THE DECLARATION OF UTRECHT, A TRANSLATION OF THE
PROFESSION OF FAITH, OR DECLARATION, FORMULATED BY THE OLD CATHOLIC
BISHOPS ASSEMBLED AT UTRECHT.
September 24, 1889
We adhere to the Rule of Faith laid
down by St. Vincent of Lerins
in these terms: "Id teneamus, ubique, quod semper, quod ab omnibus
creditum est; hoc est etenim vere proprieque catholicum." For this
reason we persevere in professing the faith of the primitive Church, as
formulated in the ecumenical symbols and specified precisely by the
unanimously accepted decision of the Ecumenical Councils held in the
undivided Church of the first thousand years.
We therefore reject the decrees of the
so-called Council of the
Vatican, which were promulgated on July 18th 1870 concerning
the infallibility and the universal Episcopate of the Bishop of Rome,
decrees which contradict the faith of the ancient Church, and which
destroy its ancient canonical constitution by attributing to the Pope
the plentitude of ecclesiastical powers over all Dioceses and over all
the faithful. By denial of his primal jurisdiction we do not wish to
deny the historic primacy which several Ecumenical Councils and the
Fathers of the ancient Church have attributed to the Bishop of Rome by
recognizing him as the Primus inter pares.
We also reject the dogma of the
Immaculate Conception promulgated
by Pius IX in 1854 in defiance of the Holy Scriptures and in
contradiction to the tradition of the first centuries.
As for other Encyclicals published by
the Bishops of Rome in
recent times – for example, the Bulls Unigenitus and Auctorem fidei,
and the Syliabus of 1864 – we reject them on all such points as are in
contradiction of the doctrine of the primitive church, and we do not
recognize them as binding on the conscience of the faithful. We also
renew the ancient protest of the Catholic Church of Holland against the
errors of the Roman Curia, and against its attacks upon the rights of
national Churches.
We refuse to accept the decrees of the
Council of Trent in
matters of discipline and as for the dogmatic decisions of that
Council, we accept them only so far as they are in harmony with the
teaching of the primitive Church.
Considering that the Holy Eucharist
has always been the true
central point of Catholic worship, we consider it our duty to declare
that we maintain with perfect fidelity the ancient Catholic doctrine
concerning the Sacramental of the Altar, by believing that we receive
the Body and the Blood of our Saviour Jesus Christ under the species of
bread and wine. The Eucharistic celebration in the Church is neither a
continual repetition nor a renewal of the expiratory sacrifice which
Jesus offered once for all upon the Cross, and it is the act by which
we represent upon earth and appropriate to ourselves the one offering
which Jesus Christ makes in Heaven, according to the Epistle to the
Hebrews ix. 11, 12, for the salvation of redeemed humanity, by
appearing for us in the presence of God (Heb. Ix. 24). The character of
the Holy Eucharist being thus understood, it is, at the same time, a
sacrificial feast, by means of which the faithful, in receiving the
body and Blood of our Savior, enter into communion with one another (I
Cor. X. 17).
We hope that Catholic theologians, in
maintaining the faith of
the undivided Church, will succeed in establishing an agreement upon
all such questions as caused controversy ever since the Churches became
divided. We exhort the priests under our jurisdiction to teach, both by
preaching and by the instruction of the young, especially the essential
Christian truths professed by all Christian confessions, to avoid, in
discussing controversial doctrines, any violation of truth or charity,
and in word and deed to set an example to the members ofour churches in
accordance with the spirit of Jesus Christ our Saviour.
By maintaining and professing
faithfully the doctrine of Jesus
Christ, by refusing to admit those errors which by the fault of men
have crept into the catholic Church, by laying aside the abuses in
ecclesiastical matters, together with the worldly tendencies of
hierarcy, we believe that we shall be able to combat efficaciously the
great evils of our day, which are unbelief and indifference in matters
of religion.