Assyrian
Bishop Mar Bawai Soro
Explains His Journey into Communion with
The
Catholic Church

Bishop Mar Bawai Soro
San Jose, CA., Jun 5, 2008
/ 03:44 am (CNA).- Last month,
Bishop Mar Bawai Soro and nearly 1,000
Assyrian Christian families were
received into communion with the
Chaldean Catholic Church in California.
Bishop Bawai explained the process to
CNA, and expressed his hope that other
Assyrian churches will also consider
uniting with the Catholic Church.
The Assyrian Church,
centered in modern-day Iraq, dates back
to the earliest days of Christianity.
Around the fifth century, the Assyrian
followers began to embrace the teachings
of Nestorius, Archbishop of
Constantinople whose doctrines were
condemned by the Council of Ephesus in
431.
However, at the
beginning in the sixteenth century,
large numbers of Nestorian Assyrians
came into union with Rome, creating the
Chaldean Catholic Church which is now
larger than the Assyrian Church.
Bishop Soro described
the process of coming into communion
with the Catholic Church to CNA: Twenty
years ago, many of the Assyrian church’s
faithful realized that other than Papal
Primacy, there were no theological
issues that existed between themselves
and the Catholic Church. He explained
that, “the more I studied Catholic
theology, the more I became certain that
both Churches were basically of the same
apostolic faith and practice.”
The Assyrian prelate
wasn’t the only one who saw this
similarity. Bishop Soro recalled that,
“at the same time, this hypothesis was
also pondered upon by the official
dialogue between the Catholic Church and
the
Assyrian Church of the East. The
conclusion after twenty years of casual
‘talks’ and official dialogue proved
this hypothesis to be correct.”
However, in 2004 the
patriarch and bishops “decided to
suspend the dialogue with Rome” even
though “all obstacles for restoring
communion with the Catholic Church
(Papal Primacy not included)” were
proven not to exist.
Bishop Soro said that
his fellow bishops’ rejection came
despite a recognition that there was an
agreement between the two traditions. He
explained that, “they knew well that the
ecclesial patrimony of the Assyrian
Church of the East -- canonical,
liturgical, and patristic -- recognizes
the Primacy of the See of Rome. Despite
the fact that this was my appeal and
argument to my church leaders for many
years - -be faithful to your tradition
and enter the Catholic Communion, i.e.,
accept the Primacy of the Pope - - they
did not listen.”
Instead, in 2005,
“they decided both to break the dialogue
with Rome and to suspend me from the
Assyrian Church of the East. And so,
since 2005, I have been able to rally
those Assyrian faithful who became as
discontent with their church’s attitude
as I was and bring them to understand
that the best step to be taken is the
restoration of communion with Rome. In
the past two and half years, we
gradually paved the way for the historic
move to unite with the
Chaldean Church.”
Bishop Bar Mawai also
spoke of his hope for the rest of the
Assyrian Church of the East to unite
with Rome. In an interview with
Terrasanta.net, the bishop stated
that while there is a possibility for
community, two factors must be
considered: time and hard work.
The prelate
explained: “At the present time, some of
the anger has to melt away before any
realistic attempt is reinitiated. We
are doing all that is humanly possible
to reply with compassion and reason to
all the accusation and condemnations
some of the radical Assyrian groups and
individuals are directing at us because
of our union with Rome. We hope that
ultimately the truth of God’s work and
the message of His forgiving love will
prevail over all trials.”
In regards to the
second factor, the bishop emphasizes the
importance of showing the world, “that
church unity is a win/win proposition,”
especially for Christians in Iraq. “The
Christian communities out there need all
the help and support they can muster.
And, through such unity, for example,
Iraqi Christians become more assertive
of their commitment to all that will
give witness to their Christian
character and advance their genuine
contribution Iraq.”