On
Saturday, Pope Francis presided over evening Vespers at Saint Paul’s
Outside the Walls Basilica where he was joined by members of the many
different Christian Churches present here in Rome.
The
celebration, which lands on the Feast of Saint Paul, marks the closing
of the annual Week of Prayer for Christian Unity which has been
exploring the theme, taken from St Paul’s first letter to the
Corinthians, “Has Christ been divided?”
Saturday’s celebrations coincide with the Feast of the Conversion of Saint Paul.
Below please find the official text of Pope Francis’ homily for the event:
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
“Has
Christ been divided?” (1 Cor 1:13). The urgent appeal which Saint Paul
makes at the beginning of his First Letter to the Corinthians, and which
has been proclaimed at this evening’s liturgy, was chosen by a group of
our fellow Christians in Canada as the theme for our meditation during
this year’s Week of Prayer.
The Apostle was grieved to learn
that the Christians of Corinth had split into different factions. Some
claimed: “I belong to Paul”; while others claimed: “I belong to Apollos”
or “I belong to Cephas”, and others yet claimed: “I belong to Christ”
(cf. v. 12). Paul could not even praise those who claimed to belong to
Christ, since they were using the name of the one Saviour to set
themselves apart from their other brothers and sisters within the
community. In other words, the particular experience of each individual,
or an attachment to certain significant persons in the community, had
become a yardstick for judging the faith of others.
Amid this
divisiveness, Paul appeals to the Christians of Corinth “by the name of
our Lord Jesus Christ” to be in agreement, so that divisions will not
reign among them, but rather a perfect union of mind and purpose (cf. v.
10). The communion for which the Apostle pleads, however, cannot be the
fruit of human strategies. Perfect union among brothers and sisters can
only come from looking to the mind and heart of Christ Jesus (cf. Phil
2:5). This evening, as we gather here in prayer, may we realize that
Christ, who cannot be divided, wants to draw us to himself, to the
sentiments of his heart, to his complete and confident surrender into
the hands of the Father, to his radical self-emptying for love of
humanity. Christ alone can be the principle, the cause and the driving
force behind our unity.
As we find ourselves in his presence, we
realize all the more that we may not regard divisions in the Church as
something natural, inevitable in any form of human association. Our
divisions wound Christ’s body, they impair the witness which we are
called to give to him before the world. The Second Vatican Council’s
Decree on Ecumenism, appealing to the text of Saint Paul which we have
reflected on, significantly states: “Christ the Lord founded one Church
and one Church only. However, many Christian communities present
themselves to people as the true inheritance of Jesus Christ; all indeed
profess to be followers of the Lord but they differ in outlook and go
their different ways, as if Christ were divided”. And the Council
continues: “Such division openly contradicts the will of Christ,
scandalizes the world, and damages the sacred cause of preaching the
Gospel to every creature” (Unitatis Redintegratio, 1).
Christ,
dear friends, cannot be divided! This conviction must sustain and
encourage us to persevere with humility and trust on the way to the
restoration of full visible unity among all believers in Christ. Tonight
I think of the work of two great Popes: Blessed John XXIII and Blessed
John Paul II. In the course of their own lives, both came to realize the
urgency of the cause of unity and, once elected to the See of Peter,
they guided the entire Catholic flock decisively on the paths of
ecumenism. Pope John blazed new trails which earlier would have been
almost unthinkable. Pope John Paul held up ecumenical dialogue as an
ordinary and indispensable aspect of the life of each Particular Church.
With them, I think too of Pope Paul VI, another great promoter of
dialogue; in these very days we are commemorating the fiftieth
anniversary of his historic embrace with the Patriarch Athenagoras of
Constantinople.
The work of these, my predecessors, enabled
ecumenical dialogue to become an essential dimension of the ministry of
the Bishop of Rome, so that today the Petrine ministry cannot be fully
understood without this openness to dialogue with all believers in
Christ. We can say also that the journey of ecumenism has allowed us to
come to a deeper understanding of the ministry of the Successor of
Peter, and we must be confident that it will continue to do so in the
future. As we look with gratitude to the progress which the Lord has
enabled us to make, and without ignoring the difficulties which
ecumenical dialogue is presently experiencing, let us all pray that we
may put on the mind of Christ and thus progress towards the unity which
he wills.
In this climate of prayer for the gift of unity, I
address a cordial and fraternal greeting to His Eminence Metropolitan
Gennadios, the representative of the Ecumenical Patriarch, and to His
Grace David Moxon, the personal representative in Rome of the Archbishop
of Canterbury, and to all the representatives of the various Churches
and Ecclesial Communities gathered here this evening.
Dear
brothers and sisters, let us ask the Lord Jesus, who has made us living
members of his body, to keep us deeply united to him, to help us
overcome our conflicts, our divisions and our self-seeking, and to be
united to one another by one force, by the power of love which the Holy
Spirit pours into our hearts (cf. Rom 5:5).
Amen.