Cardinal
Parolin visits East Timor
(Vatican
Radio) The Vatican Secretary of State, Cardinal Pietro Parolin, has travelled
to East Timor as the Pope’s Special Envoy for the celebration of the fifth
centenary of the evangelization of the country.
Cardinal
Parolin celebrated Holy Mass at the Major Seminary in Dili, where he also
delivered the homily. He called on the seminarians to become missionary
disciples: “This must be our prayer and work ‘each day,’ to become what our
Holy Father calls ‘missionary disciples.’ In fact, while every member of the
Church is called to be a missionary disciple, for a priest it should be the
model for his life.”
Read
the full text of Cardinal Pietro Parolin’s homily for Mass at the Major
Seminary in Dili, East Timor:
Mass
at Major Seminary
Dili
Dili
13
August 2015
“Because
of your love give me life, and I will do your will”
1.
Before the proclamation of the Gospel, we proclaimed these words, which give
significance to the meaning of our vocations as priests. Yes, precisely
because of God’s love, he has chosen us, and just as the prophet, Jeremiah,
wrote, “Before I formed you in the womb, I knew you, before you were born I set
you apart, and I appointed you as a prophet to the nations” (Jer. 1:5).
In the entire journey of your life in the seminary, this profound conviction
must be in your hearts: It is the Lord who is calling you; it is the Lord who
has chosen you, and it is the Lord who is holding your hand leading you to be a
worker in his vineyard.
Your
Excellencies Bishop Basilio do Nascimento
and Bishop Norberto do Amaral,
Dear Father Rectors, Formators and members of the seminary staff,
Dearest seminarians and novices,
and Bishop Norberto do Amaral,
Dear Father Rectors, Formators and members of the seminary staff,
Dearest seminarians and novices,
2.
I cannot express the depth of the joy that is my heart to be with you this evening,
to celebrate Mass for the first time in this beloved country, Timor-Leste, and
to be with you seminarians who represent the future of the Church in this
Nation, which awaits you as shepherds and spiritual guides pointing people to
God who is the source of our life, our faith and our vocation.
3.
Together, let us hold fast to this important truth, it is God who chooses us,
and as Pope Francis told priests in Ecuador, just over a month ago (8th July
2015): “Everyday renew the conviction that everything is a gift, the conviction
that your being chosen is gratuitousness – we do not merit it.”
Let
me take two words from that brotherly counsel of our Holy Father and bring it
to your life in the seminary, and those two words are “everyday”. Yes, I
ask of you to live all aspects of your life in the seminary “everyday” with
responsibility and diligence. What are you asked to do “everyday”?
First
and above all, you are asked to enter deeply into the process of formation with
commitment and sincerity. Yes, God has called you and with courage and
faith you have answered. You have come to the seminary in order to see,
to understand and to discern the validity of this call. Thus, the primary
question that you must ask, “is the Lord really calling me”?
An
answer to that question can only come if you dedicate yourselves “everyday” to
the entire process of formation that the seminary offers. On the human
level, you should be able to develop your social qualities, especially in your
interaction with people. On the intellectual level, to develop your capacity to
embrace knowledge, especially to acquire the ability to understand and resolve
challenges. On the spiritual level, to develop your relationship with
God, especially in deepening your dialogue with him, speaking to him and
listening to him.
4.
Ultimately, formation has as its goal the transformation of the heart. In
other words, “everyday” we must purify our hearts, shaving off all those
defects which hinder us from achieving two essential goals: to love God and to
be ready to love without hesitation the People of God who will be entrusted to
us as priests.
Essentially,
formation to the priesthood is the development of being a disciple of the Lord,
which requires an intimate relationship with the Master, Jesus himself, and an
ardent desire to be sent in order to serve. This must be our prayer and
work “each day”, to become what our Holy Father calls “missionary
disciples”. In fact, while every member of the Church is called to be a
missionary disciple, for a priest it should be the model for his life.
To
be a missionary disciple begins with the discovery of the presence of Christ in
our lives. Your formation must centre on that relationship with the Lord
himself who never disappoints “those who take this risk” (Evangelii Gaudium, 3)
of following him. This relationship leads to a discovery of who Jesus
truly is, for -and again I turn to the Holy Father- “he is the face of the
Father’s mercy” (Misericordiae vultus, MV 1). It is this sense of mercy,
which forms us and moulds us to become disciples of mercy. It is
necessary that “everyday” we feel in the depths of our hearts that we have been
touched by God, “who reveals his love as that of a loving father and mother”
(MV, 7) and then be ready to give that love and mercy as his disciples to
others.
Discipleship
is not merely a private relation. On the contrary, the deeper our
relation with Christ is, the more we are compelled to go forth, to be
missionaries, to bring what we have received, namely God’s love and mercy, to
others especially to those who live on the periphery of society, those who are
marginalized, those who are forgotten. This is the primary and first goal
of our priestly ministry and activity, yes to go to the peripheries, those who
are living on the outskirts, “physically, socially, psychologically and
spiritually” in other words, “those who are shunned, excluded and forced to
live apart from others” (Homily of Pope Francis, 15 February 2015) and then to
restore them to the family of God and to the very society to which they belong.
5.
This is the heart of your formation, the model that you must pursue “everyday”
to become “missionary disciples”. This requires of you great
responsibility and duty. It is that upon which you must concentrate “everyday”.
Of course, it is a process that takes time and patience. Be assured that
the Lord is with you, guiding you, embracing you and walking with you.
This presence of Christ is not an abstract idea, but finds a concrete
manifestation in the person of your spiritual director. He is for you,
the guide and the father. Therefore, always be ready to speak with him
with the greatest freedom and honesty, realizing that he is there to point you
in the right direction, to assist you in your discernment and to encourage you
in your formation.
6.
Yes, dear brothers, in the seminary “everyday” is important, because inasmuch
as you study with determination, follow the rhythm of seminary life, and speak
frankly with your spiritual director your entire life will be opened to an
immense joy, the joy of becoming priests, the joy of offering yourself to
others. Yes, the Lord has called you even before you were born, to be
sent so that your hands, that will be consecrated for service, will be signs of
the closeness of God, for which countless people are awaiting.
7.
I commend you all to the powerful intercession of Mary, the Mother of Jesus and
Queen of the Apostles. Do not be afraid to turn to her with immense love
and immense faith in all your daily undertakings, asking that she might
transform you into the image of Jesus Christ, High Priest and Pastor, because
the devotion to the our Blessed Lady is a privileged means “of finding Jesus
Christ perfectly, of loving him tenderly, of serving him faithfully” (St.
Louis-Marie Grignion de Montfort, Treatise on True Devotion, n. 62).
And
may the holy Pastors assist you, they who shine like a guiding light on the
Church of God. Amen.
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