Page 4, 4th February 2011

4th February 2011
Page 4
Page 4, 4th February 2011 — Christians can realise dream of unity, says Pope
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Organisations: Anglican Centre in Rome
Locations: Canterbury, Jerusalem, Rome

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Christians can realise dream of unity, says Pope

BY STAFF REPORTER

GIVING in to the temptation of thinking Christians will never be fully united is a sign of weak faith, Pope Benedict XVI said.

“One must resist the temptation of resignation and pessimism, which is a lack of trust in the power of the Holy Spirit,” the Pope said at an ecumenical evening prayer service marking the close of the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity.

The Pope presided over the service at the Basilica of St Paul Outside the Walls with a German Lutheran delegation, an international group of Oriental Orthodox bishops and theologians and Orthodox, Anglican and Protestant leaders from Rome.

Prayers were read by Orthodox Metropolitan Gennadios of Italy and Malta and by the Rev David Richardson, the Archbishop of Canterbury’s representative to the Vatican and director of the Anglican Centre in Rome.

In his homily the Pope said the search for Christian unity is “a moral imperative, a response to a precise call of the Lord”.

The theme of the 2011 week of prayer, “One in the Apostles’ teaching, fellowship, breaking of bread and prayer”, described the unity experienced within the early Christian community, the Pope said. The early Christian community in Jerusalem “was not closed in on itself, but from its birth it was catholic, universal, capable of embracing people of different languages and cultures”, the Pope said.

“It was a community not founded on a pact among its members, or on the simple sharing of a project or ideal, but on profound communion with God,” he said.

Pope Benedict XVI repeated what he had said earlier during his weekly general audience at the Vatican: the theme’s four ingredients are the four pillars of Christian faith and are “the fundamental dimensions of unity of the visible body of the Church”.

To be fully united, he said, Christians must hold firm to the faith taught by the Apostles, they must gather together, they must share the Eucharist, and they must pray constantly.

As unity must be based on faith believed and lived in common, the Pontiff said at the prayer service, Christian unity cannot be reduced to a recognition and acceptance of differences and an agreement to coexist peacefully.

“That for which we yearn is the unity for which Christ himself prayed and which, by its nature, is manifested in a communion of faith, sacraments and ministry,” Pope Benedict said.




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