| The Holy Father:
It is a great pleasure to welcome you here on this your first
visit to the Apostolic See as Archbishop of Canterbury. You continue
a tradition which began just before the Second Vatican Council,
with the visit of Archbishop Geoffrey Fisher, and you are the
fourth Archbishop of Canterbury whom I have had the pleasure of
welcoming during my Pontificate. I also vividly recall my own
visit to Canterbury in 1982, and the moving experience of praying
at the tomb of Saint Thomas Becket with Archbishop Robert Runcie.
The four centuries following the sad division between us, during
which time there was little or no contact between our predecessors,
have given way to a pattern of grace-filled meetings between the
Bishop of Rome, the Successor of Peter, and the Archbishop of
Canterbury. These encounters have sought to renew the links between
the See of Canterbury and the Apostolic See which have their origins
in the sending by Pope Gregory the Great of Saint Augustine, the
first Archbishop of Canterbury, to the Anglo-Saxon Kingdoms in
the late sixth century. In our own day, these meetings have also
given expression to our anticipation of the full communion which
the Holy Spirit desires for us and asks of us.
As we give thanks for the progress that has already been made
we must also recognize that new and serious difficulties have
arisen on the path to unity. These difficulties are not all of
a merely disciplinary nature; some extend to essential matters
of faith and morals. In light of this, we must reaffirm our obligation
to listen attentively and honestly to the voice of Christ as it
comes to us through the Gospel and the Church’s Apostolic
Tradition. Faced with the increasing secularism of today’s
world, the Church must ensure that the deposit of faith is proclaimed
in its integrity and preserved from erroneous and misguided interpretations.
When our theological dialogue began, our predecessors Pope Paul
VI and Archbishop Michael Ramsey could not have known the exact
route or duration of the path to full communion, but they knew
that it would require patience and perseverance, and that it would
come only as a gift of the Holy Spirit. The dialogue they initiated
was to be "founded on the Gospels and on the ancient common
traditions"; it was to be coupled with the fostering of collaboration
which would "lead to a greater understanding and a deeper
charity"; and the hope was expressed that with progress towards
unity there might be "a strengthening of peace in the world,
the peace that only He can grant Who gives ‘the peace that
passeth all understanding’" (Common Declaration, 1996).
We must persevere in building on the work already achieved by
the Anglican-Roman Catholic International Commission (ARCIC) and
on the initiatives of the recently established joint Commission
for Unity and Mission (IARCCUM). The world needs the witness of
our unity, rooted in our common love for and obedience to Christ
and his Gospel. It is fidelity to Christ which compels us to continue
to search for full visible unity and to find appropriate ways
of engaging, whenever possible, in common witness and mission.
I take heart that you have wished to pay a visit to me so early
in your ministry as Archbishop of Canterbury. We share a desire
to deepen our communion. I pray for a renewed outpouring of the
Holy Spirit upon you and your loved ones, upon those who have
travelled here with you, and upon all the members of the Anglican
Communion. May God keep you safe, watch over you always, and guide
you in the exercise of your lofty responsibilities. On this feast
of Saint Francis of Assisi, an apostle of peace and reconciliation,
let us pray together that the Lord will make us instruments of
His peace. Where there is injury, may we bring pardon; where there
is hatred may we sow love; where there is despair, may our humble
search for unity bring hope. |