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PASTORAL VISIT TO GREAT BRITAIN
ECCUMENICAL CELEBRATION IN CANTERBURY CATHEDRAL
HOMILY OF JOHN PAUL II
Saturday, 29 May 1982
1. The passages which
Archbishop Runcie and I have just read are taken from the Gospel according to
John and contain the words of our Lord Jesus Christ on the eve of his Passion.
While he was at supper with his disciples, he prayed: “that they may all be
one; even as thou, Father, art in me, and I in thee, that they also may be
in us, so that the world may believe that thou hast sent me” (Io. 17,
21).
These words are marked in a particular
way by the Paschal Mystery of our Saviour, by his Passion, death and
Resurrection. Though pronounced once only, they endure throughout all
generations. Christ prays unceasingly for the unity of his Church, because
he loves her with the same love with which he loved the apostles and disciples
who were with him at the Last Supper. “I do not pray for these only, but also
for those who believe in me through their word” (Ibid. 17, 20). Christ
reveals a divine perspective in which the Father and the Son and the Holy
Spirit are present. Present also is the most profound mystery of the Church: the
unity in love which exists between the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit
penetrates to the heart of the people whom God has chosen to be his own, and is
the source of their unity.
Christ’s words resound in a special way
today in this hallowed Cathedral which recalls the figure of the great
missionary Saint Augustine whom Pope Gregory the Great sent forth so that
through his words the sons and daughters of England might believe in Christ.
Dear brethren, all of us have become
particularly sentitive to these words of the priestly prayer of Christ. The
Church of our time is the Church which participates in a particular way in the
prayer of Christ for unity and which seeks the ways of unity, obedient to the
Spirit who speaks in the words of the Lord. We desire to be obedient,
especially today, on this historic day which centuries and generations have
awaited. We desire to be obedient to him whom Christ calls the Spirit of truth.
2. On the feast of Pentecost last
year Catholics and Anglicans joined with Orthodox and Protestants, both in Rome
and in Constantinople, in commemorating the First Council of Constantinople by
professing their common faith in the Holy Spirit, the Lord and Giver of life.
Once again on this vigil of the great feast of Pentecost, we are gathered in
prayer to implore our heavenly Father to pour out anew the Holy Spirit, the
Spirit of Christ, upon his Church. For it is the Church which, in the words of
that Council’s Creed, we profess to be the work par excellence of the Holy
Spirit when we say “we believe in one, holy, catholic and apostolic church”.
Today’s Gospel passages have called
attention in particular to two aspects of the gift of the Holy Spirit which
Jesus invoked upon his disciples: he is the Spirit of truth and the Spirit of
unity. On the first Pentecost day, the Holy Spirit descended on that small
band of disciples to confirm them in the truth of God’s salvation of the world
through the death and Resurrection of his Son, and to unite them into the one
Body of Christ, which is the Church. Thus we know that when we pray “that all
may be one” as Jesus and his Father are one, it is precisely in order that “the
world may believe” and by this faith be saved (Cfr. Io. 17, 21). For our
faith can be none other than the faith of Pentecost, the faith in which the
Apostles were confirmed by the Spirit of truth. We believe that the Risen Lord
has authority to save us from sin and the powers of darkness. We believe, too,
that we are called to “become one body, one spirit in Christ” (Prex Eucharistica
III).
3. In a few moments we shall renew our
baptismal vows together. We intend to perform this ritual, which we share in
common as Anglicans and Catholics, as a clear testimony to the one sacrament
of Baptism by which we have been joined to Christ. At the same time we are
humbly mindful that the faith of the Church to which we appeal is not without
the marks of our separation. Together we shall renew our renunciation of sin in
order to make it clear that we believe that Jesus Christ has overcome the
powerful hold of Satan upon “the world” (Io. 14, 17). We shall profess
anew our intention to turn away from all that is evil and to turn towards God
who is the author of all that is good and the source of all that is holy. As we
again make our profession of faith in the triune God - Father, Son and Holy
Spirit - we find great hope in the promise of Jesus: “The Counsellor, the Holy
Spirit, whom the Father will send in my name, he will teach you all things, and
bring to your remembrance all that I have said to you” (Ibid. 14, 26).
Christ’s promise gives us confidence in the power of this same Holy Spirit to
heal the divisions introduced into the Church in the course of the centuries
since that first Pentecost day. In this way the renewal of our baptismal vows
will become a pledge to do all in our power to cooperate with the grace of the
Holy Spirit, who alone can lead us to the day when we will profess the fullness
of our faith together.
