Pope, Orthodox Patriarch pledge to support Mideast Christians

Pope, Orthodox Patriarch pledge to support Mideast Christians

ISTANBUL
Pope, Orthodox Patriarch pledge to support Mideast Christians

Greek Orthodox Patriarch Bartholomew I (R) and Pope Francis wave on November 30, 2014 after a celebration of a divine liturgy at the Orthodox Patriarchal Church of St. George in Istanbul. AFP Photo

Pope Francis on Nov. 30 issued a strong pledge of support for the embattled Christians of the Middle East and urged an end to the millenium-old schism between the Orthodox and Catholic Churches, as he wrapped up his first visit to Turkey.
      
The trip of the pope to Istanbul has been marked by attempts to reach out both to Muslims and other Christian confessions.
      
The pope Sunday attended a divine liturgy led by Greek Orthodox Patriarch Bartholomew I, the latest sign of the warming ties between the Roman Catholic and Orthodox Churches under his papacy.
      
Bartholomew, the "first among equals" of an estimated 300 million Orthodox believers, made a joint pledge with the leader of the world's Roman Catholics to support Christians in the Middle East, saying they could not let Christianity be driven out of the region.
      
"We cannot resign ourselves to a Middle East without Christians, who have professed the name of Jesus there for two thousand years," the Church leaders said.        

Referring to the rampage of violence by Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) jihadists in Iraq and Syria, they warned that Christians in the region were being persecuted and forced from their homes.
      
They said the "terrible situation" of Christians calls "for an appropriate response on the part of the international community."      

 he two church leaders also called on the parties involved in the Ukraine conflict "to pursue the path of dialogue and of respect for international law".

Pope urges healing of Catholic, Orthodox split

                      
Pope Francis in an address at the Patriarchate also urged an end to the Orthodox and Catholic schism to bring them back into full communion, saying the conflicts in the world had made unity even more urgent.
      
"The one thing that the Catholic Church desires, and that I seek as Bishop of Rome... is communion with the Orthodox Churches."       

"How can we credibly proclaim the message of peace which comes from Christ, if there continues to be rivalry and disagreement between us?" he said.
      
Batholomew for his part said that while the road to full communion would be "perhaps lengthy and sometimes even rugged" it was irreversible.
      
He echoed the pope's comments that the violence against Christians had made this more pressing. "We no longer have the luxury of isolated action."       

The pope and Bartholomew have in the last months worked hard for a rapprochement between the eastern and western churches which have been split since the schism of 1054.
      
The reconciliation began in 1964 with the famous embrace in Jerusalem between Pope Paul VI and  Patriarch Athenagoras, the first such meeting since the 15th century.
     
Bartholomew, who commands considerable respect beyond the Orthodox Church, holds an office that dates back to the early days of the Byzantine Empire, over a millennium before the Ottoman conquest of Constantinople in 1453.
      
The Patriarchate in Istanbul remains his headquarters and the patriarch himself must under Turkish law be a citizen of the country.
      
During a prayer service on Nov. 29, the pope bowed his head and asked Bartholomew to kiss him on his brow, in a remarkable sign of humility.
                      
In another hugely symbolic moment, the pope during a visit Saturday to the Sultan Ahmet mosque -- better known abroad as the Blue Mosque -- turned towards Mecca and stood in two minutes of reflection next to a top Islamic cleric.
      
The trip has been marked by crowds far thinner than on Francis's previous visits abroad but also the heaviest security, which extended to positioning snipers on the balconies of mosque minarets.
      
Turkey's own Christian community is tiny -- just 80,000 in a country of some 75 million Muslims -- and only a small proportion of these are Catholics.
      
The pope has at times looked fatigued during a crammed three-day programme in Ankara and Istanbul but was often seen breaking into a smile at the sight of an old acquaintance.        

His trip has been less controversial than the last by a pontiff to mainly Muslim Turkey -- the visit by Pope Francis' predecessor Benedict XVI in 2006 which was overshadowed by remarks he had previously made deemed to be anti-Islamic.
      
Vaitican spokesman Federico Lombardi described the atmosphere this time as more "cordial and serene".