N E W S B R E A K
Vatican Declaration Receives "Not New" Comment From Adventists
A recently released Vatican document claiming that the Roman Catholic Church holds a monopoly on Christian legitimacy should not come as a surprise to the religious community, says Dr. Bert B. Beach, director of Inter-church Relations for the Seventh-day Adventist Church worldwide.
"There is nothing new here," says Beach of the document that has prompted an outcry from many non-Catholic Christian denominations around the world. "The Roman Catholic Church has never affirmed the validity of Protestant churches. Despite its involvement in interfaith dialogues over the years, it has always claimed primacy as being the only 'true church.'"
Beach points out that even the Second Vatican Council of 1962 to 1965, widely hailed as having liberalized the Roman Catholic Church in a number of areas, including its approach to ecumenism, consistently referred to other Christian denominations as "ecclesial communities" rather than churches.
The declaration, called Dominus Iesus, was issued by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, the Vatican body founded in 1542 that is charged with the protection of doctrinal orthodoxy. Speaking at a September 5 news conference at Vatican City, the head of the congregation, Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, said the document is intended to counter "religious relativism."
According to the document, "there exists a single church of Christ, which subsists in the Catholic Church, governed by the successor of Peter and by the bishops in communion with him." Thus, non-Catholic
churches are in a "gravely deficient situation in comparison with those who, in the [Catholic] Church, have the fullness of the means of salvation."
The steadily growing involvement of the Roman Catholic Church in various ecumenical organizations, such as the World Council of Churches, over the past few decades has made this frank assertion of
superiority shocking to many in the religious community, says Beach.
"But the Catholic Church's participation in such organizations has always been based on a mono-centric view of ecumenism," Beach explains. "This is an underlying belief that Christian organizations should work toward unity, but with the ultimate goal of coming together under the umbrella of the Roman Catholic Church the 'one true church.'"
Beach says that, in one sense, such an open assertion is a good thing, providing a clear picture of where the Vatican stands on the issue.
Gerhard Pfandl, an associate director in the General Conference Biblical Research Institute, called the declaration "an attempt to rein in certain Catholic theologians who have gone, or would like to go, beyond the limits the papacy has set in its ecumenical enterprise." Pfandl who notes that the declaration is specifically directed to Roman Catholic theologians rather than the broader religious community.
–-Adventist News Network
Pakistan Meetings Yield 150 Baptisms
More than 150 persons joined the Seventh-day Adventist Church after five weeks of revival meetings, follow-up activities and evangelistic series in the Christian ghettos of Hyderabad, Pakistan.
The team that pioneered the Advent message in the district--Thatta in 1992 and Hur Camp in 1995-- included pastor Patrick Boyle from England, who worked in the Kotri area; Hyunsoh Doh from the Adventist International Institute of Advanced Studies in the Philippines, who worked in the Thatta area; and Borge Schantz from Denmark, who worked in the Hur Camp area. Hanne Schantz led out in health lectures in each area.
Former GC Official Dies
Bobby Earl Jacobs, 71, died in his retirement home in St. George, Utah, on May 19.
During his nearly 40 years of service to the Seventh-day Adventist Church, pastors Jacobs served as a teacher/principal, pastor, and departmental director, before serving as an inter-division missionary in Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe). Jacobs also served in Singapore in the former Far Eastern Division.
Upon returning to North America Jacobs served as president of Christian Record Services and the Adventist Media Center before coming to the General Conference as an associate secretary and later as special assistant to the General Conference president.
News Notes

A Tanzania evangelistic series conducted by Jamaican lay evangelist Fitz Henry (pictured) resulted in 3,700 baptisms, reports Mel H. M. Matinyi, of the Tanzania Adventist Press. The meetings are believed to be one of the largest Adventist meetings conducted in Tanzania.
Charles Cheatham, Allegheny East Conference secretary, was elected conference president on September 10. Cheatham replaces Alvin Kibble.