A Meeting Among
Brothers in 'Faith, Charity and Hope'
Pope
Asks Ecumenical Patriarch for Blessing at Prayer Service
Istanbul, November 29, 2014 (Zenit.org) Junno Arocho
Esteves
The relationship between the Bishop of Rome,
Successor to St. Peter, and the Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople,
successor to St. Andrew, has been a fraternal relationship for the past 50
years.
In the Gospel of St. Matthew, it was Peter and Andrew who were
the first disciples called by Jesus to become “fishers of men."
Excommunications leveled after the Great Schism of 1054 were
nullified when Blessed Paul VI and Ecumenical Patriarch Athenagoras I met in
Jerusalem. While not uniting the Churches, it displayed a great desire for
reconciliation between them.
Since then, it has been the tradition for a delegation from each
Church to celebrate the patronal feast of the other’s Church: Sts. Peter and
Paul on June 29th and St. Andrew on November 30th.
On the eve of the feast of St. Andrew, Pope Francis and
Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I joined together for an Ecumenical Prayer
service at the Patriarchal Church of St. George in Phanar, Turkey.
While the reverent, prayerful sounds of the Greek Orthodox
prayers echoed in the Church, both the Pope and the Patriarch sat side by side,
their heads bowed reverently.
Addressing Pope Francis, Bartholomew I welcomed him with “joy,
honor and gratitude,” saying that his visit symbolically bridges “West and East
through this movement, while translating the love of the Chief Apostle to his
brother, the First-Called Apostle.”
The Ecumenical Patriarch also noted that the Holy Father’s visit
is a witness of the will of the Church of Rome for the restoration of full
communion with the Orthodox Church.
The relics of St. Gregory the Theologian and St. John
Chrysostom, which lie in the Patriarchal Church, are a very sign of the desire
for communion and reconciliation between the Orthodox Church and the Church of
Rome.
Following a request by the Patriarch, St. John Paul II returned
the relics of the two beloved Saints to the Ecumenical Patriarchate on November
27th, 2004. They were previously housed in St. Peter’s Basilica after they were
stolen from Constantinople by mercenary crusaders in 1204. It was a gesture
that was not forgotten by the Ecumenical Patriarch.
“This year marks the tenth anniversary since the blessed return
of the relics of St. Gregory and St. John,” Patriarch Bartholomew said. ”We
express to Your Holiness our fervent thanks for this fraternal gesture on
behalf of Your Church to our Patriarchate.”
A Brother’s Blessing
For his part, Pope Francis also expressed his gratitude for
being present at the prayer service, saying that his “heart awaits the day
which we have already begun liturgically: the Feast of the Apostle Saint
Andrew, Patron of this Church.”
“Yes, my venerable and dear Brother Bartholomew, as I express my
heartfelt ‘thank you’ for your fraternal welcome, I sense that our joy is
greater because its source is from beyond; it is not in us, not in our
commitment, not in our efforts – that are certainly necessary – but in our
shared trust in God’s faithfulness which lays the foundation for the
reconstruction of his temple that is the Church.”
Reflecting on the calling of Peter and Andrew, the Pope said
that their encounter with Christ transformed them from blood brothers to
brothers in faith, charity and especially, hope.
“What a grace, and what a responsibility, to walk together in
this hope, sustained by the intercession of the holy Apostles and brothers,
Andrew and Peter!” he exclaimed.
After extending his best wishes, the Pope asked a favor from the
Ecumenical Patriarch rarely seen. “I ask of you a favor: to bless me and the
Church of Rome.”
Pope Francis approached Bartholomew I, who was visibly moved by
the gesture. The Patriarch blessed the Pontiff, kissed his forehead and
embraced him.
As they exited the prayer service and removed their respective
stoles, Patriarch Bartholomew reached over to fix the Holy Father’s pectoral
cross as he took his stole off. A gesture that, while significant to some, is
common among brothers.
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