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United in One Church
by: Bishop Sarhad Yawsip Jammo
Having declared their intention to unite with the
Catholic Church and restore unity with the Chaldean Catholic
Church, the Bishop, clergy, and faithful of the Assyrian
Catholic Apostolic Diocese have triggered the initiation of the
process that should lead them, by the grace of God, to full
communion with the Catholic Church.
Christians, sharing with each other the fundamental
sacraments and articles of faith, most of all being baptized in
the Name of the Holy Trinity and having accepted the Lord Jesus
as their Savior, possess the solid basis for their belonging to
the Christian family; nevertheless, the Catholic Church
teaches that being in full communion with her - and thus
recognizing the primacy of the Bishop of Rome as pertaining to
the structural elements of the ecclesial ministry-belongs to the
integrity of Christian doctrine. Therefore, rapprochement
between the Catholic Church and other apostolic churches or
Christian communities is a very desired and appreciated
relationship, but it cannot be the final purpose of dialogue for
Christian unity. Full communion and
factual ecclesial unity must be the coveted result of serious
dialogue and sincere rapprochement.
Furthermore, resolving for unity is a grace from
God working in the heart of those who are yearning for the
coming of his Kingdom. It is a comforting eschatological sign in
a divided world, because it is the prevailing of brotherly love
over selfishness, of the common ecclesial heritage over
sectarianism and fragmentation; it is the end of suffocating
isolation and the breathing of fresh air from the rich garden of
the Lord. It is a true spiritual liberation.
Working for achieving church unity--for
Chaldeans & Assyrians, the Catholic among them and the
Apostolic--is a sign of hope for a better future, ecclesial and
civil. For several centuries, these sole remnants of
Mesopotamian Christianity have been dividing and subdividing
themselves; for the first time, at this critical junction of
history, a serious attempt for unity is being pursued with all
the zeal and determination of souls motivated by the Lord’s call
for Church unity and frustrated with division.
As the local Chaldean Catholic bishop, bearing pastoral
responsibility for the Chaldeans & Assyrians in my diocese of
St. Peter the Apostle in the Western United States, I am
compelled by my Episcopal duty to respond positively to the
resolution of my Assyrian brothers and sisters, and to do what
is in my competence to interact with it. It falls to me, at the
same time, to pursue the canonical process with the Holy See and
the Chaldean Patriarchate & Synod, in order to formulate and
enact a concrete model of ecclesial unity suitable for all
concerned.
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