.- Catholics and Protestants in Germany announced on Tuesday that they would press ahead with intercommunion at an event in May despite Vatican objections.
In a March 16 press release, organizers of the third Ecumenical Church Congress (ĂKT) in Frankfurt said that they planned to invite Christians to attend celebrations âin many churchesâ in the city and across Germany on May 15.
According to CNA Deutsch, CNAâs German-language news partner, they said: âChristians of all denominations have the opportunity on this evening to come and enter, to get to know different traditions and — following their own conscience — to celebrate the living memory of Jesus Christ.â
âThe signal should go out from Frankfurt to continue to seek ecumenical togetherness, in everyday life and in the mutual visit of congregations.â
The press release quoted Thomas Sternberg, president of the influential Central Committee of German Catholics (ZdK), as saying that any baptized Christians could make a âdecision of conscienceâ to partake of the celebrations, based on a statement of âCommon Witnessâ adopted in the fall of 2020 by the ĂKTâs leadership.
âThe doors are open,â said Sternberg, who is also co-president of the German Churchâs controversial âSynodal Way,â together with the German Catholic bishopsâ conference president Bishop Georg BĂ€tzing of Limburg.
The event has already raised alarm at the Vaticanâs Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF), which objected to a proposal for a âEucharistic meal fellowshipâ between Catholics and Protestants last September.
The proposal was made by the Ecumenical Study Group of Protestant and Catholic Theologians (ĂAK) in a 2019 document entitled âTogether at the Lordâs Table.â
In a four-page critique and letter to BĂ€tzing, the doctrinal congregation emphasized that significant differences in understanding of the Eucharist and ministry remained between Protestants and Catholics.
âThe doctrinal differences are still so important that they currently rule out reciprocal participation in the Lordâs Supper and the Eucharist,â the CDF said.
âThe document cannot therefore serve as a guide for an individual decision of conscience about approaching the Eucharist.â
The CDF cautioned against any steps towards intercommunion between Catholics and members of the Evangelical Church in Germany (EKD), an organization representing 20 Protestant groups.
Cardinal Kurt Koch, prefect of the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity, has also expressed serious misgivings about the âEucharistic meal fellowshipâ proposal.
Earlier this month, BĂ€tzing wrote to priests in Limburg diocese, which also includes the city of Frankfurt, where the ĂKT will take place on May 13-16.
He said in a March 1 letter to clergy that they could give Holy Communion to non-Catholic individuals if they requested it after examining their consciences.
In the four-page letter, he told priests that there could, however, be âno general, inter-denominational reception of the Eucharistâ or ânew forms of Eucharistic celebration.â
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