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ADDRESS OF POPE JOHN PAUL II TO H.E.
Mr FRANCIS JOSEPH CARASCO, AMBASSADOR OF SAINT LUCIA TO THE HOLY SEE
Friday, 26 April 1985
Mr Ambassador,
I am pleased to welcome Your Excellency
as I accept the Letters accrediting you as Ambassador Extraordinary and
Plenipotentiary of Saint Lucia. It is a special pleasure to greet you today
since you come as the first Ambassador of your country to the Holy See. Our
relations are already marked by mutual respect and esteem, but this historic
occasion expresses our common intention to deepen the bonds of trust which exist
and to collaborate in a more formal and stable way, especially in furthering
peace and justice in the world.
Over the centuries, diplomatic missions
have helped to create more effective lines of communication and dialogue between
individual nations and the world community as a whole. The Holy See itself has
constantly engaged in international diplomacy, establishing and maintaining full
diplomatic relations with a large number of States and participating in the
activities and discussions of international organizations. While its role is a
unique one in view of the Church’s primary task of promoting moral and spiritual
values, the Holy See has always prized the opportunity to make a unique and
important contribution to harmony and understanding between governments and
peoples and to the protection and dignity of every human person. You can be
sure, then, Your Excellency, that the Holy See is pleased with the establishment
of diplomatic relations with Saint Lucia, and it holds in honour and respect
your own distinguished role as its first Ambassador.
The Christian faith, and the Catholic
Church in particular, has flourished in a remarkable way in your country. The
development in recent years of an ever increasing number of your own indigenous
clergy and religious, who are gradually assuming greater responsibility for the
pastoral care of the faithful, is a clear sign of the Church’s growth and
vigour. In this regard, I have noted with pleasure your reference to the dynamic
and vital role which the Church is playing in your island’s development - in the
spiritual and moral realms certainly, but also in the fields of education,
culture and social works. I can assure you that, in a genuine spirit of
ecumenism and with appreciation for the existing freedom of religion, the
Catholic Church will continually seek to collaborate with the people of Saint
Lucia in efforts to promote the common good and welfare of all, while she
pursues her specific mission of proclaiming the Gospel of Jesus Christ.
The Holy See appreciates the desire of
your Government to engage in joint efforts with neighbouring countries in the
Caribbean to create a zone of peace. It likewise appreciates your interest in
the establishment of a more equitable economic and social order internationally.
Perhaps your history of having so frequently experienced influences from without
before your independence has made your nation more deeply aware of the
importance of international relations, especially at the present period of
history which is witnessing an ever increasing interdependence.
I wish to express my gratitude for the
cordial greetings which you have conveyed on behalf of the Prime Minister, the
Rt Hon. John Compton, and I would ask you kindly to reciprocate them. I thank
you, too, for the kind invitation to visit Saint Lucia. I would be very happy
indeed to accept this invitation and look forward to the day when it might be
arranged.
As you begin your new assignment, be
assured, Your Excellency, of the full cooperation and assistance of the Holy See
in the fulfilment of your mission. I pray that the Lord will grant you much joy
and satisfaction in your work. And I invoke the abundant blessings of Almighty
God upon you and your fellow citizens.
© Copyright 1985 - Libreria Editrice
Vaticana
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