Pope
greets Bishops, faithful of Armenian Catholic Church
(Vatican
Radio) On Divine Mercy Sunday, Pope Francis will preside at Solemn Mass for the
faithful of the Armenian Rite, in commemoration of the centenary of the “Medz
Yeghern” (the “Great Crime”) – the massacre of Armenians by the Ottoman
government in what is now Turkey.
During
the Mass, the Holy Father will inscribe the great Armenian Saint Gregory of
Narek among the Doctors of the Universal Church.
Ahead
of Sunday’s commemoration, Pope Francis on Thursday met with the members of the
Patriarchal Synod of the Armenian Catholic Church, who will be present for
Sunday’s Mass.
In
his prepared remarks, the Pope prayed that the Divine Mercy “might help us all,
in love for truth and justice, to heal every wound and to hasten concrete
gestures of reconciliation and peace among the Nations that have not yet
reached a consensus on the reading of such sorrowful events.”
Pope
Francis greeted not only the many Armenians who travelled to Rome with their
Bishops, but also the many Armenians of the Diaspora throughout the world. He
especially recalled Armenians in those places that, during the Medz Yeghern
were places of safety for Armenian Christians, but are now places where
Christianity itself is threatened.
The
Holy Father noted the long history of Christianity in Armenia, and its rich
spiritual and cultural heritage going back to 301, when Armenia became the
first Christian nation. Pope Francis called on the Bishops to “always cultivate
a feeling of gratitude to the Lord” for the ability to keep the Faith even in
the most difficult times. He reminded them that, if the Armenian people have,
in a certain sense, shared in the Passion of the Lord, their suffering
nonetheless contains the seeds of His Resurrection.
Concluding
his remarks, Pope Francis also paid tribute to those who worked to relieve the
suffering of the Armenian people during the “Great Crime”, notably Pope
Benedict XV, the Pope at the time, who intervened with the Ottoman rulers to
try to halt the massacres.
Finally,
Pope Francis entrusted the ecumenical dialogue between the Armenian Catholic
Church and the Armenian Apostolic Church to Saint Gregory of Narek, while
recognizing that the shared sufferings of one hundred years ago have already
produced a certain “ecumenism of blood.”
The
ecumenical aspect of Sunday’s Liturgy was also highlighted by the Catholicos
Patriarch of Cilicia, Nerses Bedros XIX. The Catholicos noted that, in addition
to the Armenian Catholic Bishops and faithful, representatives of the Armenian
Apostolic Church – including Catholicos Karekin II of Etchmiadzin and
Catholicos Aram I of Antelias – will also be present for the Liturgy, along
with the President of the Republic of Armenia.
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