vol.11
issue 1
Patristik und Ökumene
Patristics and Ecumenism
April 2019
Review of Ecumenical Studies • Sibiu
vol. 11 • issue 1 • April 2019
Patristik und Ökumene
Patristics and Ecumenism
guest editor
Radu Gârbacea
The Institute for Ecumenical Research, Lucian Blaga University of Sibiu
Institut für Ökumenische Forschung, Lucian Blaga Universität Hermannstadt
RES • Review of Ecumenical Studies • Sibiu
11 • 1 • 2019
CONTENTS / INHALT
Editorial
5
Articles / Aufsätze
Serafim Seppälä
Anathematized Church Fathers: a Gateway to
Ecumenism?
16
Dragoş Boicu
“Let None Desert the Church on my Account” Some Inconsistencies
regarding the Chrysostomic Vision on the Unity of the Church
25
Paul Siladi
The “Ecumenism” of the Desert Fathers. The Relationship with
the Other in Apophthegmata Patrum
46
Peter-Ben Smit
Charism and Challenge – Old Catholic Ecumenism and
the Appeal to the Early Church
58
Alexandru-Marius Crișan
A New Stone on an Ancient Foundation: Traditional Liturgical
Aspects in Taizé Order of Prayer
76
Further Articles / Witere Aufsätze
Marius-Stefan Ciulu
Die Verwendung und Bedeutung biblischer Referenzen in
Vita Antonii
90
Ecumenical News / Aktuelles
Coriolan Mureșan
Complex Inter-Orthodox and Ecumenical Dialogue Following
the Ukrainian Tomos of Autocephaly
120
Book Reviews / Buchrezensionen
Riemer Roukema & Hagit Amirav (eds.)
128
The „New Testament“ as a Polemical Tool. Studies in Ancient
Christian Anti-Jewish Rhetoric and Beliefs, NTOA/StUNT 110,
Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, Göttingen 2018, 264 p. (Hans Klein)
Claudia Rapp & Andreas Külzer (eds.)
134
The Bible in Byzantium. Appropriation, Adaptation, Interpretation,
Reading Scripture in Judaism and Christianity 25, Vandenhoeck &
Ruprecht, Göttingen, 2019, 160 p. (Alexandru Ioniță)
4
Charism and Challenge – Old Catholic Ecumenism
and the Appeal to the Early Church
Peter-Ben Smit*
This paper explores the role of the appeal to the early Church in Old Catholic theology,
describing how this appeal has been challenged and further developed through
ecumenical dialogue in particular. Noting the various problems involved in this
appeal and the manner in which they have been discussed within the Old Catholic
(ecumenical) theological discourse, the paper highlights the process of discernment
within the Union of Utrecht of Old Catholic Churches, and from that in particular
the consultation with the Ecumenical Patriarchate on the subject, and analyses the
role of the appeal to the early church in this setting. Notably, the hermeneutically
reflected appeal to the early church paved the way for a theologically responsible
manner of opening the apostolic ministry to women as well as men.
Keywords: Early church; Old Catholicism; ecumenism; Orthodoxy; hermeneutics; synodality; conciliarity; women’s ordination; ministry.
Introduction
The appeal to the early Church in ecumenical theology invites considering
the Old Catholic tradition, given that it has combined, in all of its formal
expressions, precisely these two commitments: (1) a commitment to the
early church as a means of shaping (2) an ecumenical commitment.1 For
instance, the ‘charter’ of the central international body of the communion of
Old Catholic Churches, the so-called ‘Declaration of Utrecht’ of the International Bishops’ Conference of the Old Catholic Churches of the Union of
Utrecht,2 stated in 1889 in its paragraphs 1 and 7:
Peter-Ben Smit, Professor (ao.) of Systematic and Ecumenical Theology, University of
Bern; Professor of Contextual Biblical Interpretation, Vrije Universiteit (Amsterdam); Professor (by special appointment) of Ancient Catholic Church Structures (Utrecht University);
research associate in the Faculty of Theology, University of Pretoria. Address: Berchtoldstrasse
15-4, 3012 Bern, Switzerland, e-mail:
[email protected].
This paper is based on and partially reuses materials that also appeared in: Old Catholic and
Philippine Independent Ecclesiologies in History. The Catholic Church in Every Place, Leiden 2011,
and idem, Old Catholic Theology, Leiden 2019 (forthcoming). References to secondary literature
have been kept to a minimum, with emphasis on primary sources in the latter part of the essay.
1
See in general: Urs von Arx, “Der kirchliche und ökumenische Auftrag der Altkatholischen
Kirchen der Utrechter Union: Wie weiter in die Zukunft?”, in: Internationale Kirchliche
Zeitschrift 98 (2008), p. 5-49.
2
On its inception, see: e.g., Dick Schoon, “The Union of Utrecht among the Christian
World Communities: A Comparative Perspective”, in: Internationale Kirchliche Zeitschrift
*
RES 11 (1/2019), p. 58-75
DOI: 10.2478/ress-2019-0005
Charism and Challenge
(1) We adhere to the principle of the ancient Church laid down by
St Vincent of Lérins in these terms: ‘Id teneamus, quod ubique,
quod semper, quod ab omnibus creditum est; hoc est etenim vere
proprieque catholicum’. Therefore we abide by the faith of the
ancient Church as it is formulated in the ecumenical symbols and
in the universally accepted dogmatic decisions of the ecumenical
synods held in the undivided Church of the first millennium.
