Pope Francis in Mexico: discourse to bishops
(Vatican Radio) Pope
Francis addressed the Catholic Bishops of Mexico on Saturday, the
first full day of his Apostolic visit to the country. Below, please find the full
text of the Holy Father's prepared remarks, in their official English
translation.
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I am pleased to have this
opportunity of meeting you the day after my arrival here in this beloved
country, which, following in the footsteps of my predecessors, I also have come
to visit.
How could I not come!
Could the Successor of Peter, called from the far south of Latin America,
deprive himself of seeing la Virgen Morenita?
I thank you for receiving me
in this Cathedral, a larger casita (“little house”) and yet
always sagrada (“sacred”), as the Blessed Virgin of Guadalupe had
requested. I also thank you for your kind words of welcome.
I know that here is found the
secret heart of each Mexican, and I enter with soft footsteps as is fitting for
one who enters the home and soul of this people; and I am deeply grateful for
you having opened your doors to me. I know that by looking into the eyes
of the Blessed Virgin I am able to follow the gaze of her sons and daughters
who, in her, have learned to express themselves. I know that no other
voice can speak so powerfully to me of the Mexican heart as the Blessed Mother
can; she guards its highest aspirations and most hidden hopes; she gathers its
joys and its tears. She understands its various languages and she
responds with a Mother’s tenderness because these men and women are her own
children.
I am happy to be with you
here, near Cerro del Tepeyac, in a way close to the dawn of
evangelization in this continent. Please allow la Guadalupana to
be the starting point of everything I will say to you. How I wish She
herself would convey to you all that is dear to the Pope’s heart, reaching the
depths of your own pastoral hearts, and through you, to each of the particular
Churches present in this vast country of Mexico.
The Pope for some time has
nourished a desire to see la Guadalupana just as Saint Juan
Diego did, and successive generations of children after him. And I have
desired, even more, to be captured by her maternal gaze. I have reflected
greatly on the mystery of this gaze and I ask you to receive in these moments
what pours forth from my heart, the heart of a Pastor.
A gaze of tenderness
Above all, la Virgen
Morenita teaches us that the only power capable of conquering the
hearts of men and women is the tenderness of God. That which delights and
attracts, that which humbles and overcomes, that which opens and unleashes, is
not the power of instruments or the force of law, but rather the omnipotent
weakness of divine love, which is the irresistible force of its gentleness and
the irrevocable pledge of its mercy.
A rather inquisitive and
famous literary figure of yours, Octavio Paz, said that in Guadalupe great
harvests and fertile lands are no longer prayed for, but instead a place of
rest where people, still orphaned and disinherited, may seek a place of refuge,
a home.
With centuries having gone by
since the founding event of this country and the evangelization of the continent,
it may be asked: has the need been diluted or even forgotten for that place of
rest so ardently desired by the hearts of Mexicans entrusted to your care?
I know the long and painful
history which you have gone through has not been without much bloodshed,
impetuous and heartbreaking upheavals, and violence and incomprehension.
With good reason my venerable and saintly predecessor, who felt at home here in
Mexico, wished to remind us: “Like rivers that are sometimes hidden and
plentiful, converge at times and at others reveal their complementary
differences, without ever merging completely: the ancient and rich sensitivity
of the indigenous peoples loved by Juan de Zumárraga and Vasco de Quiroga, whom
many of these peoples continue to call fathers; Christianity, rooted in the
Mexican soul; and modern rationality of the European kind, which wanted so much
to exalt independence and freedom” (John Paul II, Address,
Welcoming Ceremony, 22 January 1999).
And in this history, the
maternal place of rest which continually brought life to Mexico, although
sometimes seeming like “a net of a hundred and fifty-three fish” (cf. Jn 21:11),
was never without fruit, was always able to heal the divisions which threatened.
For this reason I invite you
to begin anew from that need for a place of rest which wells up from the spirit
of your people. The restful place of the Christian faith is capable of
reconciling a past, often marked by loneliness, isolation and rejection, with a
future, continually relegated to a tomorrow which just slips away. Only in that
place of faith can we, without renouncing our own identity, “discover the
profound truth of the new humanity, in which all are called to be children of
God” (John Paul II, Homily, Canonization of Juan Diego).
Bow down then, quietly and
respectfully, towards the profound spirit of your people, go down with care and
decipher its mysterious face. The present, so often mixed with dispersion
and festivity, is it not for God a preparatory stage, for him who alone is
fully present? Familiarity with pain and death, are they not forms of
courage and pathways to hope? And the view that the world is always and
uniquely in need of redemption, is this not an antidote to the proud
self-sufficiency of those who think they can do without God?
Naturally, for this reason it
is necessary to have an outlook capable of reflecting the tenderness of
God. I ask you, therefore, to be bishops who have a pure vision, a
transparent soul, and a joyful face. Do not fear
transparency. The Church does not need darkness to carry out her
work. Be vigilant so that your vision will not be darkened by the gloomy
mist of worldliness; do not allow yourselves to be corrupted by trivial
materialism or by the seductive illusion of underhanded agreements; do not
place your faith in the “chariots and horses” of today’s Pharaohs, for our
strength is in “the pillar of fire” which divides the sea in two, without much
fanfare (cf. Ex 14:24-25).
The world in which the Lord
calls us to carry out our mission has become extremely complicated. And
even the proud notion of cogito, which at least did not deny that
there was a rock on the sand of being, is today dominated by a view of life
which more than ever many consider to be hesitant, itinerant and lawless
because it lacks a firm foundation. Frontiers so passionately invoked and
upheld are now open to the irony of a world in which the power of some can no
longer survive without the vulnerability of others. The irreversible
hybridization of technology brings closer what is distant; sadly, however, it
also distances what should be close.
It is in this very world that
God asks you to have a view capable of grasping that plea which cries out from
the heart of your people, a plea which has its own calendar day, the Feast
of crying out. This cry needs a response: God exists and is close in
Jesus Christ. Only God is the reality upon which we can build, because,
“God is the foundational reality, not a God who is merely imagined or
hypothetical, but God with a human face” (Benedict VI, Address to
CELAM, 13 May 2007).
Observing your faces, the
Mexican people have the right to witness the signs of those “who have seen the
Lord” (cf. Jn 20:25), of those who have been with God.
This is essential. Therefore, do not lose time or energy in secondary
things, in gossip or intrigue, in conceited schemes of careerism, in empty
plans for superiority, in unproductive groups that seek benefits or common
interests. Do not allow yourselves to be dragged into gossip and
slander. Introduce your priests into a right understanding of sacred
ministry. For us ministers of God it is enough to have the grace to
“drink the cup of the Lord”, the gift of protecting that portion of the
heritage which has been entrusted to us, though we may be unskilled
administrators. Let us allow the Father to assign the place he has
prepared for us (Mt 20:20-28). Can we really be concerned
with affairs that are not the Father’s? Away from the “Father’s affairs”
(Lk 2:48-49) we lose our identity and, through our own fault, empty
his grace of meaning.
If our vision does not
witness to having seen Jesus, then the words with which we recall him will be
rhetorical and empty figures of speech. They may perhaps express the
nostalgia of those who cannot forget the Lord, but who have become, at any
rate, mere babbling orphans beside a tomb. Finally, they may be words
that are incapable of preventing this world of ours from being abandoned and
reduced to its own desperate power.
I think of the need to offer
a maternal place of rest to young people. May your vision be capable of
meeting theirs, loving them and understanding what they search for with that
energy that inspired many like them to leave behind their boats and nets on the
other side of the sea (Mk 1:17-18), to leave the abuses of the
banking sector so as to follow the Lord on the path of true wealth (cf. Mt9:9).
I am particularly concerned
about those many persons who, seduced by the empty power of the world, praise
illusions and embrace their macabre symbols to commercialize death in exchange
for money which, in the end, “moth and rust consume” and “thieves break in and
steal” (Mt 6:19). I urge you not to underestimate the moral
and antisocial challenge which the drug trade represents for Mexican society as
a whole, as well as for the Church.
The magnitude of this
phenomenon, the complexity of its causes, its immensity and its scope which
devours like a metastasis, and the gravity of the violence which divides with
its distorted expressions, do not allow us as Pastors of the Church to hide
behind aondyne denunciations. Rather they demand of us a prophetic courage
as well as a reliable and qualified pastoral plan, so that we can gradually
help build that fragile network of human relationships without which all of us
would be defeated from the outset in the face of such an insidious
threat. Only by starting with families, by drawing close and embracing
the fringes of human existence in the ravaged areas of our cities and by
seeking the involvement of parish communities, schools, community institutions,
political communities and institutions responsible for security, will people
finally escape the raging waters that drown so many, either victims of the drug
trade or those who stand before God with their hands drenched in blood, though
with pockets filled with sordid money and their consciences deadened.
A vision that can build
In the mantle of the Mexican
spirit, God, with the thread of mestizocharacteristics, has woven
and revealed in la Morenita the face of the
Mexican people. God does not need subdued colours to design this face,
for his designs are not conditioned by colours or threads but rather by the
permanence of his love which constantly desires to imprint itself upon us.
Therefore, be bishops who are
capable of imitating this freedom of God who chooses the humble in order to
reveal the majesty of his countenance; capable of reproducing this divine
patience by weaving the new man which your country awaits with the fine thread
made of the men and women you encounter. Do not be led by empty efforts
to change people as if the love of God is not powerful enough to bring about
change.
Rediscover the wise and
humble constancy that the Fathers of faith of this country passed onto
successive generations with the language of divine mystery. They did this
by first learning and then teaching the grammar needed to dialogue with God; a
God concealed within centuries of searching and then brought close in the
person of his Son Jesus Christ, who is our future and who is recognized as such
by so many men and women when they behold his bloody and humiliated face.
Imitate his gracious humility and his bowing down to help us. We will
never comprehend sufficiently how, with the mestizothreads of our
people, God has woven the face by which he is to be known. We can never
be thankful enough.
I ask you to show singular
tenderness in the way you regard indigenous peoples and their fascinating but
not infrequently decimated cultures. Mexico needs its American-Indian
roots so as not to remain an unresolved enigma. The indigenous people of
Mexico still await true recognition of the richness of their contribution and
the fruitfulness of their presence. In this way they can inherit that
identity which transforms them into a single nation and not only an identity
among other identities.
On many occasions, much has
been said about a supposedly failed future of this nation, about a labyrinth
of loneliness in which it is imprisoned by its geography as well as by
a fate which ensnares it. For some, all of this is an obstacle to the
plan for a unified face, an adult identity, a unique position among the concert
of nations and a shared mission.
For others, the Church in
Mexico is also regarded as being either condemned to suffer the inferior
position to which it was relegated in some periods of its past, as for example
when its voice was silenced and efforts were made to eradicate it; or condemned
to venture into expressions of fundamentalism thus holding onto provisional
certainties while forgetting to nest its heart in the Absolute and be called in
Christ to unite everyone and not just a portion (cf. Lumen Gentium 1:1).
On the other hand, never
cease to remind your people of how powerful their ancient roots are, roots
which have allowed a vibrant Christian synthesis of human, cultural and
spiritual unity which was forged here. Remember that the wings of your
people have spread on various occasions to rise above changing
situations. Protect the memory of the long journey undertaken so far and
know how to inspire the hope of attaining new heights because the future will
bear a land “rich in fruit” even if it involves considerable challenges (Num13:27-28).
May your vision, always and
solely resting upon Christ, be capable of contributing to the unity of the
people in your care; of favouring the reconciliation of its differences and the
integration of its diversities; of promoting a solution to its endogenous
problems; of remembering the high standards which Mexico can attain when it
learns to belong to itself rather than to others; of helping to find shared and
sustainable solutions to its misfortunes; of motivating the entire nation to
not be content with less than what is expected of a Mexican way of living in
the world.
A vision that is close and
attentive, not dormant
I urge you to not fall into
that paralyzation of standard responses to new questions. Your past is a
source of riches to be mined and which can inspire the present and illumine the
future. How unfortunate you are if you sit on your laurels! It is
important not to squander the inheritance you have received by protecting it
through constant work. You stand on the shoulders of giants: bishops,
priests, religious and lay faithful “unto the end”, who have
offered their lives so that the Church can fulfil her own mission. From
those heights you are called to turn your gaze to the Lord’s vineyard to plan
the sowing and wait for the harvest.
