24.
Papal Journeys have become an important element in the work of
implementing the Second Vatican Council. Begun by John XXIII on the eve of the
Council with a memorable pilgrimage to Loreto and Assisi (1962), they notably
increased under Paul VI who, after first visiting the Holy Land (1964),
undertook nine other great apostolic journeys which brought him into direct
contact with the peoples of the different continents.
The current Pontificate has widened this
programme of travels even further, starting with Mexico, on the occasion of the
Third General Conference of the Latin American Episcopate held in Puebla in
1979. In that same year, there was also the trip to Poland for the Jubilee of the
nine hundredth anniversary of the death of Saint Stanislaus, Bishop and Martyr.
The successive stages of these travels are
well known. Papal journeys have become a regular occurrence, taking in the
particular Churches in every continent and showing concern for the
development of ecumenical relationships with Christians of various
denominations. Particularly important in this regard were the visits to Turkey
(1979), Germany (1980), England, Scotland and Wales (1982), Switzerland (1984),
the Scandinavian countries (1989), and most recently the Baltic countries
(1993).
At present, it is my fervent wish to visit
Sarajevo in Bosnia-Hercegovina and the Middle East: Lebanon, Jerusalem and the
Holy Land. It would be very significant if in the Year 2000 it were possible to
visit the places on the road taken by the People of God of the Old Covenant,
starting from the places associated with Abraham and Moses, through Egypt
and Mount Sinai, as far as Damascus, the city which witnessed the conversion of
Saint Paul.
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