On Sunday afternoon, July 28, just before boarding the
aircraft for his return flight to Rome, the Holy Father, Pope Francis met with
the leadership of the Episcopal Conference of Latin America (known as CELAM)
during their General Coordination meeting which was being held in Rio de
Janeiro.
Address
of the Holy Father, Pope Francis
to the leadership of CELAM
Introduction
I thank the Lord for this opportunity to speak with you,
my brother bishops, the leadership of CELAM for the four-year period from 2011
to 2015. For 57 years CELAM has served the 22 Episcopal Conferences of Latin
America and the Caribbean, working in a spirit of solidarity and subsidiarity
to promote, encourage and improve collegiality among the bishops and communion
between the region’s Churches and their pastors.
Like yourselves, I too witnessed the powerful working of
the Spirit in the Fifth General Conference of the Latin American and Caribbean
Episcopate in Aparecida, in May 2007, which continues to inspire the efforts of
CELAM for the desired renewal of the Particular Churches. In many of them, this
renewal is clearly taking place. I would like to focus this conversation on the
legacy of that fraternal encounter, which all of us have chosen to call a
Continental Mission.
Particular characteristics of Aparecida
There are four hallmarks of the Fifth Conference. They
are like four pillars for the implementation of Aparecida, and they are what
make it distinctive.
1 Starting without a document
MedellĂn, Puebla and Santo Domingo began their work with
a process of preparation which culminated in a sort of Instrumentum Laboris which then served as a basis for discussion,
reflection and the approval of the final document. Aparecida, on the other
hand, encouraged the participation of the Particular Churches as a process of
preparation culminating in a document of synthesis. This document, while
serving as a point of reference throughout the Fifth General Conference, was
not taken as a starting point. The initial work consisted in pooling the concerns
expressed by the bishops as they considered the new period of history we are
living and the need to recover the life of discipleship and mission with which
Christ founded the Church.
2 A setting of prayer with the people of God
It is important to remember the prayerful setting created
by the daily sharing of the Eucharist and other liturgical moments, in which we
were always accompanied by the People of God. On the other hand, since the
deliberations took place in the undercroft of the Shrine, the music which
accompanied them were the songs and the prayers of the faithful.
3 A document which continues in commitment, with the
Continental Mission
This context of prayer and the life of faith gave rise to a desire for a new Pentecost for the Church and the commitment to undertake a Continental Mission. Aparecida did not end with a document; it continues in the Continental Mission.
This context of prayer and the life of faith gave rise to a desire for a new Pentecost for the Church and the commitment to undertake a Continental Mission. Aparecida did not end with a document; it continues in the Continental Mission.
4 The presence of Our Lady, Mother of America
It was the first conference of the bishops of Latin
America and the Caribbean to be held in a Marian shrine.
Dimensions of the
Continental Mission
The Continental Mission is planned along two lines: the
programmatic and the paradigmatic. The programmatic mission, as its name
indicates, consists in a series of missionary activities. The paradigmatic
mission, on the other hand, involves setting in a missionary key all the
day-to-day activities of the Particular Churches. Clearly this entails a whole
process of reforming ecclesial structures. The change of structures (from obsolete ones to new ones) will not be
the result of reviewing an organizational flow chart, which would lead to a
static reorganization; rather it will result from the very dynamics of mission.
What makes obsolete structures pass away, what leads to a change of heart in
Christians, is precisely missionary spirit. Hence the importance of the
paradigmatic mission.
The Continental Mission, both programmatic and
paradigmatic, calls for creating a sense of a Church which is organized to
serve all the baptized, and men and women of goodwill. Christ’s followers are
not individuals caught up in a privatized spirituality, but persons in
community, devoting themselves to others. The Continental Mission thus implies
membership in the Church.
An approach like this, which begins with missionary
discipleship and involves understanding Christian identity as membership in the
Church, demands that we clearly articulate the real challenges facing
missionary discipleship. Here I will mention only two: the Church’s inner
renewal and dialogue with the world around us.
