Vatican
City, 16 May 2013
(VIS) – The Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople, Bartholomew I,
is visiting Milan, on the occasion of the 1700th
anniversary of the Edict of Milan, signed by Constantine and
Licinius, respectively the emperors of the western and eastern parts
of the Roman Empire, in 313. The treaty granted freedom of worship to
Christians throughout the Roman Empire, putting an end to religious
persecution.
For
his visit, Pope Francis, yesterday afternoon, sent a message—through
Secretary of State Tarcisio Bertone, S.D.B., to Cardinal Angelo
Scola, archbishop of Milan, with greetings to the Patriarch, the
participants in the commemoration, as well as to the entire city,
“for the importance given to the memory of the historic decision
that, decreeing religious freedom for Christians, opened new paths to
the Gospel and decisively contributed to the birth of European
civilization.”
In
the text, the Holy Father expresses the desire that, “today as
then, the common witness of Christians of the East and West,
sustained by the Spirit of the Risen One, will agree to the spread of
the message of salvation in Europe and the entire world and that,
thanks to the foresight of civil authorities, the right to publicly
express one’s faith will be respected everywhere, and that the
contribution that Christianity continues to offer to culture and
society in our time will be accepted without prejudice.”
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