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Third European Ecumenical Assembly



The light of Christ shines upon all. Hope for renewal and unity in Europe

Andrea Riccardi

Andrea RiccardiIn these days, if they do not read this assembly at Sibiu as a merely ritual event, European Christians have an excellent opportunity to look together at our continent in the world. Ten years ago at Graz it had not been long since the wall had fallen: it was the Christian assembly of a reunified Europe. It was a time of great enthusiasm! The world has changed today. The future is not as exciting. There is scepticism, here and there, even concerning this assembly: what is its use?

We are facing dramatic questions. The world asks them to us, and it compels us to look beyond ourselves: how can we renew the life of Europe? How can we progress on the path of unity? How can we be a human and evangelical presence in the world… And what will be of the world tomorrow? (Since it will certainly be less European, and less dominated by Europe). But often we limit ourselves to looking at our own country or our own community. Every community has its own problems, of course. But that is not enough. Today’s challenges can only be grasped in a broader perspective. A globalized world requires a larger vision. Not a vision focussing on the models of the globalized culture. The world needs a Christian vision, an audacious perspective, like that of the first Christian generations, who were able to be free from particularism, which is fear of the world and distrust for the power of the Gospel. At the well of Jacob, in the land of the Samaritans, Jesus told his disciples who were engaged in petty discussions: “Open your eyes and look at the fields! They are ripe for harvest” (Jn 4,36).

I want to try and open my eyes and see the fields of the world, though I am aware of the limits of my experience, as a European Christian, as a historian, as a traveller through the world’s events, lead especially by the experience of the Community of Sant’Egidio to meet with many lands of poverty. Compared with many other parts of the world, Europe is full of resources. Among them, above all, is peace, the precious heritage of sixty years of peace. In the XX Century only twenty years went by between the two world wars. Then there was war again, in 1939. In my life, as an Italian born in 1950 – and now you all know my age – I have never had to experience war in my own land. The same cannot be said for my parents and my grandparents. This is the great gift of peace.

After the abyss of World War II, Europeans finally understood how foolish it is to fight each other. How many years were stolen from women, children, and men by the foolishness of war, of unprecedented violence and slaughters! From the abyss of World War II Europeans understood: never again one against the other, always one with the other! This was the beginning of the process of European unification, which was marked also by uncertainties and reluctance. Year 1989 has erased the legacy of division of 1945. The liberation from Communism took place when an unarmed force confronted regimes founded on violence and coercion. Unfortunately, there were also wars in ex Yugoslavia. But there is peace in our continent today, peace and widespread well-being (with very high standards in some countries, and areas of more or less penetrating poverty). Peace and well-being… Peace in Europe may be considered normal by young people, but it is actually something extraordinary in our centuries of history. It is a blessing from God and a holy gift!

What should we do, then, with this heritage of peace? We are tempted to waste it, like any other inheritance: waste it in the flush of new rising nationalism. This is an anti-historical stance: most European countries, whether small or medium sized, cannot face alone the huge challenges of the world, the challenge coming from the economy and civilizations of major Asian countries, such as China or India. Nationalistic passions make people blind to reality. They stem not from the will to dominate over others, as in the past, but from the desire to live for oneself.

There are other ways to waste peace, the heritage of so many sorrows and troubles of the XX Century: making Europe a fortress, lifting up walls around its borders. If walls are built in self-defence, however, the demons of the XX Century will be back with their lot of fratricidal wars. Walls are born from fear of a increasingly bigger world, with too many protagonists, dynamic and strong. Our European history has never been that of a fortress, but a history of extroversion from our continent: Europe is bound to the Asian world, connected to Africa and to the Middle East by the Mediterranean Sea, and looking out toward the horizons of the Atlantic Ocean. A history of conquests and imperialism, with negative consequences, and a missionary history. Europe cannot become a protected fortress-like island. Europeans are tempted to withdraw from history: perhaps saying they do not want to do wrong as they did in the past. We are worried. We are no longer the ones we used to be. There is a decline: there is evidence to it in the demographical projections. The European Christians in 2025 will be less than the Christians of Africa or Latin America. But there is also a void of future visions. Often politics yield no more than the realism of financial governance. In the last decades, Europe has seen the consumption of social and political ideas, the Marxist ideology and ideas on how to change the society… Everyone has become more cautious in thinking of the future.

