Pope
Francis addresses Synod of Bishops at conclusion
(Vatican
Radio) 24 Oct. On Saturday evening the Synod on the Family came to a close
when the Synod Fathers voted paragraph by paragraph on the final text. At the
end of the vote the text was presented to the Holy Father. All 94 points
received the required two-thirds majority vote.
General
Secretary of the Synod, Cardinal Lorenzo Baldiserri, thanked the Holy Father
and all the Synod Fathers as well as the auditors, experts, support personnel
and the media.
Pope
Francis then delivered his closing address. He too begun by thanking all those
involved in Synod. The Holy Father said now that the Synod has come to an end
he asks "What will it mean for the Church to conclude this Synod devoted
to the family?" He said that the Synod was not about settling issues but
attempting to see them in the light of the Gospel and the Church's tradition
and two thousand year history. The Pope said that it was about interpreting
reality through God's eyes.
He
said that it was about making clear that the Church is a Church of the poor in
spirit and of sinners seeking forgiveness. The Holy Father said that it was
about trying to "broaden horizons, rising above conspiracy theories and
blinkered viewpoints". He went on to say that in the course of the Synod
different viewpoints were freely expressed - he added "and at times,
unfortunately, not entirely in well-meaning ways" - that led to a rich and
lively dialogue "[offering] a vivid image of the Church which does not
simply 'rubberstamp', but draws from the sources of her faith living waters to
freshly parched hearts."
He
said that the Synod had heard what is normal for one bishop is not for another,
what is considered a violation of a right in once society is an evident and
inviolable rule in another," depending on contexts. He said that at the
conclusion of Vatican II the Church spoke about inculturation as the
"intimate transformation of authentic cultural values through their
integration in Christianity, and the taking root of Christianity in the various
human cultures." He said that inculturation does not weaken true values,
but demonstrates their true strength and authenticity "since they adapt
without changing; indeed they quietly and gradually transform the different
cultures."
The
Holy Father said that without falling into relativism or demonising others the
Synod sought to embrace, fully and courageously, the goodness and mercy of God
who transcends our every human reckonings and desires.
Quoting
Benedict XVI, Pope Francis said "Mercy is indeed the central nucleus of
the Gospel message". The Holy Father said that many of the delegates felt
the working of the Holy Spirit who is "the real protagonist and guide of
the Synod." To conclude the Synod, he said, is to "return to our true
'journeying together' in bringing to every part of the world, every diocese, to
every community and every situation, the light of the Gospel, the embrace of
the Church and the support of God's mercy!"
Below,
please find the official English translation of the Holy Father's address:
Dear
Beatitudes, Eminences and Excellencies, Dear Brothers and Sisters,
I
would like first of all to thank the Lord, who has guided our synodal process
in these years by his Holy Spirit, whose support is never lacking to the
Church.
My
heartfelt thanks go to Cardinal Lorenzo Baldisseri, Secretary General of the
Synod, Bishop Fabio Fabene, its Under-Secretary, and, together with them, the
Relator, Cardinal Peter Erdő, and the Special Secretary, Archbishop Bruno
Forte, the Delegate Presidents, the writers, consultors and translators, and
all those who have worked tirelessly and with total dedication to the Church:
My deepest thanks!
I
likewise thank all of you, dear Synod Fathers, Fraternal Delegates, Auditors
and Assessors, parish priests and families, for your active and fruitful
participation.
And
I thank all those unnamed men and women who contributed generously to the
labours of this Synod by quietly working behind the scenes.
Be
assured of my prayers, that the Lord will reward all of you with his abundant
gifts of grace!
As
I followed the labours of the Synod, I asked myself: What will it mean for the
Church to conclude this Synod devoted to the family?
Certainly,
the Synod was not about settling all the issues having to do with the family,
but rather attempting to see them in the light of the Gospel and the Church’s
tradition and two-thousand-year history, bringing the joy of hope without
falling into a facile repetition of what is obvious or has already been said.
Surely
it was not about finding exhaustive solutions for all the difficulties and
uncertainties which challenge and threaten the family, but rather about seeing
these difficulties and uncertainties in the light of the Faith, carefully
studying them and confronting them fearlessly, without burying our heads in the
sand.
It
was about urging everyone to appreciate the importance of the institution of
the family and of marriage between a man and a woman, based on unity and
indissolubility, and valuing it as the fundamental basis of society and human life.
It
was about listening to and making heard the voices of the families and the
Church’s pastors, who came to Rome bearing on their shoulders the burdens and
the hopes, the riches and the challenges of families throughout the world.
It
was about showing the vitality of the Catholic Church, which is not afraid to
stir dulled consciences or to soil her hands with lively and frank discussions
about the family.
It
was about trying to view and interpret realities, today’s realities, through
God’s eyes, so as to kindle the flame of faith and enlighten people’s hearts in
times marked by discouragement, social, economic and moral crisis, and growing
pessimism.
It
was about bearing witness to everyone that, for the Church, the Gospel
continues to be a vital source of eternal newness, against all those who would
“indoctrinate” it in dead stones to be hurled at others.
