CHAPTER I - THE CATHOLIC
CHURCH'S COMMITMENT TO
ECUMENISM
God's plan and
communion
5.
Together with all Christ's disciples, the Catholic Church bases upon God's plan
her ecumenical commitment to gather all Christians into unity. Indeed,
"the Church is not a reality closed in on herself. Rather, she is
permanently open to missionary and ecumenical endeavour, for she is sent to the
world to announce and witness, to make present and spread the mystery of
communion which is essential to her, and to gather all people and all things
into Christ, so as to be for all an 'inseparable sacrament of unity'
".4
Already in the Old
Testament, the Prophet Ezekiel, referring to the situation of God's People at
that time, and using the simple sign of two broken sticks which are first
divided and then joined together, expressed the divine will to "gather
from all sides" the members of his scattered people. "I will be their
God, and they shall be my people. Then the nations will know that I the Lord
sanctify Israel"
(cf. 37:16-28). The Gospel of John, for
its part, considering the situation of the People of God at the time it was
written, sees in Jesus' death the reason for the unity of God's children:
"Jesus would die for the nation, and not for the nation only, but to
gather into one the children of God who are scattered abroad" (11:51-52).
Indeed, as the Letter to the Ephesians explains, Jesus "broke down the
dividing wall of hostility ... through the Cross, thereby bringing the
hostility to an end"; in place of what was divided he brought about unity
(cf. 2:14-16).
6.
The unity of all divided humanity is the will of God. For this reason he sent
his Son, so that by dying and rising for us he might bestow on us the Spirit of
love. On the eve of his sacrifice on the Cross, Jesus himself prayed to the
Father for his disciples and for all those who believe in him, that theymight be one, a living communion. This is
the basis not only of the duty, but also of the responsibility before God and
his plan, which falls to those who through Baptism become members of the Body
of Christ, a Body in which the fullness of reconciliation and communion must be
made present. How is it possible to remain divided, if we have been
"buried" through Baptism in the Lord's death, in the very act by
which God, through the death of his Son, has broken down the walls of division?
Division "openly contradicts the will of Christ, provides a stumbling
block to the world, and inflicts damage on the most holy cause of proclaiming
the Good News to every creature".5
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