(7) We hope that the theologians, while maintaining the faith of
the undivided Church, will succeed in their efforts to establish an
agreement on the differences that have arisen since the divisions
of the Church. We urge the priests under our jurisdiction in the
first place to stress, both by preaching and by religious instruction,
the essential Christian truths professed in common by all the
divided confessions, carefully to avoid, in discussing still existing
differences, any violation of truth or charity, and, in word and
deed, to set an example to the members of our parishes of how to
act towards people of a different belief in a way that is in accordance
with the spirit of Jesus Christ, who is the Saviour of us all.3
More than a century later, this commitment was reiterated in the preamble
of the newly revised statute of the same body, reiterating the contents of
the 1889 declaration, before proceeding to state the ecclesiology of the Old
Catholic Churches:
2. In the “Declaration of Utrecht”, fundamental for Old Catholic
doctrine, the communion of the Union of Utrecht which came
into existence in the context of the First Vatican Council confesses
the Catholic faith as expressed in the Church in the east and west
by the seven Ecumenical Councils. It approves of the historic
precedence of the Bishop of Rome as primus inter pares, but
rejects the papal dogmas of the said council and a number of
other papal pronouncements as far as they are at variance with the
doctrine of the Ancient Church. It affirms its faith in the essence
and mystery of the Eucharist. Furthermore the Union of Utrecht
shows its awareness of its obligation to do everything that will help
to overcome the divisions in the Church, and, based on the faith of
the undivided Church, to seek and declare unity and communion
with other Churches.4
105 (2015), p. 91-103; Wietse van der Velde, “The Declaration of Utrecht”, in: Internationale Kirchliche Zeitschrift 104 (2014), p. 64-67.
3
Reprinted (in translation) in: Urs von Arx and Maja Weyermann (eds.), Statut der Internationalen Altkatholischen Bischofskonferenz (IBK). Offizielle Ausgabe in fünf Sprachen, Bern
2001, ad loc..
4
See: U. von Arx, M. Weyermann (eds.), Statut.
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Peter-Ben Smit
Yet, the appeal to the faith and order of the early Church is both as
programmatic for ‘Old Catholicism’ as it is potentially problematic,
certainly when Old Catholic churches are seen by ecumenical partners
to introduce ‘novelties’, such as the ordination of women to the threefold
apostolic ministry. Therefore, the question addressed by this paper is: how
does the appeal to the early Church function in Old Catholic theology, with
particular attention to its ecumenical commitment and accountability. In
order to do so, first a general outline of the understanding of the appeal
to the early Church in Old Catholic Church will be given, upon which a
particular case is considered: the appeal to the early church in the context of
the Old Catholic discernment of the ordination of woman to the apostolic
ministry, a theological journey that was ecumenical in nature as well.
Charism and Challenge: The Early Church in Old Catholic Theology
As was just noted, the appeal to the early Church is both a characteristic, a
charism if you like, of Old Catholic theology, as well as a challenge. The latter
has to do with the fact that it may be regarded as (1) being indebted to a(n all
too) romantic view of the early church, (2) an epistemology that privileges
the ‘original’ in a questionable manner and is subject to epistemological
positivism, (3) a historical untenable view of the unity of the early church,
and (4) using an entity with unclear boundaries (what are the temporal,
institutional and social boundaries of the early church?) and therefore an
unclear content.5 Yet, this does not hinder Old Catholic theologians from
For characteristic points of criticism, in this case by Old Catholic authors, see: Kurt Stalder, “Theologische Wissenschaft”, in: Internationale Kirchliche Zeitschrift 64 (1974), p. 194220; Matthias Ring, “Ad pristinam normam patrum: Anmerkungen zum alt-katholischen
Reformparadigma”, in: Angela Berlis, Klaus-Dieter Gerth (eds.), Christus Spes: Liturgie und
Glaube im ökumenischen Kontext, Frankfurt, Peter Lang 1994, p. 255-264. Of course, an
internal Old Catholic debate concerning these various matters exists. For instance, it is argued that one of the advantages of the appeal to the early Church in terms of its faith and
order is precisely that it refers back to a lived reality and an organic whole, not only a set of
theological principles or a particular set of books, such as the Bible and therefore offers an
encompassing point of theological departure. See with this emphasis: U. von Arx, “Identity,
Plurality, Unity – What’s the Right Blend? Some Reflections from an Old Catholic Perspective”, in: Jeremy Morris, Nicholas Sagovsky (eds.), The Unity We Have and the Unity We Seek:
Ecumenical Prospects for the Third Millennium, London, T&T Clark 2003, p. 3-26, here p. 4.
Also, considering such queries with an eye to “tradition” as the ongoing transmission of the
faith, such historical unclarities are even necessary, given that they offer opportunities for the
ongoing discovery of new, forgotten or misrepresented aspects of the Church’s tradition with
an eye to its communication in new contexts. Somewhat counterintuitively therefore, precisely the apparently problematic aspects of an appeal to the early church, in fact make the
faith and order of the early church much more conveniently accessible and the connection
with the life of the world today is facilitated by it, given that they further a hermeneutical
approach to theological tradition. See the argument in: Peter-Ben Smit, Traditie als Missie.
5
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Charism and Challenge
continuing to make appeals to the early church, the point of which is often
summed up with Vincentius of Lerinum’s famous dictum: “id teneamus
quod ubique, quod semper, quod ab omnibus creditum est” (Vincentius
Lerinum, Commonitorium II.3).6 It has been adopted by the Old Catholic
Churches as a quasi-official theological motto (cf. the first paragraph of
the 1889 Declaration of Utrecht and the cover of the main Old Catholic
theological outlet, the Internationale Kirchliche Zeitschrift).7
A motto it may be, but, like the appeal to the earlier church, it is
one that is in need of interpretation. Such interpretation has developed
in the history of the Union of Utrecht and its theology itself. In it, the
appeal to the early Church – and with that to the Vincentian rule – can be
seen to have four key functions.8 The appeal functions in relation to: (1)
the protest against a specific shape of the Church, i.e. as it was the result
of the ultramontanization of the church during the 19th century; (2) the
formulation of an Old Catholic “creed”; (3) the development of a basis
for ecumenical relations; (4) the starting point for ecclesial renewal. Not
coincidentally, these are also the four main ingredients of the Declaration
of Utrecht of 1889. The four are mutually interrelated and depend on each
other, yet, it is helpful to distinguish them.
(1) In the context of resistance against the ultramontanization of the
church, the appeal to the early Church during the 19th century (and in the
125 Jaar Unie van Utrecht – 1275 jaar in de voetsporen van St. Willibrord, Amersfoort, Publicatieserie Oud-Katholiek Seminarie 2015.
6
The dictum is an abbreviated form of the following text: “In ipsa item catholica ecclesia
magnopere curandum est, ut id teneamus, quod ubique, quod semper, quod ab omnibus
creditum est. Hoc est etenim vere proprieque catholicum; quod ipsa vis nominis ratioque declarat, quae omnia fere universaliter comprehendit.” – For an edition, see: e.g., Martien F.G.
