Vatican City, 30 April 2015 (VIS) –
This morning Pope Francis received in audience twenty members of the
Anglican-Roman Catholic International Commission, meeting in these
days in order to study the relationship between the universal Church
and the local Church, with particular reference to processes for
discussions and decision making regarding moral and ethical
questions. The Commission was created as a result of the historic
meeting in 1966 between Pope Paul VI and the Archbishop of
Canterbury, Arthur Michael Ramsey, who signed a joint declaration to
establish dialogue based on the Gospel and the common tradition in
the hope of leading to the unity in truth for which Christ prayed.
Although that goal has not yet been
reached, the Commission's visit to the Pope shows how “the shared
tradition of faith and history between Anglicans and Catholics can
inspire and sustain our efforts to overcome the obstacles to full
communion”. Furthermore, the commission will shortly publish five
jointly agreed statements from the second phase of the
Anglican-Catholic dialogue, a reminder that ecumenical relations and
dialogue are not secondary elements of the life of the Churches. “The
cause of unity is not an optional undertaking and the differences
which divide us must not be seen as inevitable”, said the Holy
Father.
“There is a strong bond that already
unites us which goes beyond all divisions”, underlined Francis. “It
is the testimony of Christians from different Churches and
traditions, victims of persecution and violence simply because of the
faith they profess. And not only now, that there are many of them; I
think also of the martyrs of Uganda, half Catholics and half
Anglicans. The blood of these martyrs will nourish a new era of
ecumenical commitment, a fervent desire to fulfil the last will and
testament of the Lord: that all may be one. The witness by these our
brothers and sisters demands that we live in harmony with the Gospel
and that we strive with determination to fulfil the Lord's will for
his Church. Today the world urgently needs the common, joyful witness
of Christians, from the defence of life and human dignity to the
promotion of justice and peace. Together let us invoke the gifts of
the Holy Spirit in order to be able to respond courageously to the
'signs of the times' which are calling all Christians to unity and
common witness”.
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