Thirty years ago, as a newly elected Pope, John Paul II prophetically said: “Be not afraid!”. He repeated with conviction the ancient summons of Easter. It recurs often the Bible, for fear envelops much of the history of humanity and peoples. To give up acting in the world at large and build walls does not make fear go away. It does not vanquish our civilisation’s addiction to nationalistic pride. The courage to be who we are cannot be found in identifying enemies on the horizon, waving Christianity like a banner against potential enemies, though it is often the easiest choice. We Europeans are not what we used to be, but we must not let ourselves be imprisoned by deceiving passions or hiding from history. We are not what we used to be, but what will we be? We will be what we, men and women, will be capable of living and communicating. Europe is uncertain and fearful, rich in peace and well-being. And what about us, Christians of Europe? The Word of the Lord is a lamp to our steps: listening to the Word shows us the way. Jesus tells the women at the sepulchre: “Do not be afraid, for I know that you are looking for Jesus, who was crucified” (Mt 28,6). By seeking Jesus who was crucified we are saved from fear. It is what the new martyrs did in the XX Century: martyrs in Russia (a memory that inspires respect for the Russian Christians), in the East (I think of sorrowful Albania), in Spain, under Nazism, in missions outside Europe. The search for Jesus who was crucified endowed them with a humble strength while facing an overwhelming power: a weak strength., In the XX Century, while bent on establishing new world orders, Europe has been through a time of martyrdom.

The Christians’ search for Jesus who was crucified can disquiet the culture of fear, the waste of peace, well-being and freedom. Martin Buber wisely said: “To begin with oneself: that is the only thing that matters… the lever of Archimedes with which we can lift up the world is our interior and personal transformation”. Spiritual men and women begin with themselves but they do not give up lifting up the world. The path of interior and personal transformation... lifting up the world starts from our hearts. To lift up the world from evil, from the misery that still exists in rich Europe, where the word “justice” is forgotten, from the misery of the South of the world, from widespread violence, and war… Spiritual men and women do not give up lifting up the world. The belief in a providential economic salvation is not enough to show us the way to the future. We are tired of ideologies, and an ideological form of Christianity is hardly enough for us. We need lives full of faith and love in this Europe poor of visions for the future. The Apostle Paul bears witness to the Corinthians concerning the corner stone of what being Christian means: “For Christ's love compels us, because we are convinced that one died for all, and therefore all died. And he died for all, that those who live should no longer live for themselves but for him who died for them and was raised again” (2 Cor 5, 14-15).

What we commit ourselves to and what we offer to Europe is no longer to live for ourselves. The Word of God offers us a thought that disquiets us and our European culture: that those who live should no longer live for themselves but for him who died for them and was raised again! Christians must be free from fear and insatiable avarice (whichever its reasons) that make us live for ourselves, powerless, narrow-minded and closed. Embittered by petty family quarrels, in a time rich with well-being and peace, unconcerned by those who live outside Europe with no peace and no life worthy of the name. Will we be capable of challenging the culture and praxis of countries and communities that live for themselves? Will we be capable of attracting with the joy of finally being true men and true women? The great Hebrew teacher Hillel once said: “In a place where there are no men, one must strive to be a man”. Strive to be a man, strive to be human! Then we shall drive a dent into the politically correctness of living for oneself, fortress Europe, and the selfish short-sightedness of European nations closed in themselves.

What does it mean to help Europe not to live for itself? It means to conquer the temptation of nationalism. In 1968 in his dialogue with Patriarch Athenagoras, Olivier Clement, one of the great Christians of our times, already pointed out the first steps of an undergoing process of globalisation: “On one side… the rising of a planetary man, in an increasingly world encompassing history; on the other… each people retreats into its own originality…”. And the Patriarch, the father of ecumenism in the XX Century, answered: “We Christians must feel we are in the joint of these two motions, to try and harmonise them… Churches as sisters, peoples as brothers: such should be the model we set forth and the message we give”. Not to live for oneself is to be at the joint and find a peaceful balance between globalising unification and growing particularism. The European Countries are reminded that they cannot live only of a national future: there is a process of unification that needs to progress. They are afraid of losing something today, but in the future the states of Europe will be lost if they are alone. The unification of Europe, however, is far from being mere bureaucracy or a soulless construction, devoid of passion.

Christians as brothers (which is ecumenism) must be the soul of more united European peoples. There are many people who are sceptical concerning ecumenism. There are several reasons. But unity among Christians is a commandment of the Lord. Who would dare give up the commandment of love because people still hate each other today? We need each other. Ecumenism is an exchange of gifts. As a Christian of the West, I can say how much we have received from the spreading of the icon in the West, how much we can receive in terms of liturgy and spirituality from the East. There is a profound and mysterious bond between peace and unity among Christians and peace and unity in the world. Travelling around the world, there is a question addressed to Europe. Is it not a call? Twice in the XX Century war in Europe has meant war in the world. Peace in Europe can become peace for the world. Today war is rehabilitated, in our current mentality it is an instrument to solve problems. It is accepted as the natural companion of our history. Few people – look at terrorism – are enough to make war and make many people suffer. Violence, with the diffusion of weapons, is often a companion of life in our world, which for the first time in its history, in 2007, has seen the urban population exceed the rural population. But war and violence come from evil!