Parmentier, Vincentius van Lerinum, de beide Commonitoria, Amersfoort, Stichting Centraal
Oud-Katholiek Boekhuis 1989. For interpretations emphasizing the “material” and “formal”
aspects of the Vincentian rule, see: Christian Oeyen, “Die alte Kirche als Norm nach Döllinger und seiner Schule”, in: Internationale Kirchliche Zeitschrift 86 (1996), p. 25-44, and Jan
Visser, “Die Alte Kirche als hermeneutisches Prinzip”, in: Internationale Kirchliche Zeitschrift
86 (1996), p. 45-64; idem, “Vincentius van Lerinum en zijn Id teneamus. Over een oud-katholieke lijfspreuk”, in: Kees van der Kooi et al. (eds.), Vele gaven, één Geest. Meedenken met
Martien Parmentier op het gebied van oecumenica, patristiek en theologie van de charismatische
vernieuwing, Gorinchem, Ekklesia 2012, p. 121-129.
7
Although the subsequent considerations will aim at a systematization of the appeal to the
early Church with a focus on the emergence of a joint Old Catholic tradition post-1870, it is
good to stress here that such an appeal is characteristic of both traditions of “Old Catholicism”,
given that the “augustinianist” tradition also aimed at a return to the patristic sources. See, e.g.:
Mattijs Ploeger, Celebrating Church. Ecumenical Contributions to a Liturgical Ecclesiology, Tilburg-Groningen, Instituut voor Liturgiewetenschap, Liturgisch Instituut 2008, p. 167-170.
8
The following is indebted to discussions with Dr. Adrian Suter, Schönenwerd/Bern on
the subject of his Habilitationsprojekt that is dedicated to “Berufung auf die Alte Kirche als
Kriterium für Theologie heute”.
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Peter-Ben Smit
case of the Dutch Church also earlier)9 clearly had the function of providing
the rationale for the “Old” Catholic protest: the theological and canonical
renewal that was taking place was seen to be in contradiction to the faith and
order of the early Church and it certainly had not been believed everywhere,
always and by all. Vincentius’ rule functioned as a way to especially exclude
Pastor Aeternus (1870; dogmatization of papal infallibility and papal
universal jurisdiction) from the spectrum of legitimate Catholic teaching
and to relegate what was expressed in Ineffabilis Deus (1854; Immaculate
Conception of Mary) to the realm of possible theological opinion, while
excluding it from the realm of dogma. When applying the terminology of
material and formal principles of theology: the ultramontanizing dogmatic
definitions went against the material principle, i.e. the dogmatic tradition of
the early Church.10 Yet, this was by no means the only aspect of the protest.
It was also argued that the changes went against an episcopal-synodal and
conciliar way of existing as a community of reconciliation and engaging
in discernment of the truth as such,11 as the Dutch bishops had already
protested against the dogmatization of the immaculate conception of the
Blessed Virgin by pope Pius IX without a General Council in 1854.12 In
other words: it was argued that the new developments were not “just” at
odds with the ancient faith and order as it had existed in the early Church,
but in fact contradicted the manner of discerning the truth of the early
Church as well, which made things even more serious and the protest all
the more urgent. With that, more than just the “validity” of a particular
innovation was at stake, but the extent to which the Church could indeed
be the (social) space in which salvation could be experienced, i.e. by existing
in such a manner that the life of the ecclesial communion could indeed be a
conduit for facilitating an encounter with God in Christ through the Spirit,
which is at the heart of what it means to be a Catholic Church.13 In all of
On this church and its history, see: D. Schoon, Van bisschoppelijke Cleresie tot Oud-Katholieke Kerk. Bijdrage tot de geschiedenis van het katholicisme in Nederland in de 19de eeuw,
Nijmegen, Valkhof Pers 2004.
10
See: C. Oeyen, “Die alte Kirche”.
11
See on this: e.g., Jan Visser, Het ideaal van de ecclesia primitiva, Amersfoort, Centraal
Oud-Katholiek Boekhuis 1980; idem, “Kirche”, and idem, “Vincentius”; see also Andreas
Krebs, “‘... den blühendsten Zustand der Kirche wieder herbeizuführen’. Papstkritik und
Alte Kirche bei Joseph Hubert Reinkens”, in: Internationale Kirchliche Zeitschrift 101 (2011),
p. 101-115.
12
See: D. Schoon, Van bisschoppelijke Cleresie, p. 245-253.
13
See the considerations in: Kurt Stalder, Die Wirklichkeit Christi erfahren. Ekklesiologische
Untersuchungen und ihre Bedeutung für die Existenz von Kirche heute, Zürich, Benziger 1984;
idem, Sprache und Erkenntnis der Wirklichkeit Gottes. Texte zu einigen wissenschaftstheoretischen
und systematischen Voraussetzungen für die exegetische und homiletische Arbeit (ed. U. von Arx),
9
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Charism and Challenge
these ways, this protest based on the faith and order of the early Church still
stands in contemporary Old Catholic theology, given that its formal view of
the legitimacy of these doctrinal developments has not changed.14
(2) The second function of the appeal to the early Church was
to furnish the Old Catholic Churches with a viable point of doctrinal
orientation. In fact, the protest against the ultramontanization of the
Church that was mentioned first – because it was historically the most
prominent around the First Vatican Council – is a corollary of a way of
developing the Catholic tradition on the basis of the (academically accessed)
faith and order of the early Church, not vice versa. Yet, the First Vatican
Council made the development of such catholic theology in continuity
with the faith and order of the early Church all the more urgent. The
appeal to the early Church, certainly in a cultural atmosphere that was both
academically and romantically inclined to favor origins as the place where
truth might be found, provided a theologically, academically, ecclesially
and socially viable point of orientation for the faith and order of the
Old Catholic Churches. It has remained this ever since, again with both
emphasis on the content of the faith and order of the early Church and
with emphasis on the (communal) hermeneutics of the early Church.15 It
also meant that the Old Catholics could in good faith remain Catholics and
were not forced to go for the “logical” alternative for Roman Catholicism,
that is Protestantism. In the course of the 20th century ongoing reflection
on the appeal to the early Church and its constructive significance led to
the following theological consensus of the 1995 International Old Catholic
Theologians’ Conference:
Die Internationale Altkatholische Theologenkonferenz ist zu der
Feststellung gekommen, dass die Berufung auf die Alte Kirche
sich nicht allein auf Glaubensinhalte bezieht, sondern auch auf
die Art und Weise, wie man in Fragen des kirchlichen Lebens zu
einer Übereinstimmung kommt. Dieser Prozess zur Bewahrung
kirchlicher Gemeinschaft war gekennzeichnet von synodalen und
konziliaren Beratungen. Er war in der Alten Kirche eingebettet
in Einheit und Vielfalt. Diese beiden Prinzipien der «Synodalität»
Freiburg, Universitätsverlag 2000; on this qualitative view of catholicity, see: U. von Arx,
“Was macht die Kirche katholisch? Perspektiven einer christkatholischen Antwort”, in: Wolfgang W. Müller (ed), Katholizität – Eine ökumenische Chance, Zürich, TVZ 2006, p. 147-186.
