Pope to Meet Putin; Could Help Mend Catholic-Orthodox Ties
Thursday,
07 Nov 2013 10:36 AM
VATICAN
CITY — Pope Francis will receive Russian President Vladimir Putin on Nov. 25, an
encounter that could help mend strained relations between the Vatican and the
Russian Orthodox Church.
Russian-Vatican
relations have been fraught since the 1991 breakup of the Soviet Union, with
Moscow accusing the Roman Catholic Church of trying to poach believers from the
Russian Orthodox Church, a charge the Vatican denies.
But
Putin is the first Kremlin leader since the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution to
publicly profess religious faith — to the Orthodox church — and has several
times advocated ending the long feud between the two major Christian
churches.
Putin
and the Pope will hold their first meeting on Nov. 25, a Vatican spokesman said
on Thursday.
Putin,
who also met his two immediate predecessors, could invite the Pope to visit
Russia, diplomats said.
Popes
Benedict and John Paul had standing invitations from the Russian government but
could not go because they received no matching invitation from the Orthodox
Church. Francis would need the same to go to Russia.
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Another
dispute between the churches concerns the fate of many church properties that
Soviet leader Joseph Stalin ordered confiscated from Eastern Rite Catholics, who
worship in an Orthodox liturgy but owe their allegiance to
Rome.
Stalin
gave the Catholic property to the Russian Orthodox Church, but after the fall of
communism, the Eastern Rite Catholics took back many sites, leading to a rise in
tensions.
The
Russian Orthodox Church, which has resurged since the collapse of the Soviet
Union, has some 165 million members in former Soviet republics including Russia
and other states.
Francis
is the first non-European Pope in 1,300 years. His predecessors came from
countries — Italy, Poland and Germany — that were caught up in the 20th
century's two global conflicts as well as in the Cold War that followed World
War II.
Diplomats
have said that Francis, an Argentine with no European political baggage, would
have a far better chance of improving ties with the Russian Orthodox
Church.
There
have been signs of a general warming between the western and eastern branches of
Christianity.
On
March 20, Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew became the first worldwide spiritual
leader of Orthodox Christians to attend a papal inaugural Mass since the Great
Schism split western and eastern Christianity in 1054. http://www.newsmaxworld.com/GlobalTalk/pope-catholic-putin-orthodox/2013/11/07/id/535376?ns_mail_uid=15347332&ns_mail_job=1545279_11082013&promo_code=15873-1
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