Week of Prayer for Christian Unity?
Dr
Harry Hagopian, LL.D, KOG - KSL
But we have this treasure in clay jars, so that it
may be made clear that this extraordinary power belongs to God and does not
come from us (2 Corinthians
4:7)
This week, the traditional Churches of Jerusalem come together every
evening to reflect upon the theme of the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity.
They will be reflecting together upon those treasures in clay jars that are
nothing more and nothing less than life itself. After all, life in the
Christian affirmation cannot be neutral. Rather, it is positive and meant to be
treasured. God created the world, enlivened the breath of life into us and gave
us a world and each other to enjoy. It is therefore important, in the midst of
our daily lives, to remember this life-inspiring reality. After all, does the
hymn we sing at times not remind us, ‘Joyful, Joyful, We Adore Thee’?
St Paul, in this passage from Corinthians, also added that we have this
treasure in clay jars. We know life in this world only through our existence in
human form and within finite space, subject to disease, to accident, to all
manner of chance and change which can alter our dreams, change our hopes, and
present us with unforeseen challenges. The life of faith, our belief that life
is a God-given treasure, can be severely tested. St Paul knew something about
this in his own life, a ‘thorn’ that weighed heavily upon his shoulders
.
So if life is a God-given treasure, albeit in fragile clay jars, and
one that has been affirmed to us by our Lord and Saviour, should we then not
labour harder to safeguard and nurture that treasure with much more cohesion
let alone coherence? Should we not think somewhat more proactively about psalm
36 verse 9 when it affirms, ‘For with you is the fountain of Life’, as we
contemplate our lives as believers in the One Christ and followers of His
teachings?
To talk about unity, ecumenism or its affiliated constituencies, let me
go back as far as 1902 when His Holiness Yoachim II, Ecumenical Patriarch of
Constantinople, issued an encyclical where he raised the matter of
intra-Christian relations. In 1920, he followed it up with another encyclical
entitled ‘Unto the Churches of Christ Everywhere’ in which he also encouraged
the spirit of reconciliation and drew upon the First Letter of St Peter to love
one another earnestly from the heart (1 P 1:22b).
To look across two millennia of Christianity, a number of people tend
to project a waning faith, ever-dwindling numbers in the pews and increasing
ructions between the faiths. One article I read last year even drew analogies
between the faiths and Samuel Huntingdon’s ‘Clash of Civilisations’! I do
not think the analogy is valid, any more than it is valid to compare Jan
Kerkhof’s ‘Europe without Priests’ with the faith-based situation across the
world.
So let me start with basics. We are talking here about the Christian
faith, but what is this faith in its essence? What is its definition? In
my opinion, it is not enough to discuss the word of God and comment on it. We
must carry it also, and bear witness to it in the way we live. There is
no original recipe or magical formula here! We Christians must learn afresh to
become credible interpreters and disciples of God’s love to humankind. I believe
therein lies the secret of a Mother Teresa, a Father Maximilien Kolbë or an
Archbishop Desmond Tutu who changed the world around them. In the words of
Cardinal Franz König, Emeritus Archbishop of Vienna, we need to
transubstantiate faith through love, not institutionalise it. And in the words
of St John Chrysostom, Patriarch of Constantinople and a contemporary of St
Augustine in the 5C, Christians are called to ‘shine like a light in a world of
darkness’
In my opinion, that in a nutshell is what this annual week of prayers -
in Jerusalem this week and across the world a week earlier - is about! It is
not about 'transforming' all the churches so that they become uniformly
monochromatic! How lacklustre and uninspiring that would be! Rather, it is about
ordained and lay persons from different statements of belief coming together to
celebrate as sisters and brothers the diversity of their ecclesial traditions -
without forgetting the ultimate goal of re-assembling the body of Christ into
the oneness that befits our Lord and Redeemer.
True, there are a host of historical, theological, dogmatic, doctrinal,
cultural and even psychological obstacles obstructing this coming together and
impeding a unified proclamation of the Gospel to the world. Nonetheless, it is
only fair to add that some modest but nonetheless meaningful strides have
already been taken in this direction. There is a sense of reconciliation within
the Christian world that is hard to underrate - or dismiss altogether!
But let me come back to my quotation of that verse from psalm 36, 'With
you is the fountain of life'. It suggests we need to find the way to the place
where the fountain of life lies in order to unlock its secret. The symbol of
the fountain reminds us of the necessity to return to the origin, to the
principle, to the roots, to the essential. To walk together, Christians need to
be grounded in the Word of God, the revelation of God's face in Jesus Christ,
the renewing force of God's Spirit, the discovery of the love of God, Father,
Son and Holy Spirit. Faith, prayer and common action can make water spring even
from the desert rock of bitterness and cleanse the sin of division in
Christendom. So, where are we on this road toward an ecumenical recovery
that faces up to those challenges? Can we actively live and witness together
the belief that 'Jesus Christ is the same yesterday, today and forever' (Heb
13:8)?