4. We can be confident in adressing
our prayer for unity to the Holy Spirit today, for according to Christ’s
promise the Spirit, the Counsellor, will be with us for ever (Cfr. ibid.
14, 16). It was with confidence that Archbishop Fisher made bold to visit Pope
John XXIII at the time of the Second Vatican Council, and that Archbishops
Ramsey and Coggan came to visit Pope Paul VI. It is with no less confidence that
I have responded to the promptings of the Holy Spirit to be with you today at
Canterbury.
5. My dear brothers and sisters of the
Anglican Communion, “whom I love and long for” (Phil. 4, 1), how happy I
am to be able to speak directly to you today in this great Cathedral! The
building itself is an eloquent witness both to our long years of common
inheritance and to the sad years of division that followed. Beneath this
roof Saint Thomas Becket suffered martyrdom. Here too we recall Augustine and
Dunstan and Anselm and all those monks who gave such diligent service in this
church. The great events of salvation history are retold in the ancient stained
glass windows above us. And we have venerated here the manuscript of the Gospels
sent from Rome to Canterbury thirteen hundred years ago. Encouraged by the
witness of so many who have professed their faith in Jesus Christ through the
centuries - often at the cost of their own lives a sacrifice which even today is
asked of not a few, as the new chapel we shall visit reminds us - I appeal to
you in this holy place, all my fellow Christians, and especially the members of
the Church of England and the members of the Anglican Communion throughout the
world, to accept the commitment to which Archbishop Runcie and I pledge
ourselves anew before you today. This commitment is that of praying and
working for reconciliation and ecclesial unity according to the mind and heart
of our Saviour Jesus Christ.
6. On this first visit of a Pope to
Canterbury, I come to you in love - the love of Peter to whom the Lord
said, “I have prayed for you that your faith may not fail; and when you have
turned again, strengthen your brethren” (Luc. 22, 32). I come to you also
in the love of Gregory, who sent Saint Augustine to this place to give the
Lord’s flock a shepherd’s care (Cfr. 1 Petr. 5, 2). Just as every
minister of the Gospel must do, so today I echo the words of the Master: “I am
among you as one who serves” (Luc. 22, 27). With me I bring to you,
beloved brothers and sisters of the Anglican Communion, the hopes and the
desires, the prayers and good will of all who are united with the Church of
Rome, which from earliest times was said to “preside in love” (S. IGNATII
ANTIOCHENI Ad Romanos, Prooem.).
7. In a few moments Archbishop Runcie
will join me in reading a Common Declaration, in which we give
recognition to the steps we have already taken along the path of unity, and
state the plans we propose and the hopes we entertain for the next stage of our
common pilgrimage. And yet these hopes and plans will come to nothing if our
striving for unity is not rooted in our union with God; for Jesus said,
“In that day you will know that I am in my Father, and you in me, and I in you.
He who has my commandments and keeps them, he it is who loves me; and he who
loves me will be loved by my Father, and I will love him and manifest myself to
him” (Io. 14, 20-21). This love of God is poured out upon us in the
person of the Holy Spirit, the Spirit of truth and of unity. Let us open
ourselves to his powerful love, as we pray that, speaking the truth in love, we
may all grow up in every way into him who is the head, into our Lord Jesus
Christ (Cfr. Eph. 4, 15). May the dialogue we have begun lead us to the
day of full restoration of unity in faith and love.
8. On the eve of his Passion, Jesus told
his disciples: “If you love me, you will keep my commandments” (Io. 14,
15). We have felt compelled to come together here today in obedience to the
great commandment: the commandment of love. We wish to embrace it in its
entirety, to live by it completely, and to experience the power of this
commandment in conformity with the words of the Master: “I will pray the Father,
and he will give you another Counsellor, to be with you for ever, even the
Spirit of truth, whom the world cannot receive, because it neither sees him
nor knows him; you know him, for he dwells with you, and will be in you” (Ibid.
14, 16-17).
Love grows by means of truth,
and truth draws near to man by means of love. Mindful of this, I lift up to the
Lord this prayer: O Christ, may all that is part of today’s encounter be born
of the Spirit of truth and be made fruitful through love.
Behold before us: the past and the
future!
Behold before us: the desires of so many
hearts!
You, who are the Lord of history and the
Lord of human hearts, be with us! Christ Jesus, eternal Son of God, be with us!
Amen.
© Copyright 1982 - Libreria
Editrice Vaticana
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