Be known for your love, pope tells people of Armenia

IMAGE: CNS/Paul Haring

By Cindy Wooden

GYUMRI, Armenia (CNS) — Acts of love and kindness must be a
Christian’s “calling card,” the characteristic that identifies them
more than anything, Pope Francis told Catholics in northern Armenia.

Traveling June 25 to Gyumri, a city with a significant
Catholic population and one still bearing the scars of an earthquake almost
three decades ago, Pope Francis once again praised the steadfast faith of the
Armenian people.

Thanking God for all that had been rebuilt since the 1988
earthquake, the pope also asked the region’s people to consider what they are
called to build today and, more importantly, how they are called to build it.

Celebrating the only public Mass scheduled for his three-day
visit to predominantly Orthodox Armenia, Pope Francis told thousands of people
in Gyumri’s Vartanants Square that memory, faith and merciful love must be the
foundations of their lives.

The joy that comes from encountering Christ, he said, “renews
our life, makes us free and open to surprises, ready and available for the Lord
and for others.”

The exercise of charity renews and rejuvenates the church,
he said.

“Concrete love is the Christian’s calling card; any
other way of presenting ourselves could be misleading and even unhelpful,”
he said, because Christians are called to be known by their love.

Pope Francis urged the Armenian people to continue on the
path of dialogue and respect, especially among members of the Armenian Catholic
and Armenian Apostolic churches.

During his stay in Armenia, the pope was the houseguest of
Catholicos Karekin II, the patriarch of the Armenian Apostolic Church. The
catholicos was present for the pope’s celebration of Mass, a gesture the pope
was scheduled to reciprocate the next day in Yerevan.

At the beginning of Gyumri Mass, Catholicos Karekin recalled
how, during the Soviet period, many churches in Armenia were closed or
destroyed. The Armenian Apostolic Cathedral of the Seven Holy Wounds in Gyumri
became an ecumenical place of worship with different areas of the church
hosting services for the Armenian Apostolic, Catholic and Eastern Orthodox communities.

After Mass, Pope Francis invited the catholicos to join him
in the popemobile. They toured the square, both giving the people their
blessings.

The need to overcome divisions among Christians and to work
for peace in the world was given even greater attention by Pope Francis and
Catholicos Karekin during an evening prayer service back in Yerevan.

In the capital’s Republic Square, where crowds had gathered
while the sun was still hot, the pope and patriarch processed in together,
walking side by side and blessing the people. They stopped to shake hands with Armenian
President Serzh Sargsyan.

Pope Francis told the people that he and the catholicos,
like all those committed to Christian unity, “look confidently toward the
day when by God’s help we shall be united around the altar of Christ’s
sacrifice in the fullness of eucharistic communion.”

“Let us pursue our journey with determination,” he
said. “Indeed, let us race toward our full communion!”

In working and praying for Christian unity, the pope said,
churches are not looking for “strategic advantages” or ways to
promote their own interests. “Rather, it is what Jesus requires of us and
what we ourselves must strive to attain with good will, constant effort and
consistent witness” in order to fulfill “our mission of bringing the
Gospel to the world.”

Following Christ’s example, the pope said, “we are
called to find the courage needed to abandon rigid opinions and personal
interests in the name of the love that bends low and bestows itself, in the
name of the humble love that is the blessed oil of the Christian life, the
precious spiritual balm that heals, strengthens and sanctifies.”

Together, he said, Christians must work and pray for peace,
defending the persecuted — including Christians in the Middle East — but also
promoting reconciliation.

Ending a day that began at Armenia’s genocide memorial, Pope
Francis prayed that Armenia and Turkey would embark on a new process of
reconciliation and that peace would finally come to Nagorno-Karabakh, an
enclave in Azerbaijan. The ethnic Armenian majority of Nagorno-Karabakh voted
in 1988 to unify with Armenia. Fighting ensured and continued until a
cease-fire was reached in 1994, although the enclave’s status was never fully
resolved. Sporadic fighting has occurred since, most recently in early April.

In his talk, Catholicos Karekin claimed Azerbaijan started
the latest wave of violence with military exercises on the border.

But the patriarch cast his gaze wider, welcoming refugees
from Syria and Iraq — nations that traditionally had strong Armenian Christian
communities. “With hope in God, they wait for peaceful days to arrive in
their native lands,” Catholicos Karekin said.

“May our merciful Lord cleanse the world from the tragedies
of evil and grant peace and protection,” he prayed, adding hopes that the
biblical prophecy would come true: “They shall beat their swords into
plowshares, their spears into pruning hooks, nations shall not lift up sword
against nation, neither shall they learn war any more.”

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Follow Wooden on Twitter: @Cindy_Wooden

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