Athens, Greece - The head of the powerful Orthodox Church of Greece will meet with Pope Benedict XVI at the Vatican next month, a historic journey marking the first official visit ever by a Greek church leader.
A statement by the Church of Greece's governing body, the Holy Synod, said the Dec. 14 visit by Archbishop Christodoulos follows an invitation by the pope.
"The Holy Synod expressed its joy that this visit will be carried out," the Synod said. "Its fruits will be positive."
It will be the first official visit by a Greek church leader to the Vatican, with which the Eastern Orthodox church -- of which the Church of Greece is a part -- split in the acrimonious Schism of 1054.
The program of the visit, during which the pope will present the archbishop with an important Christian relic -- a section of the chain of Saint Peter -- will be settled with the Vatican.
Benedict's predecessor, John Paul II, had invited Christodoulos to the Vatican during his visit to Athens in 2001 -- the first ever by a pope since the schism. But the return visit was postponed after senior Greek church officials expressed fears it might anger Greek Orthodox zealots who oppose any improvement in ties with the Catholic Church.
The church wields considerable power in Greece, where about 98 percent of the 11 million residents are baptized into the Church of Greece.
At the end of this month, Benedict is to meet with the leader of the world's Orthodox Christians, Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I, in Turkey.