Byzantine, Texas

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Wednesday, March 20, 2013

Pope of Rome to Orthodox, Oriental Orthodox, et al.

Posted on 9:14 AM by Unknown
(Vatican Radio) On Wednesday, March 20 2013, Pope Francis received several dozen representatives of the various Christian Churches and other world religions, who attended the Pope’s inauguration.

Among them were several leaders from the Orthodox Church, Orthodox Oriental Church, the Anglican Communion, and various Protestant churches, including the Lutheran, Baptist and Methodist churches. Representatives from the Jewish and Muslim faiths were also present.

Please find below Vatican Radio's translation of the Pope's discourse:

Dear Brothers and Sisters,

First of all, heartfelt thanks for what my Brother Andrew told us. Thank you so much! Thank you so much!

It is a source of particular joy to meet you today, delegates of the Orthodox Churches, the Oriental Orthodox Churches and Ecclesial Communities of the West. Thank you for wanting to take part in the celebration that marked the beginning of my ministry as Bishop of Rome and Successor of Peter.

Yesterday morning, during the Mass, through you , I recognized the communities you represent. In this manifestation of faith, I had the feeling of taking part in an even more urgent fashion the prayer for the unity of all believers in Christ, and together to see somehow prefigured the full realization of full unity which depends on God’s plan and on our own loyal collaboration.

I begin my Apostolic Ministry in this year during which my venerable Predecessor, Benedict XVI, with true inspiration, proclaimed the Year of Faith for the Catholic Church. With this initiative, that I wish to continue and which I hope will be an inspiration for every one’s journey of faith, he wished to mark the 50th anniversary of the Second Vatican Council, thus proposing a sort of pilgrimage towards what for every Christian represents the essential: the personal and transforming relationship with Jesus Christ, Son of God, who died and rose for our salvation. This effort to proclaim this eternal treasure of faith to the people of our time, lies at the heart of the Council's message.

Together with you I cannot forget how much the council has meaning for the ecumenical journey. I like to remember the words that Blessed John XXIII, of whom we will soon mark 50 years since his death, when he gave his memorable inauguration speech: "The Catholic Church therefore considers it her duty to work actively so that there may be fulfilled the great mystery of that unity, which Christ Jesus invoked with fervent prayer from His heavenly Father on the eve of His sacrifice. She rejoices in peace, knowing well that she is intimately associated with that prayer ".

Yes, dear brothers and sisters in Christ, let us all be intimately united to our Saviour's prayer at the Last Supper, to his invocation: ut unum sint. We call merciful Father to be able to fully live the faith that we have received as a gift on the day of our Baptism, and to be able to it free, joyful and courageous testimony. The more we are faithful to his will, in thoughts, in words and in deeds, the more we will truly and substantially walk towards unity.

For my part, I wish to assure, in the wake of my predecessors, the firm wish to continue on the path of ecumenical dialogue, and I thank you, the Pontifical Council for the Promotion of Christian Unity, for the help it continues to offer in my name, for this noble cause. I ask you, dear brothers and sisters, to bring my cordial greetings to the Churches and Christian communities who are represented here. And I ask you for a special prayer for me so that I can be a pastor according to the heart of Christ.
And now I turn to you, distinguished representatives of the Jewish people, to whom we are bound by a very special spiritual bond, from the moment that, as the Second Vatican Council said, "thus the Church of Christ acknowledges that according to God’s saving design, the beginnings of her faith and her election are found already among the Patriarchs, Moses and the prophets".(Decree Nostra Aetate, 4). I thank you for your presence and trust that with the help of the Almighty, we can continue that fruitful fraternal dialogue that the Council wished for. And that it is actually achieved, bringing many fruits, especially during the last decades .

I greet and thank cordially all of you, dear friends belonging to other religious traditions; firstly the Muslims, who worship the one living and merciful God, and call upon Him in prayer. I really appreciate your presence, and in it I see a tangible sign of the wish to grow in recipricol trust and in cooperation for the common good of humanity.

The Catholic Church is aware of the importance of the promotion of friendship and respect between men and women of different religious traditions – this I wish to repeat this: the promotion of friendship and respect between men and women of different religious traditions – this is attested evident also in the valuable work undertaken by the Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue. The Church is equally aware of the responsibility that each of us bring towards our world, abd to the whole of creation, that we must love and protect. And we can do a lot for the good of the less fortunate, for those who are weak and suffering, to promote justice, to promote reconciliation, to build peace.. But above all, we must keep alive in our world the thirst for the absolute, and must not allow the vision of the human person with a single dimension to prevail, according to which man is reduced to what he produces and to what he consumes: this is one most dangerous threats of our times.

We know how much violence has been provoked in recent history by the attempt to eliminate God and the divine from the horizon of humanity, and we feel the need to witness in our societies the original openness to transcendence that is inherent in the human heart. In this we feel the closeness also of those men and women who, while not belonging to any religious tradition, feel, however the need to search for the truth, the goodness and the beauty of God, and who are our precious allies in efforts to defend the dignity of man, in the building of a peaceful coexistence between peoples and in the careful protection of creation.

