CHAPTER III CHURCHES AND ECCLESIAL COMMUNITIES
SEPARATED FROM THE ROMAN APOSTOLIC SEE
13.
We now turn our attention to the two chief types of division as they affect the
seamless robe of Christ.
The first
divisions occurred in the East, when the dogmatic formulae of the Councils of
Ephesus and Chalcedon were challenged, and later when ecclesiastical communion
between the Eastern Patriarchates and the Roman See was dissolved.
Other
divisions arose more than four centuries later in the West, stemming from the
events which are usually referred to as "The Reformation." As a result,
many Communions, national or confessional, were separated from the Roman See.
Among those in which Catholic traditions and institutions in part continue to
exist, the Anglican Communion occupies a special place.
These
various divisions differ greatly from one another not only by reason of their
origin, place and time, but especially in the nature and seriousness of
questions bearing on faith and the structure of the Church. Therefore, without
minimizing the differences between the various Christian bodies, and without
overlooking the bonds between them which exist in spite of divisions, this holy
Council decides to propose the following considerations for prudent ecumenical
action.
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