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Update |
Prague VI: New life in Christ |
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The sixth in the series of Prague consultations was held at the St Thomas cultural centre in Strasbourg, France, from February 11 to 15 2000. It brought together 25 people representative of the broad range of churches standing in the traditions of the Reformation or interested in sharing in the conversation about a more comprehensive understanding of Reformation. The following is a draft report written on behalf of the group. Seeking unity through focused and informed dialogue has been a Leitmotif of modern ecumenical endeavour since the World Missionary Conference of 1910. This has also characterized a series of international and interdenominational conferences since 1986 known informally as "the Prague consultations". The formal title of this year's meeting was "A consultation on the first, radical, and second Reformations", thus using language that requires some definition. The term, "first Reformation", includes the Waldensian Church, the Evangelical Church of Czech Brethren, the Moravian Church (Unitas Fratrum) and the Hussite Church, all understanding their spiritual origin as having occurred before 1500. In this context, "radical Reformation" refers to the Mennonites, Hutterian Brethren, Friends and the Church of the Brethren (together often known as the historic peace churches). The phrase "second Reformation" designates the classical Protestant (magisterial) Reformation, including the Lutheran, Reformed and Anglican communions. This consultation is the latest in a series that began in Prague in January 1986. In that year representatives of the historic peace churches met with representatives of the Evangelical Church of Czech Brethren, the Moravian Church, and the Hussite Church to identify common concerns. The intent of the gathering was to seek a more unified and hence more effective engagement in ecumenical conversations. The warm communality there found was deepened in June 1987 in a consultation focused on "Eschatology and Social Transformation". Prague III, held in June 1989, studied "Christian Faith and Economics". Common commitments made there have influenced wider circles, especially the World Alliance of Reformed Churches (WARC). The next meeting, held in late 1994, was known as Prague IV, although its locale shifted to Geneva under the sponsorship of WARC, with assistance from the Lutheran World Federation (LWF) and the Mennonite World Conference (MWC). Its theme, "Toward a renewed dialogue", signalled a broadening of discussion partners to include Lutherans and the Reformed, along with members of the Baptist, Methodist and Roman Catholic Churches. Special attention was given to different perspectives on the Sermon on the Mount. Geneva was again the site of Prague V in February 1998. This meeting continued to expand the range of those involved in the consultations by incorporating church leaders from Asia and Africa, facilitated through joint sponsorship by WARC, the LWF, and the MWC. Its theme, "Justification and sanctification", reflected recent Lutheran-Reformed discussions as well as the then-current Lutheran-Roman Catholic negotiations on the same subject. Prague VI has continued the same discussion theme by considering aspects of that theological complex left open at the previous meeting. The phrasing of this year's title - "New life in Christ" - also indicates that justification/sanctification language had not reflected the customary usage of some consultation members. Participants were further concerned with the linkage of ecclesiology and ethics to salvation, as well as with analysing its connections with ecology and creation. Finally, we addressed the question of a more comprehensive understanding of the concept of Reformation. Unfortunately, despite the efforts of conference planners, this year's discussants numbered only one from the global south and only two women, although an Orthodox theologian and a Seventh-Day Adventist scholar were welcome additions to the communions represented in the series of consultations. In the course of our days together, we have identified areas of common understanding as well as areas where questions remain open. These two areas are sometimes called convergences and divergences, but we prefer to use other language to avoid a sense of binding churchly quality, although the two phrases have been used in earlier consultations. The common understandings and open questions are briefly noted in the following. Common understandings
Open questions
The future?At the end of earlier consultations we agreed that we wanted to continue the conversation. After considering whether we have now completed our work, whether there are further questions we are particularly constituted to address, whether some of the participant groups should reconstitute a successor body to pick up newly urgent agenda, we agreed to name a small continuation committee (Odair Pedroso Mateus, Larry Miller, Milan Opocensky and a representative of the LWF) to plan another consultation, preferably located in Prague, within two or three years. It was agreed to seek Anglican participation. The following topics or questions have been put forward as possible themes:
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