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ROME: Pope Asks Prayer for Armenian Patriarch Visit

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  • ROME: Pope Asks Prayer for Armenian Patriarch Visit

    Zenit News Agency, Italy
    May 8 2008



    Pope Asks Prayer for Armenian Patriarch Visit



    Expresses Certainty That "Spirit of Friendship" Will Deepen


    VATICAN CITY, MAY 7, 2008 (Zenit.org).- Benedict XVI beseeched the
    faithful to pray for the visit to Rome of the patriarch of the
    Armenian Apostolic Church.


    Karekin II, Catholicos of All Armenians, attended the Pope's general
    audience today, and both leaders exchanged formal greetings.


    The Holy Father told the patriarch, "Your Holiness, I pray that the
    light of the Holy Spirit will illumine your pilgrimage to the tombs of
    the Apostles Peter and Paul, the important meetings you will have
    here, and particularly our personal conversations. I ask all who are
    present today to pray for God's blessing upon this visit."


    The Pontiff noted Karekin II's personal commitment to "the growing
    friendship between the Armenian Apostolic Church and the Catholic
    Church."


    He mentioned: "In 2000, soon after your election, you came to Rome to
    meet Pope John Paul II, and a year later, you graciously received him
    in Holy Etchmiadzin. You came once again to Rome together with many
    Church leaders from East and West, for the funeral liturgy of Pope
    John Paul II.


    "I am sure that this spirit of friendship will be further deepened
    during the coming days."


    The Armenian Apostolic Church separated from Rome after the Council of
    Chalcedon in 451.


    More than 90% of Armenian Christians are under the Armenian Apostolic
    Patriarchate. The Pope's secretary of state, Cardinal Tarcisio
    Bertone, visited Armenia last March and was received by Karekin II.


    Martyrs


    In Benedict XVI's greeting, he also mentioned the suffering of the
    Armenian people: "In an external niche of St. Peter's Basilica, there
    is a fine statue of St. Gregory the Illuminator, founder of the
    Armenian Church. It serves to remind us of the severe persecutions
    suffered by Armenian Christians, especially during the last
    century. Armenia's many martyrs are a sign of the power of the Holy
    Spirit working in times of darkness, and a pledge of hope for
    Christians everywhere.


    "Your Holiness, dear bishops and dear friends, together with you I
    implore Almighty God, through the intercession of St. Gregory the
    Illuminator, to help us grow in unity, in one holy bond of Christian
    faith, hope and love."



    The two Churches have moved closer to unity, notably thanks to a 1996
    declaration signed by John Paul II and Patriarch Karekin I on the
    nature of Jesus.


    Brotherhood


    For his part, Karekin II affirmed -- leading up to Sunday's feast of
    Pentecost -- that it is the Holy Spirit who is "the fountainhead of
    unity and transforms our steps on the paths of brotherhood with grace
    -- steps which are for the glory of God and are born from the love of
    Christ, for the sake of establishing peace in the world and a blessed
    life for mankind."



    "Intolerance and confrontation must not be allowed within the
    brotherhood and love of Christ," the patriarch said. "Mankind has
    suffered much as a result. Today as well, the creation of God -- the
    world that surrounds us -- is imperiled through interfaith
    disagreements, through wars and terrorism, through the effects of
    poverty and neglect.


    "Our brothers and sisters are in distress in the Middle East and many
    other regions of the world; where women and children, the elderly and
    disabled are endangered by the blows of disagreement and division,
    unjust competition and enmity. This is not the will of God. This is
    not our calling."


    Karekin II mentioned as well the struggle in Armenia to gain
    international recognition of their suffering at the hands of the
    Ottoman Empire. Both religious and civil leaders in Armenia want the
    massacre to be recognized as a genocide. In 1915 and the following
    years, perhaps as many as 1.5 million Armenians were killed within the
    empire as it broke apart. Turkey and other states oppose the use of
    the word genocide to describe the event.


    "Today, many countries of the world recognize and condemn the genocide
    committed against the Armenian people by Ottoman Turkey, as did the
    Holy See, by His Holiness Pope John Paul Il of blessed memory during
    our fraternal visit to Rome in 2000," the patriarch said.


    He added: "Offering prayers to his luminous memory, we as Pontiff of
    the Armenians, appeal to all nations and lands to universally condemn
    all genocides that have occurred throughout history and those that
    continue through the present day, so that those who yield power and
    authority realize their responsibilities and results of those crimes
    which have been and continue to be committed against the creation of
    God, and that the denial of these crimes is an injustice that equals
    the commission of the same."


    Recognitions


    This afternoon, the Catholicos received an honorary doctorate in the
    theology of pastoral care of youth from the Pontifical Salesian
    University. He was accompanied during the ceremony by Cardinal Bertone
    and Cardinal Walter Kasper, president of the Pontifical Council for
    Promoting Christian Unity.


    Cardinal Bertone recalled his March visit to Armenia. He said he
    experienced "an exquisite and warm welcome" and was able to "submerge
    [him]self in the history of the Church."


    "Armenia," he explained, "has its roots sunk in the preaching of the
    holy Apostles Bartholomew and Thaddeus. The entire Armenian people
    converted to Christ more than 17 centuries ago, at the dawn of the
    fourth century, in the year 301. Baptism makes of the Armenians the
    first people to be officially Christian, much before Christianity was
    recognized as the official religion of the Roman empire."


    Cardinal Kasper pronounced the "laudatio," recognizing Karekin II's
    extensive work in the pastoral ministry of youth.


    "Immediately after the fall of communism, he arranged for the former
    Communist Pioneer Palaces to be converted into church-sponsored youth
    centers," the cardinal said. Shortly thereafter, in 1990, "he created
    a Christian Education Center [...] where young people receive a
    catechetical and Christian formation, together with a program in
    traditional Armenian art and culture."


    "His Holiness Karekin II has continued to follow with care the
    preparation and post-ordination training of his clergy," cardinal
    Kasper added, noting how the patriarch has sent many students for
    further studies abroad, often to Catholic universities or faculties of
    theology.


    http://www.zenit.org/article-22522? l=english
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