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  • No Insurmountable Obstacles to Catholic, Orthodox Unity

    Catholic World News
    Feb 22 2005

    No Insurmountable Obstacles to Catholic, Orthodox Unity


    (CWR) -- Throughout his pontificate, John Paul II has made dramatic
    gestures in an effort to break down the barriers of Orthodox
    hostility toward the Catholic Church. He has made pilgrimages to
    traditionally Orthodox lands, apologized for the misdeeds of
    Catholics, and asked Orthodox theologians to join in a discussion of
    how the papacy can serve as the focus of Christian unity in the 21st
    century.

    In November 2003 the Pope confirmed the accuracy of a rumor that had
    circulated around Rome for months: that he planned to make a new sort
    of gesture toward the Eastern churches, by returning the prized icon
    of Our Lady of Kazan to the Russian Orthodox Church. After several
    false starts, that plan was carried out late in August 2004. By
    restoring a beloved icon that had been missing for most of a century,
    the Holy Father obviously sought also to restore some of the goodwill
    that has been conspicuously lacking from the Moscow patriarchate's
    attitude toward Rome in recent years.

    Whether the Pope's effort will prove successful in reviving
    productive ecumenical talks with the Russian Orthodox Church is not
    yet clear. But the papal gesture drew one prompt reaction from
    another important corner of the Orthodox world. Late in June, when he
    visited Rome to join in celebrating the patronal feast of Ss. Peter
    and Paul, the Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople asked Pope John
    Paul to consider returning another set of objects prized by the
    Orthodox: the relics of Ss. John Chrysostom and Gregory Nazianzen.

    Although both St. John Chrysostom and St. Gregory Nazianzen were
    bishops of Constantinople, their relics have been in Rome for
    centuries. The relics of St. Gregory Nazianzen were brought to the
    Vatican during the 8th-century iconoclastic controversy, when the
    emperors outlawed the veneration of relics. Those of St. John
    Chrysostom were taken by Crusaders in the 13th century. The Orthodox
    Church had complained, over the centuries, that the relics being held
    by the Vatican were actually the property of the Constantinople See.

    When the Pope acceded to that request, Patriarch Bartholomew I
    underlined the importance of the gesture by saying that he would fly
    back to Rome--making his second visit to the Vatican of the year--to
    accept the relics in person. After a few weeks of preparation, plans
    were set for an ecumenical ceremony in St. Peter's basilica on
    November 27, at which Pope John Paul II would turn over the relics to
    the Patriarch.

    HIGH EXPECTATIONS

    Ss. John Chrysostom (349-407) and Gregory Nazianzen (330-390) are
    both doctors of the Church, who gained fame for their defense of
    Christian doctrine in the face of the Arian heresy. Each saint also
    is claimed by Patriarch Bartholomew as a predecessor as Patriarch of
    Constantinople.

    As he announced plans for the November ceremony, Bishop Brian
    Farrell, the secretary of the Pontifical Council for Christian Unity,
    observed that the Pope's decision to return the relics was a "sign of
    the deep communion that exists between the Catholic Church and the
    Orthodox Church." He pointed out that similar gestures had been made
    by local churches. In 2001, the Diocese of Bari, Italy, presented
    relics of St. Nicholas to the Russian Orthodox Church. And in 2000,
    relics of St. Gregory the Illuminator, which had been kept in a
    monastery near Naples, were presented to Catholicos Karekin II, the
    leader of the Armenian Apostolic Church.

    The second visit of 2004 by Patriarch Bartholomew, the acknowledged
    "first among equals" among Orthodox patriarchs, would in itself be a
    sign of "growing rapprochement" between the Catholic and Orthodox
    churches, Bishop Farrell said. While there are important
    disagreements on matters of doctrine and ecclesiology that remain
    unresolved, he observed, there are increasingly strong personal bonds
    between the members of the Catholic and Orthodox hierarchies--the
    bodies that were estranged by the Great Schism of 1054.

    Patriarch Bartholomew, who was elected as the 273rd Patriarch of
    Constantinople in October 1991, visited the Vatican for the first
    time in June 1995, when he joined in the historic inter-religious day
    of prayer for peace at Assisi. In 1994, Pope John Paul had reached
    out to the Orthodox leader by asking Bartholomew to write the
    meditations to be read during the Stations of the Cross on Good
    Friday in the Roman Coliseum. Thus began a series of visits and
    exchanges between Rome and Constantinople. Each year the Vatican
    sends a delegation of prelates to join in the Orthodox Patriarch's
    celebration of the feast of St. Andrew, the patron of Constantinople,
    on November 30; the Orthodox respond by sending a delegation to
    Rome--headed his year by the Patriarch himself--for the feast of Ss.
    Peter and Paul on June 29. During his private conversations with the
    Pontiff in June, Bartholomew I had invited John Paul to return the
    personal visit by making a trip to Constantinople, but the Pontiff's
    health made such a trip impossible.

