Pope Francis speaks to Peru's bishops: Full text
Pope Francis speaks to Peru's Bishops. |
We bring you the full text of Pope Francis' prepared remarks
delivered to the bishops of Peru in the Archbishop's Residence in Lima on the
final day of his Apostolic Visit.
Address of the Holy Father
Meeting with the Peruvian Bishops
Lima, Archbishop’s House
Sunday, 21 January 2018
Meeting with the Peruvian Bishops
Lima, Archbishop’s House
Sunday, 21 January 2018
Dear Brother Bishops,
Thank you
for the kind words addressed to me by the Cardinal Archbishop of Lima and the
President of the Episcopal Conference in the name of all present. I have
looked forward to being here with you. I recall with pleasure your
visit ad limina last year.
These days
I have spent among you have been very intense and gratifying. I have been
able to learn about and experience the different realities that shape these
lands, and to share at first hand the faith of God’s holy and faithful people,
which does us so much good. Thank you for the opportunity to “touch” the
faith of the people that God has entrusted to you.
The theme
of this Visit speaks to us of unity and hope.
This is a demanding yet exciting programme, which makes us think us of the
heroic accomplishments of Saint Turibius of Mogrovejo, archbishop of this see
and patron of the Latin American episcopate, an example of a “builder of
ecclesial unity”, as my predecessor, Saint John Paul II described him during
his first Apostolic Visit to this land.[1]
It is
significant that this holy bishop is frequently portrayed as a “new Moses”.
As you know, the Vatican has a picture in which Saint Turibius appears
crossing a great river whose waters open before him like the Red Sea, so that
he could get to the other shore, where a numerous group of natives awaited him.
Behind Saint Turibius is a great crowd, representing the faithful people who
follow their shepherd in the task of evangelization.[2] This beautiful
image can serve to anchor my reflection with you. Saint Turibius,
the man who wanted to get to the other shore.
We see him
from the time in which he accepted the mandate to come to these lands with the
mission to be a father and a shepherd. He left the security of familiar
surroundings in order to enter a completely new universe, unknown and filled
with challenges. He journeyed towards a promised land guided by faith as
“the assurance of things hoped for” (Heb 11:1). His faith and
his trust in the Lord impelled him, then and for the rest of his life, to get
to the other shore, where the Lord himself was waiting for him in the midst of
a great crowd.
1. He wanted to get to the
other shore in search of the distant and dispersed. To do so, he had to
leave behind the comfort of the bishop’s residence and traverse the territory
entrusted to him in constant pastoral visits; he tried to visit and stay
wherever he was needed, and how greatly was he needed! He went out to
encounter everyone, along paths that, in the words of his secretary, were meant
more for goats than for people. Turibius had to face greatly differing
climates and landscapes, “of the twenty-two years of his episcopate, eighteen
were spent outside of his city, three times crossing his territory”.[3]
He knew that this was the one way to be a pastor: to be close to his own,
dispensing the sacraments, and he constantly exhorted his priests to do the
same. He did so not only by words, but by his witness in the front lines
of evangelization. Today we would call him a “street” bishop. A
bishop with shoes worn out by walking, by constant travel, by setting out to
“preach the Gospel to all: to all places, on all occasions, without hesitation,
reluctance and fear. The joy of the Gospel is for all people: no one can
be excluded”.[4]. How much Saint Turibius knew this! Without fear
and without hesitation he immersed himself in our continent in order to
proclaim the good news.
2. He wanted to get to the
other shore not only geographically but also culturally. Consequently, he
worked in many ways for an evangelization in the native languages. With the
Third Council of Lima he provided for catechisms to be compiled and translated
into Quechua and Aymara. He encouraged the clergy to learn the language
of their flock in order to administer the sacraments to them in a way they
could understand. Visiting and living with his people, he realized that
it was not enough just to be there physically, but to learn to speak the
language of others, for only in this way could the Gospel be understood and
touch the heart. How necessary is this vision for us, the pastors of the
twenty-first century! For we have to learn completely new languages, like
that, for example, of this, our digital age. To know the real language of
our young people, our families, our children… As Saint Turibius clearly
realized, it is not enough just to be present and occupy space; we have to be
able to generate processes in people’s lives, so that the faith can take root
and be meaningful. And to do that, we have to be able to speak their
language. We need to get to the places where new stories and paradigms
are being born, to bring the word of Jesus to the very heart of our cities and
our peoples.[5] The evangelization of culture requires us to enter into
the heart of culture itself, so that it can be illuminated from within by the
Gospel.
