JUAN PABLO II
HOLY FATHER'ADDRESS AT HIS
DEPARTURE Sunday,
9 may 1999
1. As I leave this beloved land of Romania, I first of all
offer to you, Mr President, my greeting and my thanks for the
welcome you have given me. Through you I extend these sentiments to all the
beloved Romanian people whose warmth and enthusiasm I have felt as they
gathered around me these past few days.
I extend a particular greeting to His Beatitude Patriarch
Teoctist, to the Metropolitans, the Bishops and all the people of the
venerable Orthodox Church of Romania. I fraternally embrace the Bishops and
Catholic communities of the Byzantine and Latin rites, all of whom have a
place in my heart. I also extend my greetings to the other Christian
denominations and to the members of other religions in the country.
2. These have been days of deep emotion, which I have
intensely felt and which will be cherished in my heart. Let us accept the
events we shared together as a gift from God's hand, confident that they will
bear fruits of grace for Christians and for all the people of Romania. Your
country has a unique ecumenical vocation stemming from its very roots. Because
of its geographical location and long history, its culture and tradition,
Romania in a way is a house where East and West meet in natural dialogue.
The Church too breathes here with her two lungs in a
particularly visible way, as we have seen in these days. Side by side, as were
Peter, Andrew and the other Apostles gathered in prayer with the Mother of God
in the first Upper Room, we have experienced a new spiritual Pentecost. The
wind of the Holy Spirit has blown powerfully over this land and has spurred us
to be firmer in communion and bolder in proclaiming the Gospel. We have
practised the new language given to us, the language of fraternal
communion, and have tasted its sweetness and beauty, its power and
effectiveness.
3. While the door to the third millennium is about to open, we
are asked to transcend our usual confines to make the wind of Pentecost more
forcefully felt in the countries of the old continent and to the furthest ends
of the earth. Unfortunately, the threatening crash of arms seems to be
prevailing over the persuasive voice of love, and the outbreak of violence is
reopening wounds which people were struggling patiently to heal.
I renew my wish that weapons will at last be laid down so that
we can once again meet one another and engage in new and more effective
dialogues of communion and peace! Christians have an important role in
this regard, whatever their denomination. Today they are called to live and
express their brotherhood with greater boldness, so that peoples can be
encouraged, indeed, spurred to rediscover and to strenthen what they have in
common. The spiritual event we have celebrated, blessed by St Demetrius and
the holy martyrs of recent decades, is an experience to preserve and pass on,
in the hope that the new millennium opening before us will be a time of
renewed communion between the Christian Churches and the discovery of
brotherhood among peoples. This is the dream I take with me as I leave this
land so dear to me.
4. I would like to entrust this dream to you all. In
particular, I would like to entrust it to the young. Yes, to you, dear young
people of Romania! I would have liked to meet you personally; unfortunately it
was not possible. This evening I make my own the words in which Peter
announced the fulfilment of God's promise to those listening to him as the day
of Pentecost was drawing to a close: “I will pour out my Spirit upon all
flesh, and your sons and your daughters shall prophesy, and your young
men shall see visions, and your old men shall dream dreams” (Acts
2:17). In these days the Spirit is entrusting God's “dream” to you, young
people: may all men and women belong to his family; may all Christians be one.
Enter the new millennium with this dream!
You who have been freed from the nightmare of communist
dictatorship, do not let yourselves be deceived by the false and dangerous
dreams of consumerism. They also destroy the future. Jesus enables you to
dream of a new Romania, a land where East and West can meet in brotherhood.
This Romania is entrusted to your hands. Boldly build it together. The Lord is
entrusting it to you. Entrust yourselves to him, knowing that “unless the
Lord builds the house, those who build it labour in vain” (Ps 126
[127]:1).
May the Lord bless Romania; may he bless its people and may he
bless Europe!
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