25.
In preparing for the Year 2000, the
individual Churches have their own role to play, as they celebrate with
their own Jubilees significant stages in the salvation history of the various
peoples. Among these regional or local Jubilees, events of great importance
have included the millennium of the Baptism of Rus' in 1988 (11) as also the
five hundredth anniversary of the beginning of evangelization in America
(1492). Besides events of such wide-ranging impact, we may recall others which,
although not of universal importance, are no less significant: for example, the
millennium of the Baptism of Poland in 1966 and of the Baptism of Hungary in
1968, together with the six hundredth anniversary of the Baptism of Lithuania
in 1987. There will soon also be celebrated the 1500th anniversary of the
Baptism of Clovis (496), king of the Franks, and the 1400th anniversary of the
arrival of Saint Augustine in Canterbury (597), marking the beginning of the
evangelization of the Anglo-Saxon world.
As far as Asia is concerned, the Jubilee
will remind us of the Apostle Thomas, who, according to tradition, brought the
proclamation of the Gospel at the very beginning of the Christian era to India,
where missionaries from Portugal would not arrive until about the year 1500.
The current year also marks the seventh centenary of the evangelization of
China (1294), and we are preparing to commemorate the spread of missionary work
in the Philippines with the erection of the Metropolitan See of Manila (1595).
We likewise look forward to the fourth centenary of the first martyrs in Japan
(1597).
In Africa, where the first proclamation of
the Gospel also dates back to Apostolic times, together with the 1650th
anniversary of the episcopal consecration of the first Bishop of the
Ethiopians, Saint Frumentius (c. 340), and the five hundredth anniversary of
the beginning of the evangelization of Angola in the ancient Kingdom of the
Congo (1491), nations such as Cameroon, Côte d'Ivoire, the Central
African Republic, Burundi and Burkina Faso are celebrating the centenaries of
the arrival of the first missionaries in their respective territories. Other
African nations have recently celebrated such centenaries.
And how can we fail to mention the Eastern
Churches, whose ancient Patriarchates are so closely linked to the apostolic
heritage and whose venerable theological, liturgical and spiritual traditions
constitute a tremendous wealth which is the common patrimony of the whole of
Christianity? The many jubilee celebrations in these Churches, and in the
Communities which acknowledge them as the origin of their own apostolicity,
recall the journey of Christ down the centuries, leading to the Great Jubilee
at the end of the second millennium.
Seen in this light, the whole of Christian
history appears to us as a single river, into which many tributaries pour their
waters. The Year 2000 invites us to gather with renewed fidelity and ever
deeper communion along the banks of this great river: the river of
Revelation, of Christianity and of the Church, a river which flows through
human history starting from the event which took place at Nazareth and then at
Bethlehem two thousand years ago. This is truly the "river" which
with its "streams", in the expression of the Psalm, "make glad the
city of God" (46:4).
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