It
was also about laying bare the closed hearts which frequently hide even behind
the Church’s teachings or good intentions, in order to sit in the chair of
Moses and judge, sometimes with superiority and superficiality, difficult cases
and wounded families.
It
was about making clear that the Church is a Church of the poor in spirit and of
sinners seeking forgiveness, not simply of the righteous and the holy, but
rather of those who are righteous and holy precisely when they feel themselves
poor sinners.
It
was about trying to open up broader horizons, rising above conspiracy theories
and blinkered viewpoints, so as to defend and spread the freedom of the
children of God, and to transmit the beauty of Christian Newness, at times
encrusted in a language which is archaic or simply incomprehensible.
In
the course of this Synod, the different opinions which were freely expressed –
and at times, unfortunately, not in entirely well-meaning ways – certainly led
to a rich and lively dialogue; they offered a vivid image of a Church which
does not simply “rubberstamp”, but draws from the sources of her faith living
waters to refresh parched hearts. (1)
And
– apart from dogmatic questions clearly defined by the Church’s Magisterium –
we have also seen that what seems normal for a bishop on one continent, is
considered strange and almost scandalous for a bishop from another; what is
considered a violation of a right in one society is an evident and inviolable
rule in another; what for some is freedom of conscience is for others simply
confusion. Cultures are in fact quite diverse, and each general principle needs
to be inculturated, if it is to be respected and applied. (2) The
1985 Synod, which celebrated the twentieth anniversary of the conclusion of the
Second Vatican Council, spoke of inculturation as “the intimate transformation
of authentic cultural values through their integration in Christianity, and the
taking root of Christianity in the various human cultures”.(3) Inculturation
does not weaken true values, but demonstrates their true strength and
authenticity, since they adapt without changing; indeed they quietly and
gradually transform the different cultures. (4)
We
have seen, also by the richness of our diversity, that the same challenge is
ever before us: that of proclaiming the Gospel to the men and women of today,
and defending the family from all ideological and individualistic assaults.
And
without ever falling into the danger of relativism or of demonizing others, we
sought to embrace, fully and courageously, the goodness and mercy of God who
transcends our every human reckoning and desires only that “all be saved” (cf.
1 Tm 2:4). In this way we wished to experience this Synod in the context of the
Extraordinary Year of Mercy which the Church is called to celebrated.
Dear
Brothers,
The
Synod experience also made us better realize that the true defenders of
doctrine are not those who uphold its letter, but its spirit; not ideas but
people; not formulae but the gratuitousness of God’s love and forgiveness. This
is in no way to detract from the importance of formulae, laws and divine
commandments, but rather to exalt the greatness of the true God, who does not
treat us according to our merits or even according to our works but solely
according to the boundless generosity of his Mercy (cf. Rom 3:21-30; Ps 129; Lk
11:37-54). It does have to do with overcoming the recurring temptations of the
elder brother (cf. Lk 15:25-32) and the jealous labourers (cf. Mt 20:1-16).
Indeed, it means upholding all the more the laws and commandments which were
made for man and not vice versa (cf. Mk 2:27).
In
this sense, the necessary human repentance, works and efforts take on a deeper
meaning, not as the price of that salvation freely won for us by Christ on the
cross, but as a response to the One who loved us first and saved us at the cost
of his innocent blood, while we were still sinners (cf. Rom 5:6).
The
Church’s first duty is not to hand down condemnations or anathemas, but to
proclaim God’s mercy, to call to conversion, and to lead all men and women to
salvation in the Lord (cf. Jn 12:44-50).
Blessed
Paul VI expressed this eloquently: “”We can imagine, then, that each of our
sins, our attempts to turn our back on God, kindles in him a more intense flame
of love, a desire to bring us back to himself and to his saving plan… God, in
Christ, shows himself to be infinitely good… God is good. Not only in himself;
God is – let us say it with tears – good for us. He loves us, he seeks us out,
he thinks of us, he knows us, he touches our hearts us and he waits for us. He
will be – so to say – delighted on the day when we return and say: ‘Lord, in
your goodness, forgive me. Thus our repentance becomes God’s joy”. (5)
Saint
John Paul II also stated that: “the Church lives an authentic life when she
professes and proclaims mercy… and when she brings people close to the sources
of the Saviour’s mercy, of which she is the trustee and dispenser”. (6)
Benedict
XVI, too, said: “Mercy is indeed the central nucleus of the Gospel message; it
is the very name of God… May all that the Church says and does manifest the
mercy God feels for mankind. When the Church has to recall an unrecognized
truth, or a betrayed good, she always does so impelled by merciful love, so
that men may have life and have it abundantly (cf. Jn 10:10)”. (7)
In
light of all this, and thanks to this time of grace which the Church has
experienced in discussing the family, we feel mutually enriched. Many of us
have felt the working of the Holy Spirit who is the real protagonist and guide of
the Synod. For all of us, the word “family” has a new resonance, so much so
that the word itself already evokes the richness of the family’s vocation and
the significance of the labours of the Synod. (8)
In
effect, for the Church to conclude the Synod means to return to our true
“journeying together” in bringing to every part of the world, to every diocese,
to every community and every situation, the light of the Gospel, the embrace of
the Church and the support of God’s mercy!
