Pope urges Myanmar Bishops to continue to provide
prophetic voice
Bishop Felix Lian When Thang and Bishop John Saw Yaw Han, President and General Secretary of the Catholic Bishops' conference of Myanmar.- EPA |
(Vatican Radio) Pope Francis on Wednesday
met with the 22 Catholic Bishops of Myanmar and reflected with
them on the joys and challenges of their ministry in the nation.
The meeting took place in Yangon’s Cathedral Complex. After
addressing those present he was introduced personally to each Bishop and
symbolically blessed the corner stones of 16 Churches, of the Major Seminary
and of the Apostolic Nunciature.
The Catholic Church in Myanmar includes 3 Archdioceses and
13 Dioceses. The President of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of Myanmar is
Archbishop Felix Lian Khen Thang.
The Pope focussed his discourse to the Bishops on the
concepts of healing, accompaniment and prophecy.
He spoke of the need for healing and reconciliation in a
country that is working to overcome deeply-rooted divisions and build national
unity and he highlighted the precious value provided by cultural and religious
diversity and the bishops’ responsibility to help foster healing and communion
at every level.
Regarding his focus on ‘accompaniment’, Pope Francis
reminded the bishops that a good shepherd must constantly be present to his
flock. He said that the Church is called to ‘go forth’ bringing the light of
the Gospel to every periphery and he urged them to make a special effort to
accompany the young and to be “concerned for their formation in the sound moral
principles that will guide them in confronting the challenges of a rapidly
changing world.”
Finally, the Pope spoke of the prophetic voice of the Church
that “witnesses daily to the Gospel through its works of education and charity,
its defence of human rights, its support for democratic rule”. He encouraged
the bishops – and Catholic communities - to continue to play a constructive
part in the life of society and to stand by the poorest and the most vulnerable
as well as helping to protect the environment.
Please find below the Pope’s prepared speech to Myanmar
Bishops:
Your Eminence,
My Brother Bishops,
My Brother Bishops,
For all of us,
this has been a busy day, but also a day of great joy! This morning we
celebrated the Eucharist together with the faithful from throughout Myanmar,
while this afternoon we met with leaders of the majority Buddhist
community. I would like our encounter this evening to be a moment of
quiet gratitude for these blessings and for peaceful reflection on the joys and
challenges of your ministry as shepherds of Christ’s flock in this
country. I thank Bishop Felix [Lian Khen Thang] for his words of greeting
in your name and I embrace all of you with great affection in the Lord.
I would like to group my own thoughts around three words: healing,
accompaniment and prophecy.
First, healing. The Gospel we preach is above all a message of healing,
reconciliation and peace. Through the blood of Christ’s cross, God has
reconciled the world to himself, and has sent us to be messengers of that
healing grace. Here in Myanmar, that message has a particular resonance,
as this country works to overcome deeply-rooted divisions and to build national
unity. For you, whose flocks bear the scars of this conflict and have
borne valiant witness to their faith and their ancient traditions, the
preaching of the Gospel must not only be a source of consolation and strength,
but also a summons to foster unity, charity and healing in the life of this
nation. For the unity we share and celebrate is born of diversity.
It values people’s differences as a source of mutual enrichment and
growth. It invites people to come together in a culture of encounter and
solidarity.
In your episcopal ministry, may you constantly experience the Lord’s guidance
and help in your efforts to foster healing and communion at every level of the
Church’s life, so that by their example of forgiveness and reconciling love,
God’s holy people can be salt and light for hearts longing for that peace the
world cannot give. The Catholic community in Myanmar can be proud of its
prophetic witness to love of God and neighbour, as expressed in its outreach to
the poor, the disenfranchised, and above all in these days, to the many
displaced persons who lie wounded, as it were, by the roadside. I ask you
to offer my thanks to all who, like the Good Samaritan, work so generously to
bring the balm of healing to these, their neighbours in need, without regard
for religion or ethnicity.
Your ministry of healing finds particular expression in your commitment to
ecumenical dialogue and interreligious cooperation. I pray that your
continuing efforts to build bridges of dialogue and to join with the followers
of other religions in weaving peaceful relations will bear rich fruit for
reconciliation in the life of the nation. The interfaith peace conference
held in Yangon last spring was a powerful testimony before the world of the
determination of the religions to live in peace and to reject every act of
violence and hatred perpetrated in the name of religion.
My second word to you this evening is accompaniment. A good shepherd is
constantly present to his flock, guiding them as he walks at their side.
As I like to say, the shepherd should bear the smell of the sheep. In our
time, we are called to be “a Church which goes forth” to bring the light of
Christ to every periphery (cf. Evangelii Gaudium, 20). As bishops, your
lives and ministry are called to model this spirit of missionary outreach, above
all through your regular pastoral visitation of the parishes and communities
that make up your local Churches. This is a privileged means for you, as
loving fathers, to accompany your priests in their daily efforts to build up
the flock in holiness, fidelity and a spirit of service.
By God’s grace, the Church in Myanmar has inherited a solid faith and a fervent
missionary spirit from the labours of those who brought the Gospel to this
land. On this firm foundation, and in a spirit of communion with your
priests and religious, continue to imbue the laity with a spirit of true
missionary discipleship and seek a wise inculturation of the Gospel message in
the daily life and traditions of your local communities. The contribution
of catechists is essential in this regard; their formation and enrichment must
remain among your chief priorities.
Above all, I would ask you to make a special effort to accompany the
young. Be concerned for their formation in the sound moral principles
that will guide them in confronting the challenges of a rapidly changing
world. The next Synod of Bishops will not only address these issues but
also directly engage young people, listening to their stories and enlisting
them in our common discernment on how best to proclaim the Gospel in the years
to come. One of the great blessings of the Church in Myanmar is its young
people and, in particular, the number of seminarians and young religious.
In the spirit of the Synod, please engage them and support them in their journey
of faith, for by their idealism and enthusiasm they are called to be joyful and
convincing evangelizers of their contemporaries.
My third word to you is prophecy. The Church in Myanmar witnesses daily
to the Gospel through its works of education and charity, its defence of human
rights, its support for democratic rule. May you enable the Catholic
community to continue to play a constructive part in the life of society by
making your voices heard on issues of national interest, particularly by
insisting on respect for the dignity and rights of all, especially the poorest
and the most vulnerable. I am confident that the five-year pastoral
strategy that the Church has developed within the larger context of
nationbuilding will bear rich fruit for the future not only of your local
communities but also of the country as a whole. Here I think in a special
way of the need to protect the environment and to ensure a just use of the
nation’s rich natural resources for the benefit of future generations.
The protection of God’s gift of creation cannot be separated from a sound human
and social ecology. Indeed, “genuine care for our relationship with
nature is inseparable from fraternity, justice and keeping faith with others”
(Laudato Si’, 70).
Dear brother bishops, I thank God for this moment of communion and I pray that
our presence together will strengthen us in our commitment to be faithful
shepherds and servants of the flock that Christ has entrusted to our
care. I know that your ministry is demanding and that, together with your
priests, you often labour under the heat and the burden of the day (cf. Mt
20:12). I urge you to maintain a balance between your spiritual and
physical health, and to show paternal concern for the health of your
priests. Above all, I encourage you to grow daily in prayer and in the
experience of God’s reconciling love, for that is the basis of your priestly
identity, the guarantee of the soundness of your preaching, and the source of
the pastoral charity by which you guide God’s people on the path of holiness
and truth. With great affection I invoke the Lord’s grace upon you, the
clergy and religious, and all the lay faithful of your local Churches.
And I ask you, please, not to forget to pray for me.
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