Associated Press
ABOARD THE PAPAL PLANE (AP) — Pope Francis said Sunday he is ready to
go anywhere, anytime to meet with the head of the Russian Orthodox
Church — even while acknowledging that he doubts the day will ever come
that Catholic and Orthodox theologians will agree to end the 1,000-year
schism.
Francis spoke to reporters Sunday en route home from Turkey, where he
made a remarkable gesture of deference to the spiritual leader of the
world’s Orthodox Christians by bowing down to receive his blessing.
Francis also assured Turkey’s Orthodox community that the Catholic
Church wouldn’t force the Orthodox to give up their patrimony on the
path to unity.
Asked about prospects of meeting with Patriarch Kirill, head of the Russian Orthodox Church, Francis said both wanted to meet.
“I said I’ll go wherever you want — you call me and I’ll go. And he
also has the same desire,” Francis said. “But with the problems of the
war, the poor guy has so many problems, so a meeting with the pope will
have to wait. But we do want to meet. We want to go forward.”
Earlier Sunday in Istanbul, Francis and Ecumenical Patriarch
Bartholomew I issued a joint statement saying they were praying for
peace in Ukraine “while we call upon all parties involved to pursue the
path of dialogue and of respect for international law in order to bring
an end to the conflict and allow all Ukrainians to live in harmony.”
The Russian Orthodox Church has largely backed Russian President Vladimir Putin’s position on Ukraine.
The Catholic and Orthodox churches split in 1054 over differences on
the primacy of the papacy. The two churches have grown closer together
in recent decades, but long-running tensions in Russia between Orthodox
faithful and Catholics in Russia prevented Emeritus Pope Benedict XVI
and before him St. John Paul II from achieving their long-sought dreams
of a meeting with the Russian patriarch.
Francis said that Catholics and Orthodox are on a path toward unity
that must be traveled. “We’re on this path, but we must wait until the
theologians agree among themselves. We’ll never get to that day, I
assure you. I am skeptical.”
But he said individuals — not just theologians — can work for unity,
sharing their experiences, doing charity work together, praying together
and working together.
“Unity is a path, a path that we must take and one that we must take together,” he said.
Source: http://orthodoxmag.
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