By Pastor Hal Mayer on Sep 01, 2014 11:00 am
Pope
Francis sent a message to the Waldensian-Methodist annual synod held
24-29 August 2014 in Torre Pellice, Italy. The Vatican Secretary of
State Cardinal Pietro Parolin signed the telegram on behalf of the pope.
The letter offered the Waldenses the pope’s “fraternal greeting” and
assured the synod delegates of his spiritual closeness during their
discussions.
In
language that would have deeply offended the Waldenses persecuted by
the Catholic Church in the 11th to the 13th centuries, the message said
that the pope, “prays that the Lord, through the intercession of the
Virgin Mary, grant to all Christians progress on the path towards full
communion, to witness to the Lord Jesus Christ and to offer the light
and strength of His Gospel to the men and women of our time.”
The
Waldensian Church historically refused to accept the papal teaching on
the Virgin Mary, and would certainly not have seen her as co-redemptrix
of Christ and co-mediatrix with Christ. The Waldensian church should
repudiate such a message with historical piety. But that probably didn’t
happen in this ecumenical age.
Pope
Francis has been reaching out to many Protestant and charismatic groups
in the hopes that they will seek full communion with Rome. Full
communion involves Rome’s sacraments including the mass, which was
especially odious and abominable to these ancient Christians.
The
Waldensian church has 50,000 members including 15,000 in Argentina and
Uruguay and a few scattered elsewhere around the world.
Will
the Sunday-keeping Waldenses eventually fall for the ecumenical appeal
of Pope Francis? It remains to be seen. But the Bible says that all that
dwell upon the earth will worship the beast. That includes the
Waldenses if they do not follow its principles in their worship.
Source References
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Pope sends telegram to Methodist-Waldensian synod
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Pope Francis Sends Message to Methodist-Waldensian Synod
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The Synod of the Waldensian and Methodist Churches opens in Torre Pellice
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