ECUMENICAL PATRIARCHATE

icon

Exarchate of Parishes of Russian
Tradition in Western Europe

EPISCOPAL VICARIATE OF GREAT BRITAIN AND IRELAND
   welcome to exarchate-uk.org

Year of Saint Paul
28 June 2008– 29 June 2009

"Bring us back together again, from all our divisions."
Benedict XVI's prayer for Christian unity marked the opening of the Pauline Year on 28 June

Opening in Rome by Pope and Patriarch

Pope Benedict XVI has announced a special jubilee year dedicated to St. Paul, saying the Church needs modern Christians who will imitate the apostle's missionary energy and spirit of sacrifice. This Pauline year will mark symbolically the 2,000th anniversary of the saint's birth.

He made the announcement while presiding over a vespers service in the crowded Basilica of St. Paul without-the-Walls in Rome on June 28, the eve of the feast of Sts. Peter and Paul, patron saints of Rome. Before entering the basilica of St Paul's Outside the Walls, the Pope, accompanied by representatives of other Churches, had walked in procession around the four-sided portico of the basilica: next to the Pauline Door, Benedict XVI lit the first candle of the brazier that will remain lit for the entire Pauline Year.  After him, the gesture was repeated by the Ecumenical Patriarch and representatives of other Churches.

The Pauline year will feature numerous special liturgies and events in Rome, but will also be celebrated in local churches and in sanctuaries, religious orders and other institutions that have a special link to St. Paul.

Ecumenical significance

The Patriarch and the PopeIn a special way, the Pauline year will be ecumenical, reflecting the saint's commitment to the unity and harmony among all Christians.

Seated near the altar were representatives of other Christian Churches, in particular a delegation from the Orthodox Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople. The Pope greeted them warmly, reiterating their "common commitment to do everything possible to hasten the time of full communion between the Christian East and West." The desire for unity was also expressed in the words spoken by Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew.

With them, as a concrete image of the journey of ecumenism, were representatives of the Patriarchs of other Eastern Churches, including that of Russia, and of the Archbishop of Canterbury and of other Christian churches and communities.

Proclamation in Damascus by Patriarch Ignatius

In conjunction with the celebrations of the Church in Rome, the Pauline Year was inaugurated today in Damascus as well - this city of the apostle's conversion - being proclaimed, in the name of all the Christian communities (Orthodox, Catholic and Protestant) of the city, by the Greek Orthodox Patriarch of Antioch, Ignatius IV (Hazim), while the Melkite Greek Catholic Patriarch of Antioch, Gregorios III (Laham), was in Rome at the basilica of St Paul. 

In Turkey, the modern-day location of Tarsus, the city of St Paul's birth, the Year was opened a few days in advance, on the 22nd.  In Tarsus, as of today, there are officially no Christians or churches.  For this year, permission has been requested for the use of the old church of St Paul, officially a museum, as well as many other churches in Turkey.

Sources: Asia News, Zenit, Anno Paolino Org and others

The Pope's greeting to Patriarch Bartholomew

Brothers and Sisters,

The great feast of Saints Peter and Paul -- patrons of this Church of Rome and, together with the other apostles, pillars of the one, holy, Catholic and apostolic Church -- brings to us every year the welcome presence of a fraternal delegation of the Church of Constantinople which, this year, because of the opening of the "Pauline Year," is led by the Patriarch himself, His Holiness Bartholomew I. I address my cordial greeting to him as I express my joy of once again having the happy opportunity of exchanging the kiss of peace with him in the common hope of seeing the coming of the day of unitatis redintegratio - the day of full communion between us.

I also greet the members of the patriarchal delegation, the representatives of the Churches and ecclesial communities, who honour us with their presence, offering with this presence a sign of the will to intensify the movement toward the full unity of the disciples of Christ. We dispose ourselves now to listen to the reflections of His Holiness the Ecumenical Patriarch, words that we desire to receive with an open heart because they come from our dearly beloved brother in the Lord.

