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Pope Francis delivers message to Armenians

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  • Pope Francis delivers message to Armenians

    Pope Francis delivers message to Armenians

    15:15 12/04/2015 >> SOCIETY


    Pope Francis delivered a Message to all Armenians on Sunday,
    presenting the President of Armenia, Serzh Azati Sargsyan, Catholicos
    Karekin II, Catholicos Aram I, and Patriarch Nerses Bedros XIX, with
    copies at the end of Mass marking the centenary of the Medz Yeghern in
    which more than 1 million Armenians under Ottoman rule were driven
    from their homes, dispossessed and killed, Vatican Radio reports.

    Below, please find the full text of the Message in its official
    English translation.

    Dear Armenian Brothers and Sisters,

    A century has passed since that horrific massacre which was a true
    martyrdom of your people, in which many innocent people died as
    confessors and martyrs for the name of Christ (cf. John Paul II and
    Karekin II, Common Declaration, Etchmiadzin, 27 September 2001). Even
    today, there is not an Armenian family untouched by the loss of loved
    ones due to that tragedy: it truly was "Metz Yeghern", the "Great
    Evil", as it is known by Armenians. On this anniversary, I feel a
    great closeness to your people and I wish to unite myself spiritually
    to the prayers which rise up from your hearts, your families and your
    communities.

    Today is a propitious occasion for us to pray together, as we proclaim
    Saint Gregory of Narek a Doctor of the Church. I wish to express my
    deep gratitude for the presence here today of His Holiness Karekin II,
    Supreme Patriarch and Catholicos of All Armenians, His Holiness Aram
    I, Catholicos of the Great House of Cilicia, and His Beatitude Nerses
    Bedros XIX, Patriarch of Cilicia of Armenian Catholics.

    Saint Gregory of Narek, a monk of the tenth century, knew how to
    express the sentiments of your people more than anyone. He gave voice
    to the cry, which became a prayer, of a sinful and sorrowful humanity,
    oppressed by the anguish of its powerlessness, but illuminated by the
    splendour of God's love and open to the hope of his salvific
    intervention, which is capable of transforming all things. "Through
    his strength I wait with certain expectation believing with unwavering
    hope that... I shall be saved by the Lord's mighty hand and... that I will
    see the Lord himself in his mercy and compassion and receive the
    legacy of heaven" (Saint Gregory of Narek, Book of Lamentations, XII).

    Your Christian identity is indeed ancient, dating from the year 301,
    when Saint Gregory the Illuminator guided Armenia to conversion and
    baptism. You were the first among nations in the course of the
    centuries to embrace the Gospel of Christ. That spiritual event
    indelibly marked the Armenian people, as well as its culture and
    history, in which martyrdom holds a preeminent place, as attested to
    symbolically by the sacrificial witness of Saint Vardan and his
    companions in the fifth century.

    Your people, illuminated by Christ's light and by his grace, have
    overcome many trials and sufferings, animated by the hope which comes
    from the Cross (cf. Rom 8:31-39). As Saint John Paul II said to you,
    "Your history of suffering and martyrdom is a precious pearl, of which
    the universal Church is proud. Faith in Christ, man's Redeemer,
    infused you with an admirable courage on your path, so often like that
    of the Cross, on which you have advanced with determination, intent on
    preserving your identity as a people and as believers" (Homily, 21
    November 1987).

    This faith also accompanied and sustained your people during the
    tragic experience one hundred years ago "in what is generally referred
    to as the first genocide of the twentieth century" (John Paul II and
    Karekin II, Common Declaration, Etchmiadzin, 27 September 2001). Pope
    Benedict XV, who condemned the First World War as a "senseless
    slaughter" (AAS, IX [1917], 429), did everything in his power until
    the very end to stop it, continuing the efforts at mediation already
    begun by Pope Leo XIII when confronted with the "deadly events" of
    1894-96. For this reason, Pope Benedict XV wrote to Sultan Mehmed V,
    pleading that the many innocents be saved (cf. Letter of 10 September
    1915) and, in the Secret Consistory of 6 December 1915, he declared
    with great dismay, "Miserrima Armenorum gens ad interitum prope
    ducitur" (AAS, VII [1915], 510).

    It is the responsibility not only of the Armenian people and the
    universal Church to recall all that has taken place, but of the entire
    human family, so that the warnings from this tragedy will protect us
    from falling into a similar horror, which offends against God and
    human dignity. Today too, in fact, these conflicts at times degenerate
    into unjustifiable violence, stirred up by exploiting ethnic and
    religious differences. All who are Heads of State and of International
    Organizations are called to oppose such crimes with a firm sense of
    duty, without ceding to ambiguity or compromise.

    May this sorrowful anniversary become for all an occasion of humble
    and sincere reflection, and may every heart be open to forgiveness,
    which is the source of peace and renewed hope. Saint Gregory of Narek,
    an extraordinary interpreter of the human soul, offers words which are
    prophetic for us: "I willingly blame myself with myriad accounts of
    all the incurable sins, from our first forefather through the end of
    his generations in all eternity, I charge myself with all these
    voluntarily" (Book of Lamentations, LXXII). How striking is his sense
    of universal solidarity! How small we feel before the greatness of his
    invocations: "Remember, [Lord,]... those of the human race who are our
    enemies as well, and for their benefit accord them pardon and mercy...
    Do not destroy those who persecute me, but reform them, root out the
    vile ways of this world, and plant the good in me and them" (ibid.,
    LXXXIII).

    May God grant that the people of Armenia and Turkey take up again the
    path of reconciliation, and may peace also spring forth in Nagorno
    Karabakh. Despite conflicts and tensions, Armenians and Turks have
    lived long periods of peaceful coexistence in the past and, even in
    the midst of violence, they have experienced times of solidarity and
    mutual help. Only in this way will new generations open themselves to
    a better future and will the sacrifice of so many become seeds of
    justice and peace.

    For us Christians, may this be above all a time of deep prayer.
    Through the redemptive power of Christ's sacrifice, may the blood
    which has been shed bring about the miracle of the full unity of his
    disciples. In particular, may it strengthen the bonds of fraternal
    friendship which already unite the Catholic Church and the Armenian
    Apostolic Church. The witness of many defenceless brothers and sisters
    who sacrificed their lives for the faith unites the diverse
    confessions: it is the ecumenism of blood, which led Saint John Paul
    II to celebrate all the martyrs of the twentieth century together
    during the Jubilee of 2000. Our celebration today also is situated in
    this spiritual and ecclesial context. Representatives of our two
    Churches are participating in this event to which many of our faithful
    throughout the world are united spiritually, in a sign which reflects
    on earth the perfect communion that exists between the blessed souls
    in heaven. With brotherly affection, I assure you of my closeness on
    the occasion of the canonization ceremony of the martyrs of the
    Armenian Apostolic Church, to be held this coming 23 April in the
    Cathedral of Etchmiadzin, and on the occasion of the commemorations to
    be held in Antelias in July.

    I entrust these intentions to the Mother of God, in the words of Saint
    Gregory of Narek:

    "O Most Pure of Virgins, first among the blessed,

    Mother of the unshakeable edifice of the Church,

    Mother of the immaculate Word of God,

    (...)

    Taking refuge beneath your boundless wings which grant us the
    protection of your intercession, we lift up our hands to you,

    and with unquestioned hope we believe that we are saved."

    (Panegyric of the Theotokos)


    http://www.panorama.am/en/current_topics/2015/04/12/pope-message/

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