A statement dated March 24 but issued by the Vatican on Wednesday said the agenda emerged from meetings in Rome last week between a Presbyterian delegation and German Cardinal Walter Kasper, the newly named president of the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity.
Representatives of the Reformed Church in American and the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America also attended the meetings March 20-21 as ecumenical observers.
"We agreed that the contemporary ecumenical spirit is part of a new situation which enables us to address in new ways the issues which have separated us," the statement said.
The statement listed as first among "opportunities for further exploration" in dialogue at the international or national level "the possibility of Reformed participation on the ecumenical consensus on basic truths of the doctrine of justification, building on the recent Catholic-Lutheran agreement."
In what was considered a milestone in Lutheran-Catholic dialogue, leaders of the two faiths signed a "Joint Declaration on the Doctrine of Justification" in Augsburg, Germany, on Oct. 31, 1999.
Justification is the doctrine that describes how people are saved. Lutherans have stressed that salvation comes from God's grace alone while Catholics have seen an important role for the acts, or works, that people perform during their lives.
Surmounting differences that have lasted since the Protestant Reformation, the churches declared: "By grace alone, in faith in Christ's saving work, and not because of any merit on our part, we are accepted by God and receive the Holy Spirit, who renews our hearts while equipping and calling us to good works."
The Presbyterian-Vatican statement cited as other areas for dialogue the possibility of "reaching a mutual recognition of the sacrament of baptism" and a joint study of the Reformation aimed at laying aside almost 500 years of hostility.
