Rome's Centro Pro Unione marks 50 years of ecumenical welcome
By Philippa Hitchen
Half a century ago, in an ancient Roman building overlooking one of the city’s most famous piazzas, a new centre opened up to welcome non-Catholic pilgrims to the Eternal City.
The , as it’s now known, had already played a key role during the Second Vatican Council as an informal meeting place for theologians, bishops, journalists and the ecumenical observers who were, for the first time, invited to attend that defining moment in the life of the Catholic Church.
50 years on, under the leadership of the Franciscan Friars of the Atonement, the centre still plays an important role, bringing together ecumenists and experts from many different traditions to discuss challenges facing the Christian Churches today.
Professor Teresa Rossi is Associate director of the Centro, in charge of implementing some of the new programmes it has developed to reach out to younger generations of Catholics.
As she welcomed guests for a 50th anniversary tea on Thursday, she told us the celebration means a lot to her as ecumenism is “the great love of my life”. It also makes us reflect on “the gift of the informal encounters” that took place at the centre”. Those encounters brought an authenticity, which leads to the truth, she said, adding that the Church is on “a pilgrimage together with other friends toward authenticity and the truth – and towards unity of course!”
Authenticity, unity and truth
Thinking about the so-called “Para-Council” which took place among the ‘periti’ and experts in this room, Rossi said, “it was a novelty, an innovation”, made possible by Pope John XXIII’s invitation to the ecumenical observers. “This is the message we have to take with us”, she said, of receiving the past and bring it into the future, to respond to current challenges.
Budding ecumenism
Formation and reception are always linked, Rossi said, as she explained some of the current activities of the Centro “addressing different targets, theologians, pastoral operators, but also school children. She mentioned a project called “Budding Ecumenism”, teaching teenagers about ecumenical dialogue in the building which was once a seminary for students training for the priesthood.
Sincerity, listening and encounter
While ecumenism is not commonly known or studied, Rossi noted, it also teaches children the much needed values of “encountering the other, learning how to be sincere, open, to listen to the others” and those are “a gift” for all baptised Christians.
Thank you for reading our article. You can keep up-to-date by subscribing to our daily newsletter. Just click here