By Sala Stampa Santa Sede
1. Praising the Most Holy Trinity, Father, Son and Holy Spirit, we, Pope Francis and Catholicos Patriarch Mar Gewargis III, raise our minds and hearts in thanksgiving to the Almighty for the increasing closeness in faith and love between the Assyrian Church of the East and the Catholic Church. Our meeting today as brothers echoes the words of the blessed Apostle Paul: “Peace be to the brothers, and love with faith, from God the Father and the Lord Jesus Christ” (Eph 6:23).
1. Praising the Most Holy Trinity, Father, Son and Holy Spirit, we, Pope Francis and Catholicos Patriarch Mar Gewargis III, raise our minds and hearts in thanksgiving to the Almighty for the increasing closeness in faith and love between the Assyrian Church of the East and the Catholic Church. Our meeting today as brothers echoes the words of the blessed Apostle Paul: “Peace be to the brothers, and love with faith, from God the Father and the Lord Jesus Christ” (Eph 6:23).
2. In recent decades, our Churches have grown closer together than
they have ever been over the centuries. From the time of their first
meeting in Rome in 1984, our Predecessors of blessed memory, Pope Saint
John Paul II and Catholicos Patriarch Mar Dinkha IV, embarked on a
journey of dialogue. We are most grateful for the fruits of this
dialogue of love and truth, which confirm that a diversity of customs
and disciplines is in no way an obstacle to unity, and that certain
differences in theological expressions are often complementary rather
than conflicting. It is our prayerful hope that our theological dialogue
may help us to smooth the path to the long-awaited day when we will be
able to celebrate together the Lord’s sacrifice on the same altar. In
the meantime, we intend to move forward in mutual recognition and shared
witness to the Gospel. Our common Baptism is the solid foundation of
the real communion that already exists between us: “in one Spirit we
were all baptized into one body” (1 Cor 12:13). Walking together in trust, we seek the charity that “binds everything together in perfect harmony” (Col 3:14).
3. On our pilgrimage towards visible unity, we experience a common
suffering, arising from the dramatic situation of our Christian brothers
and sisters in the Middle East, especially in Iraq and Syria. The
significance of the Christian presence and mission in the Middle East
was once more clearly highlighted at the Day of Prayer and Reflection
held in Bari on 7 July 2018, when the Heads of Churches and Christian
communities of the Middle East gathered to pray and speak with one
another. The Good News of Jesus, crucified and risen out of love, came
from the Middle East and has won over human hearts down the centuries,
due not to worldly power but the unarmed power of the Cross. Yet for
decades now, the Middle East has been an epicentre of violence where
entire populations endure grievous trials every day. Hundreds of
thousands of innocent men, women and children suffer immensely from
violent conflicts that nothing can justify. Wars and persecutions have
increased the exodus of Christians from lands where they have lived side
by side with other religious communities since the time of the
Apostles. Without distinction of rite or confession, they suffer for
professing the name of Christ. In them, we see the Body of Christ which,
today too, is afflicted, beaten and reviled. We are profoundly united
in our prayer of intercession and in our charitable outreach to these
suffering members of Christ’s body.
4. Amid such suffering, whose immediate end we implore, we continue
to see brothers and sisters who tread the way of the cross, meekly
following in Christ’s footsteps, in union with him who reconciled us by
his cross “and thus put hostility to death in himself” (cf. Eph
2:14-16). We are grateful to these brothers and sisters of ours, who
inspire us to follow the path of Jesus in order to defeat enmity. We are
grateful to them for the witness they give to the Kingdom of God by the
fraternal relationships existing among their various communities. Just
as the blood of Christ, shed out of love, brought reconciliation and
unity, and caused the Church to flourish, so the blood of these martyrs
of our time, members of various Churches but united by their shared
suffering, is the seed of Christian unity.
5. In the face of this situation, we stand together with our
persecuted brothers and sisters, to be a voice for the voiceless.
Together we will do all we can to alleviate their suffering and help
them to find ways to start a new life. We wish to affirm yet again that
it is not possible to imagine the Middle East without Christians. This
conviction is founded not simply on religious grounds, but also on
social and cultural realities, since Christians, with other believers,
greatly contribute to the specific identity of the region: a place of
tolerance, mutual respect and acceptance. The Middle East without
Christians would no longer be the Middle East.
6. Convinced that Christians will remain in the region only if peace
is restored, we lift up our earnest prayers to Christ, the Prince of
Peace, asking for the return of that essential “fruit of justice” (cf. Is
32:17). A truce maintained by walls and displays of power will not lead
to peace, since genuine peace can only be attained and preserved
through mutual listening and dialogue. We therefore call once again upon
the International Community to implement a political solution that
recognizes the rights and duties of all parties involved. We are
convinced of the need to guarantee the rights of every person. The
primacy of law, including respect for religious freedom and equality
before the law, based on the principle of “citizenship”, regardless of
ethnic origin or religion, is a fundamental principle for the
establishment and preservation of a stable and productive coexistence
among the peoples and communities of the Middle East. Christians do not
want to be considered a “protected minority” or a tolerated group, but
full citizens whose rights are guaranteed and defended, together with
those of all other citizens.
7. Finally, we reaffirm that the more difficult the situation, the
more necessary is interreligious dialogue grounded in an attitude of
openness, truth and love. Such dialogue is also the best antidote to
extremism, which is a threat to the followers of every religion.
8. As we meet here in Rome, we pray together to the Apostles Peter
and Paul that through their intercession God may bestow his abundant
blessings on the Christians of the Middle East. We ask the Most Holy
Trinity, model of true unity in diversity, to strengthen our hearts so
that we may respond to the Lord’s call that his disciples be one in
Christ (cf. Jn 17:21). May the Almighty who has begun this good work in us bring it to completion in Christ Jesus (cf. Phil 1:6).