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Pope Prays For Reunification Of Armenian Christians

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  • Pope Prays For Reunification Of Armenian Christians

    POPE PRAYS FOR REUNIFICATION OF ARMENIAN CHRISTIANS

    Catholic World News
    March 20 2006

    Vatican, Mar. 20 (CWNews.com) - Pope Benedict XVI (bio - news) voiced
    his prayer for the reunification of Armenian Christians, as he met
    on March 20 with the Armenian Catholic Patriarch Nerses Bedros XIX
    Tarmouni and an accompanying group of pilgrims from Lebanon.

    Looking back across the history of Christianity in Armenia, the Pope
    noted the divisions among the different churches "that recognize St.

    Gregory the Illuminator as their common founding father." (St.

    Gregory established Christianity in Armenian in 301.) He acknowledged
    with satisfaction that the different Armenian churches "have resumed
    a cordial and fruitful dialogue," and looked forward to the time when
    they might regain "fraternal harmony internally, in full communion
    with the Bishop of Rome."

    A tragic history has contributed to the divisions among Armenian
    Christians, the Pope observed. He mentioned the Metz Yeghern, or "great
    evil," that saw hundreds of thousands of Armenians slaughtered by
    Turkish persecutors during the forced migration from the Mediterranean
    to the land now known as Armenia. While the Armenian Apostolic Church
    is now established both in that country and in Lebanon, the diaspora
    caused the Armenian Catholic community to find a new base in Lebanon.

    Today the Armenian Apostolic Church claims about 7 million faithful,
    including 2 million in Armenia, another 2.4 million in nearby Russian
    and Georgia, and about 500,000 in the Middle East, with the remained
    spread across Europe and the Americas. The Armenian Catholic Church
    has about 345,000 members, primarily in the Middle East but also
    spread worldwide.

    During the past 50 years the Armenian Apostolic Church has drawn
    closer to the Vatican in ecumenical talks; Pope John Paul II (bio -
    news) and the late Catholicos Karekin II, the head of the Armenian
    Church, signed a joint statement essentially ending the doctrinal
    disputes that caused a split after the Council of Chalcedon in 451.

    Pope Benedict observed that it was a "comforting sign of the unity
    we hope for" when Pope John Paul joined in celebrating the 1700th
    anniversary of the founding of Christianity in Armenia.
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