APOSTOLIC JOURNEY OF HIS
HOLINESS BENEDICT XVI TO TURKEY (NOVEMBER 28 - DECEMBER 1,
2006)
COMMON DECLARATION BY
HIS HOLINESS POPE BENEDICT XVI AND PATRIARCH BARTHOLOMEW I
“This is the day that the Lord has made, let us rejoice and
be glad in it!” (Ps 117:24)
This fraternal encounter which brings us together, Pope
Benedict XVI of Rome and Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I, is God’s
work, and in a certain sense his gift. We give thanks to the Author of all
that is good, who allows us once again, in prayer and in dialogue, to
express the joy we feel as brothers and to renew our commitment to move
towards full communion. This commitment comes from the Lord’s will and
from our responsibility as Pastors in the Church of Christ. May our
meeting be a sign and an encouragement to Catholics and Orthodox
everywhere to share the same sentiments and the same attitudes of
fraternity, cooperation and communion in charity and truth. The Holy
Spirit will help us to prepare the great day of the re-establishment of
full unity, whenever and however God wills it. Then we shall truly
be able to rejoice and be glad.
We have recalled with thankfulness the meetings of our
venerable predecessors, blessed by the Lord, who showed the world the
urgent need for unity and traced sure paths for attaining it, through
dialogue, prayer and the daily life of the Church. Pope Paul VI and
Patriarch Athenagoras I went as pilgrims to Jerusalem, to the very place
where Jesus Christ died and rose again for the salvation of the world, and
they also met several times, here in the Phanar and in Rome. They left us
a common declaration which retains all its value; it emphasizes that
true dialogue in charity must sustain and inspire all relations between
individuals and between Churches, that it “must be rooted in a total
fidelity to the one Lord Jesus Christ and in mutual respect for their own
traditions” (Tomos Agapis, 195). Nor have we forgotten the
reciprocal visits of His Holiness Pope John Paul II and His Holiness
Dimitrios I. It was during the visit of Pope John Paul II, his first
ecumenical visit, that the creation of the Mixed Commission for
theological dialogue was announced. This has brought together
Catholics and Orthodox in the declared aim of re-establishing full
communion.
As far as relations between the Church of Rome and the
Church of Constantinople are concerned, we cannot fail to recall the
solemn ecclesial act effacing the memory of the ancient anathemas which
for centuries had a negative effect on Catholic-Orthodox
relations. We have not yet drawn from this act all the positive
consequences which can flow from it in our progress towards full unity, to
which the mixed Commission is called to make an important
contribution. We exhort Catholics and Orthodox to take an active
part in this process, through prayer and through significant gestures.
At the time of the plenary session of the mixed Commission
for theological dialogue, which was recently held in Belgrade through the
generous hospitality of the Serbian Orthodox Church, we expressed our
profound joy at the resumption of the theological dialogue. This had been
interrupted for several years because of various difficulties, but now the
Commission was able to work afresh in a spirit of friendship and
cooperation. In treating the topic “Conciliarity and Authority in
the Church” at local, regional and universal levels, the Commission
undertook a phase of study on the ecclesiological and canonical
consequences of the sacramental nature of the Church. This will
permit us to address some of the principal questions that are still
unresolved between Catholics and Orthodox. We are committed to offer
unceasing support, as in the past, to the work entrusted to this
Commission and we accompany its members with our prayers.
As Pastors, we have first of all reflected on the mission to
proclaim the Gospel in today’s world. This mission, “Go, make
disciples of all nations” (Mt 28:19), is today more timely and
necessary than ever, even in traditionally Christian
countries. Moreover, we cannot ignore the increase of secularization,
relativism, even nihilism, especially in the Western world. All this
calls for a renewed and powerful proclamation of the Gospel, adapted to
the cultures of our time. Our traditions represent for us, Catholics
and Orthodox, a patrimony which must be continually shared, proposed, and
interpreted anew. This is why we must strengthen our cooperation and our
common witness before the world.
We have viewed positively the process that has led to the
formation of the European Union. Those engaged in this great project
should not fail to take into consideration all aspects affecting
the inalienable rights of the human person, especially religious freedom,
a witness and guarantor of respect for all other freedoms. In every
step towards unification, minorities must be protected, with their
cultural traditions and the distinguishing features of their
religion. In Europe, Catholics and Orthodox, while remaining open to
other religions and to their cultural contributions, must unite their
efforts to preserve Christian roots, traditions and values, to ensure
respect for history, and thus to contribute to the European culture of the
future and to the quality of human relations at every level. In this context, how could we not evoke the very ancient witnesses and the
illustrious Christian heritage of the land in which our meeting is taking
place, beginning with what the Acts of the Apostles tells us
concerning the figure of Saint Paul, Apostle of the Gentiles? In this
land, the Gospel message and Hellenic culture met. This link, which
has contributed so much to the Christian heritage that we share, remains
timely and will bear more fruit in the future for evangelization and for
our unity.
Our concern extends to those parts of today’s world where
Christians live and to the difficulties they have to face, particularly
poverty, wars and terrorism, but equally to various forms of exploitation
of the poor, of migrants, women and children. Catholics and Orthodox
are called to work together to promote respect for the rights of every
human being, created in the image and likeness of God, and to foster
economic, social and cultural development. Our theological and
ethical traditions can offer a solid basis for a united approach in
preaching and action. Above all, we wish to affirm that killing
innocent people in God’s name is an offence against him and against human
dignity. We must all commit ourselves to the renewed service of
humanity and the defence of human life, every human life.
We take profoundly to heart the cause of peace in the Middle
East, where our Lord lived, suffered, died and rose again, and where a
great multitude of our Christian brethren have lived for centuries.
We fervently hope that peace will be re-established in that region, that
respectful coexistence will be strengthened between the different peoples
that live there, between the Churches and between the different religions
found there. To this end, we encourage the establishment of closer
relationships between Christians, and of an authentic and honest
interreligious dialogue, with a view to combating every form of violence
and discrimination.
At present, in the face of the great threats to the natural
environment, we want to express our concern at the negative consequences
for humanity and for the whole of creation which can result from economic
and technological progress that does not know its limits. As
religious leaders, we consider it one of our duties to encourage and to
support all efforts made to protect God’s creation, and to bequeath to
future generations a world in which they will be able to live.
Finally, our thoughts turn towards all of you, Orthodox and
Catholics throughout the world, Bishops, priests, deacons, men and women
religious, lay men and women engaged in ecclesial service, and all the
baptized. In Christ we greet other Christians, assuring them of our
prayers and our openness to dialogue and cooperation. In the words
of the Apostle of the Gentiles, we greet all of you: “Grace to you
and peace from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ” (2 Cor
1:2).
From the Phanar, 30 November 2006
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