Pope Francis meets Colombia’s bishops: Full text
Pope Francis greets Colombian Bishops.-AP |
(Vatican Radio) “Colombia needs that watchfulness,
proper to you as bishops, to sustain its courage in taking the first step
towards definitive peace and reconciliation, towards abdicating the method of
violence and overcoming the inequalities at the root of so much suffering.”
Pope Francis made the exhortation on Thursday evening to the
bishops of Colombia, where he is on an Apostolic Visit on Sept. 6-11.
In a lengthy discourse at the Cardinal’s Palace in Bogota,
the Holy Father also exhorted the bishops on various issues of their pastoral
duties, such as family and life, young people, priests, religious, vocations
and the laity.
Commenting on the theme of his apostolic visit - “Let’s
take the first step” – he urged them never to forget that “God is the Lord of
the first step”, which he said is a “compass” that will keep them “from
going astray”.
He particularly urged them to preach reconciliation to the
hearts of men and women, leading them to be responsible for their brothers and
sisters.
Below, please find the official English translation of
the Pope's prepared speech:
Address: Meeting with the Colombian Bishops
Bogotá
Thursday, 7 September 2017
Peace be with you
This was the greeting of the Risen Lord to his little flock
after he triumphed over death. Let it be my own greeting to you at the
beginning of my visit.
Thank you for your words of welcome. I am pleased that
my first steps in this country have brought me to meet you, the Colombian
bishops. Through you, I embrace the whole Church in Colombia; I hold all
your people in my heart, the heart of the Successor of Peter. I am very
grateful for your ministry as bishops, and I ask you to carry it out with
renewed generosity. I offer a particular greeting to the retired bishops,
and I ask them, by their prayers and their discreet presence, to continue to
sustain the Bride of Christ to whom they devoted themselves so generously.
I have come to proclaim Christ, and to undertake a journey
of peace and reconciliation in his name. Christ is our peace! He
has reconciled us with God and with one another!
I am convinced that Colombia has one remarkable feature: it
has never been a goal fully attained, a destiny completely achieved, or a
treasure totally possessed. I think of the nation’s human riches, its
vast natural resources, its culture, its luminous Christian synthesis, the
heritage of its faith and the memory of its evangelizers. I think of the
irrepressible joy of its people, the unfailing smile of its youth, its
characteristic fidelity to the Gospel of Christ and to his Church and, above
all, its indomitable courage in resisting threats of death not merely
proclaimed but often experienced at first hand. All this recedes, hides
itself, from those who come here as foreigners bent on domination, while
offering itself freely to those who touch its heart with the meekness of a
wayfarer. Such is Colombia.
For this reason, I have come to your Church as a wayfarer, a
pilgrim. I am your brother, desirous of sharing the risen Christ for whom
no wall is impenetrable, no fear insurmountable, no disease incurable.
I am not the first Pope to speak to you in your home.
Two of my great predecessors were your guests here. Blessed Paul VI came
immediately after the conclusion of the Second Vatican Council to encourage the
collegial realization of the mystery of the Church in Latin America, as did
Saint John Paul II in his memorable Apostolic Visit of 1986. The words of
both are a lasting resource; the guidelines they set forth, and the marvellous
synthesis that they proposed regarding your ministry as bishops, are a legacy
to be treasured. I wish that everything I say to you may be received in
continuity with their teachings.
Guardians and sacrament of the first step
“Let’s take the first step”. This is the theme of my
visit and this is the first thing I would say to all of you. You know
very well that God is the Lord of the first step. He constantly goes
before us. Sacred Scripture everywhere speaks of God as exiled from
himself for love. So it was when there was only darkness, chaos,
and God, going forth from himself, brought all things into being (cf. Gen
1:2.4). So it was when he walked in the Garden and saw the nakedness of
his creatures (cf. Gen 3:8-9). So it was when, as a pilgrim, he dwelt in
the tent of Abraham, leaving him with the promise of an unexpected fertility
(cf. Gen 18:1-10). So it was when he appeared to Moses herding the goats
of his father-in-law and opened new horizons before him (cf. Ex 3:1-12).
