(Note: This article appears on the April-May 2014 issue of World Mission magazine, for which I write. Aside from highlighting what stands to be gained during Pope Francis' trip to the Holy Land, this article is my tribute to Pope Paul VI, who will be beatified on October 19, 2014. )
Fifty years after the landmark encounter between the heads of the Catholic and Orthodox Church in Jerusalem, Pope Francis will revisit the Holy Land amid continuing tension in the Middle East and lingering roadblocks to Catholic-Orthodox dialogue.
Pope
Francis is set to make a historic pilgrimage to the Holy Land from May 24 to 26,
as an outward manifestation of his constant appeal for peace in the Middle
East, amid continuing conflict in the region, particularly in Syria. The Holy Father will visit Jordan, Israel,
and Palestine.
The
Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem, Fouad Twal, hopes that the plight of the Church
in the Holy Land, particularly the Christians living in East Jerusalem, will be
among the issues that will be addressed in the visit. East Jerusalem, which is home to some of the
holiest sites in Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, is being claimed by both
Israel and Palestine. Patriarch Twal prays that the economic agreement that
Israel and the Holy See are working out will not result in the discrimination
of Arab Christians, who are concerned that the accord will be an affirmation of
Israel’s sovereignty over the entire Jerusalem.
A Mission, a Memorial
Ecumenical Patriarch Athenagoras and Pope Paul VI |
Aside
from his call for lasting peace, the Pope is set to commemorate the 50th
anniversary of the meeting between Pope Paul VI and the Ecumenical Patriarch of
Constantinople Athenagoras in Jerusalem in January 1964. The meeting between the two Christian leaders
heralded the thawing of and significantly transformed the relations between the
Catholic and Orthodox Churches, which have been separated for a millennium. The
current Ecumenical Patriarch, Bartholomew, will meet with Francis in the holy
city during the papal visit.
In
an interview with Vatican Insider, Irish
Bishop Brian Farrell, Secretary of the Pontifical Council for Promoting
Christian Unity, describes the Pope’s trip as a “pilgrimage of prayer.” Although Farrell does not expect anything earthshaking
to come out of the meeting between Francis and Bartholomew, he nevertheless
emphasizes its importance in terms of publicly reaffirming the two Churches’
commitment to resolving differences and identifying the roadblocks towards full
communion between the Churches.
The Progress So Far
Since
the 1964 meeting between Paul and Athenagoras, much progress has been made in
terms of overcoming the prejudices and misunderstandings between the Catholic
and Orthodox Churches. For one, both
leaders lifted the mutual excommunications imposed by the Eastern and Western
Churches, which were a consequence of the Great Schism in 1054. In recent
times, the Ecumenical Patriarchate has also sent delegations to Rome for the
Feast of Saints Peter and Paul. The
Church of Rome, on the other hand, has been reciprocating this filial gesture
by sending its representatives to Turkey on the Feast of St. Andrew, patron of
the Patriarchate.
Popes
John Paul II and Benedict XVI have also visited the Ecumenical Patriarchate in
Turkey in 1979 and 2006, respectively. Meanwhile, Bartholomew made it clear
that advancing Orthodox-Catholic relations is among his priorities, by attending
Pope Francis’ installation as Bishop of Rome, the first such gesture by an
Ecumenical Patriarch since the 11th century Schism.
Most
importantly, formal dialogue between the Catholic and Orthodox Churches, which
began in 1980, continues to this day. In October 2007, the Joint International
Commission for the Theological Dialogue between the Roman Catholic Church and
the Orthodox Church, during its 10th plenary session in Ravenna,
Italy, issued what observers called a “breakthrough” document in terms of the
advancement of the ecumenical cause. In
that “Ravenna Document,” member-theologians unanimously recognized the Bishop
of Rome as the protos, the bishop of
the “first diocese,” as he used to be regarded in the Church in the first
millennium.
