Pope Benedict's Speech to Armenian Patriarch November 30, 2006 Istanbul, Turkey
Dear Brother in Christ,
I am pleased to have this opportunity to meet Your
Beatitude in this very place where Patriarch Kalustian welcomed my predecessors Pope
Paul VI and Pope John Paul II. With great affection I greet the entire Armenian Apostolic
community over which you preside as shepherd and spiritual father. My fraternal greeting
goes also to His Holiness Karekin II, Catholicos of Holy Etchmiadzin, and the hierarchy
of the Armenian Apostolic Church. I give thanks to God for the Christian faith and
witness of the Armenian people, transmitted from one generation to the next, often
in very tragic circumstances such as those experienced in the last century.
Our
meeting is more than a simple gesture of ecumenical courtesy and friendship. It is
a sign of our shared hope in God’s promises and our desire to see fulfilled the prayer
that Jesus offered for his disciples on the eve of his suffering and death: “that
they may all be one. As you, Father, are in me and I in you, may they also be one
in us, so that the world may believe that you have sent me” (Jn 17:21). Jesus gave
his life on the Cross to gather into one the dispersed children of God, to break down
the walls of division. Through the sacrament of Baptism, we have been incorporated
into the Body of Christ, the Church. The tragic divisions which, over time, have
arisen among Christ’s followers openly contradict the Lord’s will, give scandal to
the world and damage that most holy cause, the preaching of the Gospel to every creature
(cf. Unitatis Redintegratio, 1). Precisely by the witness of their faith and love,
Christians are called to offer a radiant sign of hope and consolation to this world,
so marked by conflicts and tensions. We must continue therefore to do everything
possible to heal the wounds of separation and to hasten the work of rebuilding Christian
unity. May we be guided in this urgent task by the light and strength of the Holy
Spirit.
In this respect I can only offer heartfelt thanks to the Lord for
the deeper fraternal relationship that has developed between the Armenian Apostolic
Church and the Catholic Church. In the thirteenth century, Nerses of Lambron, one
of the great Doctors of the Armenian Church, wrote these words of encouragement: “Now,
since we all need peace with God, let its foundation be harmony among the brethren.
We have prayed to God for peace and continue to do so. Look, he is now giving it
to us as a gift: let us welcome it! We asked the Lord to make his holy Church solid,
and he has willingly heard our plea. Let us climb therefore the mountain of the Gospel
faith!” (Il Primato della Carità, Ed. Qiqajon, p. 81). These words of Nerses have
lost nothing of their power. Together let us continue to pray for the unity of all
Christians, so that, by receiving this gift from above with open hearts, we may be
ever more convincing witnesses of the truth of the Gospel and better servants of the
Church’s mission.