The Christians of Europe are responsible for peace in the world. This mission is made feasible also by our continent’s resources. The demons of war can be defeated. Christians have a power of peace. I say this thinking of the experience of the Community of Sant’Egidio in Africa (with the accomplishment of peace in Mozambique, for instance, after war had killed one million people). Today everyone can work for peace, not only major states. With its conflicts Europe provoked two world wars, shouldn’t it be the root of peace in the world? It is up to us Christians to demand this from our governments. But it is also up to us to discover our power to free the peoples from the evil of war. War is a terrible disease, but it can be healed. If it does not want to live for itself, Europe cannot forget Africa. Even though Africa may seem distant from Romania. Its future, however, is joined to Europe. Today Africa is the land of sorrows, diseases and violence, but it is also the land where the new Chinese expansion is taking place, with its offer of capitalism and authoritarianism. Great European men indicated that Europe and Africa share a common destiny: like Albert Schweitzer, a theologian, an exegete, but also a doctor who spent most of his life for his African patients. We are worried today because 30 million people are HIV-positive, and by a vast majority they cannot be treated because of the high price of the drugs, while AIDS can be treated in the whole of Europe. This is a shameful detachment of Europe. While it fares sumptuously, Lazarus lies dying on its doorstep. He dies of diseases. He dies of hunger and due to lack of water. One billion people in our world have no access to clean water and this leads to the death of 1,800,000 children in the world every year due to intestinal diseases.

Justice cannot be absent from our prophecy. It is a word that has lost its profound biblical echo, after being overused by politics. But Jesus speaks of it in the beatitudes, with loving eyes for those who thirst for it. Justice must stir the economic policies of our countries, where there are too many poor people; it must stir the economic relations between us and with the world, with Africa. Africa must be thought of together with Europe, for it is a test for the ethics of international policies. A great Pope, forty years ago, wrote: “What must be promoted is a planetary humanism”. And he added “The world is sick. Its sickness is not so much in the waste of its resources, or the hoarding of resources in the hands of a few, as in the lack of brotherhood between men and peoples”. Europe – and it is the impulse we can give as believers – can recover its place in the world working for a planetary humanism. That is why we must be audacious, but also believers and brothers.

Western Christianity has a love story with the South of the world that needs to be rekindled. Eastern Christianity – Christianity in Russia, which runs deep into the very heart of Asia – has its love story with the East and the Middle East. Christian communities, according to their history, can be audacious and committed to give new live to brotherhood among peoples in Europe and beyond. Doesn’t Europe have the chance to be an agent of brotherhood among peoples today? And European Christians, don’t they have a responsibility to pursue this route?

The life of spiritual men and women in Europe can be a source from which much may flow: a planetary humanism, initiatives of peace and solidarity, a wise meditation on the world, capable of looking at it as the common house of all peoples and human beings. Besides, the environmental changes (which are now perceived by everyone in their effects) show that the earth is a common house. This confirms also the tragedy of the yearly levy of natural resources that exceeds by 25% today the earth’s capability to regenerate them. The fate of peoples is more and more interconnected, like in a common house: it was the profound perception of the vision of the fathers.

Since 1989, the ecumenical Patriarch wanted the 1st September, the beginning of the liturgical year, to be the feast of creation, when Christians become the voice of the creation that suffers the pains of birth. The 1st September was also the day when World War II began in 1939, when Poland was invaded by the Nazi armies and Europe fell into the abyss. We bear the sorrows of creation, of war, the mother of so many sorrows and so much poverty, in prayer and in the liturgy. From a Church that listens to the Word of God, that prays, and rebuilds a shattered unity, stems a new way of looking to the world, a sense of responsible love that becomes mission, which is no longer to live for ourselves. A humanism is born, that can stretch out to the entire planet. Europe today is no longer what it used to be; but it can be better than it was, for itself and for others.

The world can be lifted up, peoples, men and women, from the slavery of war and poverty, from the imprisonment of living for oneself, if we open our hearts to the Gospel, if we join the prayer of the Church, and we look at our brothers with love. Saint Seraphim of Sarov wisely taught: “Acquire peace in yourself and thousands around you will find salvation”. The path of the heart, the path of a love that pacifies, heals, and makes rise again, are all the same humble and strong route: the path of Christians, of a Christian people, that learns from the crucified Lord not to live for itself.

Andrea Riccardi