 

The Patriarch's Homily for the Feast of Sts Peter and Paul

Your Holiness,

Having again experienced, in November 2006, the joy and emotion of the personal and blessed participation of Your Holiness in the patronal feast of Constantinople, the commemoration of the St. Andrew the Apostle, the First Called, I set out "with a joyous step" from Phanar in the New Rome, to come to you to participate in your joy in the patronal feast of Old Rome. And we have come to you "with the fullness of the blessing of the Gospel of Christ" (Romans 15:29), returning the honour and love, celebrating with our beloved brother in the land of the West, "the certain and inspired heralds, the coryphaei of the disciples of the Lord," the holy apostles Peter, brother of Andrew, and Paul -- these two great, central pillars of the whole Church stretched out toward heaven, which, in this historic city, also offered the ultimate shining confession of Christ and gave their souls to the Lord here through martyrdom, one on the cross and the other by the sword, and thus sanctified this city.

We greet, with the deepest and most devoted love, on the part of the Most Holy Church of Constantinople and her children throughout the world, You Holiness, desired brother, wishing from the heart "those who live in Rome beloved of God" (Romans 1:7), good health, peace, prosperity and progress day and night toward salvation "fervent in spirit, serving the Lord, joyful in hope, strong in tribulation, steadfast in prayer" (Romans 12:11-12).

In both Churches, Your Holiness, we duly honor and greatly venerate Peter -- he who made his salvific confession of the divinity of Christ, as much as Paul -- the vessel of election, who proclaimed this confession and faith to the ends of the universe in the midst of the most unimaginable difficulties and dangers. Since the year of salvation 258 we have celebrated their memory in the West and in the East on June 29. In the East we also prepare for this feast by a fast observed in their honor on the preceding days, following a tradition of the ancient Church. To strongly emphasize their equal importance, but also their weight in the Church and her regenerative and salvific work through the centuries, the East honors them in an icon in which they either hold a little ship in their hands, which symbolizes the Church, or they embrace and exchange the kiss in Christ.

It is indeed this kiss that we have come to exchange with you, Your Holiness, emphasizing the ardent desire and love in Christ, things which are closely related to each other. The theological dialogue between our Churches "in faith, truth and love," thanks to divine help, goes forward despite the considerable difficulties that exist and the well-known problems. We truly desire and fervently pray that these difficulties will be overcome and that the problems will disappear as soon as possible so that we may reach the desired final goal for the glory of God.

We know well that this is your desire too, as we also are certain that Your Holiness will neglect nothing, personally working, together with your illustrious collaborators, through a perfect smoothing of the way, toward a positive fulfilment of the labours of dialogue, God willing.

Your Holiness, we too have proclaimed the year 2008 "Year of the Apostle Paul" on the 2,000th. anniversary of the great apostle's birth. In regard to the events of the anniversary celebration, in which we have also venerated the precise place of the St. Paul's martyrdom, we are planning, among others things, a sacred pilgrimage to some of the monuments of the apostolic activity of the apostle in the East: Ephesus, Perga, and other cities in Asia Minor, but also Rhodes and Crete, the places called "good ports." Be assured, Your Holiness, that on this sacred journey, you too will be present, walking with us in spirit, and that in each place we will offer up an ardent prayer for you and our brothers of the venerable Roman Catholic Church, fervently asking the divine Paul's intercession with the Lord for you.

And now, venerating the sufferings and the cross of Peter and embracing Paul's chains and stigmata, honouring the confession and martyrdom and the venerable death of both for the name of the Lord, which truly leads to Life, we glorify the Thrice-Holy God and we supplicate him, so that through the intercession of Saints Peter and Paul, who are his Protocoryphaei and Aostles, he will, here below, grant us and all his children of the Orthodox and the Roman Catholic Church throughout the world "union of faith and communion in the Spirit" in the "bond of peace" and there above eternal life and great mercy. Amen.

 

Translation by Joseph G. Trabbic - by ZENIT

The Pope and the Patriarch at the VaticanWebsites on the Pauline Year

http://www.paulineyear.org/default.asp

Saint Paul-without-the-Walls http://www.annopaolino.org/index.asp?lang=eng
http://www.catholicnews.com/data/stories/cns/0703717.htm
Asia News http://www.asianews.it/index.php?l=en&art=12631
http://www.pontificalorientalinstitute.com/news/world-news-of-the-eastern-church/patriarch-homily-for-feast-of-sts-peter-and-paul.html

This following is from a French language website, one of many: http://eucharistiemisericor.free.fr/index.php?page=2906082_st_paul

Report by Valerie Chamberlain

 Message of the Primates of the Orthodox Churches October 2008