Pope
Francis: Charism of unity anchored in Eucharist
(Vatican
Radio) In the Paul VI Audience Hall before his General Audience on Wednesday,
Pope Francis met with the Bishop Friends of the Focolare Movement.
Founded
in Italy in 1943 by Chiara Lubich, the Focolare, also known as the Work of
Mary, is an ecclesial movement that promotes the ideals of unity and universal
brotherhood. Since 1977, a number of Bishops who desired to live out the
spirituality of communion promoted by Focolare, have gathered together as the
Bishop Friends of the Movement. The Bishop Friends hold regular meetings at
international and regional levels.
In
his address to the Bishops, Pope Francis called to mind the theme of their
current meeting: “The Eucharist, Mystery of Communion.” He said, “the charism
of unity proper to the Work of Mary is strongly anchored in the Eucharist,
which gives it its Christian and ecclesial character.” It is the work of the
Bishop to gather the community “around the Eucharist, around the double table
of the Word and of the Bread of Life.” This, the Pope said, “is our service,
and it is a fundamental one.”
Pope
Francis said, “the Bishop is the principle of unity in the Church, but this
does not take place without the Eucharist: the Bishop does not gather the
people around his own person or his own ideas, but around Christ present in His
Word and in the Sacrament of His Body and Blood.” When the Bishop is conformed
to Christ, “nourished with faith in Christ the living Bread,” he is “is urged
on by his love to give his life for the brothers and sisters, to go out, to go
to meet those who are marginalized and despised.”
The
Holy Father had special words of greeting for those Bishops present who had
come from “the blood-soaked lands” of Iraq, Syria, and Ukraine. “In the
suffering you have lived with your people,” he said, “you experience the
strength that comes from the Eucharistic Jesus, the strength of going forward
united in faith and hope.” He assured the Bishops the Church is united to them
in the daily celebration of the Mass.
Concluding
his address, Pope Francis encouraged the Bishops to carry on their “commitment
in favour of the ecumenical journey and inter-religious dialogue” and thanked
them for the contributions they make “to a greater communion between the
various ecclesial movements.”
Below
please find the full text of the Pope’s address to the Bishop Friends of the
Focolare Movement:
Dear
brothers,
I
welcome you, and I thank Cardinal Kovithavanij for his introduction. And I
thank the President and Co-President of the Focolare Movement for their
presence.
You
have brought together in Rome the friendship with this Movement and an interest
in the “spirituality of communion.” In particular, in these days your
reflection has centred on the theme of “The Eucharist, Mystery of Communion.”
In
effect, the charism of unity proper to the Work of Mary is strongly anchored in
the Eucharist, which gives it its Christian and ecclesial character. Without
the Eucharist, unity would lose its divine pole of attraction, and would be
reduced to simply human, psychological, sociological feeling and dynamic.
Instead, the Eucharist guarantees that at the centre there is Christ, and there
is His Spirit, the Holy Spirit, to move our steps and our initiatives of
encounter and of communion.
The
Apostle Paul writes: “Because the loaf of bread is one, we, though many, are
one body, for we all partake of the one loaf” (1 Cor 10:17). As Bishops, we
gather the communities around the Eucharist, the double table of the Word and
of the Bread of Life. This is our service, and it is fundamental. The Bishop is
the principle of unity in the Church, but this does not take place without the
Eucharist: the Bishop does not gather the people around his own person or his
own ideas, but around Christ present in His Word and in the Sacrament of His
Body and Blood. And in the school of Jesus, the Good Shepherd made Himself the
Lamb sacrificed and risen, the Bishop gathers the sheep entrusted to him with
the offering of his life, himself taking on a form of Eucharistic existence.
And so the Bishop, conformed to Christ, becomes a living Gospel, becomes Bread
broken for the life of many with his preaching and his witness. He who is
nourished with faith in Christ the living Bread is urged on by his love to give
his life for the brothers and sisters, to go out, to go to meet those who are
marginalized and despised.
In
a particular way I thank you, Brothers, who come from the blood-soaked lands of
Syria and of Iraq, and also of Ukraine. In the suffering you have lived with
your people, you experience the strength that comes from the Eucharistic Jesus,
the strength of going forward united in faith and hope.
In
the daily celebration of the Mass we are united to you, we pray for you
offering the Sacrifice of Christ; and from it the many initiatives of
solidarity in favour of your Churches gain their strength and significance.
Dear
Brothers, I encourage you to carry on your commitment in favour of the
ecumenical journey and inter-religious dialogue. And I thank you for the
contribution you make to a greater communion between the various ecclesial
movements.
May
the Lord bless you and the Madonna protect you. Let us pray for one another. I
thank you for your prayers.
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