    In a private letter sent to Patriarch Bartholomew on September 8, the
    Pontiff referred to the relics as "the common patrimony of the faith
    which unites us, however imperfectly." Bartholomew responded by
    confirming that he would come to Rome to receive the relics, saying
    that the gesture would have "an immense significance" for his
    Orthodox see.

    The Orthodox delegation arrived in Rome on November 26, and was
    greeted by a welcoming committee led by Cardinal Walter Kasper, the
    president of the Pontifical Council for Christian Unity. During their
    stay in Rome the Orthodox clerics were lodged in the Vatican's St.
    Martha residence, and the Patriarch was the guest of honor at a
    dinner hosted by Cardinal Kasper's dicastery, with many officials of
    the Roman Curia in attendance. And before his departure, the
    Patriarch would again speak privately with the Roman Pontiff.

    As the organizers finished the last-minute details of preparation,
    television crews set up their equipment in the Vatican basilica for
    live broadcasts that would bring the ecumenical ceremony to network
    audiences in Italy and in Greece.

    NO INSURMOUNTABLE PROBLEMS

    During the Saturday-morning ceremony, Pope John Paul II underlined
    his desire for full Christian unity, while the leader of the Orthodox
    world promised "to continue the dialogue of truth in love" with the
    Catholic Church. As he handed over the precious relics, the Pope said
    the gesture was "a blessed opportunity to purify our wounded
    memories."

    The Holy Father offered a prayer that "God will hasten the hour in
    which we will be able to live together, in the celebration of the
    holy Eucharist, full communion." As he received the relics--which had
    been enclosed in magnificent alabaster reliquaries--Patriarch
    Bartholomew I said that the Pope's gesture "confirms that there are
    not insurmountable problems in the Church of Christ."

    The ceremony included a Liturgy of the Word, in which the readings
    included both Scriptural passages and selections from the two saints
    whose relics were being transferred. The Pope and the Patriarch then
    prayed together, and each made a short statement. (Because of the
    difficulty that John Paul II now encounters in speaking aloud, the
    Pope's statement was read by Archbishop Leonardo Sandri, the deputy
    Secretary of State.)

    During his address, Patriarch Bartholomew gently alluded to the
    historic complaints of the Orthodox Church, saying that by returning
    the relics the Pope was correcting "an ecclesiastical anomaly and
    injustice." He added that the Pope's gesture should be imitated by
    others who "arbitrarily hold and still retain treasures of the
    faith." He did not identify the objects of that statement, which
    could apply to governments in Eastern Europe, as well as to Catholic
    dioceses.

    Two days after the ceremony, Patriarch Bartholomew stunned reporters
    by saying that taking possession of the relics was the "most
    important event" of his 13-year tenure as the Ecumenical Patriarch.
    He stressed that the Pope's willingness to return the relics to
    Constantinople was "a very important step toward full unity between
    our two churches," and that the gesture would be "very much
    appreciated by the ecumenical Patriarchate and by all of the Orthodox
    world." Patriarch Bartholomew told a Vatican Radio audience that he
    was "very moved and very happy" because of the "historic event,
    thanks to the goodwill of the Pope."

    Cardinal Walter Kasper more modestly observed that the transfer of
    the relics was "a sign of our relations, which are much improved." He
    observed that it was also a sign of the "common heritage of faith
    from the first centuries of Christianity," since the two saints are
    equally venerated by the Orthodox and Catholic Church.

    Just one small shadow of controversy marred the warmth of the
    transfer. Provoked by the repeated charges that the relics had been
    stolen from the Orthodox Church, papal spokesman Joaquin
    Navarro-Valls informed reporters that the Pope was not making an "act
    of reparation" or a request for "forgiveness" by turning them over to
    Patriarch Bartholomew. The claims that Catholics had looted the
    relics were misleading, he insisted; in particular, the notion that
    the relics of St. Gregory Nazianzen had been "stolen" from the
    Patriarchate of Constantinople were, he argued, "historically
    inaccurate." Navarro-Valls pointed out that the remains of St.
    Gregory had been moved to Rome during the 8th century so that they
    could be saved from the iconoclastic persecution of that day.

