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THE CHURCH IS ALWAYS IN A STATE OF
PENTECOST
VATICAN
CITY, 7 MAY 2008 (VIS) - In the general audience, held this morning
in St. Peter's
Square in the presence of 20,000 faithful, the Holy Father used the
occasion of the visit to Rome of His Holiness Karekin II, Supreme
Patriarch and Catholicos of all Armenians, to focus his remarks on
ecumenical dialogue. The Patriarch, who was present at the audience,
also made a brief address in which he reflected on the same theme,
also dwelling upon the history of the Armenian people.
Greeting the Patriarch in English, Benedict XVI referred to the
statue of St. Gregory the Illuminator, founder of the Armenian
Church, which is located in a niche of the Vatican Basilica and
"serves to remind us of the severe persecutions suffered by Armenian
Christians, especially during the last century.
Armenia's many martyrs are a sign of
the power of the Holy Spirit working in times of darkness, and a
pledge of hope for Christians everywhere".
The
Patriarch's presence, said the Pope, "revives our hope for the full
unity of all Christians", and he noted the well-known "commitment of
the Armenian
Apostolic
Church
to ecumenical dialogue".
"These days of preparation that immediately precede the Solemnity of
Pentecost stimulate us to renew our hope in the help of the Holy
Spirit to advance along the path of ecumenism. We have the certainty
that the Lord Jesus never abandons us in our search for unity,
because His Spirit is tirelessly at work to support the efforts we
make to overcome all forms of division".
Benedict XVI went on: The Holy Spirit is "a power for the
forgiveness of sins, for the renewal of our hearts and our lives. It
renews the earth and creates unity where before there was division".
When it descended upon the Apostles they spoke in tongues, a sign
that "the Babylonian dispersion, fruit of the pride which divides
mankind, was overcome in the Spirit, which is charity and gives us
unity in diversity".
"Since the first moment of her existence the Church, thanks to the
power of the Holy Spirit, has spoken in all tongues and lived in all
cultures. She destroys nothing of their history and gifts, but
assumes them all in a great and new unity, which reconciles unity
with the multiplicity of forms. With its power, the Holy Spirit ...
unites divided man in divine charity and thus creates ... the great
community which is the Church in all the world".
Pope Benedict then went on to highlight how "the Church is
always, so to say, in a state of Pentecost. Gathered in the Cenacle,
she prays incessantly to obtain ever new effusions of the gifts of
the Holy Spirit, ... and is not afraid to announce the Gospel to the
furthest confines of the earth. This is why, faced with difficulties
and divisions, Christians cannot resign themselves or give way to
discouragement.
"This is what Christ asks of Christians: to persevere in prayer in
order to keep alive the flame of faith, hope and charity, and the
longing for full unity", the Pope added. He then went on to mention
his recent apostolic trip to the
United States during which he had
made reference "to the centrality of prayer in the ecumenical
movement. In this period of globalisation and, at the same time, of
fragmentation, 'without prayer ecumenical structures, institutions
and programs would be deprived of their heart and soul'", he
said.
Finally, the Holy Father quoted
St. Paul's Letter to the Galatians where it is
written that "the fruit of the spirit is love, joy, peace, patience,
kindness, generosity, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control.
Today", he concluded, "we too invoke these gifts of the Spirit for
all Christians, so that in the joint and generous service of the
Gospel they may be a sign in the world of God's love for humanity".
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