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ADDRESS OF THE HOLY FATHER
POPE JOHN PAUL II
TO THE MEMBERS OF THE ANGLICAN COMMUNITY
Friday 26 April, 1988
Dear Brothers in our Lord Jesus Christ,
1. I wish to welcome you to Rome and to the Vatican and, through you, I extend
my heartfelt greetings to all the members of the Anglican Communion.
In the course of your stay in Rome you have visited many of the sacred and
historical monuments with which this city is so richly endowed. You have walked
in the steps of the earliest Christian martyrs and reflected on the lesson of
their lives and deaths. I pray that you will be strengthened and encouraged in
your own lives and service by the days spent in the City of Peter and Paul.
I am pleased you have wished to visit the Successor of Peter. I am well aware of
the work that has already been done by Anglicans and Catholics in the search for
a shared understanding of the universal service of unity which belongs to the
office of the Bishop of Rome. It is my prayer that this work will bear fruit and
help pave the way for that fullness of unity which is the will of Christ for his
followers.
2. Shortly you will be joining the other bishops of the Anglican Communion for
the Lambeth Conference. This meeting takes place at a significant moment both in
the development of the ecumenical movement and in the life of the Anglican
Communion itself. In your deliberations at Lambeth, you will deal with difficult
and delicate issues which touch on the Catholic Church as well as with our
Orthodox brothers and sisters. I pray that when you are together you will give
full weight to the importance of maintaining and strengthening the bonds of that
real though imperfect communion in which Anglicans and Catholics are united. The
deepening of this communion are fundamental to the mission that Christ gave to
his disciples. Those things that damage Catholic unity likewise weaken the
impact of Christian witness. Our divided world yearns for that vision of true
communion and deep reconciliation to which we are called to testify.
Let us be faithful to that witness so that the world may see ever more clearly
the character of the unity to which all people are called. May our very striving
for unity itself be recognized as a sign of the reconciling work of God.
My dear Brothers: I greet you once more in the Risen Lord. May he bless you and
keep you always.
© Copyright 1988 - Libreria
Editrice Vaticana
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