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LWF General Secretary Pays Tribute to Dutch Cardinal Johannes Willebrands


From "Frank Imhoff" <Frank.Imhoff@elca.org>
Date Fri, 04 Aug 2006 15:37:28 -0500

LWF General Secretary Pays Tribute to Dutch Cardinal Johannes Willebrands Emeritus President of Vatican?s Ecumenical Office Dies

GENEVA, 4 August 2006 (LWI) * The General Secretary of the Lutheran World Federation (LWF) Rev. Dr Ishmael Noko, has paid tribute to the great contribution of Dutch Cardinal Johannes Willebrands to the cause of unity among the churches and with the Jewish people.

Cardinal Willebrands, emeritus-president of the Vatican?s Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity (PCPCU), died on 2 August in the Netherlands, aged 96.

In a letter of condolence to PCPCU President Walter Cardinal Kasper today, Noko expresses his appreciation and respect for "the special quality of spiritual warmth and personal commitment to the cause of unity for which Cardinal Willebrands was so well known also in the Lutheran world."

The general secretary particularly notes "the strong mutual confidence" that has been established over the years between the PCPCU, and its predecessor bodies, and the LWF. "It is clear that our current ecumenical work stands in a tradition of more than forty years to which our predecesso rs have all contributed their parts," he adds.

Johannes Willebrands was born on 4 September 1909 in the Netherlands. He was ordained into priesthood in 1934, and was named bishop in 1964. He was created a Roman Catholic Cardinal in 1969, the same year he was appointed president of the then Vatican's Secretariat for Promoting Christian Unity. He led the secretariat until his retirement in 1989, a year after Pope John Paul II renamed it the PCPCU.

The international bilateral dialogue between Lutherans and Roman Catholics led to the October 1999 landmark signing of the Joint Declaration on the Doctrine of Justification by representatives of the LWF and the PCPCU.

It is Noko's prayer that the memory of Willebrands would serve "as an inspiration for present and future ecumenists and leaders in the Church of Jesus Christ." (311 words)

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(The LWF is a global communion of Christian churches in the Lutheran tradition. Founded in 1947 in Lund, Sweden, the LWF currently has 140 member churches in 78 countries all over the world, with a total membership of 66.2 million. The LWF acts on behalf of its member churches in areas of common interest such as ecumenical and inter-faith relations, theology, humanitarian assistance, human rights, communication, and the various aspects of mission and development work. Its secretariat is located in Geneva, Switzerland.)

[Lutheran World Information (LWI) is the LWF?s information service. Unless specifically noted, material presented does not represent positions or opinions of the LWF or of its various units. Where the dateline of an article contains the notation (LWI), the material may be freely reproduced with acknowledgment.]

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