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Armenian prelate begins visit to Rome

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  • Armenian prelate begins visit to Rome

    Catholic News Agency, CO
    May 6 2008


    Armenian prelate begins visit to Rome

    Vatican, May. 6, 2008 (CWNews.com) - The head of the Armenian
    Apostolic Church, Catholicos Karekin II, arrives in Rome today for a
    visit that will continue through May 9.

    The Armenian patriarch-- who will be accompanied by 18 bishops and 75
    members of the Armenian laity-- will be formally greeted by Pope
    Benedict XVI (bio - news) at the regular Wednesday papal audience on
    May 7. Catholicos Karekin will meet privately with the Pontiff on
    Friday, May 9.

    During his stay in Rome the Armenian patriarch will pray at the statue
    of St. Gregory the Illuminator in the patio of the Vatican
    basilica. (St. Gregory brought the Christian faith to Armenia and is
    the patron saint of the Armenian Church.) He will receive an honorary
    doctorate from the Pontifical Salesian University, visit the
    Pontifical Armenian College, and participate in a conference at the
    Pontifical Oriental Institute on "holy sacrifice in the Armenian
    tradition."

    Ecumenical ties between the Holy See and the Armenian Apostolic Church
    have been extremely close since 1996, when Pope John Paul II (bio -
    news) and Catholicos Karekin I, the predecessor to the current
    Armenian patriarch, signed a joint statement effectively ending the
    theological dispute that had divided the two churches for 15
    centuries. Just before the death of Karekin I, Pope John Paul II wrote
    to the ailing Armenian prelate, promising his continued efforts to
    bring about "re-establishment of full communion" between the Armenian
    Apostolic Church and the Holy See.

    When Karekin II was elected in 1999 to head the Armenian Church, he
    promptly pledged his own efforts to pursue reunion with Rome. During a
    visit to Rome in 2000 he signed another joint statement with Pope John
    Paul, affirming that the doctrines of the two churches are
    "complimentary rather than in opposition."

    http://www.cwnews.com/news/view story.cfm?recnum=58247

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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