Address of the Holy Father to participants in
the Plenary Session of the Pontifical Council
for Promoting Christian Unity, 06.05.2022
This morning, in the Vatican Apostolic Palace,
the Holy Father Francis received in audience the
participants in the Plenary Session of the
Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian
Unity, to whom he addressed the following words:
Address of the Holy Father
Dear Cardinals,
Dear brother Bishops and Priests,
Dear brothers and sisters!
I greet you all heartily, and I thank Cardinal
Koch for the words he addressed to me on behalf
of you, members, consultors and collaborators of
the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian
Unity.
Today concludes the Plenary Session of your
Council, which it is finally possible to hold in
person after having postponed it several times
due to the pandemic. This, with its tragic
impact on the social life of the entire world,
has strongly conditioned even ecumenical
activities, preventing the usual contacts and
new projects over the last two years. At the
same time, however, the healthcare crisis has
also offered an opportunity to strengthen and
renew relations among Christians.
A first significant ecumenical result of the
pandemic has been a renewed awareness of
belonging to one Christian family, an awareness
rooted in the experience of sharing the same
fragility and of being able to trust only in the
help that comes from God. Paradoxically, the
pandemic, which forced us to keep a distance
from each other, has made us understand how
close to each other we are in reality, and how
we are responsible for each other. It is
fundamental to continue to cultivate this
awareness, and to give rise to initiatives that
make explicit and nurture this spirit of
fraternity. And on this issue, I would like to
emphasize that today, for a Christian, it is not
possible or practicable to go alone with one’s
own denomination. Either we go together, all the
fraternal denominations, or we do not go ahead
at all. Today the awareness of ecumenism is such
that one cannot think of journeying on the path
of faith without the company of brothers and
sisters from other Churches of ecclesial
communities. And this is a great thing. Alone,
never. We cannot do it. Indeed, it is easy to
forget this profound truth. When it happens to
Christian communities, it exposes us to the
serious risk of the presumption of
self-sufficiency and self-referentiality, which
are grave obstacles to ecumenism. And we see
this. In some countries there are certain
egocentric revivals – so to speak – of certain
Christian communities that either go backwards,
or cannot advance. Today, either we all walk
together or we do not walk. This awareness is a
truth and a grace from God.
Even before the healthcare emergency had come to
an end, the entire world found itself facing
another tragic challenge: the war currently
underway in Ukraine. Since the end of the second
world war there has never been any lack of
regional wars, many of them! Think of Rwanda,
for example, thirty years ago, to mention just
one; but think of Myanmar, let’s think… But
since they are far away, we do not see them,
whereas this one is close by and it makes us
react. So much so that I have often spoken about
a piecemeal third world war, scattered
everywhere. However, this war, cruel and
senseless like every war, has a greater
dimension and threatens the entire world, and
cannot but question the conscience of every
Christian and every Church. We must ask
ourselves: what have Churches done, and what can
they do, to contribute to “the development of a
global community of fraternity based on the
practice of social friendship on the part of
peoples and nations” (Encyclical Letter Fratelli
tutti, 154)? It is a question we must think
about together.
In the last century, the awareness that the
scandal of the division of Christians had
historic relevance in generating the evil that
poisoned the world with grief and injustice had
moved communities of believers, under the
guidance of the Holy Spirit, to desire the unity
for which the Lord prayed and gave his life.
Today, faced with the barbarism of war, this
longing for unity must once again be nurtured.
Ignoring the divisions between Christians, out
of habit or resignation, means tolerating that
contamination of hearts that creates fertile
ground for conflicts. The proclamation of the
gospel of peace, that gospel that disarms hearts
even before armies, will be more credible only
if it is announced by Christians who are finally
reconciled in Jesus, Prince of peace; Christians
inspired by his message of universal love and
fraternity, which transcends the boundaries of
their own community and nation. Let us return to
what I said: today, either we walk together or
we stand still. We cannot walk alone. But not
because it is modern, no: because the Holy
Spirit has inspired this sense of ecumenism and
brotherhood.
From this point of view, your reflection on how
to celebrate the 1700th anniversary of the First
Council of Nicaea, which will take place in
2025, makes a valuable contribution. Despite the
troubled events of its preparation and above all
the subsequent long period of reception, the
first ecumenical Council was an event of
reconciliation for the Church, which in a
synodal way reaffirmed its unity around the
profession of its faith. The style and the
decisions of the Council of Nicaea should
enlighten the current ecumenical journey and
lead to practical steps towards the full
reestablishment of Christian unity. Given that
the 1700th anniversary of the first Council of
Nicaea coincides with the Jubilee year, I hope
that the celebration of the next Jubilee may
have a relevant ecumenical dimension.
Since the first Ecumenical Council was a synodal
act, and manifested synodality as a form of life
and organization of the Christian community also
at the level of the universal Church, I want to
emphasize the invitation that your Council,
together with the General Secretariat of the
Synod of Bishops, has addressed to the Bishops’
Conferences, asking them to look for ways of
listening, during the current synodal process of
the Catholic Church, also the voices of brothers
and sisters of other Confessions on issues that
challenge faith and diakonia in today’s world.
If we truly want to listen to the voice of the
Spirit, we must not fail to hear what he has
said and is saying to all those who have been
born again “of water and the Spirit” (Jn 3: 5).
To go ahead, to walk together. It is true that
theological work is very important, and we must
reflect, but we cannot wait for theologians to
agree before we embark on the path of unity.
Once a great Orthodox theologian told me that he
knew when theologians would be in agreement.
When? The day after the final judgment, he said.
But in the meantime? Journey as brothers, in
prayer together, in works of charity, in the
search for truth. Like brothers. And this
brotherhood is for all of us.
Dear friends, I encourage you to continue in
your demanding and important service, and I
accompany you with my constant proximity and
gratitude. I ask the Lord to bless you, and
please, do not forget to pray for me. Thank you.
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