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ANTELIAS: Addresses of Pope Benedict XVI and Catholicos Aram I

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  • ANTELIAS: Addresses of Pope Benedict XVI and Catholicos Aram I

    From: Catholicosate of Cilicia <[email protected]>
    Subject: ANTELIAS: Addresses of Pope Benedict XVI and Catholicos Aram I

    PRESS RELEASE
    Catholicosate of Cilicia
    Communication and Information Department
    Contact: V.Rev.Fr.Krikor Chiftjian, Communications Officer
    Tel: (04) 410001, 410003
    Fax: (04) 419724
    E- mail: [email protected]
    Web: http://www.armenianorthodoxchurch.org/

    PO Box 70 317
    Antelias-Lebanon

    Armenian version: http://www.armenianorthodoxchurch.org/v04/doc/Arme nian.htm


    THE ADDRESS OF HIS HOLINESS
    POPE BENEDICT XVI

    Your Holiness,

    With heartfelt affection in the Lord I greet you and the distinguished
    members of your delegation on the occasion of your visit to the Church of
    Rome. Our meeting today stands in continuity with the visit which you made
    to my beloved predecessor Pope John Paul II in January 1997, and with the
    many other contacts and mutual visits which, by God's grace, have led in
    recent years to closer relations between the Catholic Church and the
    Armenian Apostolic Church.

    In this year of Saint Paul, you will visit the tomb of the Apostle of the
    Nations and pray with the monastic community at the basilica erected to his
    memory. In that prayer, you will be united to the great host of Armenian
    saints and martyrs, teachers and theologians, whose legacy of learning,
    holiness and missionary achievements are part of the patrimony of the whole
    Church. We think of Saint Nerses Shnorhali and Saint Nerses of Lambron who,
    as Bishop of Tarsus, was known as "the second Paul of Tarsus". That
    testimony culminated in the twentieth century, which proved a time of
    unspeakable suffering for your people. The faith and devotion of the
    Armenian people have been constantly sustained by the memory of the many
    martyrs who have borne witness to the Gospel down the centuries. May the
    grace of that witness continue to shape the culture of your nation and
    inspire in Christ's followers an ever greater trust in the saving and
    life-giving power of the Cross.

    The See of Cilicia has long been involved in encouraging positive ecumenical
    contacts between the Churches. Indeed, the dialogue between the Oriental
    Orthodox Churches and the Catholic Church has benefited significantly from
    the presence of its Armenian delegates. We must be hopeful that this
    dialogue will continue to move forward, since it promises to clarify
    theological issues which have divided us in the past but now appear open to
    greater consensus. I am confident that the current work of the International
    Commission - devoted to the theme: "The Nature, Constitution and Mission of
    the Church" - will enable many of the specific issues of our theological
    dialogue to find their proper context and resolution.

    Surely the growth in understanding, respect and cooperation which has
    emerged from ecumenical dialogue promises much for the proclamation of the
    Gospel in our time. Throughout the world Armenians live side by side with
    the faithful of the Catholic Church. An increased understanding and
    appreciation of the apostolic tradition which we share will contribute to an
    ever more effective common witness to the spiritual and moral values without
    which a truly just and humane social order cannot exist. For this reason, I
    trust that new and practical means will be found to give expression to the
    common declarations we have already signed.

    Your Holiness, I cannot fail to assure you of my daily prayers and deep
    concern for the people of Lebanon and the Middle East. How can we not be
    grieved by the tensions and conflicts which continue to frustrate all
    efforts to foster reconciliation and peace at every level of civil and
    political life in the region? Most recently we have all been saddened by the
    escalation of persecution and violence against Christians in parts of the
    Middle East and elsewhere. Only when the countries involved can determine
    their own destiny, and the various ethnic groups and religious communities
    accept and respect each other fully, will peace be built on the solid
    foundations of solidarity, justice and respect for the legitimate rights of
    individuals and peoples.

    With these sentiments and with affection in the Lord, I thank Your Holiness
    for your visit, and I express my hope that these days spent in Rome will be
    a source of many graces for you and for all those entrusted to your pastoral
    care. Upon you and to all the faithful of the Armenian Apostolic Church I
    invoke an abundance of joy and peace in the Lord.

    ##

    THE ADDRESS OF HIS HOLINESS ARAM I, CATHOLICOS OF CILICIA
    DURING HIS PUBLIC MEETING WITH HIS HOLINESS POPE BENEDICT XVI
    ON 24 NOVEMBER 2008, THE VATICAN CITY

    It gives me a profound spiritual joy to greet Your Holiness in the spirit of
    Christian love and with the commitment to the visible unity of the church,
    which Your predecessor His Holiness Pope Jean Paul II of blessed memory and
    we greeted each other in 1997. In the Common Declaration that we signed we
    said that "our meeting has offered a privileged opportunity to pray and
    reflect to­gether, and to renew our commitment and common efforts to the
    unity of Christians".

