At 11:00am today, the Holy Father received in audience His Holiness, Moran Baselios Marthoma Paulose II, Catholicos of the Orient and Metropolitan of the Malankara Orthodox Syrian Church, along with his entourage.
Speech
of the Holy Father, Pope Francis
For the meeting with His Holiness
Moran Baselios Marthoma Paulose II
Your Holiness,
Dear Brothers in Christ,
It is a joy for me to meet Your Holiness and the
distinguished delegation of the Malankara Orthodox Syrian Church. Through you,
I greet a Church that was founded upon the witness, even to martyrdom, that
Saint Thomas gave to Our Lord Jesus Christ. The apostolic fraternity which
united the first disciples in their service of the Gospel, today also unites
our Churches, notwithstanding the many divisions that have arisen in the
sometimes sad course of history, divisions which, thanks be to God, we are
endeavouring to overcome in obedience to Lord’s will and desire (cf. Jn
17:21).
The Apostle Thomas exclaimed, My Lord and my God! (Jn 2:28) with one of the most beautiful
confessions of faith in Christ handed down by the Gospels, a faith which
proclaims the divinity of Christ, his lordship in our lives, and his victory
over sin and death through his resurrection. This event is so real that Saint
Thomas is invited to touch for himself the actual marks of the crucified and
risen Jesus (cf. Jn 20:27). It is precisely in this faith that we meet
each other; it is this faith that unites us, even if we cannot yet share the
Eucharistic table; and it is this faith which urges us to continue and
intensify the commitment to ecumenism, encounter and dialogue towards full
communion. With deep affection I welcome Your Holiness and the members of your
delegation and I ask you to convey my cordial greetings to the Bishops, clergy
and faithful of the Malankara Orthodox Syrian Church. I also greet the communities
you are visiting in Europe.
Thirty years ago, in June of 1983, Catholicos Moran Mar
Baselios Marthoma Mathews I paid a visit to my venerable predecessor, Pope John
Paul II and to the Church of Rome. Together, they recognised their common faith
in Christ. Afterwards, they met again at Kottayam, in the Cathedral of Mar
Elias, in February of 1986 during the pastoral visits of the Pope in India. On
that occasion, Pope John Paul II said: With
you I desire that our Churches may soon find effective ways of resolving the
urgent pastoral problems that face us, and that we may progress together in
brotherly love and in our theological dialogue, for it is by these means that
reconciliation among Christians and reconciliation in the world can come about.
I can assure you that the Catholic Church, with the commitment she made at the
Second Vatican Council, is ready to participate fully in this enterprise.
From those encounters began a concrete path of dialogue
with the institution of a mixed commission, which brought to birth the
agreement of 1990, on the day of Pentecost, a commission which continues its
important work and which has brought us to significant steps on themes such as
the common use of buildings of worship and cemeteries, the mutual concession of
spiritual and even liturgical resources in specific pastoral situations, and
the necessity to identify new forms of collaboration when faced with growing social
and religious challenges.
I wanted to recall some of the steps in these 30 years of
the growing closeness between us, because I believe that on the ecumenical path
it is important to look with trust to the steps that have been completed,
overcoming prejudices and closed attitudes which are part of a kind of culture of clashes and source of
division, and giving way to a culture of
encounter, which educates us for mutual understanding and for working
towards unity. Alone however, this is impossible; our witnesses and poverty
slow the progress. For this reason, it is important to intensify our prayer,
because only the Holy Spirit with his grace, his light and his warmth can melt
our coldness and guide our steps towards an ever greater brotherhood of prayer
and commitment in order to let relationships of friendship and cooperation grow
at various levels, in the clergy, among the faithful, and among the various
churches born from the witness given by Saint Thomas. May the Holy Spirit
continue to enlighten us and guide us towards reconciliation and harmony,
overcoming all causes of division and rivalry which have marked our past.
Your Holiness, let us walk this path together, looking
with trust towards that day in which, with the help of God, we will be united
at the altar of Christ's sacrifice, in the fullness of Eucharistic communion. Let
us pray for one another, invoking the protection of Saint Peter and Saint
Thomas upon all the flock that has been entrusted to our pastoral care. May
they who worked together for the Gospel, intercede for us and accompany the
journey of our Churches.
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