WASHINGTON (November 4, 2010) — The U.S. Catholic bishops will vote on an
agreement with four Protestant communities to mutually recognize one another’s
baptism as valid when they meet for their annual Fall General Assembly, November
15-18, in Baltimore. The proposed Common Agreement on Mutual Recognition of
Baptism is the result of six years of study and discussion between the
United States Conference of Catholic Bishops’ (USCCB) Committee for Ecumenical
and Interreligious Affairs and representatives from the Presbyterian Church-USA,
the Reformed Church in America, the Christian Reformed Church, and the United
Church of Christ.
“The U.S. bishops stand at an important juncture in
affirming the unity that Christ has given to the baptized members of his body, a
unity that is ever fragile and always in need of support from the pastors of the
Church,” said Atlanta Archbishop Wilton Gregory, chairman of the USCCB Committee
for Ecumenical and Interreligious Affairs, on the importance of the
agreement.
The Catholic Church has recognized the validity of baptisms of
most major Christian communions since the Second Vatican Council (1962-65). In
2002, concerns over certain practices (such as baptism by sprinkling) and spoken
formulas (such as baptism in the name of the Creator, Redeemer and Sanctifier)
used by some Christians led the Pontifical Council for the Promotion of
Christian Unity to urge national bishops’ conferences to study their mutual
understanding of baptism with other Christians. These questions were examined
and resolved by Round Seven of the Reformed-Roman Catholic Dialogue-USA, which
produced the Common Agreement, as well as a study entitled “These
Living Waters.”
The Common Agreement affirms that both Catholic
and Reformed Christians hold that baptism is the sacramental bond of unity for
the Body of Christ, which is to be performed only once, by an authorized
minister, with flowing water, using the Scriptural Trinitarian formula of
“Father, Son and Holy Spirit.” The agreement encourages all local Christian
communities to keep baptismal records. The Common Agreement has already
been ratified by the Presbyterian Church-USA.
The bishops will vote on
the Common Agreement and an accompanying Reception Statement that calls
upon bishops and pastors in the U.S. to recognize as valid baptisms from the
Reformed communities in question. This will apply to baptisms performed after
the agreement has gone into effect and if a baptismal certificate is provided
stating that the traditional Trinitarian formula was used.
While other
bishops’ conferences around the world have entered into similar agreements with
the Protestant communities of their region, this document is unprecedented for
the Catholic Church in the United States. As the Common Agreement would
be an official agreement with other Christians, it is not amendable. The
Reception Statement, however, can be discussed and amended by the
bishops.
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Keywords: Common Agreement on Mutual Recognition of
Baptism, Presbyterian Church-USA, Reformed Church in America, Christian
Reformed Church, United Church of Christ, Archbishop Wilton Gregory, Committee
on Ecumenical and Interreligious Affairs, Reformed-Roman Catholic Dialogue-USA,
Pontifical Council for the Promotion of Christian Unity
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