So it was when he refused to turn away from his beloved Jerusalem, even when she
prostituted herself in the byways of infidelity (cf. Ez 16:15). So it was
when he migrated with his glory towards his people exiled in slavery (cf. Ez
10:18-19).
Then, in the fullness of time, God chose to reveal the true
name of the first step, his first step. That name is Jesus, and that step
is irreversible. It is born of the freedom of a love that precedes all
else. For the Son is himself the living expression of that love.
Those who acknowledge and accept him receive the freedom always to take,
in him, that first step. They have no fear of getting lost if they step
out of themselves, for they have the down payment of the love coming from God’s
first step, a compass that keeps them from going astray.
Preserve, then, with holy fear and reverence, that first step
which God has taken towards yourselves and, through your ministry, towards the
people that he has entrusted to your care. Realize that you are a living
sacrament of that divine freedom which is unafraid to go forth from itself out
of love, that has no fear of being impoverished by surrendering itself and
needs no strength other than that of love.
God goes before us. We are only branches, not the
vine. So do not silence the voice of the One who has called you, or
delude yourselves into thinking that the success of the mission entrusted to
you depends on your own meagre virtues or the benevolence of the powers that
be. Instead, pray fervently when you have so little to give, so that you
will be granted something to offer to those who are close to your hearts as
pastors. In the life of a bishop, prayer is the vital sap that passes
through the vine, without which the branches wither and bear no fruit. So
keep wrestling with God, even more so in the night of his absence, until he
gives you his blessing (cf. Gen 32:25-27). The wounds of that important
daily wrestling in prayer will be for you a source of healing. You will
be healed by God, so that you can in turn bring healing to others.
Show clearly that you are a sacrament of God’s first
step
Indeed, showing clearly that you are sacraments of God’s
first step will demand a constant interior exodus. “There is no mightier
invitation to love than to anticipate in loving” (Saint Augustine, De
catechizandis rudibus, I, 4.7, 26: PL 40). Consequently, every area of
your episcopal ministry should be marked by the freedom to take the first step.
The premise for the exercise of the apostolic ministry is a readiness to draw
close to Jesus, leaving behind all that we were, in order to become something
we were not (Saint Augustine, In. Psal.,121, 12: PL 36).
I urge you to be vigilant not only as individuals but as a
collegial body, ever docile to the Holy Spirit, with regard to this constant
point of departure. Where it is lacking, the features of the Master fade
from the faces of his disciples, the mission is blocked and there is a
weakening of that pastoral conversion which is nothing other than a renewed
impulse to preach the Gospel of joy today, tomorrow and the day following (cf.
Lk 13:33). That same concern filled the heart of Jesus, leaving him
without a place to lay his head, intent only on carrying out to the end the
Father’s will (cf. Lk 9:58.62). What other future do we have? To
what other dignity can we aspire?
Do not use the yardstick of those who would have you be mere
functionaries, bowing to the dictatorship of the present. Instead, keep
your gaze fixed on the eternity of the One who chose you, ever ready to accept
his own decisive judgment.
While acknowledging the complex reality of the Colombian Church,
it is important to preserve the uniqueness of its varied and legitimate
strengths, its pastoral sensitivities, its regional peculiarities, its
historical memories and its wealth of distinct ecclesial experiences.
Pentecost means that everyone ought to be able to hear the message in his
or her own language. So continue to seek communion among yourselves.
Never tire of building it through frank and fraternal dialogue, avoiding
hidden agendas like the plague. Make every effort to take the first step,
trying to understand each other’s way of thinking. Allow yourselves to be
enriched by what others can offer you and build a Church that can offer this
country an eloquent witness of the progress that can be made when things are
not left in the hands of a small group. The role of the Ecclesiastical
Provinces in relation to the Gospel message is fundamental, for the voices that
proclaim that message are diverse and concordant. So do not rest content with a
watered-down compromise that leaves the minority quietly impotent while
dampening those hopes that should be courageously entrusted to God’s power
rather than to our own weak efforts.
