopalians
in the pews, or even their priests?
In an interview
with explorefaith.org, Douglas LeBlanc, an Episcopalian and
the editor of GetReligion.org, argued differently. “Carnley’s
remark is quite simply ridiculous,” he said. “The
Seattle Statement is typical of what I would call ‘bureaucratic
ecumenism,’ which proceeds as though unity in Christ can
be brought about through archbishops making declarations on behalf
of their communions.”
Other Episcopalian
experts see the matter differently. For The Rev. Clair McPherson,
rector of Trinity-St. Paul’s in New
Rochelle, New York, the Seattle Statement—and its relaxation
of doctrinal differences—is cause for rejoicing. He explained: “Doctrinally,
Anglicanism finds its greatest strength in inclusiveness, comprehensiveness,
and openness. This has always seemed to us most congruent with
Apostolic tradition and with the ethos of the pre-Nicene, undivided
Church.”
But, why
would the Anglican ecumenical leaders change their perspective
now, at this particular time? Douglas LeBlanc’s
lack of enthusiasm for the new agreement has nothing to do with
a disapproval of Anglicanism moving closer to Rome. “I
think the Episcopal Church would be healthier if it embraced
more of Catholicism, especially in its moral theology,” he
said.
Rev. McPherson,
who is also an adjunct professor at General Theological Seminary
in New York City, suggests that “The
Anglican delegates were resisting the Reformation-era prejudice
against any doctrine that is ‘non-biblical’—the
reason most reformed churches deny the two doctrines mentioned
in the Seattle announcement.”
Also, could
it be that the Anglican/Episcopalian delegates wanted to emphasize
the distinction between a progressive (classically
Anglican?) approach and an evangelical approach to reading the
Bible? In the ongoing battles between Anglicans worldwide—who
range widely today from progressive to evangelical—over
the issue of openly gay bishops, many on the progressive side
have argued that Anglicans do not, and never have, sought to
interpret the Bible without the dual aids of tradition and reason.
Somewhere
behind the conclusions of the Seattle Statement may be an additional
point that is being made: It is un-Anglican
to believe that all belief is to be located in scripture. In
that sense, Rev. McPherson articulates the progressive Episcopal
spirit best: “I find myself agnostic on the question of
[Mary’s] Assumption. I doubt strongly that any Anglican
would be compelled to believe in it, but I would want any Anglican
to feel free to believe in it, which is a different question
entirely.”
For
more information on the joint statement, visit http://www.anglicancommunion.org/acns/articles/39/75/acns3978a.cfm.
Jon M. Sweeney is
an Episcopalian author and editor living in Vermont. His latest
book is The Lure of Saints: A Protestant Experience of Catholic
Tradition. His memoir, Born Again and Again: Surprising
Gifts of a Fundamentalist Childhood, will be published this
Fall.
More
by Jon Sweeney.
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