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  • Adelaide: Covenant hailed as a landmark

    Covenant hailed as a landmark

    Townsville Bulletin/Townsville Sun (Australia)
    November 25, 2004 Thursday

    AUSTRALIAN churches signed a covenant during the Fifth National Forum
    of the National of Council of Churches in Australia (NCCA).

    The forum was held in Adelaide last month.

    Church leaders have hailed the covenant as one of the most
    significant events in Australia's ecumenical history.

    "It's an international benchmark," NCCA president, Rev James Haire of
    the Uniting Church said.

    "No one else I believe, anywhere in the world, has been able to
    produce anything quite as comprehensive as this. It is true that the
    US is working towards something similar -- but that doesn't include
    the Catholics."

    The invitation to the churches in Australia to engage in a process of
    covenanting together at the national level has been grounded in the
    conviction that ecumenical commitment is fundamental to the integrity
    of the Church's mission.

    The process since 1996 has been an invitation to the churches, at the
    national level, to take specific steps towards a more visible
    expression of unity, to move towards a deeper experience of communion
    (koinonia).

    Bishop Michael Putney was present in Adelaide for the Forum of the
    National Council of Churches.

    Archbishop Carroll, president of the Australia Catholic Bishops
    Conference, signed the covenant on behalf of the Catholic Church.

    The first part of the covenanting document includes a Declaration of
    Intent by the member churches.

    It reaffirms their commitment to one another as partners on the
    ecumenical journey and another to engage in an ongoing process of
    growing together not knowing what visible form, unity, which is God's
    will and gift, may take.

    The signatories to the covenant are: the Anglican Church of
    Australia; Anticohian Orthodox Church; Armenian Apostolic Church;
    Assyrian Church of the East; Churches of Christ in Australia;
    Congregation Federation of Australia; Coptic Orthodox Church of
    Australia, Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of Australia; Lutheran Church
    of Australia; Religious Society of Friends; Roman Catholic Church in
    Australia, Romania Orthodox Church; the Salvation Army; Syrian
    Orthodox Church and Uniting Church in Australia.

    Different churches then agreed to more specific parts of the
    covenant.

    The Catholic Church agreed:

    * To explore initiatives for sharing physical resources such as
    buildings

    * To explore with other Christian communities issues and strategies
    for mission so that the possibility of common mission is recognised
    as a priority

    * To seek, to develop clear and sensitive guidelines dealing with
    how Christian churches together can best meet the needs of people in
    local (especially rural) situations

    * To recognise the Sacrament of Baptism administered in the other
    Christian churches and to promote the use to the common certificate
    of baptism.
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