When Pope Francis met with Pope Tawadros II, the head of Egypt's
Coptic Orthodox Church spoke an urgent need for unity among Christians
in the Middle East.
The Egyptian is only the second Coptic pope to visit the Vatican.
On
the day he visited, however, there were three popes in the Italian holy
city including Pope Emeritus Benedict. His visit to the Vatican and
Italy which started on May 9 ends on Monday.
With 11 million
members, the Egyptian Coptics are the country's biggest Christian church
in a country where the 85-million population is overwhelmingly Muslim.
"We
must prepare our people for this very real and needed unity that we
know and live, we must work quickly and seriously," said Pope Tawadros
in his May 10 remarks provided to Catholic News Agency by his office.
Pope
Francis in his reply said, "Let me assure you that your efforts to
build communion among believers in Christ, and your lively interest in
the future of your country and the role of the Christian communities
within the Egyptian society find a deep echo in the heart of the
Successor of Peter and of the entire Catholic community.
The Catholic pontiff said "the sharing of daily sufferings can become an effective instrument of unity."
He added, "From shared suffering can blossom forth forgiveness and reconciliation, with God's help.
Tall
black-clad Tawadros, aged 60 and white-robed Francis, 76, made no
mention in their public statements of recent violence in in Egypt
between majority Muslims and Christians.
Such sectarian violence
that is replicated in other Middle Eastern countries has provoked many
utterances about how dangerous it is for Christians in the region and
that is an endangered faith there.
Tawadros invited Francis to
visit Egypt and suggested the two churches should observe May 10 as "a
celebration of brotherly love between the Catholic Church and the Coptic
Orthodox Church."
The meeting between the Catholic and Oriental
Orthodox Popes came 40 years to the day after the historic encounter
between Pope Paul VI and Tawadros' predecessor, Shenouda III.
They
signed a joint statement pledging the two churches to the search for
reconciliation and unity.
Pope John Paul II returned the visit to Egypt in 2000.
The
Egyptian Coptic Church is currently a member of the World Council of
Churches, which groups mainly Anglican, Orthodox and Protestant
Christians and does not include the Roman Catholic Church, although it
cooperates with it on many levels.
On April 21 the head of the
World Council of Churches met in Cairo with Tawadros where they
discussed the situation of Arab Christians and ways to strengthen
Christian-Muslim relations following Egypt's 2011 revolution
WCC
general secretary, Rev.Olav Fykse Tveit, met Pope Tawadros at St. Mark's
Cathedral, Cario, site of attacks earlier in April following a funeral
for Christians killed in a northern Egyptian town only a few days
earlier.