On August 15 of this year, His Excellency, Richard Smith, President of the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops addressed to the Synod of Ukrainian-Greek Catholic Bishops in Kiev, Ukraine.
Address of His Excellency, Richard Smith
President of the
Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops
From
your heroic example, we in the West can draw encouragement and inspiration
Dear Brother Bishops,
Glory to Jesus Christ!
I thank my brother in the Lord, His Beatitude Sviatoslav,
for the kind invitation to address this eminent gathering. I am pleased and
honoured to be with you, because this occasion affords me the opportunity to
greet you on behalf of all the Latin-rite Bishops of Canada, and to assure you
of our fraternal affection and abiding esteem. We remember with deep
appreciation the visit of His Beatitude to our Plenary Assembly held near the
city of Montreal, Canada just under one year ago and the message he shared with
us. His words were a pledge of fraternal communion, which my visit with you in
Kyiv now allows me to reciprocate.
We rejoice with you as you celebrate here the 1025th
anniversary of the baptism of the people of Kyivan-Rus. In Canada we continue
to mark an anniversary of considerably fewer years but still of great
significance for our land, namely, the centenary of the arrival of the first
Ukrainian Catholic Bishop in our country, the Blessed Nikita Budka. The
commemorations of these events unite to underscore the marvellous enrichment
that our Ukrainian brothers and sisters bring to both Church and society.
Among the many gifts you offer us, I want to mention in
particular your witness of fidelity and resilience. As I visit this country and
read again of its history, I am both edified and humbled by the resilience of
the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church in the face of great persecution and
suffering. The lesson you teach us is that authentic discipleship involves
inescapably the embrace of truth revealed in Christ and its incarnation in our
individual and collective lives. Resistance to this truth by others, even
violent opposition, does not excuse us from our responsibility to be faithful
witnesses to our Lord. From your heroic example, we in the West can draw
encouragement and inspiration. While secularization there steadily fashions an
environment intolerant of the Gospel, you remind us of the beauty of fidelity
and its power to transform. In this way you encourage us to be steadfast, regardless
of the consequences, confident that God works mysteriously through his faithful
ones to turn all to the good.
It appears to me that your apprehension of the beauty of
truth and faithful adherence to it arises from the central place accorded by the
Ukrainian tradition to the Divine Liturgy. God who is Truth meets us in the
Liturgy, where he draws us into the mystery of His love, and enables us to
share even now in his Triune life. Encounter with this mystery in the Liturgy
engenders fidelity to the divine love, and impels us by that same caritas toward
our brothers and sisters, even if our presence and message is unwelcome. Your
consistent witness over many centuries to this truth lends strength to the call
now being issued to the Church and world by Pope Francis to know the Lord and
to bring his love to the peripheries.
At the same time the Divine Liturgy handed on in the
Byzantine tradition gives great emphasis to Mercy, which is Truth's necessary
companion. Here again we find a lesson vital for our times. Our day is rather
harsh and unforgiving toward human frailty, an attitude that, sadly,
characterizes the manner in which many Catholics relate to one another. Yet God
is rich in mercy (Eph 2:4) and no one can survive without divine
forgiveness (Ps 130:3). From the frequent cry for mercy in the Divine
Liturgy we learn the foundation of true human solidarity: since all are in need
of God's tender compassion, we must be merciful toward one another.
In Canada, the relationship between Latin and Ukrainian
Catholics is strong. I am pleased to share with you that this good rapport is
particularly visible in our national episcopal conference and regional
assemblies of Bishops, where we welcome the full participation of our Ukrainian
brothers. Indeed, we ensure that the Metropolitan has a permanent ex officio
presence on our Permanent Council, the body of Bishops that governs the
life of our episcopal conference between plenary sessions. We benefit greatly
from their participation not only in various committees of the national
conference but also in shared ministry at the regional and local levels. They
are our brothers, they are our friends, and we are enriched by our collaboration
for the good of the Church.
Today on the Latin Church Calendar we mark a beautiful
mystery in the life of our Blessed Mother. The Ukrainian tradition speaks of
this as her Dormition, the Latin as her Assumption. These two terms for the
same event constitute a distinction without difference. Thus does our common
love for the Mother of God shine light on the nature of our unity in the
Church: distinct without difference. By the intercession of Our Lady, may this
communion give both hope and direction to our world that hungers for harmony
and peace.
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