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ADDRESS
OF JOHN PAUL II TO THE CATHOLIC, LUTHERAN AND
ORTHODOX BISHOPS IN
FINLAND
Monday, 7 January
1985
Dear Brothers in Christ,
It is a great joy for me to welcome you
to Rome today, the Catholic, Lutheran and Orthodox Bishops in Finland. It is a
particular joy because you have come together to this city in a spirit of true
ecumenical fellowship, and the purpose of your visit reflects your appreciation
of the fact that prayer must lie at the very heart of all endeavours to
reestablish that unity for which Christ prayed.
At the church of Santa Maria Sopra
Minerva you are to inaugurate a place of prayer for your countrymen here in this
city. In so doing you are looking back to your common roots as Christians and as
Finns. Your country is one in which Western and Eastern Christians live side by
side; and you join in revering the memory of Saint Henry, the first Western
Bishop in your country. You also express your common roots by joining in the
recitation of the Nicene-Constantinopolitan Creed in its original form. This
recitation of the Creed provides a solid foundation for our hope of achieving
full unity among Christians. On the occasion of the Sixteenth Centenary of the
Council of Constantinople I wrote: “The teaching of the First Council of
Constantinople is still the expression of the one common faith of the whole of
Christianity. As we confess this faith – as we do every time that we recite the
Creed – . . . we wish to emphasize the things which unite us with all our
brothers, notwithstanding the divisions that have occurred in the course of the
centuries” (IOANNIS PAULI II Epistula ad universos Ecclesiae Episcopos
volvente anno MCD a Concilio Costantinopolitano I necnon MDL a Concilio Ephesino,
I, 1, die 25 mar. 1981: Insegnamenti di Giovanni Paolo II, IV, 1 (1981)
816).
At the international level, the Catholic
Church, the Orthodox Church and the Lutheran World Federation are all committed
to and engaged in the ecumenical dialogue. Our dialogues are making progress,
through God’s grace, but it is important that they not remain remote from the
life of the Christian people in the local Churches. By your present initiative
you are giving vivid expression to the progress already made, and you are doing
so in a way that will, I hope, encourage the people you serve to work and pray
ever more zealously for the great cause of unity.
Thus your initiative is a striking form
of common witness. The fact that you come here together is itself a witness to
the importance of efforts for unity. The fact that you pray together is a
witness to our belief that only through the grace of God can that unity be
achieved. The fact that you recite the Creed together is a witness to “the one
common faith of the whole of Christianity” (Ibid.).
Dear Brothers in Christ: I thank you for
this visit; I pray for you in your pastoral responsibilities; I pray for your
beloved country. May your visit, through the prayers of Saint Henry, lead us all
nearer to the great day of perfect unity in Christ our Saviour, manifested in
the flesh, . . . preached among the nations, believed on in the world” (1 Tim.
3,16).
© Copyright 1985
- Libreria Editrice
Vaticana
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