Αντιπροσωπεία
του Οικουμενικού Πατριαρχείου στη Ρώμη για να συμμετάσχει στις
εορταστικές εκδηλώσεις των Αγίων Αποστόλων Πέτρου και Παύλου, υπό την ηγεσία του Μητροπολίτη Βοστώνης κ.Μεθοδίου
The Pope received a medallion with the embrace between
Saint Andrew and Saint Peter, as a symbol of unity between the two churches
Pope Francis has addressed a delegation from the Orthodox Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople
Professing the same faith in the mercy of God, Catholics and
Orthodox must do more to ensure mercy marks the way they treat each
other, Pope Francis told a delegation from the Orthodox Ecumenical
Patriarchate of Constantinople.
“If, as Catholics and Orthodox, we wish to proclaim together the
marvels of God’s mercy to the whole world, we cannot continue to harbour
sentiments and attitudes of rivalry, mistrust and rancour,” the Pope
said today.
The delegation, led by Greek Orthodox Metropolitan Methodios of
Boston, was in Rome to represent Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew of
Constantinople at the Pope’s celebration of the feast of Sts Peter and
Paul, the patron saints of the church of Rome.
Since 1969, the patriarchs have sent delegations to the Vatican for
the June 29 feast and the Popes have sent a delegation to Turkey each
year for the feast of St Andrew, patron of the patriarchate.
Metropolitan Methodios is the Orthodox co-president of the North American Orthodox-Catholic Theological Consultation.
Pope Francis used his presence at the Vatican as an opportunity to praise the “fruitful work” of the North American group.
“Instituted more than 50 years ago, this consultation has proposed
significant reflections on central theological issues for our churches,
thus fostering the development of excellent relations between Catholics
and Orthodox on that continent,” the Pope said.
Pope Francis told the delegation that in proclaiming a Year of Mercy
he wanted not only to encourage people to contemplate how merciful God
is, but also to focus on ways to make the witness they give to God’s
mercy more effective.
“Divine mercy frees us of the burden of past conflicts and lets us be
open to the future to which the Spirit is guiding us,” he said.
St Peter, who had denied Jesus, and St Paul, who had persecuted
the early Christian community, both had powerful experiences of God’s
forgiveness and great mercy, the Pope said.
They became “tireless evangelisers and fearless witnesses to the salvation offered by God in Christ to every man and woman.”
With St Peter and St Paul, he said, Christians are united in their
experience of being forgiven and receiving God’s mercy and grace.
Before the split of the churches of the East and West in the 11th
century, he said, the church of Rome and the church of Constantinople
were united despite differences “in the liturgical sphere, in
ecclesiastical discipline and also in the manner of formulating the one
revealed truth.”
“However,” the Pope said, “beyond the concrete shapes that our
churches have taken on over time, there has always been the same
experience of God’s infinite love for our smallness and frailty and the
same calling to bear witness to this love before the world.”
“Acknowledging that the experience of God’s mercy is the bond uniting
us means that we must increasingly make mercy the criterion and measure
of our relationship,” he insisted.
And that mercy must be seen in the acceptance that they will have differences.
Pope Francis also used the audience with the delegation to speak
again of the importance of visiting refugees on the island of Lesbos in
April with Patriarch Bartholomew and the head of the Orthodox Church of
Greece.
“Seeing the despair on the faces of men, women and children uncertain
of their future, listening helplessly as they related their
experiences, and praying on the shore of the sea that has claimed the
lives of so many innocent persons, was a tremendously moving
experience,” the Pope said.
“A great consolation in that sad experience was the powerful
spiritual and human closeness that I shared” with Patriarch Bartholomew
and Archbishop Ieronymos II of Athens and all Greece.
“Led by the Holy Spirit, we are coming to realise ever more clearly
that we, Catholics and Orthodox, have a shared responsibility toward
those in need, based on our obedience to the one Gospel of Jesus Christ
our Lord,” the Pope said.
“Taking up this task together is a duty linked to the very credibility of our Christian identity.”
Patriarch Bartholomew, in a letter to the Pope, also recalled the
importance of the visit to Lesbos and the continuing need for Christians
to witness together to the values taught by the Gospel.
“The contemporary crisis of refugees and migrants has demonstrated
the need for European nations to address this problem on the basis of
the ancient Christian principles of fraternity and social justice,” the
patriarch wrote.
Europe needs its Judeo-Christian roots to keep it from becoming
“entirely secularised or subjected to ‘economism’ and various forms of
fundamentalism.”
“The ‘culture of solidarity’ nurtured by Christianity is not
preserved through the progress of standards of living, the Internet and
globalisation,” he said.
Christian action and preaching to address “the global challenges of
our time will continue because they constitute a good witness for the
church of Christ, serving humankind and the world,” the patriarch wrote.