VISIT TO THE PATRIARCH AND TO THE HOLY SYNOD
GREETING OF HIS HOLINESS
Palace of the Holy Synod (Sofia)
Sunday, 5 May 2019
Your Holiness,
Venerable Metropolitans and Bishops,
Dear Brothers,
Christos vozkrese!
Venerable Metropolitans and Bishops,
Dear Brothers,
Christos vozkrese!
In the joy of the Risen Saviour, I offer you Easter greetings on this
Sunday known in the Christian East as “Saint Thomas Sunday”. Let us
consider the Apostle, who puts his hand in the Lord’s side, touches his
wounds and proclaims, “My Lord and my God!” (Jn 20:28). The
wounds opened in the course of history between us Christians remain
painful bruises on the Body of Christ which is the Church. Even today,
their effects are tangible; we can touch them with our hands. Yet,
perhaps together we can touch those wounds, confess that Jesus is risen,
and proclaim him our Lord and our God. Perhaps together we can
recognize our failings and immerse ourselves in his wounds of love. And
in this way, we can discover the joy of forgiveness and enjoy a
foretaste of the day when, with God’s help, we can celebrate the Paschal
mystery at one altar.
On this journey, we are sustained by great numbers of our brothers
and sisters, to whom I would especially like to render homage: the witnesses of Easter.
How many Christians in this country endured suffering for the name of
Jesus, particularly during the persecution of the last century! The ecumenism of blood!
They spread a pleasing perfume over this “Land of Roses”. They passed
through the thicket of trials in order to spread the fragrance of the
Gospel. They blossomed in fertile and well-cultivated ground, as part of
a people rich in faith and genuine humanity that gave them strong, deep
roots. I think in particular of the monastic tradition that from
generation to generation has nurtured the faith of the people. I believe
that these witnesses of Easter, brothers and sisters of different
confessions united in heaven by divine charity, now look to us as seeds
planted in the earth and meant to bear fruit. While so many other
brothers and sisters of ours throughout the world continue to suffer for
their faith, they ask us not to remain closed, but to open ourselves,
for only in this way can those seeds bear fruit.
Your Holiness, this meeting, which I have greatly desired, follows that of Saint John Paul II with Patriarch Maxim during the first visit of the Bishop of Rome to Bulgaria. It also follows in the footsteps of Saint John XXIII, who, in the years he lived here, became greatly attached to this people, “so simple and good” (Giornale dell’anima,
Bologna, 1987, 325), valuing their honesty, their hard work and their
dignity amid trials. Here, as a guest welcomed with affection, I
experience a deep fraternal nostalgia, that healthy longing for
unity among children of the same Father that was felt with growing
intensity by Pope John during his time in this city. During the Second Vatican Council,
which he convened, the Bulgarian Orthodox Church sent observers, and
from that time on, our contacts have multiplied. I think of the visits
that, for fifty years now, Bulgarian delegations have made to the
Vatican and which I annually have the joy of receiving; so too, the
presence in Rome of an Orthodox Bulgarian community that prays in one of
the churches of my Diocese. I appreciate the gracious welcome given to
my envoys, whose presence has increased in recent years, and the
cooperation shown with the local Catholic community, especially in the
area of culture. I am confident that, with the help of God, and in his
good time, these contacts will have a positive effect on many other
dimensions of our dialogue. In the meantime, we are called to journey and act together
in order to bear witness to the Lord, particularly by serving the
poorest and most neglected of our brothers and sisters, in whom he is
present. The ecumenism of the poor.
Our guides on this journey are, above all, Saints Cyril and
Methodius, who have linked us since the first millennium and whose
living memory in our Churches continues to be a source of inspiration,
for despite adversities they made their highest priority the
proclamation of the Lord, the call to mission. As Saint Cyril put it:
“With joy I set out for the Christian faith; however weary and
physically weak, I will go with joy” (Vita Constantini, VI, 7;
XIV, 9). And despite premonitions of the painful divisions which would
take place in centuries to come, they chose the prospect of communion.
Mission and communion: two words that distinguished the life of these
two saints and that can illumine our own journey towards growth in
fraternity. The ecumenism of mission.
Cyril and Methodius, Byzantines by culture, were daring enough to
translate the Bible into a language accessible to the Slavic peoples, so
that the divine Word could precede human words. Their courageous
apostolate remains today a model of evangelization and a challenge to
proclaim the Gospel to the next generation. How important it is, while
respecting our own traditions and distinctive identities, to help one
another to find ways of passing on the faith in language and forms that
allow young people to experience the joy of a God who loves them and
calls them! Otherwise, they will be tempted to put their trust in the
deceitful siren songs of a consumerist society.
Communion and mission, closeness and proclamation. Saints Cyril and
Methodius also have much to say to us about the future of European
society. Indeed, “they were in a certain sense the promoters of a united
Europe and of a profound peace among all the continent’s inhabitants,
showing the basis for a new art of living together, with respect for
differences, which in no way are an obstacle to unity” (SAINT JOHN PAUL
II, Greeting to the Official Bulgarian Delegation, 24 May 1999: Insegnamenti XXII,
1 [1999], 1080). We too, as heirs of the faith of the saints, are
called to be builders of communion and peacemakers in the name of Jesus.
Bulgaria is a “spiritual crossroads, a land of contacts and mutual
understanding” (ID., Address at the Arrival Ceremony, Sofia, 23 May 2002: Insegnamenti,
XXV, 1 [2002], 864). Here various confessions, from the Armenian to the
Evangelical, and different religious traditions, from the Jewish to the
Muslim, have found a welcome. The Catholic Church has met with
acceptance and respect both in her Latin tradition and in her
Byzantine-Slavic tradition. I am grateful to Your Holiness and the Holy
Synod for this benevolent reception. In our relationships, too, Saints
Cyril and Methodius remind us that, “far from being an obstacle to the
Church’s unity, the diversity of customs and observances only adds to
her beauty” and that between East and West “various theological
formulations are often to be considered complementary rather than
conflicting” (Unitatis Redintegratio, 16-17). “We can learn so much from one another (Evangelii Gaudium, 246)!
Your Holiness, shortly I will be able to visit the Patriarchal
Cathedral of Saint Aleksander Nevskij and to pray there in memory of
Saints Cyril and Methodius. Saint Aleksander Nevskij, from the Russian
tradition, and the Holy Brothers, from the Greek tradition and apostles
of the Slavic peoples, show us the extent to which Bulgaria is a
bridge-country. Your Holiness, dear Brothers, I assure you of my prayers
for you, for the faithful of this beloved people, for the lofty
location of this nation, and for our journey in an ecumenism of blood,
of the poor and of mission. In turn, I ask a place in your prayers, in
the certainty that prayer is the door that opens to every path of
goodness. I thank you once again for the welcome I have received and I
assure you that I will cherish the memory of this fraternal encounter. Christos vozkrese!