14
See: U. von Arx, “Ein «Petrusamt» in der Communio der Kirchen. Erwägungen aus altkatholischer Perspektive”, in: Internationale Kirchliche Zeitschrift 93 (2003) p. 1-42; see also:
Adrian Suter, “«Ce qui a été cru partout, toujours et par tous»–la catholicité selon la théologie catholique-chrétienne”, in: François-Xavier Amherdt (ed.), Vers une catholicité œcuménique?, Freiburg, Universitaires De Fribourg Eds 2013, p. 61-70.
15
See: J. Visser, “Kirche”.
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Peter-Ben Smit
und der «Einheit in der Vielfalt» stützen und ergänzen sich
gegenseitig.16
What this appeal meant positively, rather than just ‘negatively’ (i.e., as a
foundation for rejection illicit innovations) becomes the clearest when
focusing on ecclesial reunification and renewal, hence, now its ecumenical
function will be discussed.
(3) The third function of the appeal to the early Church was an
ecumenical one.17 This function is a direct consequence of the orientation
towards the early Church and the realization that, in the light of the
ultramontanization of the Church as the outcome of a longer tendency
in Western Catholicism, the Western (Roman) Catholic tradition could
no longer be regarded as the only authentic continuation of the Christian
tradition and that the faith and order of the early Church ought to be the
norm for authentic Catholicity. When establishing this, church unity, in
the sense of recognizing each other’s Catholicity, must also have the faith
and order of the early Church as its basis. On this basis, it was hoped that
confessionalism (in the West and even longer-standing schisms, such as the
one between Eastern and Western Christianity), could be overcome. With
regard to ecumenical rapprochement, a similar interplay between content of
the faith and order of the early Church and its (re)discovery in the modern
world can be seen as in the case of both protest and the development of a
way of doing Catholic theology in continuation with the faith and order
of the early Church: it is about both form and content, about how faith is
discerned and about what it has as its content. In other words: only when
churches can together, i.e. in a conciliar manner, discern the faith and order
of the early Church and its identical presence in the lives of these churches
in such a way that this can also be received (episcopally-synodally) by the
churches involved, then ecclesial communion has been established. As will
be discussed below, the Old Catholic approach to ecumenism avant la lettre
would provide a good match with the later Faith and Order Movement, as
it issued out of the 1910 World Missionary Conference (Edinburgh), in
dialogue with which much later Old Catholic theology has been developed.
In the early years of the Altkatholische Bewegung, this approach to ecumenism
led to a principled focus on the Church of Utrecht, the Orthodox Churches
16
International Old Catholic Theologians’ Conference, “[Resolution]”, in : Internationale
Kirchliche Zeitschrift 86 (1996), p. 15.
17
See for an outline: U. von Arx, “Der kirchliche und ökumenische Auftrag ”; more extensively: Harald Rein, Kirchengemeinschaft: Die anglikanisch-altkatholisch-orthodoxen Beziehungen von 1870 bis 1990 und ihre ökumenische Relevanz 1-2, Bern, Peter Lang 19931994; see also: P. B. Smit, Ecclesiologies, and idem, Tradition in Dialogue. The Concept of Tradition in International Anglican Bilateral Dialogues, Amsterdam, Vu University Press 2012.
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Charism and Challenge
and the Anglican Churches, as churches that were likely to have continued
the faith and order of the early Church in a manner similar to the Old
Catholics. Following the formalization of relations with the Church of
Utrecht (episcopal consecrations in the 1870s and the establishment of the
Union of Utrecht in 1889), a trilateral ecumenical project was pursued with
the Orthodox and Anglican Churches in particular.
(4) A fourth and final function of the appeal to the faith and order of
the early Church has to do with the theological and organizational renewal
(and with that: spiritual renewal) of the Old Catholic Churches. Here, again
form and content cohere: the faith and order of the early Church can only
be received and confessed when justice is done to the manner of discerning
the truth of the early Church.18 In line with this, a strengthening of synodal
structures was one of the first, if not the first, step taken to renew the life of
the Church on the basis of the faith and order of the early Church (in the
churches emerging out of the Altkatholische Bewegung this took the form of
modern synods in the 19th century, in the Dutch Church, synodal awareness
existed even without a “modern” synod, given its ecclesiological tradition, cf.
above). Subsequent renewal in the life of the churches, whether it pertained
to the liturgical life (e.g., the introduction of the vernacular, the revision
of liturgical rites in general, etc.)19, church order (e.g., the abolition of
compulsory clerical celibacy, the ordination of both women and men to the
apostolic ministry, etc.), or matters at the interface of ethics and theological
anthropology, have usually been discerned both within the communion of
a local church and within the communion of communions of churches that
the Union of Utrecht is, ideally leading either to a common mind or to
the insight that different practices need not be church dividing. Tensions
and differences are inherent to this process, yet also serve the purpose of
furthering and deepening the conversation, rather than being obstacles in
the way of centrally decreed ordinances. This is the nature of synodality
and conciliarity as theological and therefore spiritual processes: communion
and dialogue is predicated on difference.20 In fact, it precisely facilitates the
process to which Old Catholic theologians also referred when they argued
that the faith of the early Church needs to be “rethought” for today in order
to remain faithful to it and when they underlined that salvation should also
As emphasized by, e.g., U. von Arx, “Was macht die Kirche”; Adrian Suter “Altkatholische
Kirchen”, in: Johannes Oeldemann (ed.), Konfessionskunde Leipzig-Paderborn, Evangelische
Verlagsanstalt 2016, p. 247-274; M. Ploeger, Celebrating Church.