3. Saint Turibius wanted to
get to the other shore of charity. For our patron, there could be no
evangelization without charity. He knew that the supreme form of
evangelization is to model in our own lives the self-giving of Jesus Christ,
out of love for every man and woman. The children of God and the children
of the devil are revealed in this way: all who do not practise justice are not
from God, nor are those who do not love their brothers and sisters (cf. 1
Jn 3:10). In his visits, he was able to see the abuses and
excesses that the original peoples had suffered, and thus he was unafraid, in
1585, to excommunicate the Corregidor of Cajatambo, setting
himself against a whole system of corruption and a web of interests which “drew
upon him the enmity of many”, including the Viceroy.[6] Such, we see, is
the pastor who knows that spiritual good can never be separated from just
material good, and all the more so when the integrity and dignity of persons is
at risk. An episcopal spirit of prophecy unafraid of denouncing abuses
and excesses committed against our people. In this way, Turibius reminds
society as a whole, and each community, that charity must always be accompanied
by justice. And that there can be no authentic evangelization that does
not point out and denounce every sin against the lives of our brothers and
sisters, especially those who are most vulnerable.
4. He wanted to get to the
other shore in the formation of his priests. He founded the first
post-Tridentine seminary in this part of the world, thus encouraging the
training of the native clergy. He realized that it was not enough to
visit everywhere and to speak the same language: the Church needed to raise up
her own local pastors and thus become a fruitful mother. To this end, he
defended the ordination of the mestizos – a controversial
issue at that time – and sought to make others see that if the clergy needed to
be different in any area, it had to be by virtue of their holiness and not
their racial origin.[7] This formation was not limited to seminary
studies, but continued through the constant visits that he undertook.
There he was able to see firsthand the “state of his priests” and to show
his concern for them. The story goes that on Christmas Eve his
sister gave him a shirt that he could wear for the holidays. That same
day he went to visit a priest and, seeing his living conditions, took off the
shirt and gave it to him.[8] He was a pastor who knew his priests.
A pastor who tried to visit them, to accompany them, to encourage them and to
admonish them. He reminded his priests that they were pastors and not
shopkeepers, and so they had to care for and defend the indios as
their children.[9] Yet he did not do this from a desk, and so he knew his
sheep and they recognized, in his voice, the voice of the good shepherd.
5. He wanted to get to the
other shore of unity. In an admirable and prophetic way, he worked to
open up possibilities for communion and participation among the different
members of God’s people. Saint John Paul II mentioned this when speaking
to the bishops in these lands. He noted that: “The Third Council of Lima
was the result of that effort, guided, encouraged and directed by Saint
Turibius; it bore fruit in a wealth of unity in faith, pastoral and
organizational norms, and useful insights for the desired integration of Latin
America”.[10] We know very well that this unity and consensus emerged
from great tensions and conflicts. We cannot deny tensions and the
differences; life is not possible without conflict. Yet they require us,
if we are men and Christians, to face them and to deal with them. But to
deal with them in a spirit of unity, in honest and sincere dialogue, face to
face, taking care not to fall into temptation to ignore the past, or to remain
prisoners, lacking the vision to discern paths of unity and peace. It is
a source of encouragement, in our journey as an episcopal conference, to know
that unity will always prevail over conflict.[11] Dear brothers, work for
unity. Do not remain prisoners of divisions that create cliques and
hamper our vocation to be a sacrament of communion. Remember: what was
attractive about the early church was how they loved one another. That
was – and is and always will be – the best way to evangelize.
6. The moment came for Saint
Turibius to get to the final shore, to the land of which he had a foretaste on
every shore he left. This time, however, he did not leave alone. As
in the picture I spoke of previously, he went to meet the saints surrounded by
a great crowd. He was a pastor who packed “his bags” with names and
faces. They were his passport to heaven. I would not like to pass
over this final chord, the moment when the shepherd surrendered his soul to
God. He did so in the midst of his people, and a native played a song on
his chirimía so that the soul of his pastor would feel at
peace. Brothers, would that when we undertake our final journey, we might
have this same experience. Let us ask the Lord to grant this to us.[12]
And please, do not forget to pray for me.
[1] Address to the Peruvian Bishops (2
February 1985), 3.
[2] Cf. Miracle of Saint Turibius, Vatican
Pinacoteca.
[3] JORGE MARIO BERGOGLIO, Homily at Mass, Aparecida
(16 May 2007).
[4] Apostolic Exhortation Evangelii Gaudium, 23.
[5] Cf. Ibid., 74.
[6] Cf. ERNESTO ROJAS INGUNZA, El Perú de los Santos,
in : KATHY PERALES YSLA (ed.), Cinco Santos del Perú. Vida, obra y
tiempo, Lima (2016), 57.
[7] Cf. JOSÉANTONIO BENITO RODRÍGUEZ, Santo Toribio
de Mogrovejo, in KATHY PERALES YSLA (ed.), Cinco Santos del Perú.
Vida, obra y tiempo, Lima
(2016),178.
[8] Cf. ibid., 180.
[9] Cf. JUAN VILLEGAS, Fiel y evangelizador. Santo
Toribio de Mogrovejo, patrono de los obisbos de América Latina, Montevideo
(1984), 22.
[10] Address to the Peruvian Bishops (2
February 1985), 3.
[11] Cf. Apostolic Exhortation Evangelii Gaudium,
226-230.
[12] Cf. JORGE MARIO BERGOGLIO, Homily at Mass,
Aparecida (16 May 2007).
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