November 2, 2006 CHICAGO – The
U.S. Lutheran-Roman Catholic Dialogue in Round XI met Oct. 12-15 in Baltimore
for its third session to discuss "The Hope for Eternal Life." The Evangelical
Lutheran Church in America (ELCA) and the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops
(USCCB) selected the topic at the end of Round X in 2004 to examine issues related
to the Christian's life beyond death. The conversation
stems from principles of life-after-death developed in the Joint Declaration on
the Doctrine of Justification, which the Lutheran World Federation and the Catholic
Church signed Oct. 31, 1999, in Augsburg, Germany. Dialogue members are considering
such issues as purgatory, indulgences, and masses and prayers for the dead. The
Rev. Lowell G. Almen, ELCA secretary, and the Most Rev. Richard J. Sklba, auxiliary
bishop of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Milwaukee, co-chair this round of
the U.S. dialogue. In addition to members of the ELCA and the Roman Catholic Church,
the dialogue included two participants from the Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod.
The Rev. Theodore W. Asta, associate to the bishop, ELCA
New England Synod, Worcester, Mass., led a session on Lutheran funeral liturgies,
including liturgies in the new "Evangelical Lutheran Worship" of the ELCA and
Evangelical Lutheran Church in Canada. Dr. Susan K. Wood,
S.C.L., Department of Theology, Marquette University, Milwaukee, reviewed her
earlier paper on Roman Catholic funeral liturgies and presented a paper on "Communal
Eschatology and the Communion of Saints." Dr. Christian
David Washburn, lecturer, systematic theology, St. Charles Borromeo Seminary,
Drexel Hill, Pa., presented a paper on "Prayers for the Dead." Lutheran
and Roman Catholic members of the dialogue "concurred that prayers for the dead
have their basis in Scripture and tradition, and that heaven is not a place of
rejoicing individually in the Lord but of our being ‘together' with him and with
one another in joyful communion," said the Rev. James Massa, executive director,
USCCB Secretariat for Ecumenical and Interfaith Affairs, Washington, D.C. "Though
Lutherans acknowledged the place of praying for deceased loved ones publicly and
privately, they pressed their Catholic colleagues to explain how their own church
understands the effects of such prayer," Massa said. The
Rev. Jared Wicks, S.J., Jesuit community, John Carroll University, University
Heights, Ohio, presented a paper on "Christology in the Creedal Material," and
the Rev. George H. Tavard, A.A., emeritus professor of theology, Brighton, Mass.,
led a session on "Mystics." Tavard said purgatory has
been understood by Catholics as both a place of punishment and a state of cleansing,
perhaps even momentary at the time of death. The image of cleansing was prominent
among the mystics, for whom final purgation meant an encounter with the "fire"
of divine love which purged the effects of sin on the human person. Dr.
Michael J. Root, professor of systematic theology and dean, Lutheran Theological
Southern Seminary, Columbia, S.C., presented a paper on the Council of Trent's
dealing with "satisfaction," and he offered "a Lutheran response." He raised theological
reasons for prayers and other pious practices done on behalf of the dead. Members
of the dialogue assumed responsibilities to present papers at their next meeting,
March 15-18, 2007, at Lutheran Theological Southern Seminary. They decided future
topics could include prayers for the dead in Eastern Orthodox Christianity, the
manner in which piety shapes belief, Christ's own interim state in his "descent
to the dead" and other topics related to the hope for eternal life. ELCA
News Service Information about the Lutheran-Roman Catholic Dialogue is at
http://www.ELCA.org/ecumenical/ecumenicaldialogue/romancatholic/
on the ELCA Web site. | |