Dear friends, thank you for your presence. To all, I offer my cordial and fraternal greetings.
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
Posted in | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • Bp. Vasilije of Tuzla and Zvornik and the sex scandal
    Bishop posing with Belgrade stripper Dejan Nestorovic Belgrade ( Radio Free Europe ) - The Serbian Orthodox Church has approved the resignat...
  • The Theophany of Our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ
    Theophany of our Lord, Troparion, Tone 1 When Thou, O Lord, wast baptized in the Jordan,/ the worship of the Trinity was made manifest;/ for...
  • “Let us at least die like Christians!”
    From the Archangel Gabriel Orthodox Church's website , a rather stirring story on Christian death from the book Everyday Saints . I can ...
  • Pseudo-Cyril of Alexandria on the Eucharist and the Godhead
    From the blog Roger Pearse , a post on how a modern opinion gets conflated with a patristic source. A correspondent has written to me with a...
  • Of Copts and unicorns - μονοκερωτων
    From the blog On Coptic Nationalism, a post entitled Coptic Unicorn: It's Symbolism . The very prominent Coptologist, Alin Siciu, has re...
  • Palm Sunday in Ottowa
  • Harry Potter: an Orthodoxy story?
    ( Moscow News ) - Harry Potter, the world’s most famous child sorceror, is to become an Orthodox Christian figure, in a play written by a pr...
  • Egyptian police abet rioting Muslims vs. mourning Christians
    Cairo ( AINA ) - A media representative for Egypt's Catholic bishops echoed concerns that police sided with Islamic extremists who attac...
  • OCN responds to sacrilegious SNL skit
    ( OCN ) - The Orthodox Christian Network has asked for a public apology from NBC for airing an offensive skit which depicted Jesus as a reve...
  • UK Copts want to accept Chalcedonians by confession
    ( British Orthodox ) - The Synod of the British Orthodox Church has submitted a recommendation to the Holy Synod of the Coptic Orthodox Patr...

Categories

  • books (2)

Blog Archive

  • ▼  2013 (500)
    • ►  August (47)
    • ►  July (73)
    • ►  June (51)
    • ►  May (95)
    • ►  April (71)
    • ▼  March (63)
      • How it should be done: St. Innocent Church in Maco...
      • St. Philotheus and the Sunday of St. Gregory Palamas
      • The whys on dating Pascha
      • OCMC in "urgent" need of your help
      • Met. Tikhon, OCA Council provide update on Met. Jonah
      • Yale - Lux et veritas.
      • Watertown, MA church robbed
      • Parousia when?
      • On the Assembly of Bishops Committee for Youth
      • Death of the branch theory
      • Man wants to remarry, gets govt. involved
      • Curtains and the Presanctified Liturgy
      • Prayer, fasting, and almsgiving.
      • Liturgy of the Presanctified Gifts in Moscow
      • Iconodules the new iconoclasts?
      • Met. Tikhon at Sunday of Orthodoxy service in DC
      • Pan-Orthodox Vespers, the American experience
      • Holy Cross Monastery - a story of survival
      • President Barack Obama visits Church of the Nativity
      • Met. Tikhon welcomed at Rome’s Russian Orthodox Ch...
      • EP invites Pope to travel with him to Holy Land
      • Reading The Scriptures in an Orthodox Manner
      • Cypriot Church in the trenches with government
      • Pope of Rome to Orthodox, Oriental Orthodox, et al.
      • Chalcedon 28 - controversial barbarian lands
      • Update on internecine discord in Ukraine
      • Orientale Lumen Conferences scheduled
      • Orthodox delegations in Rome for papal inauguratio...
      • The UK: canary in the coal mine.
      • A video on the bright line of division
      • Kristen Stewart explains St. Patrick's Day
      • Ten Lenten tips
      • Who’s Who of The Great Canon of St. Andrew of Crete
      • Notes from OCA synodal spring session
      • Want some Lenten resources?
      • School of Liturgical Chant launched in Chicago
      • Ecumenical Patriarch to attend papal inaugural mass
      • Is rejection of same-sex relationships Orthodox?
      • Antioch and Jerusalem at odds over Qatar
      • The Two Chairs of Peter
      • On papal fervor
      • Pithless Thoughts responds to OCN's SNL appeal
      • OCN responds to sacrilegious SNL skit
      • First Maronite elector ever for Pope of Rome
      • "How Medicine is Destroying Pastoral Care"
      • Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew on the Great Fast
      • Oriental Orthodox respond to John X of Antioch's o...
      • The Copts in Jerusalem
      • Want to see how un-Christlike you are? Try raising...
      • The Last Judgement
      • Jurisdictional webmasters meet at St. Vlad's
      • On Orthodoxy and a new Pope of Rome
      • Things Jesus never said
      • OCF: Making a difference in New Orleans
      • Moscow Times: The Interior of a Church
      • This video makes me uncomfortable
      • On the Ancient of Days icon
      • “Let us at least die like Christians!”
      • St. Emmelia Orthodox Homeschooling Conference
      • Flowers continue to bloom in Arab Spring
      • Resurrection of our Lord Chapel in Dachau Camp
      • "A Journey of Faith" - Growing the Church in Kenya
      • Pastor and laity - "Blurred Lines"
    • ►  February (56)
    • ►  January (44)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile