Pope
Francis to German Bishops: Use Jubilee to revive Church
(Vatican
Radio) Pope Francis on Friday told the bishops of Germany the upcoming Jubilee
of Mercy offers the opportunity to “rediscover the sacraments of Penance and
the Eucharist.”
The
bishops were meeting with the Holy Father during their ad limina visit to Rome.
In
a speech handed to the bishops at the meeting, Pope Francis noted a sharp
decline in sacramental participation among the Catholics in Germany.
“Whereas
in the 1960’s the faithful almost everywhere attended Mass every Sunday, today
it is often less than 10 percent,” he said.
“The
Sacraments are always approached less often,” the Pope continued.
“The
Sacrament of Penance is often missing. Fewer and fewer Catholics receive
the Sacrament of Confirmation or contract a Catholic marriage,” he continued.
“The number of vocations to the ministerial priesthood and to the consecrated
life has significantly diminished. Given these facts, one can truly speak of an
erosion of the Catholic faith in Germany.”
Pope
Francis said the solution to the crisis depends upon overcoming “paralyzing
resignation,” and cannot be based upon an attempt to “rebuild from the wrecks
of ‘the good old days’ in the past,” but it can be inspired by the life of the
early Christians.
He
turned the bishops attention to the biblical figures of Priscilla and Aquila,
the married couple who witnessed with their words and lives to the love of
Christ.
“The
example of these ‘volunteers’ can help us reflect, given the trend towards a
growing institutionalization,” Pope Francis said.
“We
always inaugurate new facilities, from which, in the end, the faithful are
missing,” Pope Francis said.
“It
is a sort of new Pelagianism, which puts its trust in administrative
structures, in perfect organizations” – the Pope continued – “excessive
centralization, rather than helping, complicates the life of the Church and her
missionary dynamics.”
He
told the bishops to give more attention to Confession during the Jubilee of
Mercy, since “in Confession is the beginning of the transformation of each
individual Christian and the reform of the Church.”
“It
is also necessary to highlight the intimate connection between the Eucharist
and the priesthood,” the Holy Father said.
“The
precious collaboration of the laity, especially in those places where vocations
are missing, cannot become a surrogate for the ministerial priesthood, or give
it the semblance of being simply optional,” he said. “If there is no priest,
there is no Eucharist.”
The
Pope also said a task of the Bishop which is always underappreciated is the
commitment to life.
“The
Church must never get tired of being the advocate of life, and should never
step back from proclaiming that human life must be protected unconditionally
from conception to natural death,” he said.
He
said any compromise on this issue makes one guilty of being part of a
“throwaway culture,” noting the wounds caused in society due to the suffering
of the weakest and most defenseless: The unborn, the elderly, and the sick.
“All
of us in the end will suffer the painful consequences,” he said.
Pope
Francis also spoke about the refugee crisis affecting Europe, and thanked the
Churches and individual citizens who have offered their help in accommodating
those “seeking refuge from war and persecution” with their assistance, on both
a material and human level.
“In
the spirit of Christ, we must continue to meet the challenge of the great
number of people in need,” he said. “At the same time, we support all
humanitarian initiatives to ensure that the living conditions in the countries
of origin become more bearable.”
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