As they bring to a close their solemn meeting which they are
deeply convinced has been of particular significance for the ongoing
relations between the Catholic Church and the Armenian Apostolic Church, His
Holiness John Paul II, Bishop of Rome and Pope of the Catholic Church, and His
Holiness Karekin I, Supreme Patriarch and Catholicos of all Armenians, give
humble thanks to the Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ who has enabled them to meet
in His love for prayer together, for a fruitful discussion of their common
desire to search out a more perfect unity in the Holy Spirit, and for an
exchange of views about how their Churches may give a more effective witness to the
Gospel in a world approaching a new millennium in the history of salvation.
Pope
John Paul II and Catholicos Karekin I recognize the deep spiritual communion
which already unites them and the Bishops, clergy and lay faithful of their
Churches. It is a communion which finds its roots in the common faith in the
Holy and life-giving Trinity proclaimed by the Apostles and transmitted down
the centuries by the many Fathers and Doctors of the Church and the Bishops,
priests, and martyrs who have followed them. They rejoice in the fact that
recent developments of ecumenical relations and theological discussions carried
out in the spirit of Christian love and fellowship have dispelled many
misunderstandings inherited from the controversies and dissensions of the past.
Such dialogues and encounters have prepared a healthy situation of mutual
understanding and recovery of the deeper spiritual communion based on the common
faith in the Holy Trinity that they have been given through the Gospel of Christ
and in the Holy Tradition of the Church.
They particularly welcome the great
advance that their Churches have registered in their common search for unity in
Christ, the Word of God made flesh. Perfect God as to His divinity, perfect man
as to His humanity, His divinity is united to His humanity in the Person of the
Only-begotten Son of God, in a union which is real, perfect, without confusion,
without alteration, without division, without any form of separation.
The
reality of this common faith in Jesus Christ and in the same succession of
apostolic ministry has at times been obscured or ignored. Linguistic, cultural
and political factors have immensely contributed towards the theological
divergences that have found expression in their terminology of formulating their
doctrines. His Holiness John Paul II and His Holiness Karekin I have expressed
their determined conviction that because of the fundamental common faith in
God and in Jesus Christ, the controversies and unhappy divisions which
sometimes have followed upon the divergent ways in expressing it, as a result of
the present declaration, should not continue to influence the life and witness
of the Church today. They humbly declare before God their sorrow for these
controversies and dissensions and their determination to remove from the mind
and memory of their Churches the bitterness, mutual recriminations and even
hatred which have sometimes manifested themselves in the past, and may even
today cast a shadow over the truly fraternal and genuinely Christian relations
between leaders and the faithful of both Churches, especially as these have developed in recent times.
The communion already existing between the two Churches
and the hope for and commitment to recovery of full communion between them
should become factors of motivation for further contact, more regular and
substantial dialogue, leading to a greater degree of mutual understanding and
recovery of the communality of their faith and service.
Pope John Paul II and Catholicos Karekin I give their blessing and pastoral support to the further development of existing contacts and to new manifestations of that dialogue of
charity between their respective pastors and faithful which will bear fruit in
the fields of common action on the pastoral, catechetical, social and
intellectual levels.
Such a dialogue is particularly imperative in these present
times when the Churches are faced with new challenges to their witness to the
Gospel of Jesus Christ arising out of the rapidly changing situations in the
modern world so deeply affected by an extreme secularistic and secularizing
pace of life and culture. It requires closer collaboration, mutual confidence
and a greater degree of concern for common action. It presumes and requires an
attitude of service which is not self-seeking and which is characterized by a
mutual respect for the fidelity of the faithful to their own Churches and
Christian traditions.
They appeal to their clergy and laity to carry out more
actively and effectively their full co-operation in all fields of diaconia, and
to become agents of reconciliation, peace and justice, struggling for the true
recognition of human rights and dedicating themselves to the support of all
those who are suffering and are in spiritual and material need throughout the
world.
John Paul II and Karekin I express a particular pastoral concern for the
Armenian people, both those living in their historic motherland where freedom and
independence were once more recovered and re-established recently through the creation of
the new Independent State of Armenia, those living in Nagorno Karabagh in need
of permanent peace, and those who live in a state of world -wide diaspora. Amid
upheavels and tragedies, especially during this century, these people have
remained faithful to the apostolic faith, the faith of martyrs and confessors,
the faith of millions of unnamed believers for whom Jesus Christ, the Son of God
incarnate and Saviour of the world, has been the foundation of their hope, and
whose Spirit has guided them across the centuries. As they approach the 17th
centenary of the official establishment of the Church in Armenia, may they
receive the special blessings of the Triune God for peace with justice and for a
renewed dedication to witnessing faithfully to the Lord Jesus Christ.
Rome, 13
December 1996.
©
Copyright 1996 - Libreria Editrice Vaticana