The Church’s inner
renewal
Aparecida considered Pastoral Conversion to be a
necessity. This conversion involves believing in the Good News, believing in
Jesus Christ as the bearer of God’s Kingdom as it breaks into the world and in
his victorious presence over evil, believing in the help and guidance of the
Holy Spirit, believing in the Church, the Body of Christ and the prolonging of
the dynamism of the incarnation.
Consequently, we, as pastors, need to ask questions about
the actual state of the Churches which we lead. These questions can serve as a
guide in examining where the dioceses stand in taking up the spirit of
Aparecida; they are questions which we need to keep asking as an examination of
conscience.
1 Do we see to it that our work, and that of our priests,
is more pastoral than administrative? Who primarily benefits from our efforts,
the Church as an organization or the People of God as a whole?
2 Do we fight the temptation simply to react to complex
problems as they arise? Are we creating a proactive mindset? Do we promote
opportunities and possibilities to manifest God's mercy? Are we conscious of
our responsibility for refocusing pastoral approaches and the functioning of
Church structures for the benefit of the faithful and society?
3 In practice, do we make the lay faithful sharers in the
Mission? Do we offer them the word of God and the sacraments with a clear
awareness and conviction that the Holy Spirit makes himself manifest in them?
4 Is pastoral discernment a habitual criterion, through
the use of Diocesan Councils? Do such Councils and Parish Councils, whether
pastoral or financial, provide real opportunities for lay people to participate
in pastoral consultation, organization and planning? The good functioning of
these Councils is critical. I believe that on this score, we are far behind.
5 As pastors, bishops and priests, are we conscious and
convinced of the mission of the lay faithful and do we give them the freedom to
continue discerning, in a way befitting their growth as disciples, the mission
which the Lord has entrusted to them? Do we support them and accompany them,
overcoming the temptation to manipulate them or infantilize them? Are we
constantly open to letting ourselves be challenged in our efforts to advance
the good of the Church and her mission in the world?
6 Do pastoral agents and the faithful in general feel
part of the Church? Do they identify with her and bring her closer to the
baptized who are distant and alienated?
As can be appreciated, what is at stake here are
attitudes. Pastoral Conversion is chiefly concerned with attitudes and
reforming our lives. A change of attitudes is necessarily something ongoing: it is a process, and it can only be kept
on track with the help of guidance and discernment. It is important always to
keep in mind that the compass preventing us from going astray is that of
Catholic identity, understood as membership in the Church.
Dialogue with the
world around us
We do well to recall the words of the Second Vatican
Council: The joys and hopes, the grief
and anguish of the people of our time, especially of those who are poor or
afflicted, are the joys and hopes, the grief and anguish of the followers of
Christ as well (Gaudium et Spes, 1). Here we find the basis for our dialogue
with the contemporary world.
Responding to the existential issues of people today,
especially the young, listening to the language they speak, can lead to a
fruitful change, which must take place with the help of the Gospel, the
magisterium, and the Church’s social doctrine. The scenarios and the areopagi involved are quite varied. For
example, a single city can contain various collective imaginations which create
different cities. If we remain within
the parameters of our traditional culture,
which was essentially rural, we will end up nullifying the power of the Holy
Spirit. God is everywhere: we have to know how to find him in order to be able
to proclaim him in the language of each and every culture; every reality, every
language, has its own rhythm.
Some temptations against missionary discipleship
The decision for missionary discipleship will encounter
temptation. It is important to know where the evil spirit is afoot in order to
aid our discernment. It is not a matter of chasing after demons, but simply one
of clear-sightedness and evangelical astuteness. I will mention only a few
attitudes which are evidence of a Church which is tempted. It has to do with recognizing certain contemporary
proposals which can parody the process of missionary discipleship and hold
back, even bring to a halt, the process of Pastoral Conversion.
1 Making the Gospel message an ideology. This is a
temptation which has been present in the Church from the beginning: the attempt
to interpret the Gospel apart from the Gospel itself and apart from the Church.
