"Love" and "desire for harmony", "dialogue" and "mutual respect" are the values
witnessed by the presence of Bartholomew I at the ceremony that began
the Year of the Faith and marked the 50 years since the Opening of the
Second Vatican Council.
The Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople is
the sole representative of Orthodoxy to be invited to the ceremony.
Moreover - as he himself recalled at the end of the Mass celebrated by
Benedict XVI - the Patriarchate of Constantinople has always been
committed to ecumenism, which was the mainspring of the Second Vatican
Council.
In his speech - which we publish below in full -
Bartholomew I retraced the steps that led up to the opening of the
theological dialogue between Catholics and Orthodox. At the same time he
points out that the Vatican Council also catalysed tensions in the
search for unity even among the Orthodox Churches.
Unity among
Christians, that for which Christ prayed before the "Gethsemane
experience," is a function of the common witness of the "message of
salvation and healing for our brethren: the poor, the oppressed, the
marginalized in world created by God".
"In the current turmoil of
violence, separation, and brokenness that is escalating between peoples
and nations, may the love and desire for harmony we profess here, and
the understanding we seek through dialogue and mutual respect, serve as a
model for our world".
Here is the full address by the Ecumenical
Patriarch of Constantinople:
Beloved brother in the Lord, Your Holiness Pope Benedict; Brothers and Sisters;
As
Christ prepared for His Gethsemane experience, He prayed a prayer for
unity which is recorded in the Gospel of Saint John Chapter 17 verse 11:
". . . keep through Your name those whom You have given Me, that they
may be one as We are". Through the centuries we have, indeed, been kept
in the power and love of Christ, and in the proper moment in history the
Holy Spirit moved upon us and we began the long journey towards the
visible unity that Christ desires. This has been confirmed in Unitatis
Redintegratio §1:
Everywhere large numbers have felt the impulse
of this grace, and among our separated brethren also there increases
from day to day the movement, fostered by the grace of the Holy Spirit,
for the restoration of unity among all Christians.
Fifty years
ago in this very square, a powerful and pivotal celebration captured the
heart and mind of the Roman Catholic Church, transporting it across the
centuries into the contemporary world. This transforming milestone, the
opening of the Second Vatican Council, was inspired by the fundamental
reality that the Son and incarnate Logos of God is "...where two or
three are gathered in his name" (Matt.18.20) and that the Spirit, who
proceeds from the Father, "...will guide us into the whole truth." (John
16.13).
In the 50 years that have intervened, we recall with
vividness and tenderness, but also with elation and enthusiasm, our
personal discussions with episcopal members and theological periti
during our formative time - then as a young student - at the Pontifical
Oriental Institute, as well as our personal attendance at some special
sessions of the Council. We witnessed firsthand how the bishops
experienced a renewed awareness of the validity - and a reinforced sense
of the continuity - of the tradition and faith "once for all delivered
to the saints" (Jude 1.3). It was a period of promise and hope for your
Church both internally and externally.
For the Orthodox Church,
we have observed a time of exchange and expectation. For example, the
convocation of the first Pan-Orthodox Conferences in Rhodes led to the
Pre-Conciliar Pan-Orthodox Conferences in preparation for the Great
Council of the Orthodox Churches. These exchanges will demonstrate the
unified witness of the Orthodox Church in the modern world. Moreover, it
coincided with the "dialogue of love" and heralded the Joint
International Commission for Theological Dialogue between the Roman
Catholic and the Orthodox Church, which was established by our venerable
predecessors Pope John Paul II and Ecumenical Patriarch Dimitrios.
Over
the last five decades, the achievements of this assembly have been
diverse as evidenced through the series of important and influential
constitutions, declarations, and decrees. We have contemplated the
renewal of the spirit and "return to the sources" through liturgical
study, biblical research, and patristic scholarship. We have appreciated
the struggle toward gradual liberation from the limitation of rigid
scholasticism to the openness of ecumenical encounter, which has led to
the mutual rescinding of the excommunications of the year 1054, the
exchange of greetings, returning of relics, entering into important
dialogues, and visiting each other in our respective Sees.
Our
journey has not always been easy or without pain and challenge, for as
we know "narrow is the gate and difficult is the way" (Matthew 7.14).
The essential theology and principal themes of the Second Vatican
Council - the mystery of the Church, the sacredness of the liturgy, and
the authority of the bishop - are difficult to apply in earnest
practice, and constitute a life-long and church-wide labor to
assimilate. The door, then, must remain open for deeper reception,
pastoral engagement, and ecclesial interpretation of the Second Vatican
Council.
As we move forward together, we offer thanks and glory
to the living God - Father, Son and Holy Spirit - that the same assembly
of bishops has recognised the importance of reflection and sincere
dialogue between our "sister churches". We join in the ". . . hope that
the barrier dividing the Eastern Church and the Western Church will be
removed, and that - at last - there may be but the one dwelling, firmly
established on Christ Jesus, the cornerstone, who will make both one"
(Unitatis Redintegratio §18).
With Christ as our cornerstone and the
tradition we share, we shall be able - or, rather, we shall be enabled
by the gift and grace of God - to reach a better appreciation and fuller
expression of the Body of Christ. With our continued efforts in
accordance with the spirit of the tradition of the early Church, and in
the light of the Church of the Councils of the first millennium, we will
experience the visible unity that lies just beyond us today.
The
Church always excels in its uniquely prophetic and pastoral dimension,
embraces its characteristic meekness and spirituality, and serves with
humble sensitivity the "least of these My brethren" (Matt. 25.40).
Beloved
brother, our presence here signifies and seals our commitment to
witness together to the Gospel message of salvation and healing for the
least of our brethren: the poor, the oppressed, the forgotten in God's
world. Let us begin with prayers for peace and healing for our Christian
brothers and sisters living in the Middle East. In the current turmoil
of violence, separation, and brokenness that is escalating between
peoples and nations, may the love and desire for harmony we profess
here, and the understanding we seek through dialogue and mutual respect,
serve as a model for our world. Indeed, may all humanity reach out to
'the other' and work together to overcome the suffering of people
everywhere, particularly in the face of famine, natural disasters,
disease, and war that ultimately touches all of our lives.
In
light of all that has yet to be accomplished by the Church on earth, and
with great appreciation for all the progress we have shared, we are,
therefore, honored to be invited to attend - and humbled to be called to
address - this solemn and festive commemoration of the Second Vatican
Council. It is fitting that this occasion also marks for your Church the
formal inauguration of the "Year of Faith", as it is faith that
provides a visible sign of the journey we have traveled together along
the path of reconciliation and visible unity.
In closing, Your
Holiness, Beloved Brother, we wholeheartedly congratulate you - together
with the blessed multitude assembled here today - and we fraternally
embrace you on the joyous occasion of this anniversary celebration. May
God bless you all.