St. John Paul II, in Ut Unum Sint 12, made more explicit what Unitatis Redintegratio taught on Orthodox & Eucharist.
The Council’s Decree on Ecumenism, referring to the Orthodox Churches, went so far as to declare that “through the celebration of the Eucharist of the Lord in each of these Churches, the Church of God is built up and grows in stature”. Truth demands that all this be recognized.
That is very clear on the value of the celebration of the Eucharist, by Orthodox clergy, to the good of the Church.
With the grace of the Holy Spirit, the Lord’s disciples, inspired by love, by the power of the truth and by a sincere desire for mutual forgiveness and reconciliation, are called to re-examine together their painful past and the hurt which that past regrettably continues to provoke even today. All together, they are invited by the ever fresh power of the Gospel to acknowledge with sincere and total objectivity the mistakes made and the contingent factors at work at the origins of their deplorable divisions. What is needed is a calm, clear-sighted and truthful vision of things, a vision enlivened by divine mercy and capable of freeing people’s minds and of inspiring in everyone a renewed willingness, precisely with a view to proclaiming the Gospel to the men and women of every people and nation
Conversations, at the high level where they matter & have import for international outcomes & where they help to heal the past, must occur in the above lights recognizing what the Pope says further in Ut Unum Sint 49:
The Lord has made it possible for Christians in our day to reduce the number of matters traditionally in dispute.
This is true for those who have lived it & seen it…the fruit of international theological dialogue. One is much better there, in those discussions, than re-visiting events when, as popes and patriarchs since 1964 have said, the memory of the past is obliterated. As Pope John Paul says of these memories to be purified, it is a matter of “consigning to oblivion the excommunications of the past.”
The Pope continues in paragraph 50:
The Second Vatican Ecumenical Council wished to base dialogue on the communion which already exists, and it draws attention to the noble reality of the Churches of the East: “Therefore, this Sacred Synod urges all, but especially those who plan to devote themselves to the work of restoring the full communion that is desired between the Eastern Churches and the Catholic Church, to give due consideration to these special aspects of the origin and growth of the Churches of the East, and to the character of the relations which obtained between them and the Roman See before the separation, and to form for themselves a correct evaluation of these facts”
This means theologians in the dialogue may properly come to conclusions other than previous theologians in history determined.
52. With regard to the Church of Rome and the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople, the process which we have just mentioned began thanks to the mutual openness demonstrated by Popes John XXIII and Paul VI on the one hand, and by the Ecumenical Patriarch Athenagoras I and his successors on the other. The resulting change found its historical expression in the ecclesial act whereby “there was removed from memory and from the midst of the Church” the remembrance of the excommunications which nine hundred years before, in 1054, had become the symbol of the schism between Rome and Constantinople. That ecclesial event, so filled with ecumenical commitment, took place during the last days of the Council, on 7 December 1965. The Council thus ended with a solemn act which was at once a healing of historical memories, a mutual forgiveness, and a firm commitment to strive for communion.
The events of the past are removed…they are gone. East and West both have asked for and received forgiveness. Now it is a matter of carrying forward the healing.
The Pope chose his words very well when His Holiness said:
This gesture had been preceded by the meeting of Pope Paul VI and Patriarch Athenagoras I in Jerusalem, in January 1964, during the Pope’s pilgrimage to the Holy Land. At that time Pope Paul was also able to meet Benedictos, the Orthodox Patriarch of Jerusalem. Later, Pope Paul visited Patriarch Athenagoras at the Phanar (Istanbul), on 25 July 1967, and in October of the same year the Patriarch was solemnly received in Rome. These prayer-filled meetings mapped out the path of rapprochement between the Church of the East and the Church of the West, and of the re-establishment of the unity they shared in the first millennium.
And that is the journey that Rome, her bishop and the dicasteries of the Holy See are set upon with the Ecumenical Patriarch and the dialogue partners from Orthodoxy…regardless of what others wish or think about it or balk at it.
One of the most moving moments for me was when Pope Francis bowed to ask Patriarch Bartholomew to bless him. It was moving for Bartholomew and all who saw it. The way ahead is there. The question is how many will choose to stay behind. It will be too bad for them.