Your Eminence Cardinal Walter Kasper, and beloved brothers in Christ comprising the Delegation of the Church of Rome,
It is with particular joy that we welcome you today at the historical
Center of Orthodoxy, on the occasion of our celebration of the joyous
feast of the Ecumenical Throne. Your presence here both strengthens and
seals the bonds of love and trust between our Churches, bonds which
have been cultivated in recent decades and which have been especially
established by the visit here last year of His Holiness, our most
beloved Brother in Christ Pope Benedict XVI of Rome and his fervent
participation in the Thronal Feast of the Ecumenical Patriarchate.
We are particularly moved today because, this year, we enjoy the
distinct blessing and spiritual pleasure of honoring the founder and
patron of the Church of Constantinople, the glorious and first-called
among the Apostles, Andrew, whose sacred relics were generously and
graciously permitted by the love of His Holiness to be donated to us
during our recent visit to Naples, being returned from Amalfi to the
Throne of the Patriarchate in order to remain here for the
sanctification of our faithful and as a sign of communion with the
Apostle, whom we commemorate today, as well as of fraternal unity of
Christians throughout the world.
It is with fond memories that we recall our recent meeting with His
Holiness in Naples, together with our constructive and brotherly
conversation there. This encounter contributed further to the
cultivation of an atmosphere of friendship and cooperation of our two
Churches, strengthening yet further the relations among us. We always
believe that the peaceful coexistence of Christians, in a spirit of
unity and concord, must constitute the fundamental concern of us all.
This is precisely what we confirmed and cosigned jointly with His
Holiness in the joint Declaration during his visit here last year,
urging “that we share the same emotions and the same intentions of
brotherhood, cooperation and communion in love and truth.” (Common
Declaration by Pope Benedict XVI and Patriarch Bartholomew)
In an age when, as we once again jointly emphasized last year, we
observe “the rise of secularism and relativism, or even nihilism,
especially in the western world” (Common Declaration), we must derive
inspiration from the example of the Apostle Andrew, who “endured many
trials in every land and spoke of numerous difficulties” (See the Life
of St. Andrew, according to the Synaxaristes of Constantinople), “and
yet remained upstanding through the strength of Christ and for the sake
of the faithful.”
Therefore, the feast of this Apostle provides the appropriate occasion
for us to pray together more intently for the restoration of unity
within the Christian world. The fracture of this unity has been the
cause of so much trouble in humanity, while its consequences have
proved tragic. The philosophy of the Enlightenment in the West and the
French Revolution sparked a truly cultural revolution aimed at
replacing the previous Christian tradition of the Western world with a
new, non-Christian, concept of man and society. This revolution gave
rise in many ways to the practical materialism of contemporary
societies but also to diverse forms of militant atheism and
totalitarianism which, over the last two centuries, have unfortunately
claimed the lives of millions of innocent victims. Those who remained
faithful to the Christian values were led to this new cultural
environment by means of various processes to the loss also of the
concept of mystery in God and of His living worship, which is genuinely
preserved in the East, as well as to the reduction of religious life to
a humanistic ethic by means of the relativization of doctrinal
formulations.
Today, then, it is our obligation more than ever to reclaim the
Christian roots of Europe and the spiritual, sacramental and doctrinal
unity that it enjoyed prior to the Schism of our two Churches. The
re-evangelization of our peoples is “today, more so than ever before,
timely and necessary, even within traditional Christian lands,” as we
admitted and confessed in common here exactly one year ago.
Thus, we believe that Western and Eastern Europe must cease regarding
themselves as foreign to one another. Contact among Christians of the
Latin tradition and the Orthodox faith may be rendered most productive
for both sides. The feast of the Apostle Andrew, whom we commemorate
and celebrate today, constitutes a vocation for all Christians of the
world to return to the fullness, youthfulness and purity of the
Christian tradition of the early Church. The example bequeathed to us
by the Apostle Andrew, who remained faithful to His teacher throughout
even the most grueling circumstances, preferring the Cross of Christ in
place of any other compromise, invites us to an uncompromising
resistance before the destructive consequences of the consumer culture
today, before the increasing relativization of our doctrine and faith,
before “the diverse forms of exploitation of the poor, migrants, women
and children,” as we declared again last year, as well as to “joint
action to preserve a respect for human rights in every human being
created in the image and likeness of God.” The First-Called among the
Apostles, Andrew, could have modified the demands of his preaching in
order to yield and avoid a horrible death, threatened at the time by
the Governor of Patras. Yet he preferred the eternal glory of the Lord
instead of any fleeting compromise, “considering the abuse that he
suffered for Christ to be greater wealth.” (Heb. 11.26) It is he who
today calls all Christians, and especially ecclesiastical leaders and
shepherds, “to choose rather to share ill-treatment with the people of
God than to enjoy the fleeting pleasures of sin.” (Heb. 11.26)
Today’s celebration is an invitation extended to both our Churches to
the unity of the Cross. Just as our Lord Jesus Christ stretched out His
arms upon the Cross, uniting all that was formerly divided, so also His
Apostle, in imitation of His Master, stretched out his arms, gathering
us all today and calling us to stretch out our arms upon the cross
spiritually in order to achieve the unity that we desire.
Elder Rome has the foremost St. Peter as its Apostle and Patron. New
Rome, Constantinople, has the brother of St. Peter, the first-called of
the Apostles, Andrew. Both invite us to the fraternal unity that they
shared with each other and that can only be acquired when the Cross
becomes our point of reference and experience of approach.
Let us, therefore, beseech these two brothers and greatest of Apostles
that they may grant peace to the world and lead everyone to unity, in
accordance with the particularly timely troparion today of St. Symeon
Metaphrastes, Archbishop of Thessalonika:
You, Andrew, were first-called of the Apostles;
Peter was supremely-honored among the Apostles.
Both of you endured the Cross of Christ,
Proving imitators of Your Lord and Master,
And one in mind and soul. Therefore, with Him,
As brothers, grant peace to us.
Amen.

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