Pope to Armenia's Christians: work for peace and
reconciliation
(Vatican Radio) Pope Francis
on Saturday urged young people in Armenia to be active peacemakers in a world
suffering from persecutions and conflict. Speaking at an open air prayer
service in Yerevan to leaders of all the Churches in Armenia, the Pope called
on people of faith to abandon “rigid opinions and personal interests”, showing
instead humility and generosity on the path towards full Christian unity.
During the prayer service for
peace in Yerevan’s central Republic Square, the leader of the Armenian
Apostolic Church, to which most believers in the country belong, Catholicos
Karekin II spoke bluntly about the suffering and conflicts that plague the
Caucasus region today. He recalled the fighting that flared again last April in
the contested Republic of Nagorno-Karabakh where, he said, “Armenian villages
were bombarded”, killing both soldiers and civilians.
The Patriarch also talked
again about the Armenian genocide a century ago, noting how countries including
Germany, an ally of Turkey during the First World War, have recently moved to
recognize the atrocities as a key step towards peace and reconciliation in the
region.
Pope Francis, in his words to
the Christian leaders, also spoke of that “immense and senseless slaughter”,
saying it is not only right, but also a duty to keep the memory of that tragedy
alive. But memory, he insisted, must be transformed by love and by the driving
force of faith to sow seeds of peace for the future. Memory, infused with love,
he said, becomes capable of setting out on new and unexpected paths, where
designs of hatred become projects of reconciliation
The Pope also spoke of the
wars and conflicts in the Middle East today, fueled by the proliferation of
weapons and by the arms trade. Adressing the young people present in the
windswept square, he urged them to become peacemakers, “actively engaged in
building a culture of encounter and reconciliation”.
Citing a famous 12th century
Armenian figure, Catholicos Nerses IV, remembered as a champion of efforts
towards church unity, Pope Francis said Christians must find the courage to
abandon rigid opinions and personal interests in order to “heal memories and
bind up past wounds”. He urged Armenians to work with humility and generosity
for a peaceful society, based on dignified employment for all, care for those
most in need and the elimination of corruption.
At the end of the prayer
service, the Pope and the Patriarch watered seedlings of a vine planted by
young Armenians in a model of Noah's Ark, believed to have come to rest after
the great flood on the slopes of Mount Ararat, whose snow capped peaks dominate
the eastern part of the country
Please find below the
English translation of Pope Francis’ address at the Ecumenical Prayer Vigil for
Peace in Yerevan
Venerable and Dear Brother,
Supreme Patriarch-Catholicos of All Armenians,
Mr President, Dear Brothers
and Sisters,
God’s blessing and peace be with all of you!
I have greatly desired to visit this beloved land, your country, the first to
embrace the Christian faith. It is a grace for me to find myself here on
these heights where, beneath the gaze of Mount Ararat, the very silence seems
to speak. Here the khatchkar – the stone crosses – recount a singular
history bound up with rugged faith and immense suffering, a history replete
with magnificent testimonies to the Gospel, to which you are heir. I have
come as a pilgrim from Rome to be with you and to express my heartfelt
affection: the affection of your brother and the fraternal embrace of the whole
Catholic Church, which esteems you and is close to you.
In recent years the visits and meetings between our Churches, always cordial
and often memorable, have, thank God, increased. Providence has willed
that on this day commemorating the Holy Apostles of Christ we meet once again
to confirm the apostolic communion between us. I am most grateful to God
for the “real and profound unity” between our Churches (cf. JOHN PAUL II,
Ecumenical Celebration, Yerevan, 26 September 2001: Insegnamenti XXIV/2 [2001],
466), and I thank you for your often heroic fidelity to the Gospel, which is a
priceless gift for all Christians. Our presence here is not an exchange
of ideas, but of gifts (cf. ID., Ut Unum Sint, 28): we are reaping what the
Spirit has sown in us as a gift for each (cf. Evangelii Gaudium, 246).
With great joy, we are walking together on a journey that has already taken us
far, and we look confidently towards the day when by God’s help we shall be
united around the altar of Christ’s sacrifice in the fullness of Eucharistic
communion. As we pursue that greatly desired goal, we are joined in a
common pilgrimage; we walk with one another with “sincere trust in our fellow
pilgrims, putting aside all suspicion and mistrust” (ibid., 244).
On this journey, we have been preceded by, and walk with, many witnesses,
particularly all those martyrs who sealed our common faith in Christ by their
blood. They are our stars in heaven, shining upon us here below and
pointing out the path towards full communion. Among the great Fathers, I would
mention the saintly Catholicos Nerses Shnorhali. He showed an
extraordinary love for his people and their traditions, as well as a lively
concern for other Churches. Tireless in seeking unity, he sought to
achieve Christ’s will that those who believe “may all be one” (Jn 17:21).
Unity does not have to do with strategic advantages sought out of mutual
self-interest. Rather, it is what Jesus requires of us and what we
ourselves must strive to attain with good will, constant effort and consistent
witness, in the fulfilment of our mission of bringing the Gospel to the world.
To realize this necessary unity, Saint Nerses tells us that in the Church more
is required than the good will of a few: everyone’s prayer is needed. It
is beautiful that we have gathered here to pray for one another and with one
another. It is above all the gift of prayer that I come this evening to
ask of you. For my part, I assure you that, in offering the bread and cup
at the altar, I will not fail to present to the Lord the Church of Armenia and
your dear people.