Show particular sensitivity towards the Afro-Colombian roots
of your people, which have contributed so greatly to shaping the face of this
land.
Touching the flesh of Christ’s body
I would ask you not to be afraid to touch the wounded flesh
of your own history and that of your people. Do so with humility, without
the vain pretension of self-serving activism, and with a heart undivided, free
of compromise and servility. God alone is Lord; since we are his shepherds, our
hearts must not be subservient to any other cause.
Colombia needs that watchfulness, proper to you as bishops, to sustain its
courage in taking the first step towards definitive peace and reconciliation,
towards abdicating the method of violence and overcoming the inequalities at
the root of so much suffering. That watchfulness is needed for renouncing
the easy yet irreversible path of corruption and for patiently persevering in
the construction of a res publica capable of combatting poverty and inequality.
This
is an arduous but necessary task; the path is steep and the solutions are not
easy to find. From the height of God, which is the cross of his Son, you
will receive strength; with the kindly gaze of the Risen Lord, you will make
your way forward; attentive to the voice of the Bridegroom whispering in your
hearts, you will find the criteria to discern anew, at every moment of uncertainty,
the right road to take.
One
of your distinguished writers said of a certain fictional character of his
that, “He did not realize that it is easier to begin a war than to end one”
(Gabriel García Márquez, Cien años de soledad, Chapter 9). All of us know
that peace calls for a distinct kind of moral courage. War follows the
basest instincts of our heart, whereas peace forces us to rise above ourselves.
The same author then went on to say: “He did not understand that many
words were needed to explain what war was like, if one alone was enough: fear”
(ibid., Chapter 15). I need not speak to you about such fear, a poisoned
root, a bitter fruit and a painful legacy of every conflict. I would only
encourage you not to stop believing that there is another way. Know that
you have not received a spirit of slavery to fall back into fear; the Spirit
himself bears witness that you are children, destined for an inheritance of
glorious freedom (cf. Rom 8:15-16).
With
your own eyes you see, and you are aware as are few others, how marred is the
face of this country. You are guardians of the basic parts that make the
nation one despite all its wounds. For this very reason, Colombia has
need of you, so that it can show its true face, filled with hope despite its
imperfections. So that it can engage in mutual forgiveness despite wounds
not yet completely healed. So that it can believe that another path can
be taken, even when force of habit causes the same mistakes to be constantly repeated.
So that the courage can be found to overcome everything that generates misery
in the midst of so many treasures.
I
encourage you, then, to strive to make your Churches wombs of light, capable of
giving birth, even amid great poverty, to the new children that this land
needs. Find shelter in the humility of your people, and recognize their
hidden resources of humanity and faith. Listen to how greatly their
ravaged humanity yearns for the dignity that only the Risen Lord can give. Do
not be afraid to abandon your apparent certitudes to seek the true glory of
God, which is the living man.
The word of reconciliation
Many
people can help with the challenges facing this nation, but your mission is
unique. You are not mechanics or politicians, but pastors. Christ
is the word of reconciliation written on your hearts. You have the power
to preach that word not only in pulpits, in ecclesial documents or newspaper
articles, but also in the hearts of individual men and women. You have
the power to proclaim it in the inner sanctum of their consciences, where they
hope to hear the heavenly voice that proclaims: “Peace to those whom God loves”
(Lk 2:14). You must speak that word with the frail, lowly yet invincible
resource of God’s mercy, which is capable of averting the pride and cynicism of
selfish hearts.
The
Church seeks only the freedom to speak that word. She has no need for
alliances with this or that party, but only the freedom to speak to the heart
of every man and woman. There, they are free to face their anxieties;
there, they can find the strength to change the course of their lives.
The
human heart, so often misled, wants to see life as a vast warehouse for
depositing everything it accumulates. For this very reason, the question needs
to be put: What does it profit a man to gain the entire world, if his soul
remains empty? (cf. Mt 16:26).
