JOHN PAUL II
ANGELUS
Sunday, 28 June 1998
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
1. We have reached the last Sunday of June, the month dedicated to
the Sacred Heart of Jesus, while in July the Church expresses with
special intensity her devotion to his Most Precious Blood.
Through these spiritual emphases, tradition invites us to fix our gaze of faith
on the mystery of God’s love, revealed in the Incarnation of the Son. Christ
offers his human and divine Heart, source of reconciliation and principle of new
life in the Holy Spirit, to today’s men and women who are immersed in a
secularized world and risk losing the centre of gravity in their lives.
On the threshold of the third millennium, the Church proclaims to
all people with renewed emphasis: Christ is the heart of the world; the paschal
mystery of his Death and Resurrection is the centre of history which, thanks to
him, is the history of salvation; his love draws every creature to himself and
makes those who believe in him one heart and one mind, spurring Christians of
every age to search for full unity.
2. At the end of a careful evaluation process, which involved the
Catholic Church and the Lutheran World Federation, we can now rejoice at an
important ecumenical achievement. I am referring to the Joint Declaration of
the Catholic Church and the Lutheran World Federation on the Doctrine of
Justification. This declaration states that, as a result of the dialogue
which began immediately after the Second Vatican Council, the Churches belonging
to the Lutheran World Federation and the Catholic Church have reached a high
degree of agreement on a point, that of justification, which has been so
disputed for centuries. Although the declaration does not solve all the
problems concerning the teaching of the doctrine of justification, it expresses
a consensus in basic truths of the doctrine of justification (cf.
“The Response of the Catholic Church to the Joint Declaration between the
Catholic Church and the Lutheran World Federation on the Doctrine of
Justification”).
I hope that this progress in the Lutheran-Catholic dialogue, a gift
of God’s Spirit of Wisdom at the end of the second millennium, will encourage
and strengthen the declared goal for which Lutherans and Catholics are striving:
the achievement of full visible unity. I thank all the Catholics and Lutherans
who have contributed to this important advance, and I ask the Lord to continue
supporting us on our way to unity.
3. Today, Italy is celebrating Papal Charities Day.
I would like to take this occasion to express my warm thanks to all who
generously help the Holy See’s activities and the works of solidarity it
promotes. May the Lord fill them with his goodness through the intercession of
the holy Apostles, Peter and Paul.
Let each of us entrust our prayer intentions to Mary, Mother of the
Church, and invoke her maternal protection.
© Copyright 1998 - Libreria Editrice Vaticana
|