Pope:
Seek the unity which is the work of the Holy Spirit
(Vatican Radio) On Friday Pope Francis met with members of
the “Catholic Fraternity of Charismatic Covenant Communities and Fellowship.”
The group is in Rome for its Sixteenth International Conference, which has for
its theme “Praise and charismatic worship for a New Evangelization.”
The Holy Father touched on several themes in his address to the
group, beginning with the idea of “unity in diversity.” “Unity does not imply
uniformity,” the Pope said. “It does not necessarily mean doing everything
together or thinking in the same way. Nor does it signify a loss of identity.
Unity in diversity is actually the opposite: it involves the joyful recognition
and acceptance of the various gifts which the Holy Spirit gives to each one and
the placing of these gifts at the service of all members of the Church.”
Pope Francis also
spoke about the Church’s need for the Holy Spirit. “Every Christian in his or
her life requires a heart open to the sanctifying action of the Holy Spirit.”
He encouraged his listeners to share their experience of the Holy Spirit with
others.
The theme of the
Conference, “Praise and charismatic worship for a New Evangelization,” prompted
the Pope to speak about prayer and praise. Using the image of breathing, the
Holy Father said, “Breathing is made up of two stages: inhaling, the intake of
air, and exhaling, the letting out of this air. The spiritual life is fed,
nourished, by prayer and is expressed outwardly through mission: inhaling and
exhaling. When we inhale, by prayer, we receive the fresh air of the Holy
Spirit. When exhaling this air, we announce Jesus Christ risen by the same
Spirit. No one can live without breathing. It is the same for the Christian:
without praise and mission there is no Christian life.”
Finally, Pope Francis
reminded his audience that “the Charismatic Renewal is, by its very nature,
ecumenical.” Spiritual ecumenism, he said, “is praying and proclaiming together
that Jesus is Lord, and coming together to help the poor in all their poverty.
Today the blood of Jesus, poured out by many Christian martyrs in various parts
of the world, calls us and compels us towards the goal of unity.”
Read the full text of Pope Francis' message below:
Dear brothers and sisters, welcome.
I thank you for your warm welcome and I greet you all with
affection. I know that the Catholic Fraternity has already met with the
executive and the council and that this afternoon you will open the Sixteenth
International Conference with our beloved Father Raniero. You have been kind
enough to provide me with a programme and I see that each meeting begins with
the words which I addressed to the Charismatic Renewal on the occasion of our
meeting at the Olympic Stadium last June.
I wish first of all to congratulate each of you for having
embarked upon something, which was expressed as a desire at that meeting.
For the last two months the Catholic Fraternity and the ICCRS (International
Catholic Charismatic Renewal Services) have worked together and shared office
space in the Palazzo San Calisto, in the “Ark of Noah”. I am aware that
it may not have been easy to make this decision and I thank you sincerely for
this witness to unity and grace, which you offer to the entire world.
I would like now to reflect upon some themes which I consider
important.
The first is unity in diversity. Uniformity is not Catholic;
it is not Christian. Unity in diversity. Catholic unity is diverse but it is
one. It’s curious, eh? The same one who creates diversity, all these problems
of diversity, is the same one who then creates unity: the Holy Spirit. He does
both things: unity in diversity. Unity does not imply uniformity; it does not
necessarily mean doing everything together or thinking in the same way.
Nor does it signify a loss of identity. Unity in diversity is actually
the opposite: it involves the joyful recognition and acceptance of the various
gifts which the Holy Spirit gives to each one and the placing of these gifts at
the service of all members of the Church.
Today, in the passage of the Gospel that we read at Mass, there
was this uniformity of those men attached to the letter: “You must not do it
like that…”, to the point that the Lord had to ask: “Tell me, can we do good on
the Sabbath or not?” This is the danger of uniformity. Unity is knowing how to
listen, to accept differences, and having the freedom to think differently and
express oneself with complete respect towards the other, who is my brother or
sister. Do not be afraid of differences! As I wrote in Evangelii
Gaudium: “Our model is not the sphere, which is no greater than its parts,
where every point is equidistant from the centre, and there are no differences
between them. Instead, it is the polyhedron, which reflects the convergence of
all its parts, each of which preserves its distinctiveness” but creates unity
(236).
I saw in the programme, where the names of the Communities are
mentioned, that at the introduction you have inserted the phrase, “to share the
Baptism in the Holy Spirit with the whole Church”. The Church needs the
Holy Spirit! How could we do without it! Every Christian in his or her life
requires a heart open to the sanctifying action of the Holy Spirit. The
Spirit, promised by the Father, is he who reveals Jesus Christ to us, but who
makes us…gives us the possibility to say: Jesus! Without the Spirit, we could
not say this. He reveals Jesus Christ, who leads us to a personal encounter
with him, and who, in so doing, changes our life. A question: Is this
your experience? Share it with others! In order to
share this experience, you must live it and witness to it!