I invite you to give
yourselves tirelessly and fearlessly to the task of evangelizing and deepening
the faith by means of a mystagogical catechesis that treasures the popular
religiosity of the people. Our times require pastoral attention to
persons and groups who hope to encounter the living Jesus. Only the
courageous personal conversion of our communities can seek, generate and
nourish todays disciples of the Lord (cf. Aparecida, 226, 368,
370).
Hence it is necessary for us
Pastors to overcome the temptation of aloofness and clericalism, of coldness
and indifference, of triumphalism and self-centredness. Guadalupe teaches
us that God is known by his countenance, and that closeness and humble bowing
down are more powerful than force.
As the wonderful Guadalupana tradition
teaches us, la Morenita gathers together those who
contemplate her, and reflects the faces of those who find her. It is
essential to learn that there is something unique in every person who looks to
us in their search for God. We must guard against becoming impervious to
such gazes but rather gather them to our hearts and guard them.
Only a Church able to shelter
the faces of men and women who knock on her doors will be able to speak to them
of God. If we do not know how to decipher their sufferings, if we do not
come to understand their needs, then we can offer them nothing. The
richness we have flows only when we encounter the smallness of those who beg
and this encounter occurs precisely in our hearts, the hearts of Pastors.
The first face I ask you to
guard in your hearts is that of your priests. Do not leave them exposed
to loneliness and abandonment, easy prey to a worldliness that devours the
heart. Be attentive and learn how to read their expressions so as to
rejoice with them when they feel the joy of recounting all that they have “done
and taught” (Mk 6:30). Also, do not step back when they feel
humiliated and can only cry because they “have denied the Lord” (cf.Lk 22:61-62),
and offer your support, in communion with Christ, when one of them,
disheartened, goes out with Judas into “the night” (cf. Jn 13:30).
As bishops in these situations, your paternal care for your priests must never
be found wanting. Encourage communion among them; seek the perfection of
their gifts; involve them in great ventures, for the heart of an apostle was
not made for small things.
The need for familiarity
abides in the heart of God. Our Lady of Guadalupe therefore asks for a casita
sagrada, a “small holy home”. Our Latin American populations
know well the diminutive forms of expression and use them willingly.
Perhaps they need to use the diminutive forms because they would feel lost
otherwise. They have adapted themselves to feeling small and have grown
accustomed to living modestly.
When the Church congregates
in a majestic Cathedral, she should not fail to see herself as a “small home”
in which her children can feel comfortable. We remain in God’s presence
only when we are little ones, orphans and beggars.
A “small home”, casita,
is familiar and at the same time “holy”, sagrada, for it is filled by
God’s omnipotent greatness. We are guardians of this mystery.
Perhaps we have lost the sense of the humble ways of the divine and are tired
of offering our own men and women the casita in which they
feel close to God. On occasion, a disregard for the sense of
omnipotent greatness has led to a partial loss of reverential fear towards such
great love. Where God lives, man cannot enter without being invited in
and he can only enter “taking off his shoes” (cf. Ex 3:5), so
as to confess his unworthiness.
Our having forgotten this
“taking off our shoes” in order to enter, is this perhaps not the root cause of
that lost sense of the sacredness of human life, of the person, of fundamental
values, of the wisdom accumulated along the centuries, and of respect for the
environment? Without rescuing within the consciences of men and women and
of society these profound roots and the generous efforts to promote legitimate
human rights, the vital sap will be lacking; and it is a sap that comes only
from a source which humanity itself cannot procure.
A holistic and unified
vision
Only by looking at la
Morenita can Mexico be understood in its entirety. And so I
invite you to appreciate that the mission which the Church entrusts to you
demands a vision embracing the whole. This cannot be realized in an
isolated manner, but only in communion.
La Guadalupana has a ribbon around her waist which proclaims her
fecundity. She is the Blessed Virgin who already has in her womb the Son
awaited by men and women. She is the Mother who already carries the humanity of
a newborn world. She is the Bride who prefigures the maternal
fruitfulness of Christ’s Church. You have been entrusted with the mission
of enrobing the Mexican nation with God’s fruitfulness. No part of this
ribbon can be despised.
The Mexican episcopate has
made significant strides in these years since the Council; it has increased its
members; it has promoted permanent formation which is consistent and
professional; there has been a fraternal atmosphere; the spirit of collegiality
has matured; the pastoral efforts have had an influence on your local Churches
and on the conscience of the nation; the shared pastoral initiatives have been
fruitful in vital areas of the Church’s mission, such as the family, vocations,
and the Church’s presence in society.
While we are encouraged by
the path taken during these years, I would ask you not to lose heart in the
face of difficulties and not to spare any effort in promoting, among yourselves
and in your dioceses, a missionary zeal, especially towards the most needy
areas of the one body of the Mexican Church. To rediscover that the
Church is mission is fundamental for her future, because only
the “enthusiasm and confident admiration” of evangelizers has the power to
attract. I ask you, therefore, to take great care in forming and
preparing the lay-faithful, overcoming all forms of clericalism and involving
them actively in the mission of the Church, above all making the Gospel of
Christ present in the world by personal witness.
Of great benefit to the
Mexican people will be the unifying witness of the Christian synthesis and the
shared vision of the identity and future of its people. In this sense, it
is important for the Pontifical University of Mexico to be increasingly
involved in the efforts of the Church to ensure a universal perspective; for
without this, reason, which tends to compartmentalize, will renounce its
highest ideal of seeking the truth.
The mission is vast, and to
carry it forward requires multiple paths. I strongly reiterate my appeal
to you to preserve the communion and unity that exist among you.
Communion is the essential form of the Church, and the unity of her Pastors
offers proof of its truth. Mexico and its vast, multifaceted Church,
stand in need of bishops who are servants and custodians of that unity built on
the word of God, nourished by his Body and guided by his Spirit who is the
life-giving breath of the Church.
We do not need “princes”, but
rather a community of the Lord’s witnesses. Christ is the only light; he
is the well-spring of living water; from his breath comes forth the Spirit, who
fills the sails of the ecclesial barque. In the glorified Christ, whom
the people of this country love to honour as King, may you together kindle the
light and be filled by his presence which is never extinguished; breathe deeply
the wholesome air of his Spirit. It falls to you to sow Christ in this
land, to keep alive his humble light which enlightens without causing
confusion, to ensure that in his living waters the thirst of your people is
quenched; to set the sails so that the Spirit’s breeze may fill them, never
allowing the barque of the Church in Mexico to run aground.
Remember: the Bride knows
that the beloved Pastor (cf. Song 1:7) will be found only
where there are verdant pastures and crystal clear streams. She does not
trust those companions of the Bridegroom who, sometimes out of laziness or
inability, lead the sheep through arid lands and areas strewn with rocks.
Woe to us pastors, companions of the Supreme Pastor, if we allow his Bride to
wander because we have set up tents where the Bridegroom cannot be found!
Allow me a final word to
convey the appreciation of the Pope for everything you are doing to confront
the challenge of our age: migration. There are millions of sons and daughters
of the Church who today live in the diaspora or who are in transit, journeying
to the north in search of new opportunities. Many of them have left
behind their roots in order to brave the future, even in clandestine conditions
which involve so many risks; they do this to seek the “green light” which they
regard as hope. So many families are separated; and integration into a
supposedly “promised land” is not always as easy as some believe.
Brothers, may your hearts be
capable of following these men and women and reaching them beyond the
borders. Strengthen the communion with your brothers of the North
American episcopate, so that the maternal presence of the Church can keep alive
the roots of the faith of these men and women, as well as the motivation for
their hope and the power of their charity. May it never happen, that,
hanging up their lyres, their joys become dampened, they forget Jerusalem and
are exiled from themselves (cf. Ps 136). I ask you to
witness together that the Church is the custodian of a unifying vision of
humanity and that she cannot consent to being reduced to a mere human
“resource”.
Your efforts will not be in
vain when your dioceses show care by pouring balm on the injured feet of those
who walk through your territories, sharing with them the resources collected
through the sacrifices of many; the divine Samaritan in the end will enrich the
person who is not indifferent to him as he lies on the side of the road (cf. Lk 10:25-37).
Dear brothers, the Pope is
sure that Mexico and its Church will make it in time to that rendezvous with
themselves, with history and with God. Perhaps some stone on the way may
slow their pace and the struggle of the journey may call for rest, but nothing
will make them lose sight of the destination. For how can someone arrive
late when it is their mother who is waiting? Who is unable to hear within
themselves that voice, ‘am I not here, I who am your Mother’?

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