Saint Nerses spoke of the need to grow in mutual love, since charity alone can
heal memories and bind up past wounds. Memory alone erases prejudices and
makes us see that openness to our brothers and sisters can purify and elevate
our own convictions. For the sainted Catholicos, the journey towards
unity necessarily involves imitating the love of Christ, who, “though he was
rich” (2 Cor 8:9), “humbled himself” (Phil 2:8). Following Christ’s
example, we are called to find the courage needed to abandon rigid opinions and
personal interests in the name of the love that bends low and bestows itself,
in the name of the humble love that is the blessed oil of the Christian life,
the precious spiritual balm that heals, strengthens and sanctifies. “Let
us make up for our shortcomings in harmony and charity”, wrote Saint Nerses
(Lettere del Signore Nerses Shnorhali, Catholicos degli Armeni, Venice, 1873,
316), and even – he suggested – with a particular gentleness of love capable of
softening the hardness of the heart of Christians, for they too are often
concerned only with themselves and their own advantage. Humble and
generous love, not the calculation of benefits, attracts the mercy of the
Father, the blessing of Christ and the outpouring of the Holy Spirit. By
praying and “loving one another deeply from the heart” (cf. 1 Pet 1:22), in
humility and openness of spirit, we prepare ourselves to receive God’s gift of
unity. Let us pursue our journey with determination; indeed, let us race
towards our full communion!
“Peace I give to you. Not as the world gives it, do I give it to you” (Jn
14:27). We have heard these words of the Gospel, which invite us to
implore from God that peace that the world struggles to achieve. How many
obstacles are found today along the path of peace, and how tragic the
consequences of wars! I think of all those forced to leave everything
behind, particularly in the Middle East, where so many of our brothers and
sisters suffer violence and persecution on account of hatred and interminable
conflicts. Those conflicts are fueled by the proliferation of weapons and
by the arms trade, by the temptation to resort to force and by lack of respect
for the human person, especially for the weak, the poor and those who seek only
a dignified life.
Nor can I fail to think of the terrible trials that your own people
experienced. A century has just passed from the “Great Evil” unleashed
upon you. This “immense and senseless slaughter” (Greeting, Mass for
Faithful of the Armenian Rite, 12 April 2015), this tragic mystery of iniquity
that your people experienced in the flesh, remains impressed in our memory and
burns in our hearts. Here I would again state that your sufferings are
our own: “they are the sufferings of the members of Christ’s Mystical Body”
(JOHN PAUL II, Apostolic Letter on the 1700th Anniversary of the Baptism of the
Armenian People, 4: Insegnamenti XXIV/1 [2001], 275). Not to forget them
is not only right, it is a duty. May they be a perennial warning lest the
world fall back into the maelstrom of similar horrors!
At the same time, I recall with admiration how the Christian faith, “even at the
most tragic moments of Armenian history, was the driving force that marked the
beginning of your suffering people’s rebirth” (ibid., 276). That is your
true strength, which enables you to be open to the mysterious and saving path
of Easter. Wounds still open, caused by fierce and senseless hatred, can
in some way be configured to the wounds of the risen Christ, those wounds that
were inflicted upon him and that he bears even now impressed on his
flesh. He showed those glorious wounds to the disciples on the evening of
Easter (cf. Jn 20:20). Those terrible, painful wounds suffered on the
cross, transfigured by love, have become a wellspring of forgiveness and
peace. Even the greatest pain, transformed by the saving power of the
cross, of which Armenians are heralds and witnesses, can become a seed of peace
for the future.
Memory, infused with love, becomes capable of setting out on new and unexpected
paths, where designs of hatred become projects of reconciliation, where hope
arises for a better future for everyone, where “blessed are the peacemakers”
(Mt 5:9). We would all benefit from efforts to lay the foundations of a
future that will resist being caught up in the illusory power of vengeance, a
future of constant efforts to create the conditions for peace: dignified
employment for all, care for those in greatest need, and the unending battle to
eliminate corruption.
Dear young people, this future belongs to you. Cherish the great wisdom
of your elders and strive to be peacemakers: not content with the status quo,
but actively engaged in building the culture of encounter and
reconciliation. May God bless your future and “grant that the people of
Armenia and Turkey take up again the path of reconciliation, and may peace also
spring forth in Nagorno Karabakh (Message to the Armenians, 12 April 2015).
In this perspective, I would like lastly to mention another great witness and
builder of Christ’s peace, Saint Gregory of Narek, whom I have proclaimed a
Doctor of the Church. He could also be defined as a “Doctor of
Peace”. Thus he wrote in the extraordinary Book that I like to consider
the “spiritual constitution of the Armenian people”: “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” (Book of
Lamentations, 83, 1-2). Narek, “profoundly conscious of sharing in every
need” (ibid., 3, 2), sought also to identify with the weak and sinners of every
time and place in order to intercede on behalf of all (cf. ibid., 31, 3; 32, 1;
47, 2). He became “the intercessor of the whole world” (ibid., 28,
2). This, his universal solidarity with humanity, is a great Christian
message of peace, a heartfelt plea of mercy for all. Armenians are
present in so many countries of the world; from here, I wish fraternally to
embrace everyone. I encourage all of you, everywhere, to give voice to
this desire for fellowship, to be “ambassadors of peace” (JOHN PAUL II,
Apostolic Letter for the 1700th anniversary of the Baptism of the Armenian
People, 7: Insegnamenti XXIV/1 [2001], 278). The whole world needs this
message, it needs your presence, it needs your purest witness.
Kha’ra’rutiun amenetzun! (Peace to you!).
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