I do not wish to be carried away by my own thoughts or words! I still maintain that we are not yet
ready to assume fully our ecumenical and grassroots responsibilities. There is
still far too much turf staking (despite an ever-dwindling turf) that goes on
within many denominations. The Church as an institution - as the body of our
Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ - has to learn to reconstruct itself with more
integrity, courage and vision. It also has to learn how to commune more closely
with its assembly of believers - that vast church outside the walls! In this
respect, I remember the stirring words of the philologist Joan Emri in her 1998
book where she avers that, “self-interest, self-involvement, self-indulgence,
self-love, self-importance and self-image are too many 'selves' for the Church
Universal to carry with it all at once.”
Indeed, those self-imposed 'selves' weaken immeasurably the prophetic
message of the Church worldwide and diminish its Christian ministry of love,
compassion, reconciliation and forgiveness - ineffable virtues that Christians
celebrate at least twice during the Christmas and Easter seasons. What is helpful
here is a love for the other that transcends dogmatic differences. By
implication, what is therefore required is a fellowship not unlike that of the
Early Church that is more basic - and therefore more grounded - than
theosophical quibbles in order to guide the relentless dialogue over dogma
itself. To encourage us all in that direction, I remind us all of St
Augustine’s famous phrase, “Our hearts are restless till they find their rest
in Thee.”
What is the Church to make of this unsettling contrast between
institutional decline, ecumenical obscurantism and re-emerging spiritual
awareness? I believe that the major focus of the Church should not lie
simply on filling empty pews. Perhaps more serious and certainly more urgent is
the realisation that we are not in touch with the ways in which God the Holy
Spirit is communicating with us. In the final analysis, ought we not
perhaps recall Thomas à Kempis whose statement might also hold an answer to the
present predicament, “An humble knowledge of thyself is a surer way to God than
a deep search after learning”?
However, to survive in the next millennium with an ever-enhancing sense
of fellowship that comes closer to the logos
of the truth, churches and ecumenical movements alike must re-discover the sense
of awe that characterises us as Christians. The most perceptive
theologians have always insisted that God exists beyond our doctrinal
formulations. For centuries, mystics have referred to a ‘cloud of
unknowing’ in which we must wait before we can grasp the divine. Perhaps
Christians today have to endure such a period of patient waiting before they
can re-formulate their sense of the sacred and re-affirm the God-centred praxis
of our common apostolic and catholic Christian faith. Perhaps this should
be our goal as we become acquainted with our new century.
Can we perhaps think together of three renewable buzzwords and use them
as constant mnemonics in our lives? The first is Metanoya - a sense of renewal and change. The second is Koinonia - an assembly of believers in
communion. And the third is Kairos
- an opportunity in a moment of crisis as a sign of hope. Can they help
bridge the gap that straddles the practical with the probable and then leads to
the possible in our imperfect lives as Christians striving to define our
unity? Will the Christian communities - leadership and grassroots
alike - appropriate this movement and make it their own? Is the Oikumene - that inhabited earth - a
reality? Or are we knocking at the wrong doors?
The leaflet from Jerusalem promoting the Week of Prayer for Christian
Unity 2003 states that ‘the unity of Christians needs to be the paradigm for
the unity of humankind.’ It articulates a challenge that, ‘the unity of all
those who believe in Christ is made visible when Christians truly take up their
task in the world in which they are living, when together they speak out
against all that destroys the dignity of the human person and pray and act
together in favour of true peace.’
My own prayers for unity this week are also prayers for peace in the
whole world. How true and how timely that we pray for peace, true peace in a
true Christian sense, as we are all girding up our loins for more wars, more
confrontation, and ultimately more human misery! As we spurn that which is
sinful, and embrace that which is God-given, as we remind ourselves of the
treasure in clay jars, we could perhaps again keep St Paul in our minds. In his
letter to the Ephesians, he wrote, ‘With all lowliness and gentleness, with
long suffering, bearing with one another in love, endeavouring to keep the
unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace
(Eph 4:2-3).
After all, are we not purported to project hope, compassion and unity?
Yet, just look at the levels of violence and terrorism, genocide, destruction,
poverty, despair, hopelessness, threat, oppression and ultimately disunity
hovering over the world from the Palestinian town of Bethlehem, birthplace of
our Lord, to the African shores of Zanzibar! Where is that Christian voice? How
much stronger would we become if we managed to speak in a Christian voice that
reflects our unity not only on lofty principles but equally on issues of
justice and peace for the long-suffering peoples of the world. That is one of
the practical benefits of unity - not only an idea to pursue for its own sake,
but the hope of using our faith to make a difference toward the better - for
ourselves, our families and friends, our country and our whole world.
Can we understand ‘unity’ in this positivist sense, or will we have forgotten
all about it next week anyway?
©
hbv-H@ 21 January 2003