From
your lips as legitimate shepherds of Christ, Colombia has a right to be
challenged by the truth of God, who never ceases to ask: “Where is your
brother?” (cf. Gen 4:9). That question may not be silenced, even if those
who hear it can do no more than lower their gaze in embarrassment and stammer
in shame that they sold him, perhaps for the price of a fix of narcotics or for
some misguided notion of reasons of state, or even for the false belief that
the end justifies the means.
I ask
you to keep your gaze ever fixed on concrete men and women. Do not talk
about “man”, but about human persons, loved by God and composed of flesh and
bones, history, faith, feelings, disappointments, frustrations, sorrows and
hurts. You will see that this concrete approach will unmask cold
statistics, twisted calculations, blind strategies and falsified data, and
remind you that “only in the mystery of the Word made flesh does the mystery of
man truly become clear” (Gaudium et Spes, 22).
A Church on mission
While
acknowledging the generous pastoral work that you continue to carry out, let me
now share with you some of my heartfelt concerns as a Pastor who wants to
encourage you to be more and more a Church on mission. My predecessors
have already insisted on a number of these challenges: the family and life,
young people, priests, vocations, laity and formation. Despite the
enormous efforts that have been made, in recent decades it has become perhaps
even harder to find effective ways to express Church’s maternity in begetting,
nourishing and accompanying her children.
I
think of Colombia’s families, of the defence of life from the maternal womb to
its natural conclusion, of the scourge of violence and alcoholism that often
affect entire households, of the weakening of the marriage bond and the absence
of fathers, with the tragic effects of insecurity and a sense of abandonment.
I think of young people threatened by spiritual emptiness and seeking to
escape through drug use, frivolous lifestyles and a rebellious spirit. I
think of your many generous priests and the challenge of supporting them in their
daily decision to remain faithful to Christ and the Church, while some few
continue to propose the easy way out, avoiding genuine commitment and remaining
isolated and self-centred. I think of the lay faithful throughout your
local Churches who continue to gather together in response to the call of God,
who is communion, even as many people are proclaiming the new dogma of
selfishness and the death of solidarity. I think of the immense efforts
made by so many people to grow in faith, making it a radiant light for their
hearts and a lamp to guide the first step.
I
offer you no recipes, much less do I intend to leave you a list of things to
do. Still, I would ask you, as you carry out in communion your demanding
mission as the bishops of Colombia, to maintain your serenity. Although
you know very well that, during the night, the evil one continues to sow weeds,
imitate the patience of the Lord of the harvest and trust in the good quality
of his grain. Learn from his patience and generosity. He takes his
time, because his loving gaze sees far into the distance. If love grows
weak, the heart becomes impatient, anxious to be busy about many things,
hounded by the fear of failure. Believe above all in the smallness of
God’s seeds. Trust in the power hidden in his yeast. Let your
hearts be drawn to the great beauty that leads us to sell everything we have,
in order to possess that divine treasure.
Indeed, what more powerful gift can you offer to the Colombian family than the
quiet strength of the Gospel of love, that generous love which unites a man and
a woman, and makes them an image of Christ’s union with the Church, givers and
guardians of life? Families need to know that in Christ they can once
more become a luxuriant tree capable of providing shade and bearing fruit in
every season, sheltering nests of life in its branches. Nowadays so many
people glorify trees that offer no shade, trees that bear no fruit, branches
bare of nests. May your own starting point be a joyful witness to the
fact that happiness is to be found elsewhere.
What
can you offer to young people? They love to feel loved; they distrust
those who write them off; they look for integrity and they want to be involved.
Accept them with the heart of Christ and make room for them in the life
of your Churches. Do not undersell their hopes and expectations. Be
fearless in clearly and calmly reminding everyone that a society under the
spell of drugs suffers a moral metastasis that peddles hellfire, sows rampant
corruption and creates fiscal paradises.
What
can you give to your priests? The first gift is to be fathers to them,
assuring them that the hand that begot and anointed them continues to be part
of their lives. In this digital age, it is not hard for us to reach our
priests instantly. Yet the paternal heart of a bishop cannot be content
with an occasional, impersonal and formal communication with his priests.
