Pope: Mission of CDF has an
"eminently pastoral visage"
Participants in the Plenary Session of the Congregation for
the Doctrine of the Faith met with Pope Francis on Friday at the Vatican.
By Christopher Wells
Pope Francis met Friday with participants in the Plenary
Session of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, thanking members of
the dicastery for their “delicate service” to the Church, and noting the
“particular bond” between the Congregation and the “successor of Peter, who is
called to confirm the brethren in the faith, and the Church in unity.”
In defence of the Faith and the Sacraments
The Holy Father thanked them, too, for their commitment to
supporting the magisterium of the Bishops “in defence of the faith and of the
sanctity of the Sacraments” with regard to current questions requiring great
“pastoral discernment.” In particular, the Pope mentioned the work of examining
cases concerning “graviora delicta” (more serious crimes, such as clerical
sexual abuse or grave abuses of the Sacraments), and questions of the dissolution
of marriages “in favour of the faith” (the so-called “Petrine privilege”).
In this sense, the Pope said, the work of the Congregation
“in recalling the transcendent vocation of man” and the relationship between
man’s reason and the values of truth and goodness, realized through faith in
Jesus Christ, “appears decisive.” He continued, “Nothing can help man recognize
himself and God’s plan for the world than opening himself to the light that
comes from God.”
Work of the Congregation
Pope Francis also expressed his appreciation for the work
the Congregation has undertaken during its two-year Plenary Session, including:
· the study
of Christian salvation in reference to modern tendencies to “neo-pelagianism”
and “neo-gnosticism”;
· the
importance of an adequate anthropology in the field of economics and finance;
And,
· “delicate
questions concerning the accompaniment of the terminally ill.”
With regard to the latter, the Pope noted the growth, in
many countries, of requests for euthanasia “as an ideological affirmation of
the will of power of man over life.” This becomes possible, he said, wherever
“life is not valued for its dignity, but for its efficiency and productivity.”
In response, the Pope said, “it is necessary to repeat that human life, from
conception to its natural end, possesses a dignity that renders it
untouchable.”
Contemporary man, the Pope said, often finds it difficult to
reflect on the realities of pain and suffering, of life and death, with “a gaze
of hope.” One of the services the Congregation can render to the men and women
of today, he said, is to offer to them “a trusting hope” that can allow them
“to live well, and maintain a confident prospective toward the future.”
An eminently pastoral visage
This the Pope said, gives the mission of the Congregation
for the Doctrine of the Faith “an eminently pastoral visage.” Authentic
pastors, he said in conclusion, are those “who do not abandon man to himself,
nor leave him as the prey of his disorientation and his errors, but with truth
and mercy bring him back to rediscover his authentic face in the good."
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