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BENEDICT XVI: NEWS, PAPAL TEXTS, PHOTOS AND COMMENTARY

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Pope reaches out to Mideast Christians
through Oriental Orthodox theologians


January 25, 2013

Pope Benedict XVI met members of the Mixed International Commission for Theological Dialog between the Catholic Church and the Oriental Orthodox Churches at the Apostolic Palace's Hall of Popes Friday morning as the commission marks the tenth anniversary of its first session.

[This commission is different from the larger Joint International Commission for Theological Dialog between the Catholic Church and the Orthodox Churches (all the autonomous Orthodox Churches including those in Europe, not just in the Middle East).]

Through them, he expressed his spiritual closeness to the Christians of the Middle East and his continuing prayer for justice and peace in their lands. Here is the full text of his address, which was delivered in English:

Your Eminences,
Your Excellencies,
Dear Brothers in Christ,

It is with joy in the Lord that I welcome you, the members of the Joint International Commission for Theological Dialogue between the Catholic Church and the Oriental Orthodox Churches. Through you I extend fraternal greetings to the heads of all the Oriental Orthodox Churches. In a particular way I greet His Eminence Anba Bishoy, Co-President of the Commission, and I thank him for his kind words.

Before all else I would like to recall with appreciation the memory of His Holiness Shenouda III, Pope of Alexandria and Patriarch of the See of Saint Mark, who died recently.

I also remember with gratitude His Holiness Abuna Paulos, Patriarch of the Ethiopian Tewahedo Orthodox Church, who last year hosted the Ninth Meeting of the International Joint Commission for Theological Dialogue in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.

I was saddened, too, to learn of the death of the Most Reverend Jules Mikhael Al-Jamil, Titular Archbishop of Takrit and Procurator of the Syrian Catholic Patriarchate in Rome and a member of your Commission. I join you in prayer for the eternal rest of these dedicated servants of the Lord.

Our meeting today affords us an opportunity to reflect together with gratitude on the work of the International Joint Commission, which began ten years ago, in January 2003, as an initiative of the ecclesial authorities of the family of the Oriental Orthodox Churches and the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity.

In the past decade the Commission has examined from a historical perspective the various ways in which the Churches expressed their communion in the early centuries. During this week devoted to prayer for the unity of all Christ’s followers, you have met to explore more fully the communion and communication which existed between the Churches in the first five centuries of Christian history.

In acknowledging the progress which has been made, I express my hope that relations between the Catholic Church and the Oriental Orthodox Churches will continue to develop in a fraternal spirit of cooperation, particularly through the growth of a theological dialogue capable of helping all the Lord’s followers to grow in communion and to bear witness before the world to the saving truth of the Gospel.

Many of you come from areas where Christians, as individuals and communities, face painful trials and difficulties which are a source of deep concern to us all. Through you, I would like to assure all the faithful of the Middle East of my spiritual closeness and my prayer that this land, so important in God’s plan of salvation, may be led, through constructive dialogue and cooperation, to a future of justice and lasting peace.

All Christians need to work together in mutual acceptance and trust in serving the cause of peace and justice in fidelity to the Lord’s will. May the example and intercession of the countless martyrs and saints who down the ages have borne courageous witness to Christ in all our Churches, sustain and strengthen all of us in meeting the challenges of the present with confidence and hope in the future which the Lord is opening before us.

Upon you, and upon all those associated with the work of the Commission, I cordially invoke a fresh outpouring of the Holy Spirit’s gifts of wisdom, joy and peace. Thank you for your attention.


Not to beat up on the OR more than I have to, but I must, about this story, which it plays up on the back page of tomorrow's issue (1/26/13), with the headline
'Christian unity will facilitate peace in the Middle East'-
a statement repeated in the lead paragraph which reads: "Full unity among Christians in the Middle East could provide the impetus for peace in the whole region, the Supreme Pontiff said today...."

Two problems with the above:
1) The Pope never says that anywhere in his remarks; and
2) He would never have said it because it makes no sense:
If full Christian unity, as all sides always say, will come when the Holy Spirit wills it, and not through human effort alone, then the Pope would effectively be saying that peace in the Middle East is even more unattainable than Christian unity, if it is the latter that will provide an impetus for it!

Many of you probably tuned out long ago on my occasional going-on about media, especially the Vatican media, and may think that I am simply quibbling about minor slips, or raising technical questions which do not interest the regular reader at all. My double rationale for my self-assigned vigilance has always been: 1) If only out of respect for the Holy Father and the Church institutions they report upon, Vatican media have a duty to follow professional standards - I do not see why they should feel themselves exempted; and 2) the old truism that if you cannot be careful about the small and simple things, how can you be trusted to do the important things right?

In the above example, to attribute words to the Holy Father that he never said - which are, moreover, senseless words - and make a headline of it, is very wrong. It is also the height of absurdity and editorial irresponsibility. What makes it more frightening is that such obvious errors are allowed - as if no one exercised editorial or supervisory duties at all.

Wouldn't it be nice to say, if we could, that unlike the MSM, Vatican media are very professional, honest and reliable with facts in a way that they should serve as a model for the rest of the field? Alas, we can't.

[Modificato da TERESA BENEDETTA 26/01/2013 10:16]
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