19
See: U. von Arx, “Altkatholische Liturgie im 19. und 20. Jahrhundert”, in: Jürgen Bärsch
et al. (eds.), Geschichte der Liturgie in den Kirchen des Westens. Rituelle Entwicklungen, theologische Konzepte und kulturelle Kontexte, Münster, Aschendorff 2018, p. 441-481.
20
As befits a church in analogia Trinitatis, see: M. Ploeger, Celebrating Church, p. 459-469.
18
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Peter-Ben Smit
be experienced in the Church today. Such rethinking needed to take place in
the Church’s common life and interpretation of the faith in particular,21 in
order to be able to live a life of faith essentially identical to that of the early
Church. A merely conservative attitude would, of course, prevent precisely
that as it necessarily leads to anachronisms.22
With these historical and hermeneutical considerations, not everything
is said however. When asking the question what the faith and order of the
early Church consisted of then and when delineating the early Church, as has
been commonly done, as coinciding with the timespan covered by the seven
ecumenical councils23 and when taking notice of the hermeneutics implied
in the appeal to the early Church, answers to this question by Old Catholic
theologians are both confident and relatively modest. With confidence,
the episcopal-synodal ordering with its Eucharistic focus is stressed, also as
the place where the Catholicity of the Church is found primarily.24 In a
similar manner the dogmas of the ecumenical councils are affirmed, always
noting that these also are subject to interpretation in the pneumatological
“communio event” of the church.25 The Creed of the Councils of Nicaea
(325) and Constantinople (381) is recited in the Eucharist on all Sundays
and other feast days. In the same vein the Christian canon is affirmed (i.e.,
the canon of the Septuagint), of course also underlining that a hermeneutical
approach is needed.26 Inherent to the first point is also the importance of the
apostolic ministry as a means for enabling the unity of the church, both
synchronically and diachronically and socially and spiritually. In line with
this, also the liturgical life of the early Church, with its eucharistic life as
its core, is considered to be part of the faith and order of the early Church.
Beyond this, a general appeal is made to the insights and practices of the
early Church as a first point of orientation for contemporary ecclesial life,
See for the first position, representatively: Andreas Rinkel, Dogmatische Theologie I-IV,
Amersfoort, 1956, I, p. 8; for the second, also representatively: K. Stalder, Die Wirklichkeit
Christi; idem, Sprache und Erkenntnis.
22
See: P. B. Smit, Traditie als Missie.
23
I.e., with a focus on their dogmatic content, “the catholic faith as expressed in the Church
in the east and west by the seven Ecumenical Councils” in: U. von Arx, M. Weyermann
(eds.), Statut, preamble, par. 2, see representatively: M. Ploeger, Celebrating Church; A. Suter,
“Altkatholische Kirchen”.
24
See: U. von Arx, “Was macht die Kirche”.
25
See: Herwig Aldenhoven, “Charakter, Bedeutung und Ziel der Dialogtexte”, in: U. von
Arx (ed.), Koinonia auf altkirchlicher Basis, Bern, Stämpfli 1989, p. 27-44; A. Suter, “Altkatholische Kirchen”, with emphasis on the soteriological content rather than on the letter of
dogmas; see also: M. Ploeger, “De relevantie van een doordachte geloofsvisie. Over het vak
«systematische theologie» in oud-katholiek perspectief ”, in: K. van der Kooi et al. (eds.), Vele
gaven, één Geest, p. 63-77.
26
See: P. B. Smit, Traditie als Missie.
21
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Charism and Challenge
but, as noted above, with an appeal to the Spirit. Only in the Spirit and in the
communion brought together by the Spirit, i.e. the church, qua “permanent
Pentecost,”27 can the ancient faith be received in such a way that Christ, as
a salvific reality (“Christ event”), becomes present to the Church again in a
manner essentially identical to the manner in which Christ was present to
the earliest ekklesia. Life in communion in the Church today is thus also life
in communion with the Church of the past and, in fact, given its basis in
the Christ event made present pneumatologically, it is the same communion
with God.28
The relative modesty when it comes to answering the question what
the content of the faith of the early Church is precisely, has much to do
with the other aspect of the faith and order of the early Church: its role as a
hermeneutical principle. The ecclesiological structure of the early Church,
i.e., its episcopal-synodal ordering and its character of a communion of
communions with a very limited hierarchy among the local churches (qua
Eucharistic assemblies around a bishop that gather at a supra-local level
under the presidency of a ‘primate’), serves as a means of interpretation in
communion.29 Such a structure also determines the manner, in which insight
into the tradition can be discerned: through a communal process of dialogue
and reception only.30 Such discernment in communion can, if the question at
stake demands this, concern a global communion of communions of churches
(that are themselves communions). In this case, a form of papal primacy can
be required to preside over such a communion of communions.31 To be sure
– and in line with the pneumatological emphasis above –, this is more than
just a ‘democratic’ form of governing the Church: it aims at a manner of
discerning the truth that does justice to the insights and charismata of all the
baptized and all the churches in their respective contexts, ideally based on
consensus. This ecclesiological and with that hermeneutical emphasis leads
to a certain reticence when it comes to using the early Church for laying
down the law too quickly concerning the form and content of the faith
of the early Church in detail. Theological and historical insight into what
See: H. Aldenhoven, “Charakter, Bedeutung und Ziel”, with reference to the work of
John Zizioulas.
28
See the argument by M. Ploeger, Celebrating Church.
29
See: Visser, Het ideaal van de ecclesia; idem, “Kirche”; idem, “Vincentius”.