    Renewed and strengthened with the power of the Holy Spirit, we continued the
    ecumenical journey of our predecessors. We firmly believe that this is the
    only way, sustained by our Lord's commandment of love and unity, that shall
    lead us to a common mission in a world in dire need of the life-giving
    message of the Gospel. In fact, the deep involvement of the Armenian Church,
    together with the other churches of the Oriental Orthodox family, in the
    bilateral theological dia­logue with the Catholic Church, our active
    participation in major ecumenical ini­tiatives of the Catholic Church on the
    global level, as well as our close collabo­ra­tion through ecumenical
    structures and joint ventures, on local and regional levels, are tangible
    and eloquent expressions of our Church's firm conviction that ecumenism is
    crucial for the life and mission of the churches in the world today.

    Your Holiness, the ecumenical relations and collaboration of our two
    Churches are deeply rooted in our respective histories. In fact, due to
    geo-politi­cal circumstances, when the Armenians were obliged to leave
    Armenia and es­tablish their national and political life in Cilicia in the
    10th century by creating the Armenian Kingdom of Cilicia, the Armenian
    Church, too, moved its administra­tive center, the Catholicosate, from
    Armenia to Cilicia. This new environment, with its multi-religious,
    multi-confessional and multi-ethnic character, engaged the Armenians in a
    creative and dynamic interaction with the Latin and Byzantine Churches.
    Fraternal meetings, exchanges of letters, formal visits and ecumenical
    encounters have marked the long history of our relations.

    The world of today, with its complexities, polarisations and uncertainties,
    challenges our Churches to deepen and broaden our ecumenical collaboration
    and theological dialogue, aimed at the visible unity of the church. In spite
    of the considerable advances in ecumenical growth and multilateral and
    bilateral theo­logical dialogues, world Christendom remains divided. We
    believe that a divided church cannot credibly and effectively take the
    Gospel to the world. The united voice and the common witness of the churches
    in a polarized world is the call of Christ, which is more imperative and
    urgent today than ever before.

    The world of today, with its corrupted values, reminds us of the vital
    im­portance of healing and transformation. Our Churches should not remain
    indif­ferent to the growing decay of ethical and spiritual values, nor to
    the marginal­ization of Christian traditions and the distortion of Christian
    identity. Uncritical openness of our communities to the "new values" of
    globalization and secularism need to be tested by the Gospel values that
    give quality and meaning to Christian life and ensure its integrity and
    identity.

    The world of today, with its dire need for justice and reconciliation, urges
    our Churches to become the true messengers of peace by promoting human
    rights, working for justice for those who are denied justice, and seeking
    peace and reconciliation in situations of tension and conflict. These
    imperatives form an integral part of Christian witness and diakonia. In this
    context the churches, the religions and states must recognize all genocides,
    including the Armenian Genocide, and must endeavour to prevent new genocides
    by affirming the rights of all people for dignity, freedom and
    self-determination. This is crucial for a peaceful world.

    The world of today, with its growing pluralism, manifested in all spheres
    and aspects of society life, calls our Churches to involve themselves in a
    responsi­ble inter-faith dialogue. We are living in a globalized world
    characterized by in­terdependence and interaction. We must become part of
    the dialogue that pre­serves and articulates the integrity and uniqueness of
    Christian faith and opens God's revelation, enfolded in the Bible and the
    Tradition, to other religions, while at the same time, respecting their
    traditions and values. Lebanon, where I come from, is, indeed, a country of
    such dialogue.

    Your Holiness, this is the challenge before us.

    In spite of our doctrinal, ecclesiological and theological differences, we
    must work together on the basis of our common apostolic faith and in
    faithfulness to our common calling.

    This encounter in the presence of our archbishops, bishops, and laity,
    repre­senting our communities in the Middle East, in Europe and in North
    America, marks an important step forward in our centuries-old fraternal
    relation and col­laboration. I am confident that it will enhance our
    ecumenical commitment to re­flecting and acting, witnessing and serving
    together on the way towards the full realization of God's kingdom
    inaugurated by our Lord Jesus Christ.

    I pray to the Almighty God to strengthen Your Holiness physically and
    spiritually as you carry on your pontifical mission in a world torn apart by
    so many crises and conflicts.

    May the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ, the love of God, and the commu­nion
    of the Holy Spirit be with all of us.

    ARAM I
    CATHOLICOS OF CILICIA

    24 November 2008
    Antelias, Lebanon
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