It was a special privilege for me to attend the formal publication of the green encyclical by Pope Francis on June 18, 2015. Laudato Si: On Care for our Common Home
was jointly released in the new synod hall of the Vatican by His
Eminence Peter Cardinal Turkson of the Pontifical Council for Justice
and Peace and His Eminence Metropolitan John [Zizioulas] of Pergamon, a
senior bishop and theological spokesman of the Church of Constantinople,
the Ecumenical Patriarchate
. Theologians and environmentalists, politicians and pundits have interpreted the encyclical in numerous ways, often—as Cardinal Turkson would say—reading into the text more than even the drafters envisaged. However, I would like to offer some personal insights into the ecumenical context of this important papal statement, which is not just destined for the followers of the Catholic Church and indeed not even for Christians alone.
. Theologians and environmentalists, politicians and pundits have interpreted the encyclical in numerous ways, often—as Cardinal Turkson would say—reading into the text more than even the drafters envisaged. However, I would like to offer some personal insights into the ecumenical context of this important papal statement, which is not just destined for the followers of the Catholic Church and indeed not even for Christians alone.
Communion: An Ecumenical Context
Permit
me to tell you about a lesser known aspect of the papal encyclical; to
offer a glimpse into a less obvious dimension of this document; to
provide some insight into a very important relationship: namely, the
connection between a pope and a patriarch.
Almost exactly one year
ago, Pope Francis and Patriarch Bartholomew traveled together to
Jerusalem in order to celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of the
historical visit there in 1964 by their predecessors, Paul VI and
Athenagoras.
Next December marks another milestone, namely the
fiftieth anniversary of what is known as “the lifting of the anathemas,”
namely, the eradication (by the two same prelates, Pope Paul VI and
Patriarch Athenagoras) from the memory of the Church of the tragic
excommunications that led to the unfortunate estrangement between the
Roman Catholic and Orthodox Churches—the division between the Western
and Eastern Churches known as the “great schism”—almost one thousand
years ago in 1054.
Pope Paul VI and Patriarch Athenagoras broke a
long and painful silence of ten centuries in their vision and dedication
to fulfill Christ’s final commandment and fervent prayer that His
disciples “may be one” (John 17:21). For five hundred years, the leaders
of our two churches had neither spoken to nor even communicated with
one another. When Paul and Athenagoras met in Jerusalem, it was the
first time that a Roman pontiff and an Eastern patriarch were meeting
face-to-face since the Council of Florence in 1438.
More recently,
when in March of 2013 Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew personally
attended the inaugural mass of Pope Francis in St. Peter’s Square, it
was the first time that the leader of either church had ever taken part
in such an event.
And yesterday, June 29th, marked the patronal
feast of the Church of Rome, where once again Ecumenical Patriarch
Bartholomew was officially represented at the Vatican by Metropolitan
John of Pergamon for the solemn celebration of the Feast of Saints Peter
and Paul. Above and beyond the theological dialogue that commenced in
1980 on the island of revelation, Patmos, this tradition of formal
exchanges between our two churches began in 1969.
What I would
submit to you, therefore, by way of providing further background for the
Papal Encyclical on Creation Care is that it has long been anticipated
not only from an ecological perspective, but also in the context of
ecumenical openness between two contemporary religious leaders, who are
profoundly and steadfastly committed to restoring communion between
their two churches—which Constantinople likes to characterize as “sister
churches” and Rome is fond of describing as “two lungs breathing
together.”
Compassion: An Ecological Context
If
commitment to communion is what attracts Francis and Bartholomew to a
joint witness in a world otherwise divided by political and economic
tensions, as well as by religious and racial conflicts, responsibility for compassion is undoubtedly what impels them to a shared concern for the exploitation of people and of the planet as the body of Christ.
For twenty-five years, Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew has emphasized
the spiritual dimension of the ecological crisis and even introduced
the revolutionary concept of ecological sin by way of expanding our
understanding of repentance from what we have hitherto considered an
individual wrongdoing or social transgression to a much broader,
communal, generational and even environmental abuse of God’s creation.
And since his election, the Pope assumed the name of St. Francis of
Assisi as an unmistakable indication of his priority for and sensitivity
to the marginalized, the vulnerable and the oppressed in our global
community. This is why, in his recent encyclical, he prays: “O God,
bring healing to our lives, that we may protect the world and not prey
on it. . . . Touch the hearts of those who look only for gain at the
expense of the poor of the earth.”
Preserving and Serving
What
the papal encyclical has reminded us so powerfully and permanently is
that preserving nature and serving neighbor are inseparable; they are
like two sides of the same coin.
In this regard, I believe that
it is indeed providential that these two bishops are leading their
respective churches at this critical moment in time. And it is also a
unique blessing that they relate so comfortably and confidently with
each other. There is no doubt in my mind that the favorable
reception—but at the same time I would also venture to add: the adverse
reaction to and harsh criticism—of their advancing and advocating for
the care of God’s creation is arguably the greatest testimony and
evidence that they are most definitely on the right track. For this
reason alone, they deserve our prayer and praise, while their
enlightened example and instruction deserve our attention and
promulgation.
John Chryssavgis is Archdeacon and theological advisor to Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew.
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