A Brother’s Embrace
Very
early in his papacy, Francis also underscored the importance of continuing the
dialogue
between Catholic and Orthodox Christians. In fact, the Pope’s first
words urbi et orbi (“to the city and
to the world”) upon his election as the Successor of St. Peter on 13 March
2013, hinted at his desire for unity and dialogue between estranged Christians.
In his first remarks from the balcony of St. Peter’s Basilica, the Holy Father
repeatedly referred to himself as the “Bishop of Rome.” Although many perceived this merely as
Francis’ commitment to become a more visible and active pastor of his diocese,
which his predecessors may have overlooked by exercising their office more on
the international level, some observers believe it is a signal to move the ecumenical
dialogue forward. Pope Francis went on
to say that he is the bishop of “the church of Rome, which is the one that presides
in charity over all the churches,” who begins his journey of “brotherhood, love
and trust” with his flock.
Pope Francis and Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew |
Sts. Peter and Andrew |
A
week after this, during the audience with representatives of the various
churches and religions a day after his installation to the Petrine Ministry,
Pope Francis referred to Patriarch Bartholomew as “my brother Andrew.” St.
Andrew, Bartholomew’s predecessor, was in fact St. Peter’s sibling. In the same
audience, the Holy Father renewed his call for unity among the Christian
Churches, recalling the words of Pope St. John XXIII during the “Good Pope’s”
opening address to participants of the Second Vatican Council in October 1962: "The Catholic Church considers it her duty to work actively for the fulfillment of the great mystery of that unity for which Jesus Christ prayed so earnestly to his heavenly Father on the eve of his great sacrifice; the knowledge that she is so intimately associated with that prayer is for her an occasion of ineffable peace and joy."
The Russian Resistance
Despite
the warming of relations between the two Churches, however, Bishop Farrell says
much still needs to be done. The prelate emphasizes the need for serious
dialogue, particularly regarding the fundamental questions of papal primacy and
governance, as well as the teaching authority of the Roman Catholic Church. The
Catholic Church firmly anchors its belief in the primacy and authority of
Peter, the first Pope and Bishop of Rome, over the entire Christian Church, in
the words of Jesus Himself: “You are Peter, and upon this rock I will build my church, and
the gates of the netherworld shall not prevail against it. I will give you the
keys to the kingdom of heaven. Whatever you bind on earth shall be bound
in heaven; and whatever you loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven." (Mt 16:18-19)
Russian Orthodox Patriarch Kirill |
However, the Russian
Orthodox Church, which has the largest population in the Orthodox world,
continues to dispute papal primacy.
Rejecting the “Ravenna Document,” it affirmed in a document issued on
December 2013 that the Roman Pontiff has no power whatsoever in the universal
Church, the undivided Church, except for “an honorary primacy, in love, without
legal dominion over the whole Christian Church.” Ecumenical observers fear that
this recent and continued resistance by the Russian Orthodox Church will negate
whatever progress Francis and Bartholomew will be making during their Holy Land
meeting. Meanwhile, Bartholomew sought to cushion this setback by convening all
Orthodox leaders in Constantinople in March 2014, ahead of the 2015 Synod of
all Orthodoxy.
A Renewed Hope for Unity
However, in spite of the
perceived roadblocks, the Vatican remains optimistic about the future of
Catholic-Orthodox relations. If anything, Bishop Farrell says the meeting
between Francis and Bartholomew in the Holy Land will continue to set the pace
and tone of the dialogue between the two Churches, despite a slowing down at
the Theological Commission level.
In
addition, at the start of this year, Pope Francis reaffirmed his commitment to
ecumenical dialogue by devoting the catechesis of his General Audience on 22
January 2014 to Christian unity. Describing divisions among Christians as "a source of scandal" that "weaken our witness to the Gospel," the words seemed to be a foretaste of the Pope’s mission to the
Holy Land to heal rifts, echoing the prayer of Jesus Himself for unity among
the members of the Early Christian Church : “That they may all be one. As you, Father, are in me and I
am in you, may they also be one in us so that the world may believe that you
have sent me.” (John 17:21).
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