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I. The
origin and development of the expression
2. The expression
sister Churches does not appear as such in the New
Testament; however, there are numerous indications of the sisterly relations
which existed among the local Churches of Christian antiquity. The New
Testament passage which most explicitly reflects this awareness is the final
sentence of the Second Letter of John: «The sons of your elect sister send you
their greetings» (2 Jn 13). These are greetings sent
by one ecclesial community to another; the community which sends the greetings
calls itself the sister of the other.
3. In Christian
literature, the expression begins to be used in the East when, from the fifth
century, the idea of the Pentarchy gained ground,
according to which there are five Patriarchs at the head of the Church, with
the Church of Rome having the first place among these patriarchal sister
Churches. In this connection, however, it needs to be noted that no Roman
Pontiff ever recognized this equalization of the sees or accepted that only a
primacy of honour be accorded to the See of Rome. It should be noted too that
this patriarchal structure typical of the East never developed in the West.
As is well
known, the divergences between Rome and Constantinople led, in later centuries,
to mutual excommunications with «consequences which, as far as we can judge,
went beyond what was intended and foreseen by their authors, whose censures
concerned the persons mentioned and not the Churches, and who did not intend to
break the ecclesial communion between the sees of Rome and Constantinople.»1
4. The expression
appears again in two letters of the Metropolitan Nicetas
of Nicodemia (in the year 1136) and the Patriarch John
X Camaterus (in office from 1198 to 1206), in which
they protested that Rome, by presenting herself as mother and teacher, would
annul their authority. In their view, Rome
is only the first among sisters of equal dignity.
5. In recent times,
the Orthodox Patriarch of Constantinople, Athenagoras
I, was the first to once again use the expression sister Churches. In welcoming
the fraternal gestures and the call to unity addressed to him by John XXIII, he
often expressed in his letters the hope of seeing the unity between the sister Churches re-established in the near future.
6. The Second Vatican Council adopted the expression sister Churches to
describe the relationship between particular Churches: «in the East there
flourish many particular local Churches; among them the Patriarchal Churches
hold first place, and of these, many glory in taking their origins from the
apostles themselves. Therefore, there prevailed and still prevails among
Eastern Christians an eager desire to perpetuate in a communion of faith and
charity those family ties which ought to exist between local Churches, as
between sisters.» 2
7. The first papal
document in which the term sisters is applied to the
Churches is the Apostolic Brief Anno ineunte of Paul VI to the Patriarch Athenagoras
I. After having indicated his willingness to do everything possible to
«re-establish full communion between the Church of the West and that of the
East,» the Pope asked: «Since this mystery of divine
love is at work in every local Church, is not this the reason for the
traditional expression “sister Churches,” which the Churches of various places
used for one another? For centuries our Churches lived in this way like
sisters, celebrating together the ecumenical councils which defended the
deposit of faith against all corruption. Now, after a long period of division
and mutual misunderstanding, the Lord, in spite of the obstacles which arose
between us in the past, gives us the possibility of rediscovering ourselves as
sister Churches.» 3
8. The expression has
been used often by John Paul II in numerous addresses and documents; the
principal ones, in chronological order, are the following.
In the
Encyclical Slavorum Apostoli:
«For us they [Cyril and Methodius] are the champions
and also the patrons of the ecumenical endeavour of the sister Churches of East
and West, for the rediscovery through prayer and dialogue of visible unity in
perfect and total communion.» 4
In a Letter
from 1991 to the Bishops of Europe: «Hence, with these Churches [the Orthodox
Churches] relations are to be fostered as between sister Churches, to use the
expression of Pope Paul VI in his Brief to the Patriarch of Constantinople, Athenagoras I.» 5
In the
Encyclical Ut unum sint, the theme is developed above all in number 56 which
begins in this way: «Following the Second Vatican Council and in the light of
earlier tradition, it has again become usual to refer to the particular or
local Churches gathered around their Bishop as “sister Churches.” In addition,
the lifting of the mutual excommunications, by eliminating a painful canonical
and psychological obstacle, was a very significant step on the way toward full
communion.» This section concludes by expressing the
wish that the «traditional designation of “sister Churches” should ever
accompany us along this path.» The topic is taken up
again in number 60 of the Encyclical: «More recently, the joint international
commission took a significant step forward with regard to the very sensitive
question of the method to be followed in re-establishing full communion between
the Catholic Church and the Orthodox Church, an issue which has frequently
embittered relations between Catholics and Orthodox. The commission has laid
the doctrinal foundations for a positive solution to this problem on the basis
of the doctrine of sister Churches.» 6
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