An example: Aparecida, at one particular moment, felt this temptation. It
employed, and rightly so, the method of see,
judge and act (cf. No. 19). The temptation, though, was to opt for a way of
seeing which was completely antiseptic, detached and unengaged, which
is impossible. The way we see is
always affected by the way we direct our gaze. There is no such thing as an antiseptic hermeneutic. The question
was, rather: How are we going to look at reality in order to see it? Aparecida
replied: With the eyes of discipleship. This is the way Nos. 20-32 are to be
understood. There are other ways of making the message an ideology, and at
present proposals of this sort are appearing in Latin America and the
Caribbean. I mention only a few:
a - Sociological reductionism. This is the most readily
available means of making the message an ideology. At certain times it has
proved extremely influential. It involves an interpretative claim based on a
hermeneutic drawn from the social sciences. It extends to the most varied
fields, from market liberalism to Marxist categorization.
b - Psychologizing. Here we have to do with an elitist
hermeneutic which ultimately reduces the encounter
with Jesus Christ and its development to a process of growing self-awareness.
It is ordinarily to be found in spirituality courses, spiritual retreats, etc.
It ends up being an immanent self-centred approach. It has nothing to do with
transcendence and consequently, with missionary spirit.
c - The Gnostic solution. Closely linked to the previous
temptation, it is ordinarily found in elite groups offering a higher
spirituality, generally disembodied, which ends up in a preoccupation with
certain pastoral quaestiones disputatae.
It was the first deviation in the early community and it reappears throughout
the Church’s history in ever new and revised versions. Generally its adherents
are known as enlightened Catholics
(since they are in fact rooted in the culture of the Enlightenment).
d - The Pelagian solution. This basically appears as a
form of restorationism. In dealing with the Church’s problems, a purely
disciplinary solution is sought, through the restoration of outdated manners
and forms which, even on the cultural level, are no longer meaningful. In Latin
America it is usually to be found in small groups, in some new religious
congregations, in tendencies to doctrinal or disciplinary safety. Basically it is static, although it is capable of
inversion, in a process of regression. It seeks to recover the lost past.
2 Functionalism. Its effect on the Church is paralyzing.
More than being interested in the road itself, it is concerned with fixing
holes in the road. A functionalist approach has no room for mystery; it aims at
efficiency. It reduces the reality of the Church to the structure of an NGO.
What counts are quantifiable results and statistics. The Church ends up being
run like any other business organization. It applies a sort of theology of prosperity to the
organization of pastoral work.
3 Clericalism is also a temptation very present in Latin
America. Curiously, in the majority of cases, it has to do with a sinful
complicity: the priest clericalizes the lay person and the lay person kindly
asks to be clericalized, because deep down it is easier. The phenomenon of
clericalism explains, in great part, the lack of maturity and Christian freedom
in a good part of the Latin American laity. Either they simply do not grow (the
majority), or else they take refuge in forms of ideology like those we have
just seen, or in partial and limited ways of belonging. Yet in our countries
there does exist a form of freedom of the laity which finds expression in
communal experiences: Catholic as community. Here one sees a greater autonomy,
which on the whole is a healthy thing, basically expressed through popular
piety. The chapter of the Aparecida document on popular piety describes this
dimension in detail. The spread of bible study groups, of ecclesial basic
communities and of Pastoral Councils is in fact helping to overcome clericalism
and to increase lay responsibility.
We could continue by describing other temptations against
missionary discipleship, but I consider these to be the most important and
influential at present for Latin America and the Caribbean.
5 Some ecclesiological guidelines
1 - The missionary discipleship which Aparecida proposed
to the Churches of Latin America and the Caribbean is the journey which God
desires for the present today. Every
utopian (future-oriented) or restorationist (past-oriented) impulse is
spiritually unhealthy. God is real and he shows himself in the today. With regard to the past, his
presence is given to us as memory of
his saving work, both in his people and in each of us as individuals; with
regard to the future, he gives himself to us as promise and hope. In the past God was present and left his mark:
memory helps us to encounter him; in the future is promise alone… he is not in
the thousand and one futuribles. The today is closest to eternity; even more:
the today is a flash of eternity. In
the today, eternal life is in play.
Missionary discipleship is a vocation: a call and an invitation.
It is given in the today, but also in tension. There is no such thing as
static missionary discipleship. A missionary disciple cannot be his own master,
his immanence is in tension towards the transcendence of discipleship and
towards the transcendence of mission. It does not allow for self-absorption:
either it points to Jesus Christ or it points to the people to whom he must be
proclaimed. The missionary disciple is a self-transcending subject, a subject
projected towards encounter: an encounter with the Master (who anoints us as his
disciples) and an encounter with men and women who await the message.
