Icon of Kazan is
Symbol of Christian Unity, Says Pope
VATICAN CITY, AUG. 30, 2004 (Zenit) - The Icon of the Mother of God of
Kazan is a symbol of unity between East and West, said John Paul II in
a message sent to the Orthodox patriarch. Cardinal Walter Kasper,
President of the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity,
delivered the Pope’s message and the icon to the Patriarch Alexy II on
Saturday morning in the Kremlin's Cathedral of the Dormition.
"During the long years of her pilgrimage the Mother of God in her
sacred icon...has gathered about her the Orthodox faithful and their
Catholic brethren from other parts of the world, who have fervently
prayed for the Church and the people whom she has protected down the
centuries," the Pope said in his message.
The
Holy Father also said that "Divine Providence made it possible for the
people and the Church in Russia to recover their freedom and for the
wall separating Eastern Europe from Western Europe to fall." "Despite
the division which sadly still persists between Christians, this
sacred Icon appears as a symbol of the unity of the followers of the
only-begotten Son of God, the one to whom she herself leads us," John
Paul II noted.
This
was the intention for which the Pope prayed before the icon, which he
kept in his private apartment in the Vatican, “asking that the day may
come when we will all be united and able to proclaim to the world,
with one voice and in visible communion, the salvation of our one Lord
and his triumph over the evil and impious forces which seek to damage
our faith and our witness of unity.”
United in prayer to the Russian Orthodox Church and all the people of
the country when returning the icon, the Holy Father prayed "that this
venerable image will lead us on the path of the Gospel in the
footsteps of Christ, protecting the people to whom she now returns and
the whole of humanity."
"May
the Holy Mother of God turn her gaze toward the men and women of our
time," he continued. John Paul II concluded his prayer by asking the
Virgin to "help believers not to stray from the path which God has set
before them: the proclamation of Jesus Christ, the way, and the truth
and the life, and a courageous testimony to their faith before society
and before all the nations."
(Source: Zenit.org)
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