+BARTHOLOMEW
BY THE MERCY OF GOD ARCHBISHOP OF CONSTANTINOPLE, NEW ROME
AND ECUMENICAL PATRIARCH
TO ALL THE FAITHFUL OF THE CHURCH: GRACE, PEACE, AND MERCY
FROM CHRIST OUR GLORIOUSLY RISEN SAVIOUR
Our beloved concelebrants and
devoted and God-loving children of the Church:
With profound reverence and
abundant spiritual joy the Mother Church of Constantinople together with you,
her beloved children throughout the ekumene, reverently celebrates and
commemorates today this radiant and bright Holy Sunday. "Uncreated light
has bodily risen from the tomb and as a handsome bridegroom enhances the joy of
the Resurrection.
The mystery of the glorious
Resurrection from the dead of our Lord Jesus Christ has steadfastly remained
the center of faith and worship of our Orthodox Church. The whole of our
theology of the Christian East evolves persistently around the incomprehensible
miracle of Christ's victory over death. Repeatedly the Orthodox ethos has
always been Paschal: "Praised be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus
Christ, he who in his great mercy gave us new birth; a birth unto hope which draws
its life from the Resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead; a birth to an
imperishable inheritance, incapable of fading or defilement" (1 Peter
1:3-4).
The historical event of the
Resurrection of our Lord was never perceived in Orthodox tradition as exclusively
a christological event, as a biographical incident, which in an isolated manner
refers only to the theanthropic nature of Christ. Parallel and concurrently,
his human nature, his reference to man[ s salvation, was also extolled.
Man and the world have often
tasted of the bitterness and cruelty of death. Fifty years have passed this
Pascal season since the end of World War II; a war which was the source of all
kinds of suffering and sorrow, a face to face confrontation with death. The
holocaust of the lost, the millions orphaned, the victims of genocide and
racial hatred, but also the poverty and bodily and spiritual pain, remain in
the self-awareness of humanity as a horrible memory and a sad reminder of the
inhumanity and unreasoning to which man is led when apart from God.
What more was World War II
but a consequence and result of the irrationality which oppresses the soul and
conscience and intellect and actions of man when he, rebuking the Resurrected
Lord of life, self-reliantly makes an idol of himself: "What a wretched
man I am! Who can free me from this body under the power of death?"
(Romans 7:24).
No one can save man from
death except the Theanthropic Lord who was resurrected from the dead and who
abolished "the body of death" and haw "smitten the bars of iron
asunder and broken our bonds bringing us out of darkness and the shadows of
death." From the very depths of his being mankind of all races and
generations throughout the ages has rejected death. Knowingly or unknowingly,
he turns to the values of life.
Among humankind's efforts for
sanctity of life and the establishment of peace, we especially include the
founding of the United Nations established fifty years ago. A few weeks
following the end of the Second World War this league of nations convened in
the hope for a future bereft of a bloodstained humanity. Looking to the
security of world peace and the advancement of international cooperation, this
union of nations revitalized peoples' morale and opened new horizons for
mankind so severely tested in the past.
The events which surely will
occur on the occasion of the fiftieth anniversary since the founding of this
international organization will indeed give reason and opportunity for our
re-baptism in the indestructible ideals for life, peace, justice and respect
for the human person. The celebrations of this jubilee, being far above any
contemporary frivolity and superficility, must raise serious questions as we
look to the future. A new beginning is needed in the efforts for the world community
to overcome the impasse among the nations and in general to humanize the human
being.
The founding of this
international organization unquestionably manifests and conveys the inner
desire of man towards community and fraternization. If we depend upon the
common experience of the human race, we will confirm that this desire has
profound roots in the human existence and corresponds to the very nature of the
human spirit. Created as an icon of God, man finds himself with all of his
existence within the desire of communion and love.
Beloved shepherds and
co-spiritual leaders and precious children in the Lord:
Our Holy Orthodox Church
projects and experiences this communion as an uninterrupted Paschal joy; as a
sincere mystery of love and glory. The incomprehensible miracle of the
Resurrection imbues and enlightens our ecclesiastical life. It is revived as
eucharistic participation in all of its historical vitality. The eucharistic
life as unceasing communion of true life in the Church is evidence of and points
to our victory over death. It is a profound conviction and ample proof that
"from death we have become immortal." Herein justifiably we rejoice
and give glory and thanksgiving.
Celebrating and declaring the
miracle of the Resurrection from the dead of our Lord and God and Savior Jesus
Christ, our Holy Church, through her theology, her worship and her ethos seeks
but one thing: to underscore to all of her children that the divine events are
offered in her and through her as a living communion and a historical presence
for all the faithful. With humility and obedience it is adequate that man
direct his path towards an evangelical life cultivated and revitalized only in
the Church and through the Church. In particular, let us love "the Holy
Church, instituted...in honor of God," knowing well that "the
will" of our Lord, resurrected from the dead "is the salvation of man
to which the Church has been called." Rejecting and disavowing all slander
against the Church and any soul-destructive disobedience to her, "which is
the fruit of the enemy and an obstacle to piety and a denial of the
Kingdom," let us "love peace, seek unity, cultivate love for which
God is pleased." "Let us cleanse our senses and witness the
inaccessible light of the Resurrection." "Holding our Paschal
candles, let us approach Christ who is risen from the tomb." "Let us
be glorious in splendor for the festival and let us embrace one another. Let us
say also, O brethren, to those who hate us: Let us forgive all things in the
Resurrection and so let us cry: Christ is Risen!"
May the grace and peace and
joy and the light which shattered our eternal bonds and conquered death be with
you. By His Resurrection, may we also be resurrected with Christ our true God,
and may our Patriarchal prayer and blessing be with you and all your family and
loved ones.
Glory and honor unto the ages
of ages to the Lord of life, who is risen from the dead.
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