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An Ecumenical Testimony
By Dr.
R. Keelan Downton
Post Doctoral Fellow
NCCC Faith and Order Commission
Evangelicals
have never liked the National Council of Churches. At least, that's
the way one story goes.
I tell the
story rather differently, and usually start it with junior high Sunday
School at Montvale Evangelical Free Church. It wasn't long after I
completed my Bible Instruction Class that tensions over the pastor's
leadership erupted into a major public debate. I still don't know what
the particular issue in question was, but I do know that it led to a
vote to depose the pastor that was carried by a narrow margin. Most of
those who wanted the pastor to stay went with him and created a new
church. Though the other church staff did not join this new church,
they had agreed to resign if the vote carried and so the congregation
was left largely without leadership. The painful rifts this created
between those who stayed and those who left generated a palpable
sorrow around church life in my formative years. Eventually, new
pastors were hired and stability was restored, but observation of the
deeply personal pain of Christian division had already made an
enduring impression on me.
One of the
key points of my adolescent spiritual formation was participation in a
mime/drama group we dubbed "Scene From Above." Our signature rendition
of the crucifixion from the perspective of Simon of Cyrene was so well
received in our own congregation that we took it on the road. We
performed in a few Evangelical Free Churches, but the majority were
other denominations. It never really occurred to me to question the
polity or theology of these congregations - it was clear from their
similarly misty eyes that they were as intensely committed to the
story as those in our church. The skills I developed there provided a
point of connection with other youth groups both within the
denomination and outside of it. It was a natural extension of that
ministry to both worship with these other local communities and to
join with them in ministry - sometimes providing training for
developing creative ministries, and sometimes performing with them.
Though this
provided an important framework for reflecting about the lack of
connection between the various congregations I was involved with, the
worldwide ecumenical movement remained one of the best kept secrets of
Christianity until well into my college years - even at Messiah
College, which hosted the North American Academy of Ecumenists in
1999. If not for the Church history courses of Douglas "Jake"
Jacobsen, I might have been content to promote a limited, localized,
and a historical vision of ecumenism as vague cooperation dependent on
relative silence about "non-essentials" (perhaps even without defining
what that category includes).
Graduate
studies in Northern Ireland provided an opportunity to explore the
long history of the ecumenical movement in depth. I saw the passion of
early leaders to challenge division as a hindrance to evangelism and
subsequent changes as they struggled to give their ideas institutional
form. My research was particularly informed by the work of Dennis
Cooke and Brendan Leahy who created the innovative Exploring Theology
Together program. This novel approach invited students from both
communities to sit under joint lectures by faculty from Catholic Mater
Dei Institute and Methodist Edgehill College. Living in a divided
society helped to make a connection between the personal anguish of
church division and its catastrophic socio-political implications. The
residue of Belfast's continuing "Troubles" served as a continual
reminder of the need to deal with theological difference in a way that
affirms God's love for other persons and other communities.
Participation in the life of several congregations along the Lisburn
and Malone roads in south Belfast provided an opportunity to observe
how Methodists, Presbyterians, Anglicans, and Catholics are embodying
the relationships forged through ecumenical dialogue in practical
ways.
When I
returned to the United States to teach, I was pleased to find that the
students of Messiah College and Eastern University interested and
engaged in ecumenical issues. Both these schools include a more
ecclesially diverse student body than they did a decade ago. As I
began serving on the Faith and Order Commission, several students
stayed after classes to discuss current drafts of my committee's work.
Others commented that an extended discussion of Baptism, Eucharist,
and Ministry was one of the most fruitful sections of my theology
course. Growing interest in liturgy, ritual, and other
nonpropositional ways of embodying theology means that students are
increasingly drawing from traditions outside of their own communion
and that my journey is not unique. Perhaps ecumenical testimonies will
become a new genre for acknowledging the contributions of NCC to
evangelical discourse.
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