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LETTER OF THE HOLY FATHER
JOHN PAUL II TO HIS HOLINESS ALEKSIJ II
on the occasion of the return to Russia of the Icon of Our Lady of Kazan
To His Holiness Aleksij II Patriarch of Moscow and All Russia
After a lengthy period of trials and sufferings endured by the Russian Orthodox
Church and the Russian people in the last century, the Lord of history, who
disposes all things in accordance with his will, today gives us common joy and
hope as the Icon of the Mother of God of Kazan returns to her native land.
In the joy and the sentiments of communion which I have always felt, together
with my Predecessors who were ever concerned for the Russian people, I rejoice
that Your Holiness today receives the Delegation which I have sent to you. Led
by Cardinals Walter Kasper and Theodore Edgar McCarrick, the Delegation has been
charged with consigning to you this sacred Icon, so closely linked to the faith
and the history of Christians in Russia.
By a mysterious design of Divine Providence, during the long years of her
pilgrimage the Mother of God in her sacred Icon known as Kazanskaya has
gathered about her the Orthodox faithful and their Catholic brethren from other
parts of the world, who have fervently prayed for the Church and the people whom
she has protected down the centuries. More recently, Divine Providence made it
possible for the people and the Church in Russia to recover their freedom and
for the wall separating Eastern Europe from Western Europe to fall. Despite the
division which sadly still persists between Christians, this sacred Icon appears
as a symbol of the unity of the followers of the Only-begotten Son of God, the
One to whom she herself leads us.
The Bishop of Rome has prayed before this sacred Icon, asking that the day may
come when we will all be united and able to proclaim to the world, with one
voice and in visible communion, the salvation of our one Lord and his triumph
over the evil and impious forces which seek to damage our faith and our witness
of unity.
Today I join you in prayer, dear Brother, along with the Bishops of the Russian
Orthodox Church, the priests, monks and nuns, and the People of God in the land
of Russia. United in this prayer are all the sons and daughters of the Catholic
Church in their profound devotion and veneration for the Holy Mother of God.
May this venerable image guide us along the path of the Gospel in the footsteps
of Christ, protecting the people to whom she now returns, and all humanity. May
the Holy Mother of God turn her maternal gaze towards the men and women of our
time; may she help believers not to stray from the path which God has set before
them: the proclamation of Jesus Christ, the Way, and the Truth and the Life,
and a courageous testimony to their faith before society and before all the
nations. Today we pray with confidence to the Most Holy Virgin, knowing that
she implores for us and for all nations the gift of peace.
With these sentiments of charity, in the joy of the event which we today
celebrate, and with our eyes lifted to the Holy Mother of God, I exchange with
Your Holiness a fraternal kiss in our Lord.
From the Vatican, 25 August 2004
JOHN PAUL II
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