That is why I like saying that the position of missionary
disciples is not in the centre but at the periphery: they live poised towards
the peripheries… including the peripheries of eternity, in the encounter with
Jesus Christ. In the preaching of the Gospel, to speak of existential peripheries decentralizes things; as a rule, we are
afraid to leave the centre. The missionary disciple is someone off centre: the centre is Jesus Christ,
who calls us and sends us forth. The disciple is sent to the existential
peripheries.
2 - The Church is an institution, but when she makes
herself a centre, she becomes merely
functional, and slowly but surely turns into a kind of NGO. The Church then claims
to have a light of her own, and she stops being that mysterium lunae of which the Church Fathers spoke. She becomes
increasingly self-referential and loses her need to be missionary. From an institution she becomes an enterprise. She stops being a bride and
ends up being an administrator; from being a servant, she becomes an inspector. Aparecida wanted a Church
which is bride, mother and servant, a facilitator of faith and not an inspector
of faith.
3 - In Aparecida, two pastoral categories stand out; they
arise from the uniqueness of the Gospel, and we can employ them as guidelines
for assessing how we are living missionary discipleship in the Church: nearness
and encounter. Neither of these two categories is new; rather, they are the way
God has revealed himself to us in history. He is the God who is near to his people, a nearness which culminates in the
incarnation. He is the God who goes forth to meet his people. In Latin America
and the Caribbean there are pastoral plans which are distant, disciplinary pastoral plans which give priority to
principles, forms of conduct, organizational procedures… and clearly lack nearness,
tenderness, a warm touch.
They do not take into account the revolution of tenderness brought by the incarnation of the Word.
There are pastoral plans designed with such a dose of distance that they are
incapable of sparking an encounter: an encounter with Jesus Christ, an
encounter with our brothers and sisters. Such pastoral plans can at best
provide a dimension of proselytism, but they can never inspire people to feel
part of or belong to the Church. Nearness creates communion and belonging; it
makes room for encounter. Nearness takes the form of dialogue and creates a
culture of encounter. One touchstone for measuring whether a pastoral plan
embodies nearness and a capacity for encounter is the homily. What are our
homilies like? Do we imitate the example of our Lord, who spoke as one with authority, or are they
simply moralizing, detached, abstract?
4 - Those who direct pastoral work, the Continental
Mission (both programmatic and paradigmatic) are the bishops. Bishops must
lead, which is not the same thing as being authoritarian. As well as pointing
to the great figures of the Latin American episcopate, which we all know, I
would like to add a few things about the profile of the bishop, which I already
presented to the Nuncios at our meeting in Rome.
Bishops must be pastors, close to people, fathers and
brothers, and gentle, patient and merciful. They must be men who love poverty, both
interior poverty, as freedom before the Lord, and exterior poverty, as
simplicity and austerity of life. They must be men who do not think and behave
like princes. They must be men who
are not ambitious, who are married to one church without having their eyes on
another. They must be men capable of watching over the flock entrusted to them
and protecting everything that keeps it together: guarding their people out of
concern for the dangers which could threaten them, but above all instilling
hope: so that light will shine in people’s hearts. They must be men capable of
supporting with love and patience God’s dealings with his people. The Bishop
has to be among his people in three ways: in front of them, pointing the way;
among them, keeping them together and preventing them from being scattered; and
behind them, ensuring that no one is left behind, but also, and primarily, so
that the flock itself can sniff out new paths.
I do not wish to go into further detail about the person
of the Bishop, but simply to add, including myself in this statement, that we
are lagging somewhat as far as Pastoral Conversion is concerned. We need to
help one another a bit more in taking the steps that the Lord asks of us in the
today of Latin America and the
Caribbean. And this is a good place to start.
I thank you for your patience in listening to me. Pardon
me if my remarks have been somewhat disjointed and please, I beg that we take
seriously our calling as servants of the holy and faithful people of God, for
this is where authority is exercised and demonstrated: in the ability to serve.
Many thanks.
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