A bishop has to be concerned about where and how his priests are living.
Are they truly living as Jesus’ disciples? Or have they found other forms
of security, like financial stability, moral ambiguity, a double life, or the
myopic illusion of careerism? Priests have a vital and urgent need for
the physical and affective closeness of their bishop. They need to know
that they have a father.
Priests frequently shoulder the burden of the Church’s daily activity.
They are in the front lines, continually surrounded by persons with
difficulties who look to them for pastoral assistance. People approach
them and appeal to their hearts. Priests have to feed the crowds, but
God’s food is never something to be merely handed out. On the contrary,
it can only come from our own poverty, which encounters God’s bounty. To
dismiss the crowds and to feed oneself on the little that one can unduly
appropriate is a constant temptation (cf. Lk 9:13).
So be
vigilant for the spiritual grounding of your priests. Keep leading them
to that Caesarea Philippi where each of them, from his own Jordan experience,
can hear Jesus ask once more: Who do you say that I am? The reason for
the gradual decay that often leads to the death of discipleship is always to be
found in a heart no longer able to answer: “You are the Christ, the Son of God”
(cf. Mt 16:13-16). The result is seen in a loss of the courage to give
freely of oneself, in interior confusion, and in the weariness of a heart no
longer capable of accompanying the Lord on his way to Jerusalem.
Show
particular concern for the ongoing formation of your priests, from the first
moment they hear God’s call in their hearts. The recently published Ratio
Fundamentalis Institutionis Sacerdotalis is a valuable resource whose
implementation will help the Church in Colombia in her efforts to respond to
the gift of God, who never ceases to call so many of her sons to the
priesthood.
I ask
you also to show concern for the lives of consecrated men and women. They
represent an evangelical rebuke to worldliness. They are called to purify
every residue of worldly values in the fire of the Beatitudes lived sine glossa
and in total self-abnegation for the service of others. Do not look upon
them as “useful resources” for the works of the apostolate, but hear in them
the Bride’s cry of consecrated love: “Come, Lord Jesus” (Rev 22:20).
Be
concerned too for the formation of your laity, who are responsible not only for
the strength of their faith communities, but in great part for the Church’s
presence in the area of cultural, political and economic life. Formation
in the Church involves coming into contact with the living faith of the
ecclesial community and appropriating the treasure of experiences and responses
that the Holy Spirit awakens, for he is the one who teaches all things (cf. Jn
14:26).
I
would now turn my thoughts to the challenges facing the Church in Amazonia, a
region of which you are rightly proud, because it is an essential part of the
remarkable biodiversity of this country. Amazonia is for all of us a
decisive test whether our society, all too often prey to materialism and
pragmatism, is capable of preserving what it freely received, not to exploit it
but to make it bear fruit. I think particularly of the profound wisdom of
the indigenous peoples of the Amazon region, and I ask myself if we are still
capable of learning from them the sacredness of life, respect for nature, and
the recognition that technology alone is insufficient to bring fulfilment to
our lives and to respond to our most troubling questions.
For
this reason, I encourage you not to abandon the Church in Amazonia to itself.
Creating an “Amazonian face” for the pilgrim Church in this land is a
challenge for all of you; and it calls for an increasingly conscious missionary
support on the part of all the dioceses and the entire clergy of the nation.
I am told that in some native Amazon languages the idea of “friend” is
translated by the words, “my other arm”. May you be the other arm of
Amazonia. Colombia cannot amputate that arm without disfiguring its face
and its soul.
Dear brothers:
Let
us now turn in spirit to Our Lady of the Rosary of Chiquinquirá, whose image
you were thoughtful enough to bring from her Shrine to the magnificent
Cathedral of this city, so that I too might venerate her.
As
you well know, Colombia cannot achieve that true renewal to which she aspires,
unless it is granted from on high. Let us ask this of the Lord through
the Blessed Virgin.
Just
as in Chiquinquirá God renewed the splendour of the countenance of his Mother,
may he continue to shine his heavenly light on the face of this entire country
and accompany the Church in Colombia with his gracious blessings.
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