30
See: H. Aldenhoven, “Charakter, Bedeutung und Ziel”; U. von Arx, “Was macht die
Kirche”; P. B. Smit, Traditie als Missie; M. Ploeger, Celebrating Church.
31
See, e.g., the considerations in the documentation of the international Roman Catholic – Old Catholic dialogue: Kirche und Kirchengemeinschaft Erster und Zweiter Bericht der
Internationalen Römisch-Katholisch – Altkatholischen Dialogkommission 2009 und 2016, Paderborn, Bonifatius 2017.
27
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Peter-Ben Smit
tradition is and how it functions (as an evolving organism), attention to the
necessity of the ongoing ‘translation’ of the faith in new contexts, and the
possibility inherent to that process that new or forgotten aspects of the faith
are discovered or rediscovered, as well as a certain eschatologischer Vorbehalt
(‘eschatological reservation’) when it comes to definite formulations of what
the faith amounts to, require this.32
In order to further unpack all of this, an example is appropriate at this
point: In order to understand how this appeal to the faith and order of the
early Church works in practice and to simultaneously address a topic that
concerned Old Catholic theologians from the late 1960s until the turn of
the millennium, here the case of the Old Catholic Churches’ progression
towards the ordination of women to the apostolic ministry will be considered
in more detail.
The Ordination of Women and the Appeal to the Early Church: A Test
Case
One of the most prominent discussions in Old Catholic theology in the latter
part of the 20th century concerned, at least on the surface, the ordination
of women to the apostolic ministry. Under the surface, however, other
questions were at stake as well. These included the theology of the ordained
ministry as such, the role in theology of issues raised in society (such as
women’s rights), the manner of continuing the faith of the early Church (the
question of tradition), questions of theological anthropology, the theological
significance of gender, the relationship of the churches of the Union of
Utrecht among each other and the ecumenical dimensions of this question.33
Here, the discussion and its eventual outcome will be presented from the
point of view of what this meant for the Old Catholic understanding of
the appeal to the early Church in the context of ecumenical dialogue and
accountability. In doing so, the broader questions just mentioned will serve
as an initial starting point.
From the late 1960s onwards, prompted by ecumenical relationships,
such as with the (post-Vatican II) Roman Catholic Church (cf. e.g., Dei
Verbum on tradition, Lumen Gentium on the church), the preparations of
See: P. B. Smit, Traditie als Missie, and the literature referred to there.
See in general: idem, Ecclesiologies, p. 389-419, for surveys of the developments and debates: U. von Arx, “Die Debatte über die Frauenordination in den Altkatholischen Kirchen
der Utrechter Union”, in: Wolfgang Bock, Wolfgang Lienemann (eds.), Frauenordination,
Heidelberg, Forschungsstätte d. Ev. Studiengemeinsch 2000, p. 157-20; Angela Berlis, “Women’s Ordination in the Old Catholic Churches of the Union of Utrecht”, in: Ian Jones et al.
(eds.), Women and Ordination in the Christian Churches: International Perspectives, London,
T&T Clark 2008, p. 144-154.
32
33
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Charism and Challenge
the dialogue with the Orthodox Churches (and the appertaining reception
of koinonia theology), involvement in the broader ecumenical movement (in
particular: Faith and Order, cf. on tradition the outcome of the 1963 Faith
and Order Conference of Montreal), and the broader social developments
often associated with the year 1968, Old Catholic churches and their
theologians saw themselves in a position in which they needed to engage in
renewed study and reflection of a number of interrelated questions. These
were in particular: the significance and appeal to the early Church (and in
that context: the interrelationship between Scripture and tradition) and
the theology of the ordained ministry as such and the admission of women
to the apostolic ministry. The latter two questions proved to be catalysts
for addressing the former, as repristination of a theology of the ordained
ministry was called for in a new theological and social setting.
The ensuing discussion led to a consensus at the end of the 1970s
and the early 1980s that an unqualified and therefore uncritical appeal to
the undivided Church of the first millennium was no longer sufficient.34
Instead, a different view was needed, expressed representatively by the 1981
International Old Catholic Theologians’ Conference:
Die Kirche muss… ein fortwährender Prozess der Wahrheits- und
Entscheidungsfindung und des gemeinsamen Handelns sein, an
dem alle beteiligt sind. Diese Beteiligung aller zu ermöglichen
ist die Aufgabe des Amtes in Apostolischer Sukzession. Die
Altkatholischen Kirchen der Utrechter Union glauben, dass sie
damit die Tradition (Leben und Aufgabe) der ungeteilten Kirche
des 1. Jahrtausends in einer den heutigen Problemen angemessenen
Weise weiterführen.35
The appeal to the early Church is therefore an appeal both in terms of form
and content, as would be further developed in the course of the following
years, as is apparent in a statement by the 1995 International Old Catholic
Theologians’ Conference, the conclusion of which was already cited above.36
In line with the general development of Old Catholic theology, this
conference aimed at recovering a particular aspect of the recourse to the early
Church, namely the synodal and conciliar style of processes of discernment,
in order to do justice to an appeal to the faith and order of the early Church.
Accordingly, the discussion about the ordained ministry in general,
which constituted the broader context of the entire discussion and the
See: International Old Catholic Theologians’ Conference, “Erklärung der Internationalen
Altkatholischen Theologentagung 1981”, in: Internationale Kirchliche Zeitschrift 73 (1983),
p. 65-69, esp. p. 68, n8.
35
International Old Catholic Theologians’ Conference, “Erklärung”, p. 67-68.
36
See: International Old Catholic Theologians’ Conference, “[Resolution]”.