The theme which you have chosen for the Congress is “Praise and
Worship for a New Evangelization”. Fr Raniero, a masterful guide in the
ways of prayer, will speak on this theme. Praise is the “breath” which
gives us life, because it is intimacy with God, an intimacy that grows through
daily praise. Some time ago I heard an example of this which seems very
appropriate: the way that people breathe. Breathing is made up of two
stages: inhaling, the intake of air, and exhaling, the letting out of this
air. The spiritual life is fed, nourished, by prayer and is expressed
outwardly through mission: inhaling—prayer—and exhaling. When we inhale, by
prayer, we receive the fresh air of the Holy Spirit. When exhaling this
air, we announce Jesus Christ risen by the same Spirit. No one can live
without breathing. It is the same for the Christian: without praise and
mission there is no Christian life. And with praise, adoration. But we speak
little of adoration. “But what do you do in prayer?” “I ask things of God, I
give thanks, I make intercessory prayers…” But adoration, adoring God. This
forms part of this inhaling: praise and adoration.
The Charismatic Renewal has reminded the Church of the necessity
and importance of the prayer of praise. When we speak of the prayer of
praise in the Church, Charismatics come to mind. When I spoke of the
prayer of praise during a homily at Mass in Santa Marta, I said it is not only
the prayer of Charismatics but of the entire Church! It is the
recognition of the Lordship of God over us and over all creation expressed
through dance, music and song.
I would like to revisit with you a few passages from that homily:
“The prayer of praise is a Christian prayer, for all of us. In the Mass,
every day, when we sing the ‘Holy, Holy, Holy’, this is a prayer of
praise: we praise God for his greatness because he is great. And we address him
with beautiful words because it pleases us to do this. The prayer of
praise bears fruit in us. Sarah danced as she celebrated her fertility – at the
age of ninety! This fruitfulness gives praise to God. Men and women
who praise the Lord, who pray praising the Lord – and who are happy to do so –
rejoice in singing the Sanctus at Mass and they bear fruit. Let us
consider how beautiful it is to offer the prayer of praise to God.
This should be our prayer and, as we offer it up to God, we ought to say to
ourselves, “Arise, O heart, because you are standing before the King of Glory”
(Holy Mass at Domus Sanctae Marthae, 28 January 2014).
Together with the prayer of praise, the prayer of intercession is,
in these days, a cry to the Father for our Christian brothers and sisters who
are persecuted and murdered, and for the cause of peace in our turbulent
world. Praise the Lord at all times, never cease to do so, praise him
more and more, unceasingly. I have been told of Charismatic prayer groups in
which they pray the Rosary. Prayer to the Mother of God must never be excluded,
never! But when you assemble for prayer, praise the Lord!
I see that you have among you a very dear friend, Pastor Giovanni
Traettino, whom I visited recently. Catholic Fraternity, do not forget
your origins, do not forget that the Charismatic Renewal is, by its very
nature, ecumenical. Blessed Paul VI commented on this in the magnificent
Apostolic Exhortation on evangelization which is highly relevant in our own
day: “The power of evangelization will find itself considerably diminished if
those who proclaim the Gospel are divided among themselves in all sorts of ways.
Is this not perhaps one of the great sicknesses of evangelization today?
The Lord’s spiritual testament tells us that unity among his followers is not
only the proof that we are his but also the proof that he is sent by the
Father. It is the test of the credibility of Christians and of Christ
himself. Yes, the destiny of evangelization is certainly bound up with
the witness of unity given by the Church. This is a source of
responsibility and also of comfort” (Evangelii Nuntiandi, 77). That was Blessed
Paul VI.
Spiritual ecumenism is praying and proclaiming together that Jesus
is Lord, and coming together to help the poor in all their poverty. This
must be done and not forgetting that today the blood of Jesus, poured out by
many Christian martyrs in various parts of the world, calls us and compels us
towards the goal of unity. For the persecutors, we are not divided. We
are not Lutherans, Orthodox, Evangelicals, Catholics… No! We are all one!
For the persecutors, we are Christians! They are not interested in anything
else. This is the ecumenism of blood that we live today.
Remember: seek the
unity which is the work of the Holy Spirit and do not be afraid of
diversity. The breathing of Christians draws in the new air of the Holy
Spirit and then exhales it upon the world: it is the prayer of praise and
missionary outreach. Share baptism in the Holy Spirit with everyone in
the Church. Spiritual ecumenism and the ecumenism of blood. The
unity of the Body of Christ. Prepare the Bride for the Bridegroom who
comes! One Bride only! All of us. (Rev 22:17).
Finally, in addition to my thanks, I would especially like to
mention these young musicians from northern Brazil, who played at the
beginning. I hope they continue to play a bit, no? They have welcomed me with
much affection, singing “Long live Jesus my Saviour”. I know that you
have prepared something more. I invite you all to listen to them before I
say farewell. Thank you.
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