Pope calls on Catholics to work for peace

Pope John Paul II has called on Lebanon's sizable Roman Catholic population  to work to preserve their nation's peace

Pope John Paul II has called on Lebanon's sizable Roman Catholic population  to work to preserve their nation's peace. The Pope condemned this week's massive bombing in Beirut that killed former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri and 16 others.

Denouncing the "terrible attack" as a "criminal act which offends God and men created in His likeness," John Paul prayed for God's mercy to be felt in the Middle East, according to the text of the telegram sent to Cardinal Nasrallah Pierre Sfeir, patriarch of Antioch of the Maronite faithful.

The pope urged Lebanon's Catholics to commit themselves to work for peace, joining "all men of goodwill to build, through dialogue, a future of harmony among the countries and the peoples of the region."

Christians, most of them Catholics, are a sizable minority in Lebanon. Although their numbers have declined and their political influence has waned in recent years, Christians remain a force in the country.

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John Paul visited Lebanon in 1997, several years after its devastating, 15-year civil war ended.