34
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Peter-Ben Smit
ordination of women in particular took the shape of a conversation in
communion,37 both within the member churches of the Union of Utrecht,
among them through ‘instruments of communion’ such as the IBC, the
International Old Catholic Theologians’ Conference, and International
Old Catholics’ Congresses, and with ecumenical partners, such as churches
in communion (notably the churches of the Anglican Communion), the
Orthodox Churches and the Roman Catholic Church.38 The Roman Catholic
position left, at this point, relatively little room for discussion, given the
publication of Ordinatio sacerdotalis in 1994 (preceded by Inter insigniores
in 1976).39 No further discussion was pursued, therefore. With Anglican
partners, the theology of the ordained ministry was discussed in general, as
it was with Orthodox partners, leading to joint statements on a shared and
renewed view of the ordained ministry, but not yet to a definitive position
on the ordination of women to it.40 However, as Anglicans were generally
moving into the direction of the ordination of women and, at least, the
relationship of communion was not threatened by its introduction on either
side of the relationship, for instance when the Episcopal Church in the USA
in 1976 officially ordained women to the priesthood, the conversation with
the Orthodox Churches, not generally known for their supportive stance
regarding the ordination of women to the apostolic ministry, was pursued in
particular as a way of testing the viability of the ordination of women to the
apostolic ministry as an ecumenically recognizable faithful reception of the
faith and order of the early Church.
Accordingly, a consultation took place in 1996, consisting of two
meetings of a commission of experts and meeting with the blessing of the
Ecumenical Patriarch and the Archbishop of Utrecht. The results of this
consultation, which, despite their publication in English and German,41 have
remained somewhat hidden, came at the time as a surprise to all involved
(and all observing): the joint consultation reached the unanimous conclusion that there were no theological objections against the ordination of
See for this and the following: P. B. Smit, Ecclesiologies, p. 391-419.
As discussed in: U. von Arx, “Die Debatte”; A. Berlis, “Women’s Ordination”.
39
Though it should be noted that the ordination of women to the apostolic ministry was no
hindrance for the initiation, by the Vatican authorities, see: Kirche und Kirchengemeinschaft.
40
See for an overview of Old Catholic ecumenism in this period P. B. Smit, Ecclesiologies,
p. 359-391.
41
I.e.: U. von Arx and Anastasios Kallis (eds.), Bild Christi und Geschlecht. «Gemeinsame
Überlegungen» und Referate der Orthodox-Altkatholischen Konsultation zur Stellung der Frau
in der Kirche und zur Frauenordination als ökumenischem Problem. Levadia (Griechenland)
und Konstancin (Polen) 1996, in: Internationale Kirchliche Zeitschrift 88 (1998), p. 65-348;
English translation (Duncan Reid) in: Anglican Theological Review 84 (2002), p. 489-755.
The German edition contains the full supporting patristic source materials.
37
38
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Charism and Challenge
women to the apostolic ministry. Both the results of the consultation as well
as its line of argument as they appear in the “Common Considerations“42
of the consultation are of interest here, as they show how an appeal to the
early Church factually functions and how a faithful reception of the faith
and order of the early Church has its place in an ongoing search for ecclesial
communion. This approach comes close to what would later be outlined in
the Anglican – Orthodox Cyprus Agreed Statement).43
The “Common Considerations” are prefaced by “preliminary
remarks” by the editors, Old Catholic theologian Urs von Arx and Orthodox
theologian Anastasios Kallis. They outline how the participants in the
consultation agreed that in the earliest history of the Church
At first, tendencies not to treat men and women differently based
on gender, as both are viewed as parts of Christ’s body, allowed for
multiple ecclesial ministries, even for what we would nowadays
call leadership positions.44
This changed, the more the church was influenced by gender norms current
in (Greco-Roman imperial) society, leading to the exclusion of women from
such (priestly) roles. As this happened early on, the effect was that
This state of affairs, initially caused by socio-cultural conditions,
has become surrounded with the aura of holy tradition in the
course of the Church’s pilgrimage to its destination in the doxa of
God.” (ibidem)
Yet, another, newer social development has given reason to begin reassessing
this:
This was to be confronted with the (admittedly socio-culturally
conditioned) movement that evolved in modern Europe and
North America advocating equality for women, and with the realization that various traditional cultures are characterized by the
phenomena of patriarchalism and androcentrism. This raised the
question as to whether there are inevitable and dogmatic reasons
for excluding women from being priests.45
U. von Arx, A. Kallis, “Common Considerations of the Orthodox–Old Catholic Consultation on the Role of Women in the Church and on the Ordination of Women as an Ecumenical
Issue”, in: Anglican Theological Review 84 (2002), p. 503-506. German original: “‘Gemeinsame Überlegungen’ der Orthodox-Altkatholischen Konsultation zur Stellung der Frau in der
Kirche und zur Frauenordination als ökumenischem Problem”, in: idem (eds.) Bild Christi.
43
Anglican – Orthodox Dialogue, The Church of the Triune God: The Cyprus Agreed Statement of the International Commission for Anglican – Orthodox Theological Dialogue, London,
Anglican Communion Office 2006.
44
U. von Arx, A. Kallis, “Common Considerations”, p. 501-502.
45
Ibidem, p. 502.
42
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Peter-Ben Smit
The reason for reconsidering the witness of the early Church is, therefore,
social and contextual. As it will become clear from what follows, the
argument itself is not determined by arguments derived from, for instance,
a discourse on social justice, but rather from one concerned with early
Christian soteriology and the theological anthropology inherent to it. Prior
to making this argument, first a matter of method is clarified:
The answer to this question cannot simply be taken out of the
history of the Church, as long as that history is identified as the
“holy tradition.” In other words, it does not make sense to take
statements of Church fathers, made in specific historical and cultural
contexts, and apply them to the questions that have emerged from
the spiritual needs of people today in our own cultural context.
Rather, a hermeneutical consciousness is required.46
Next, a number of reasons are mentioned as to why it is not possible to
ordain women to the apostolic ministry:
Among the objections to the ordination of Christian women
raised by churches in the East and the West alike, there are some
that claim to be independent of time or specific sociological
context. The male gender of priests is derived, according to
these arguments supposedly not conditioned by culture, from an
indispensable connection between the function of the priest to
represent Christ (or his “Christ-iconicity”) and his male sex and
gender. These reasons are ultimately untenable. The same applies
to the arguments with Christ-Adam and Eve-Mary typologies
when they are used to explain a gender-specific difference that
would make the ordination of women impossible.47
The traditional character of these argument is acknowledged, yet also
relativized with reference to another strand of tradition:
Although the patterns of both arguments reflect formal-patristic
thought, they do not correspond to the tradition, since they ignore the universal salvific significance, inclusive of both men and
women, of the incarnation of God’s Logos.48
Thus, as will happen in the “Common Considerations” themselves as well,
particular aspects of tradition that can be seen as socio-cultural in nature
primarily are relative here with reference to the theological core of the
tradition of the early Church, i.e. soteriology and its implied anthropology.
