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Christians must persevere in prayer for unity, pope says at audience

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  • Christians must persevere in prayer for unity, pope says at audience

    Catholic News Service
    May 7 2008



    Christians must persevere in prayer for unity, pope says at audience

    By Carol Glatz
    Catholic News Service


    VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- Despite the difficulties and divisions,
    Christians must persevere in prayer for full unity, Pope Benedict XVI
    said while the head of the Armenian Apostolic Church looked on.

    "We are certain that Our Lord Jesus will never abandon us in our quest
    for unity" as the Holy Spirit continues to sustain those who strive to
    overcome the divisions and heal "the lacerations in the living flesh
    of the church," the pope said.

    Just a few days before the feast of Pentecost, the pope shared the
    stage during his May 7 general audience in St. Peter's Square with
    Catholicos Karekin II, patriarch of the Armenian Apostolic Church.

    The patriarch and a delegation of 18 bishops were in Rome May 6-10 to
    meet with the pope and Vatican officials, as well as scholars and
    students at various pontifical institutes.

    After warmly greeting and embracing the patriarch before the main
    audience, the pope thanked him for his dedication to ecumenism and his
    "personal commitment to the growing friendship" between the two
    churches.

    "I am sure that this period of friendship will be further deepened
    during the coming days," he said.

    The pope said a statue in St. Peter's Basilica of St. Gregory the
    Illuminator -- the father of the Armenian Church -- serves as a
    reminder of the "severe persecutions suffered by Armenian Christians."

    Those martyrs represent "a sign of the power of the Holy Spirit
    working in times of darkness" and act as a beacon of hope for
    Christians everywhere, he said.

    Catholicos Karekin, meanwhile, called on all people to "condemn all
    genocides," both past and present, so that those in positions of
    authority may be moved to recognize "their responsibilities and
    results of those crimes."

    The patriarch also made an appeal for all Christians who "are in
    distress in the Middle East and many other regions in the world."

    These religious minorities and the more vulnerable like the elderly
    and children are "endangered by the blows of disagreement and
    division, unjust competition and enmity," he said.

    "This is not the will of God. This is not our calling," he
    said. Christians are called to live in peace, serve unity and work for
    the common good, said the patriarch.

    He said that, despite cultural, historical and theological differences
    among Christians, "we are all children of one God and we are brothers
    and sisters in his holy love."

    It is by being united in love that the diverse churches offer "genuine
    testimony that we are children of God," he said.

    The Armenian Apostolic Church is an ancient and independent Oriental
    Orthodox church that vests synods and councils with ultimate authority
    in their governance. The Catholic Church gives greater weight in
    church governance to the primacy of the bishop of Rome.


    The Armenian Church and a handful of other ancient Christian churches
    broke from the rest of Christendom in 451 when they rejected the
    assertion of the Council of Chalcedon that Christ is one person in two
    natures, undivided and unconfused.

    Modern scholarship has revealed that the differences were semantic
    rather than doctrinal, and there have been several official joint
    declarations by the pope and various heads of the Oriental Orthodox
    churches professing that their faith in Christ is the same, although
    expressed differently.

    After the two leaders exchanged greetings before the 30,000 pilgrims
    in St. Peter's Square, Pope Benedict dedicated the catechesis of his
    general audience to the theme of Christian unity.

    He said the patriarch's visit and the coming feast of Pentecost
    boosted hopes that the Holy Spirit will help them on the path of
    ecumenism.

    The presence of the Holy Spirit is why, "even facing difficulties and
    divisions, Christians can never give up or give in to discouragement,"
    he said. Even though people are separated by language and culture, the
    Holy Spirit can overcome divisions since the spirit -- as love --
    "gives unity in diversity," he said.

    "From the first moment it existed, the church has spoken in all
    tongues ... and it lives in all cultures; it destroys nothing of the
    various gifts, the different charisms," but rather brings it together
    and reconciles unity and multiplicity," he said.

    At the end of the general audience, the pope greeted pilgrims from the
    newly erected Our Lady of the Rosary Church in Qatar.

    The church is the first Catholic church built in that predominantly
    Muslim country and was inaugurated in March.

    - - -

    Editor's Note: The Vatican's text of the pope's remarks in English is
    available online at:
    www.vatican.va/holy_father/benedict_xvi/audien ces/2008/documents/hf_ben-xvi_aud_20080507_en.html .


    The Vatican's text of the pope's remarks in Spanish is available
    online at:
    www.vatican.va/holy_father/benedict_xvi/audien ces/2008/documents/hf_ben-xvi_aud_20080507_sp.html .

    END
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