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Pope, Armenian patriarch committed to Christian unity

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  • Pope, Armenian patriarch committed to Christian unity

    Catholic World News
    May 7 2008


    Pope, Armenian patriarch committed to Christian unity


    Vatican, May. 7, 2008 (CWNews.com) - At his regular weekly public
    audience on May 7, Pope Benedict XVI (bio - news) welcomed the head of
    the Armenian Apostolic Church to Rome, and spoke about the urgency of
    ecumenical work.

    In greeting Catholicos Karekin II, the Holy Father said that the
    Armenian patriarch's visit "revives our hope for the full unity of all
    Christians." He saluted the "commitment of the Armenian Apostolic
    Church to ecumenical dialogue."

    As the Christian world prepares to celebrate the feast of Pentecost,
    the Pope said, the faithful should pray for a new outpouring of the
    Holy Spirit, conscious that the Spirit "renews the earth and creates
    unity where before there was division."

    "We have the certainty that the Lord Jesus never abandons us in our
    search for unity," the Pope said, "because his Spirit is tirelessly at
    work to support the efforts we make to overcome all forms of
    division." He went on to say that the Spirit creates "the great
    community which is the Church in all the world."

    Christianity is always in a state of expectation, like the apostles
    before the first Pentecost, the Pope continued. The faithful "pray
    incessantly to obtain ever-new effusions of the gifts of the holy
    Spirit." He added that "we too invoke these gifts on all Christians,"
    hoping that the followers of Christ will form a sign of unity visible
    to all the world.

    Pope Benedict invited Catholicos Karekin to address the audience in
    St. Peter's square, and the Armenian patriarch reaffirmed his
    commitment to the cause of restoring Christian unity.

    Karekin II also said, during his brief remarks, that the world should
    recognize the suffering of the Armenian people in the genocide of the
    early 20th century. Earlier Pope Benedict had said that the appearance
    of his distinguished guest "serves to remind us of the severe
    persecutions suffered by Armenian Christians, especially during the
    last century."

    http://www.cwnews.com/news/viewsto ry.cfm?recnum=58275
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