Pope Francis meets with Chilean
Bishops
Pope Francis meets the Bishops of Chile.(Vatican Media) |
On the first full day of his apostolic journey to Chile,
Pope Francis met with the Bishops of the nation in the Sacresty of Santiago
Cathedral. This is the full text of his address:
APOSTOLIC VISIT OF HIS HOLINESS POPE FRANCIS
TO CHILE
Greeting of the Holy Father
Meeting with Bishops
Santiago Cathedral Sacristy
Tuesday, 16 January 2018
Dear Brothers:
I thank you
for the greeting that the President of the Conference has offered to me in the
name of all present.
Before all
else, I would like to greet Bishop Bernardino Piñero Carvallo, who this year
celebrates his sixtieth anniversary of episcopal ordination – he is the oldest
bishop in the world, not only in age but also in years of episcopate – who was
present for four sessions of the Second Vatican Council. A marvellous
living memory.
Soon a year
will have passed since your ad limina visit. Now it is
my turn to come and visit you. I am pleased that our meeting follows that
with our consecrated men and women, for one of our principal tasks is
precisely to be close to consecrated life and to our
priests. If the shepherd wanders off, the sheep too will stray and fall
prey to any wolf that comes along. The fatherhood of the bishop with his
presbyterate! A fatherhood that neither paternalism nor authoritarianism,
but a gift to be sought. Stay close to your priests, like Saint Joseph,
with a fatherhood that helps them to grow and to develop the charisms that the
Holy Spirit has wished to pour out upon your respective presbyterates.
I know that
ours is a brief meeting, but I would like to reiterate some of the points I
made during our meeting in Rome. I can sum them up in the following
phrase: the consciousness of being a people.
One of the
problems facing our societies today is the sense of being orphaned, the feeling
of not belonging to anyone. This “postmodern” feeling can seep into us
and into our clergy. We begin to think that we belong to no one; we
forget that we are part of God’s holy and faithful people and that the Church
is not, nor will it ever be, an élite of consecrated men and women, priests and
bishops. Without this consciousness of being a people, we will not be
able to sustain our life, our vocation and our ministry. To forget this –
as I said to the Commission for Latin America – “carries many risks and
distortions in our own experience, as individuals and in community, of the
ministry that the Church has entrusted to us”.[1] The lack of
consciousness of belonging to God’s people as servants, and not masters, can
lead us to one of the temptations that is most damaging to the missionary
outreach that we are called to promote: clericalism, which ends up as a
caricature of the vocation we have received.
A failure
to realize that the mission belongs to the entire Church, and not to the
individual priest or bishop, limits the horizon, and even worse, stifles all
the initiatives that the Spirit may be awakening in our midst. Let us be
clear about this. The laypersons are not our peons, or our employees.
They don’t have to parrot back whatever we say. “Clericalism, far
from giving impetus to various contributions and proposals, gradually
extinguishes the prophetic flame to which the entire Church is called to bear
witness. Clericalism forgets that the visibility and the sacramentality
of the Church belong to all the people of God (cf. Lumen Gentium,
9-14), not only to the few chosen and enlightened”.[2]
Let us be
on guard, please, against this temptation, especially in seminaries and
throughout the process of formation. Seminaries must stress that future
priests be capable of serving God’s holy and faithful people, acknowledging the
diversity of cultures and renouncing the temptation to any form of clericalism.
The priest is a minister of Jesus Christ: Jesus is the protagonist who
makes himself present in the entire people of God. Tomorrow’s
priests must be trained with a view to the future, since their ministry will be
carried out in a secularized world. This in turn demands that we pastors
discern how best to prepare them for carrying out their mission in these
concrete circumstances and not in our “ideal worlds or situations”.
Their mission is carried out in fraternal unity with the whole People of
God. Side by side, supporting and encouraging the laity in a climate of
discernment and synodality, two of the essential features of the priest of
tomorrow. Let us say no to clericalism and to ideal worlds that are only
part of our thinking, but touch the life of no one.
And in this
regard, to beg, to implore from the Holy Spirit the gift of dreaming and
working for a missionary and prophetic option capable of transforming
everything, so that our customs, ways of doing things, times and schedules,
language and ecclesial structures can be suitably channelled for the
evangelization of Chile rather than for ecclesiastical self-preservation.
Let us not be afraid to strip ourselves of everything that separates us
from the missionary mandate.[3]
Dear
brothers, let us commend ourselves to loving protection of Mary, Mother of
Chile. Let us pray together for our presbyterates and for our consecrated
men and women. Let us pray for God’s holy and faithful people.
[1] Letter to Cardinal Marc Ouellet, President of
the Pontifical Commission for Latin America (21 March 2016).
[2] Ibid.
[3] Cf. Apostolic Exhortation Evangelii Gaudium,
27.
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