St Nicholas’s relics will stay in Moscow through to July 12, after which they will be transported to St Petersburg
Veneration of St Nicholas the Wonderworker, a fragment of whose relics was delivered to Russia from Italy on Sunday, unites the Eastern Orthodox and Roman Catholic Christians, the Patriarch of Moscow and all Russia Kirill I said on Sunday as he received a group of clerics of the Roman Catholic Church and officials from the city of Bari, where St Nicholas’s relics are kept since the 11th century.
“We’re divided by the calendar reform but still are not divided by the date on which we venerate St Nicholas and the delivery of the relics from Myra in Lycia to Bari,” he said
Kirill I recalled that that the Roman Catholics remember the event on May 9 under the ‘New Style’ Gregorian calendar, while Russian Orthodox Christians, on May 9 under the ‘Old Style’ Julian calendar, which falls on May 22 in the commonly accepted Gregorian calendar.
“Historical evidence indicates Pope Urgan II, who put St Nicholas’s relics in the crypt of the Pontiffical Basilica in Bari in 1087, maintained ties with Metropolitan Ephraim II of Kiev who died in 1092,” the Patriarch said. “In a bid to restore relations with Contantinople (the center of Eastern Christianity; relationship was severed after the Great Schism of 1054) Pope Urban sent a fragment of St Nicholas’s relics to Ephraim II. After that the Kiev Metropolitan established the date for commemorating the ‘translation of St Nicholas’s relics to Bari. We think it happened in 1091 or 1932.”
Kirill I recalled the technological difficulties of the retrieval of the relics from the crypt. In this connection he thanked the Institute of Forensic and Insurance Medicine at Bari University and its Director Francesco Introne. He also thanked the Mayor of Bari, Antonio Decaro, Archbishop Francesco Cacucci of Bari-Bitono, and the pontiffical nuncio in Russia, Archbishop Celestino Migliore.
“I think our common efforts were crowned with tremendous success, as the relics are in Moscow today and tens of thousands of people are queuing up to venerate them,” His Holiness said.
“Spiritual and cultural cooperation is one of the most efficacious intstruments, with the aid of which the Churches can facilitate the elimination of hostility among nations at our difficult times when we see the escalation of conflicts and confrontations in the international arena.
St Nicholas’s relics will stay in Moscow through to July 12, after which they will be transported to St Petersburg. Over there, they will be put up for veneration at the St Prince Alexander of the Neva’s Lavra through to July 28.
From St Petersburg, the relics will return to Bari.
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