    Navarro-Valls did not recount the story of how the relics of St. John
    Chrysostom reached Rome, after the sack of Constantinople during the
    Fourth Crusade in 1204. While acknowledging the "tragic events" that
    were involved in the movement of the relics, he explained that the
    Pope's decision to return the icons was an effort to go "beyond the
    controversies and difficulties of the past." (Pope John Paul had
    asked for pardon for the sacking of Constantinople on an earlier
    occasion: during his trip to Greece in May 2001. In his address to
    the Greek Orthodox Patriarch Christodoulos, the Pontiff said that it
    was "tragic" that Crusaders who set out to liberate the Holy Land
    engaged in the plunder of Constantinople.)

    UNITING THE CHRISTIAN MINORITY

    When the Patriarch returned home, an ecumenical assembly, including
    Turkish civil authorities and many Catholic bishops, gathered in St.
    George's Orthodox cathedral in Istanbul to welcome the relics. Buoyed
    by the enthusiasm generated by the Pope's gesture, large crowds
    attended the Divine Liturgy on November 30, marking the feast of St.
    Andrew.

    "This was an act of reconciliation among the churches which is bound
    to have positive effects on ecumenical relations in the future,"
    Father George Marovich, spokesman for the Catholic bishops'
    conference of Turkey, told the Fides news service. National media
    outlets gave ample coverage to the return of the relics, prompting a
    heartily emotional reaction from the small Christian minority
    community in Turkey.

    The return of the relics came at a time when Turkey's Christians were
    already feeling a new sense of power and purpose, for different
    reasons. Turkey's bid for entry into the European Union has been met
    by probing questions about the state of religious freedom in the
    overwhelmingly Muslim country, and the government has responded by
    reaching out to Christian leaders--clearly hoping to elicit their
    support for the cause of entry into the European Union. During a
    meeting with Premier Recep Tayyip Erdogan in July, the Catholic
    bishops of Turkey (representing the Latin, Armenian, Chaldean, and
    Syrian Catholic communities, all of which boast a small but steadfast
    following) had a rare chance to speak about the problems encountered
    by Catholics in Turkey, and also to make a request for official
    juridical status for the Catholic Church in Turkey--something the
    government has never previously considered.

    The celebration of the relics' return, then, offered another occasion
    for solidarity among the Christians who make up just 0.6 percent of
    Turkey's population.

    RENEWED DIALOGUE?

    The Vatican officials who visited Istanbul for that November 30
    celebration reported, on their return to Rome, that the Orthodox
    Patriarchate of Constantinople shared a desire that Pope John Paul
    had expressed to Patriarch Bartholomew in June and again in November.
    The Catholic and Orthodox officials agreed--at least in principle--to
    revive a joint Catholic-Orthodox theological commission that has been
    dormant since a meeting in Baltimore in July 2000.

    The joint commission, established as the result of talks in November
    1979 between Pope John Paul and the then-Patriarch Dimitrios I, had
    produced the "Balamund declaration" of 1993, in which the Orthodox
    churches accepted the existence of the Eastern Catholic communities,
    while the Holy See acknowledged that ecumenical progress should come
    through corporate reunion with the Orthodox churches rather than the
    recognition of new Eastern-rite Catholic communities. But the
    commission then reached an impasse over Orthodox complaints about
    "proselytism" by Catholics in traditionally Orthodox lands, and about
    Vatican support for the Eastern-rite Catholic churches.

    But the Pope's latest gesture might have been enough to break that
    impasse, Vatican officials reported. The delegation from Rome, led by
    Cardinal Kasper, found that Orthodox officials were particularly
    cordial in their greetings this year. The Pope's gesture has been
    recognized as "a sign of friendship by the Catholic Church, and of
    our bond through the communion of saints," one prelate remarked.
    During their meetings in Istanbul, representatives of the Orthodox
    synod assured the Vatican delegates that they plan to respond
    promptly to the Pope's plea for a resumption of formal talks by the
    joint commission.

    During the November 30 ceremony in the cathedral of St. George, when
    Cardinal Kasper had a chance to convey greetings from the Holy See,
    he emphasized the bonds between Rome and Constantinople. The German
    cardinal reminded Patriarch Bartholomew "how profound and significant
    were the events that we celebrated in St. Peter's basilica, just a
    few days ago, and which we continue to celebrate today." Cardinal
    Kasper added: "What unites us is much more than a human bond; it is a
    communion in the faith that John Chrysostom and Gregory Nazianzen
    confessed and courageously proclaimed." While thanking God for that
    bond, the cardinal continued, "we must still reinforce our commitment
    to progress on the path to full communion." The deep spiritual bond
    between the two churches, he said, calls attention to the fact that
    the communion "is not complete."

    Orthodox officials responded positively to that challenge, the
    Vatican envoys confirmed. The Orthodox synod confirmed a desire to
    resume formal theological talks, and the only remaining problems will
    be working out the details of a time, place, and agenda for the
    discussions.
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