ADDRESS OF JOHN PAUL II TO AN ECUMENICAL DELEGATION
FROM THE LUTHERAN CHURCH IN FINLAND
Friday, 19 January 2001
Your Excellency, Dear Friends from Finland,
It is a special joy for me to welcome you to the Vatican so soon after the
conclusion of the Great Jubilee of the Year 2000. During that special time of
grace a great many people experienced a deep spiritual renewal. May the Lord
grant us to begin this new millennium with our trust firmly rooted in the saving
mystery of his death and resurrection.
I have vivid memories of the great ecumenical liturgies and gatherings which we
celebrated during the Holy Year. Among them was the solemn inauguration of the
Week of Prayer for Christian Unity, with the opening of the Holy Door at the
Basilica of Saint Paul Outside the Walls, where I welcomed with joy Bishop Ville
Riekkinen from Kuopio, together with members of the Delegation of the
Evangelical Lutheran Church of Finland present in Rome for the Feast of Saint
Henrik. There was also the Commemoration of Witnesses to the Faith at the
Colosseum, with the participation of distinguished representatives from all
corners of the Christian world. Events such as these expressed our common faith
in Jesus Christ, Lord of all times and of all peoples, "the same yesterday,
today and for ever" (Heb 13:8).
I am pleased to know that, under the leadership of the Finnish Ecumenical
Council, Christians in Finland celebrated the Great Jubilee together, with the
theme "Millennium 2000 – Year of Hope". During the year, the
celebration of the seven hundredth anniversary of Turku Cathedral, attended by
many ecumenical delegates, was an eloquent reminder of our common history. The
Jubilee was also the occasion to ensure that issues of justice for the poor and
marginalized become more central not only to Christians in Finland but to
Finnish society as a whole; and this too was an area in which Christians in your
land worked together effectively.
As we enter the Third Millennium, we are conscious of the need to commit
ourselves ever more deeply to the task of restoring full and visible unity among
all the disciples of our Lord Jesus Christ, so that the saving truth of the
Gospel may be preached more effectively to the people of Europe today. May the
Holy Spirit guide us as we renew our dedication to this task.
With happy memories of my visit to your beloved country eleven years ago, I
invoke upon you and the people of Finland the abundant blessings of Almighty
God, "to whom be glory and dominion for ever and ever. Amen" (Rev
1:6).
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