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Christian Unity (the book) - The Maranatha Community

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So <strong>the</strong> Holy Spirit is given to create <strong>the</strong> unity man cannot achieve (Ephesians4.3), and it is up to <strong>Christian</strong>s to ‘maintain <strong>the</strong> unity in <strong>the</strong> bond of peace.’ On<strong>the</strong> Day of Pentecost, when <strong>the</strong> Holy Spirit fell on <strong>the</strong> Church <strong>the</strong>re wascomplete unity: <strong>the</strong>y were all ‘homou epi to auto,’ all toge<strong>the</strong>r with <strong>the</strong> samething in mind (Acts 2.1). Days later <strong>the</strong>y were still of ‘one heart and mind’(4.32), but this unity did not last long.<strong>The</strong> Church is meant to reflect <strong>the</strong> harmony of <strong>the</strong> Trinity, complete in unity,rich in diversity. Yet soon after <strong>the</strong> beginning of <strong>the</strong> Church’s growth,divisions began to appear within its ranks. Jesus’ prayer for <strong>the</strong> unity of hisfollowers, ‘that <strong>the</strong>y may be completely one, so that <strong>the</strong> world may knowthat you have sent me and have loved <strong>the</strong>m even as you have loved me’(John 17.21 NRSV) has never since <strong>the</strong> very earliest days been realised.So, are those who hope today for a widespread movement towards <strong>Christian</strong><strong>Unity</strong>, when <strong>the</strong> Church is so much larger and complex than it was in those firstdays, just naive optimists, idealists who are always going to be disappointed in<strong>the</strong>ir hopes for <strong>the</strong> Church? Certainly, <strong>the</strong> Church’s record in history ofattempts to bring about unity is not an inspiring one. At almost every period ofhistory it has been true of <strong>the</strong> Church that it was ‘by schisms rent asunder, byheresies distressed’, and that is true still today as we begin <strong>the</strong> Church’s 21 stcentury.Yet <strong>the</strong>re is this to say. We are entering a period in which it may well bepossible for <strong>the</strong> Church to enjoy a ‘spiritual ecumenism‘ not experienced sofar in its history, by coming to accept that many of <strong>the</strong> schisms and heresiesof <strong>the</strong> past are really no bar to <strong>the</strong> declaration of oneness in worship andwitness.Arianism was a heresy that <strong>the</strong> Early Church recognised as creating a barrier tounity, and its teachings on <strong>the</strong> Person of Christ are still held today by one ortwo sects. That barrier must still hold if <strong>the</strong> Church is to be loyal to itsScriptures and Creeds. But <strong>the</strong>re are o<strong>the</strong>r ‘heresies‘ of <strong>the</strong> Early Churchperiod, for instance Nestorianism and Monophysitism, which while not beingmainstream <strong>Christian</strong> <strong>the</strong>ology can be thought of as odd Christological viewsra<strong>the</strong>r than as heresies, for both hold a high view of <strong>the</strong> deity of <strong>the</strong> Person ofJesus.Eastern Orthodoxy is today reassessing its judgement of <strong>the</strong>se two ‘heresies‘.In fact it has gone fur<strong>the</strong>r than that. On 23-28 September 1990 <strong>the</strong> ChambésyPage 13

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