Pope Francis returns from Caucasus, holds in-flight
presser
(Vatican Radio) Pope Francis
returned to Rome late Sunday evening, after an intense weekend pilgrimage to
Georgia and Azerbaijan in the Caucasus region. The Holy Father spoke with
reporters traveling with him on his return flight, during which he offered
reflections on a wide range of themes including marriage and divorce,
homosexuality, and gender identity – further to his reflections offered on the
same during the course of his whirlwind weekend visit.
Catholic News Agency has
prepared a full transcript of the in-flight press conference, available here.
Responding to a question from
Georgia’s public broadcaster, Ketevan Kardava, Pope Francis offered his own
overview of his visit there. “I had two surprises in Georgia,” he said. “One,
Georgia: I've never imagined so much culture, so much faith, so much
Christianity…It is a believing people and an ancient Christian culture! A
people of so many martyrs. I discovered something that I didn’t know: the
breadth of the Georgian faith. The second surprise was the patriarch: he is a
man of God. This man has moved me. I many times have found that I left with the
heart and moved and full of the sensitivity of having found a man of God, truly
a man of God.”
Pope Francis went on to
discuss his appreciation for practical ecumenism, saying, “On the things that
unite us and separate us, I say: don’t make us discuss things of doctrine,
leave this to the theologians. They know better than we do. They discuss, and
if they are good, they are good, they have good will, the theologians on one
side and the other, (but) what must the people do? Pray for each other, this is
important: prayer. And second: do things together. Are there poor? We work
together with the poor. There is this and that problem: we can do it together,
we do together. Are there migrants? We do things together ... we do good things
for others, together. This we can do and this is the path of ecumenism. Not
only the way of doctrine, this is the last, it comes in last. But we begin to
walk together. And with good will we can do this, you MUST do it.”
Pope Francis also addressed
the work that can be done to achieve a lasting peace between Armenia and
Azerbaijan, citing dialogue and equitable international mediation as the only
ways forward. “I believe that the one way is dialogue,” he said, “a sincere
dialogue without things held under the table.”
Pope Francis also spoke of
the duty Christians have to pray for peace. “Christians also pray, pray for
peace, because these hearts … this path of dialogue, of negotiation or of going
to an international tribunal, but they can’t have problems like this. Think
that the three Caucasus nations have problems: Georgia also has a problem with
Russia, I don't know much, but it's greater … but it has a problem that can
grow, it's an unknown. And Armenia is a nation with open borders, it has
problems with Azerbaijan and should go to an international tribunal if dialogue
and negotiation is a no-go. There is no other path. And prayer, prayer for
peace.”
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