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OL EuroEast II, May 2007 - Constantinople, Turkey
"Liturgical Worship of the Eastern Church"
At the opening session of the Second Orientale Lumen EuroEast Conference held last
week in Istanbul, His All Holiness Bartholomew, Ecumenical Patriarch and Archbishop
of Constantinople, welcomed and addressed clergy and laity from several Orthodox and
Catholic Churches, gathered from two continents and eight countries.
The Orientale Lumen Conferences are part of a lay-organized and run ecumenical
movement working to achieve unity among the historic Christian churches that became
divided in the year 1054. It is the only such movement to have the blessing and
support of Eastern Orthodox, Roman Catholic, and Eastern Catholic bishops and patriarchs.
In his remarks, Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew applauded the work of the Conference,
and said: "your own presence and participation … further confirms our belief that all
of us, each from our own position in the Body of Christ, must reach out to our
fellow-Christians in an effort to obey the will and fulfill the commandment of Our
Lord, "that we [his disciples] may be one (John 17:11)""
The Patriarch emphasized the primacy of liturgy in the church: "It is in liturgy
that all aspects of Church faith and spirituality, of Church life and practice, of
pastoral ministry and canon law, derive their essential source and find their ultimate
significance."
Chairman of the Orientale Lumen Conferences, Jack Figel, noted: "It was a great moment,
to stand in Constantinople, side by side with Catholic and Orthodox, learning from each
other. The Orientale Lumen conferences are unique in the ecumenical dialogue because
they are open to the public, with clergy and laity alike fully participating, along with
church leaders and theologians."
Plenary speakers during the conference included Metropolitan Kallistos of Diokleia from
Oxford, Archimandrite Robert Taft, SJ, of the Pontifical Orientale Institute in Rome,
Father Peter Galadza of the Sheptytsky Institute in Ottawa, Father Andrew Dudchenko of
the Ukrainian Orthodox Church in Kiev, Father Paul McPartlan of the Catholic University
of America in Washington, Professor Gabriele Winkler of Tubingen University in Germany,
and Professor Richard Schneider of York University in Toronto.
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