Pope addresses Finnish Ecumenical
Delegation
Pope Francis received in audience the Finnish Ecumenical
Delegation on the concluding day of the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity.
This is the full text of his speech:
Address of His Holiness Pope Francis
To the Finnish Ecumenical Delegation
25 January 2018
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
I offer you
a cordial greeting as we gather during your pilgrimage to Rome, which is by now
an annual event on the feast of Saint Henrik. I thank the Lutheran Bishop
of Espoo for his kind greeting. As the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity
draws to an end, we think back with joy on this past year’s joint commemoration
of the Reformation, which strengthened and deepened, in our Lord Jesus Christ,
the communion between Lutherans and Catholics and their ecumenical partners
throughout the world. This joint commemoration remains a fruitful
opportunity for ecumenism, for it marked not a goal but rather a point of
departure in the ecumenical quest for full and visible unity between
Christians, under the threefold sign of gratitude, repentance and hope, all
three of which are indispensable if we truly desire to heal our memory.
It is not by chance that our efforts are moving towards the study of a
major ecumenical question that we intend to discuss in the future, namely, the
nature of the Church.
An
essential part of the joint commemoration of the Reformation worldwide has been
the ecumenical aspect of our prayer and our meetings, no longer marked by the
disputes and conflicts of the past. Our commemoration took place in a
quite different spirit, for we understood the event of the Reformation as a
summons to confront together Christianity’s loss of credibility, and to renew
and strengthen our common confession of the Triune God. The year just
ended reminded us of a time when Christian unity was not yet sundered.
Consequently, there was only one way for Lutherans and Catholics to
commemorate 2017: in ecumenical communion.
Today I
receive from you with joy and gratitude the document recently issued by the
Lutheran Catholic Dialogue Commission for Finland, entitled: “Communion in
Growth. Declaration on the Church, Eucharist and Ministry”. Its title
reflects the decisive issues to which ecumenical dialogue can and must now turn
its attention. After the consensus reached between Lutherans and
Catholics on fundamental questions regarding the doctrine of justification, the
ecclesiological implications of that agreement must necessarily be part of the
agenda of ecumenical dialogues.
At a time
when societies are increasingly secularized, our service to ecumenism consists
in bearing witness to the presence of the living God. The greatest
ecumenical challenge we face is that of reaffirming the centrality of the God
question, which has to do not with any God, but of the God who revealed his
face to us in the man Jesus of Nazareth. Since Lutherans and Catholics
can now acknowledge together the centrality of the God question, it has been
possible to join in an ecumenical commemoration of the Reformation, not as a
mere pragmatic gesture but with a deep sense of faith in Christ crucified and
risen, a faith to which we can now testify together. By so doing, we are
shouldering the great ecumenical responsibility to which last year’s
commemoration of the Reformation called us.
Your pilgrimage
coincides each year with the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity, whose theme
this year – “Your right hand, O Lord, glorious in power” (cf. Ex 15:6)
– reminds us of the situation of dire need in which countless people live in
many parts of our world. It is our duty to come to their aid, united by
our shared ecumenical commitment. In complete humility, then, let us ask
our Lord Jesus Christ that by his grace we Christians throughout the world may
be instruments of his peace. May he help us always, amid divisions
between peoples, to work together as witnesses and servants of his healing and
reconciling love, and in this way to sanctify and glorify his name. Let
us constantly implore the support of God’s grace and the enlightenment of the
Holy Spirit, who guides us to the fullness of truth.
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