Von Arx and Kallis then acknowledge the complexities of the
discussion surrounding gender difference and equality noting that
46
47
48
72
Ibidem, p. 502.
Ibidem, p. 502-503.
Ibidem, p. 505.
Charism and Challenge
The tradition of the early Church, whose founders articulated
their faith in different socio-cultural environments from ours,
can provide us with neither general basic guidelines nor explicit
guidance for each and every case. However, they provide something
of a foundation … when they speak of the incarnation of God’s
Logos – in which Jesus Christ took the common nature of men
and women – and of the restoration of the image of God (cf. Gen.
1.27) that men and women alike find in him.49
Subsequently, the factor “culture” is again stressed as one that largely
determines the possibility of the admission of women to the apostolic
ministry or not (“certain cultural factors”).50 They also note, already
referring proleptically to the findings of the consultation as a whole, that no
“compelling dogmatic or theological reasons” were found “for not ordaining
women to the priesthood.”51 As this is the case:
This means that the ordination of women could not fundamentally
call into question or destroy the communion and unity of the church
or the moves toward restoring broken communion and unity.52
In the subsequent “Common Considerations” some of these arguments
return, yet it is worthwhile to outline them in sequence, so as to do justice
to the statement’s coherence. Having positioned the conversations in the
context of an ongoing dialogue and discernment of the Gospel (and with
that of the unity of the Church), building on the insights of the official
Orthodox – Old Catholic dialogue (1975-1987) first a common view of
tradition is outlined:
In faithfulness to the treasure of tradition, we discern tradition
as a process, directed by the Spirit of God, of the dynamic
contextualization of the faith for the life and the witness of
the Church in its ever-changing contemporary situation. This
provokes questions concerning the appropriate way of dealing
with the tradition (the hermeneutical problem).53
Next, an ecclesiological observation is made. The consultation observes
“that today churches justly emphasize the dignity of the laity and especially
of women, and that they appreciate the fact that these people occupy an
appropriate place in the mission of the church”.54
49
50
51
52
53
54
Ibidem, p. 503.
Ibidem.
Ibidem.
Ibidem.
Ibidem, p. 505.
Ibidem; subsequently reference is made to 1 Cor. 12.
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Peter-Ben Smit
Subsequently, the consultation reports that it has researched the
tradition of the early Church based on the above-mentioned understanding
of tradition; in particular attention was given to
the historical data which was brought forward as a rationale for the
“male character” of the priesthood: the maleness of the incarnate
Son of God, Jesus Christ’s choosing of men in the circle of the
twelve, the exclusive appointment of men to the priestly office
of the Church, as well as the corresponding argumentation with
regard to typologies (e.g., Adam-Christ, Eve-Mary) and with ideas
of the priest being the image or representation of Christ.55
On the basis of a consideration of these various traditions and arguments
based on them, the following is concluded:
We have reached the common conclusion that there are no
compelling dogmatic-theological reasons for not ordaining women
to the priesthood. The soteriological dimension of the Church is
decisive for us: the salvation of humankind and the entire creation
in Jesus Christ in whom the new Creation is being accomplished.
We were especially guided by the conviction that was central to
the ancient Church: only that which has been assumed and united
with God has been saved. It is human nature, common to men
and women, that has been assumed by our Lord.56
Following on this, allowance is made for the role of socio-cultural (“nontheological”) factors in the factual decision-making of churches, but these
do not infringe upon the validity of this theological view.
With this, both the basis upon which Old Catholic Churches
proceeded with the ordination of women from 1998 (Germany 1996)
onwards, and the manner in which the appeal to the early Church functions
in Old Catholicism have been laid out. The characteristics of the latter include
a discernment in communion, through the episcopal-synodal structures of
each of the local churches that are part of the Union of Utrecht, among these
churches in conciliar communion, and among communions of communions
in discussions with churches in communion and with churches with which
communion is sought. This method of discerning in communion responds to
questions raised by the contemporary context of the churches and makes use
of the tools of academic theological scholarship. In this way the churches are
able to critically reassess, as part of the process of traditioning that shapes the
life of these churches, whether their position on a topic like the ordination of
women is still the most appropriate reflections of the faith and order of the
55
56
74
Ibidem.
Ibidem.
Charism and Challenge
early Church and enable a faithful witness to Christ, who is at the heart of
the living tradition of the church (cf. the formulations of the Fourth World
Conference on Faith and Order, Montreal 1963).
Concluding Observations
A number of things can be maintained with regard to the Old Catholic
appeal to the early Church in the context of ecumenical dialogue.
First, it could be outlined how in Old Catholic theology the appeal to
the early Church is at least as much an appeal to the ‘contents’ of the early
Church as to the ‘form’ of the early Church, in terms of its being structured
as a community geared towards discerning the truth in communion. The
faith of the early Church needs to be discerned in the manner of the early
Church. This discernment in communion also amounts to discernment in
communion with ecumenical partners. In other words, the appeal to the
early Church qua basis for Old Catholic theologizing connects organically
with the Old Catholic hope that rediscovering the faith of the early Church
can provide a basis for ecclesial rapprochement and reunion, given that such
rediscovery implies and demands discernment in dialogue and communion
with other churches seeking to do the same.
Second, the manner in which such discernment takes place
concretely, illustrated here with reference to the Old Catholic discussion
about the ordination of women to the apostolic ministry in general and
to the consultation with Orthodox theologians in particular, shows that
the contours of this appeal are hermeneutical and theological in character.
Rather than a ‘copy-and-paste’ approach to the faith and order of the early
Church, it is endeavored to ask not just ‘how’ things were in the past, but
also why they were as they were; this aims at uncovering the theological
rationale embedded in various beliefs and practices, which may then be
reappropriated in a new context, while avoiding the pitfall of permitting this
context to determine the outcome of such a process, even if it is important
for enabling, even necessitating the consideration of new questions and new
answers on the basis of the tradition of the early Church.
75