Updated 11:58 pm.EST, Sun November 22, 2009

World|Sun, Jan. 25 2009 03:18 PM EST

Christian Unity through Church Bodies 'Unlikely', Say U.K. Leaders

By Jennifer Gold|Christian Today Reporter

LONDON – Christians across the United Kingdom may have prayed to become one this past week, but church unity at the national level remains an unlikely prospect, say the leaders of the nation’s main denominations.

The heads of the Anglican, Baptist, Methodist, Roman Catholic and United Reformed Churches spoke candidly last week of a loss of impetus in national efforts to bring about unity in their personal responses to questions put to them by the Church Times and Baptist Times.

“There is still at grassroots a great enthusiasm for unity,” acknowledged Archbishop of Canterbury Dr. Rowan Williams, but also “a fair amount of impatience with denominational structures that are seen as failing to deliver it.”

“Local Churches Together groups often have a good level of commitment. But you won’t find much interest in what you might call the ‘negotiating’ side of unity,” the Anglican leader added, referring to groups associated with the ecumenical organization Churches Together. “A concern for common witness and a relaxed attitude to common worship, yes, but not much keenness on what the official bodies are up to in their dialogues.”

There is “an uncomfortable gap between national bodies and local enthusiasm,” Williams observed.

The archbishop’s sentiments were echoed by the head of the Roman Catholic Church of England and Wales, the Cardinal Cormac Murphy-O’Connor, who said there had been a “slowing down of progress” in spite of increased commitment to unity.

Dr. Martyn Atkins, general secretary of the Methodist Church, meanwhile said there was “less enthusiasm for unity as an end in itself.”

The leaders’ comments coincided with the worldwide Week of Prayer for Christian Unity, which ran Jan. 18-25. Put together by the Church in Korea, the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity draws inspiration from Ezekiel 37:15-28, which records God saying to the biblical prophet Ezekiel that "they shall be one in my hand...They will be my people and I shall be their God."

In observance of the weeklong prayer effort, personal comments from the heads of the Anglican, Baptist, Methodist, Roman Catholic and United Reformed Churches were published in the latest editions of the Church Times, the Baptist Times, the Methodist Recorder and the URC’s Reform magazine.

Though the Church leaders said in their comments that structural convergence among the denominations remains a distant prospect, they said there was nonetheless a greater commitment to join up work at the local level.

And according to Williams, the greatest prospects for church unity are to be found at the parish level.

“The truth is that top-down strategies for institutional union are very unlikely to work in the near future any better than they have in the recent past,” he said. “Prayer and silence and action together are the things that change us, and even change the world.”

The Rev. Roberta Rominger, general secretary of the United Reformed Church, similarly spoke of a “partnership of purpose and action,” while Methodist leader Atkins added that there was “greater enthusiasm for focused ecumenical action” like community projects.

Atkins specifically pointed to “the strength in having a unified voice on matters of social justice especially.”

The annual week of prayer is a highlight of the ecumenical calendar and is traditionally celebrated between January 18 and 25 in the northern hemisphere or at Pentecost in the southern hemisphere.

The resources and guides for this year’s Week of Prayer for Christian Unity were developed by representatives of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of Korea and the National Council of Churches in Korea. The production of the material was supported jointly by the World Council of Churches’ Faith and Order Commission and the Roman Catholic Church’s Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity.

Christian Today reporter Anne Thomas in London and Christian Post reporter Eric Young in Washington contributed to this article.

Copyright © 2006 Christian Today. All rights reserved.
This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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  • Emma »
    Mon Apr 20, 2009 8:51 am Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    How on earth can one expect to unite all the churches when most of them teach for doctrines traditions instead of Gods word. Most of the churches are severely infiltrated with new age teachings. Best thing a true christian can do is stay away from them. If a new member comes along they will never find Christ. One has to really know God in order to have the ability to get up and walk out of a church that teaches false doctrines.

  • Sat Apr 18, 2009 1:03 am Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    I know Southern Baptists in Texas who won't speak to each other much less pray together. It's more about power and pride than theology. If all churches united tomorrow, their would be a thousand new denominations by sundown.

  • Fri Apr 10, 2009 5:02 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    "That they may be one as we are one, so that the world will know that you sent me." Jesus prayed that the church would be one three times in his high priest prayer in the garden. It is a good thing that church leaders are recognizing the importance of unity even if they seem to be making little headway. The truth is that it is a oneness of the spirit that is more important than an agreement on the minutia of scripture. An agreement on the nonegotiables of orthodoxy and an enthusiastic collaboration in orthoproxy. Namely loving one another so "that the world may know that we are his disciples".

  • Sun Jan 25, 2009 6:48 pm Agree: 1   Disagree: 2

    Unity can only come about by the Holy Spirit working in all Churches.

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