Vatican City, 2014 (VIS) – “Our
meeting is marked by the suffering we share on account of the wars
that beset various regions of the Middle East and in particular for
the violence suffered by Christians and members of other religious
minorities, especially in Iraq and Syria”, said Pope Francis this
morning, as he received in audience His Holiness Mar Dinka IV,
Catholicos Patriarch of the Assyrian Church of the East. “When we
think of their suffering, it is natural to overcome the distinctions
of rite or confession; in them there is the body of Christ that,
still today, is injured, beaten and humiliated. There are no
religious, political or economic factors that can justify what is
happening to hundreds of thousands of innocent men, women, and
children. We are deeply united in our prayers for intercession and in
charity towards these suffering members of the body of Christ”.
“Your visit is another step along the
path of an increasing closeness and spiritual communion between us,
after the bitter misunderstandings of previous centuries”,
continued the bishop of Rome. Twenty years ago, the joint
Christological declaration you signed along with my predecessor, the
Pope St. John Paul II, was a milestone in our path to full communion.
In this declaration we acknowledged that we confess the sole faith of
the apostles, faith in the divinity and humanity of Our Lord Jesus
Christ, united in a single person, without confusion or alteration,
without division or separation.
Finally, the Pope referred to the work
of the Joint Commission for Theological Dialogue between the Catholic
Church and the Assyrian Church of the East, which he accompanies with
prayer “so that the blessed day may come in which we are able to
celebrate at the same altar the sacrifice of praise, that will make
us one in Christ. … What unites us is far greater than what
divides, and for this reason we feel urged by the Spirit to share
from now the spiritual treasures of our ecclesial traditions, to
live, like true brothers, sharing the gifts that the Lord does not
cease to give to our Churches, as a sign of His goodness and mercy”.