Jerusalem (AFP) - Pope
Francis joined Orthodox Patriarch Bartholomew I in an historic joint
prayer for the Christian unity at Christianity's holiest site in
Jerusalem on Sunday.
The meeting has been billed as the main reason for the pope's three-day trip to the Middle East, which ends on Monday.
Both
leaders knelt side by side in prayer on the rough Stone of the
Anointing, where the body of Jesus was laid before burial, removing
their headgear as they did so.
Both
had to be helped to their feet by aides at the end of the prayer. The
pope is 77, Bartholomew, one of the Orthodox Chuch's most revered
figures, 74.
A choir sang a
Greek chant as they slowly walked into a joint service in the dimly-lit
church, packed with religious figures and dignitaries, and later burst
into a joyous rendition of Hallelujah.
Earlier,
the two men signed a joint pledge to pursue common dialogue, which
reaffirmed values common to the Catholic and Orthodox churches.
"Our
fraternal encounter today is a new and necessary step on the journey
towards the unity... of communion in legitimate diversity," says the
declaration which was signed in the presence of representatives of 13
Catholic and Orthodox churches in Jerusalem.
The
logo for the pope's journey is a picture of St Peter and St Andrew --
symbolising the churches of the east and west -- embracing in a boat
with a mast in the shape of a cross.
The Great Schism in 1054 split Rome and Constantinople, seat of Orthodoxy.
According
to Christian tradition, the Church of the Holy Sepulchre where the
joint service was held, was built on the site of the crucifixion, burial
and resurrection of Jesus.
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