Thank
you!
_____________________________
(1)
Cf. Letter of His Holiness Pope Francis to the Grand Chancellor of the
Pontifical Catholic University of Argentina on the Centenary of its Faculty of
Theology, 3 March 2015.
(2)
Cf. Pontifical Biblical Commission, Fede e cultura alla luce della Bibbia. Atti
della Sessione plenaria 1979 della Pontificia Commissione Biblica, LDC,
Leumann, 1981; SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Gaudium et Spes, 44.
(3)
Final Relatio (7 December 1985), L’Osservatore Romano, 10 December 1985, 7.
(4)
“In virtue of her pastoral mission, the Church must remain ever attentive to
historical changes and to the development of new ways of thinking. Not, of
course, to submit to them, but rather to surmount obstacles standing in the way
of accepting her counsels and directives” (Interview with Cardinal Georges
Cottier, in La Civiltà Cattolica 3963-3964, 8 August 2015, p. 272).
(5)
Homily, 23 June 1968: Insegnamenti VI (1968), 1177-1178.
(6)
Dives in Misericordia, 13. He also said: “In the paschal mystery… God appears
to us as he is: a tender-hearted Father, who does not give up in the face of
his childrens’ ingratitude and is always ready to forgive (JOHN PAUL II, Regina
Coeli, 23 April 1995: Insegnamenti XVIII, 1 [1995], 1035). So too he described
resistance to mercy: “The present-day mentality, more perhaps than that of
people in the past, seems opposed to a God of mercy, and in fact tends to
exclude from life and to remove from the human heart the very idea of mercy.
The word and the concept of ‘mercy’ seem to cause uneasiness…” (Dives in
Misericordia [30 November 1980] 2).
(7)
Regina Coeli, 30 March 2008: Insegnamenti IV, 1 (2008), 489-490. Speaking of
the power of mercy, he stated: “it is mercy that sets a limit to evil. In it is
expressed God’s special nature – his holiness, the power of truth and of love”
(Homily on Divine Mercy Sunday, 15 April 2007: Insegnamenti III, 1 [2007],
667).
(8)
An acrostic look at the word “family” [Italian: “famiglia”] can help us
summarize the Church’s mission as the task of: Forming new generations to
experience love seriously, not as an individualistic search for a pleasure then
to be discarded, and to believe once again in true, fruitful and lasting love
as the sole way of emerging from ourselves and being open to others, leaving
loneliness behind, living according to God’s will, finding fulfilment,
realizing that marriage is “an experience which reveals God’s love, defending
the sacredness of life, every life, defending the unity and indissolubility of
the conjugal bond as a sign of God’s grace and of the human person’s ability to
love seriously” (Homily for the Opening Mass of the Synod, 4 October 2015:
L’Osservatore Romano, 5-6 October 2015, p. 7) and, furthermore, enhancing
marriage preparation as a means of providing a deeper understanding of the
Christian meaning of the sacrament of Matrimony; Approaching others, since a
Church closed in on herself is a dead Church, while a Church which does leave
her own precincts behind in order to seek, embrace and lead others to Christ is
a Church which betrays her very mission and calling; Manifesting and bringing
God’s mercy to families in need; to the abandoned, to the neglected elderly, to
children pained by the separation of their parents, to poor families struggling
to survive, to sinners knocking on our doors and those who are far away, to the
differently able, to all those hurting in soul and body, and to couples torn by
grief, sickness, death or persecution; Illuminating consciences often assailed
by harmful and subtle dynamics which even attempt to replace God the Creator,
dynamics which must be unmasked and resisted in full respect for the dignity of
each person; Gaining and humbly rebuilding trust in the Church, which has been
gravely weakened as a result of the conduct and sins of her children – sadly,
the counter-witness of scandals committed in the Church by some clerics have
damaged her credibility and obscured the brightness of her saving message;
Labouring intensely to sustain and encourage those many strong and faithful
families which, in the midst of their daily struggles, continue to give a great
witness of fidelity to the Church’s teachings and the Lord’s commandments;
Inventing renewed programmes of pastoral care for the family based on the
Gospel and respectful of cultural differences, pastoral care which is capable
of communicating the Good News in an attractive and positive manner and helping
banish from young hearts the fear of making definitive commitments, pastoral
care which is particularly attentive to children, who are the real victims of
broken families, pastoral care which is innovative and provides a suitable
preparation for the sacrament of Matrimony, rather than so many programmes
which seem more of a formality than training for a lifelong commitment; Aiming
to love unconditionally all families, particularly those experiencing
difficulties, since no family should feel alone or excluded from the Church’s
loving embrace, and the real scandal is a fear of love and of showing that love
concretely.
Không có nhận xét nào:
Đăng nhận xét