Monday, January 29, 2018

Greetings for the Vatican's Supreme Court

At 10:30am today (EST+6) in the Consistory Hall at the Vatican Apostolic Palace, the Holy Father, Pope Francis received in audience the Prelate Auditors, the Officials, the Advocates and the Collaborators who are part of the Tribunal of the Roman Rota (the Vatican's Supreme Court) who are marking the solemn inauguration of the Judicial Year.

Following a few words of introduction from the Dean of the Roman Rota's Tribunal, His Excellency, Pio Vito Pinto, the Pope shared the following greetings.


Greetings of the Holy Father, Pope Francis
offered to the Tribunal of the Roman Rota

Dear Prelates and Auditors,

I cordially greet you, beginning with your Dean, who I wish to thank for his words.  Together with you, I greet the officials, the advocates and all the collaborators who work with the Apostolic Tribunal of the Roman Rota.  I wish you every good for the judicial year which begins today.

Today, I wish to reflect with you on a qualifying aspect of your judicial service, which is the centrality of conscience, which is at the same time the central concern for each of you and for the persons whose cases you are studying.  In fact, your activity is also expressed as a ministry of peace for consciences and needs to be exercised in full conscience, as is well expressed in the formula with which your Sentences are issued ad consulendum conscientiae o ut consulatur conscientiae (to provide for the conscience of conscience or considered as advised by conscience).

Regarding the declaration of nullity or validity of the marriage bond, you place yourselves - in a certain sense - as experts in the consciences of the Christian faithful.  In this role, you are called to incessantly invoke divine assistance in order to carry out in humility the serious task entrusted to you by the Church, thus demonstrating the connection between moral certitude, which the judge must achieve ex actis et probatis, and his conscience, known only to the Holy Spirit and assisted by him.  In fact, thanks to the light of the Holy Spirit, we are given the privilege of entering into the sacred sphere of the conscience of the faithful.  It is significant that the ancient prayer of the Adsumus, which was proclaimed at the beginning of every session of the Second Vatican Council, is still recited with such frequency within your Tribunal.

The sphere of conscience has been very dear to the Fathers of the last two Synods of Bishops, and it has resonated significantly in the Post-synodal Apostolic Exhortation Amoris laetitiaThis derives from the awareness that the Successor of Peter and the Synod Fathers have matured concerning the urgent need for the Pastors of the Church to listen to the expectations and the requests put forward by the faithful who have muted their consciences and considered them absent for so long and who, years later, were helped by God and by life to rediscover some light, turning to the Church in order to have peace within their consciences.

Conscience assumes a decisive role in the demanding choices that couples must face to welcome and build the conjugal union and hence the family according to God’s plan. The Church, a tender mother, ut consulatur conscientiae of the faithful in need of truth, has recognized the need to invite those who work in the pastoral care of marriage and family to obtain a renewed awareness in helping engaged couples to build and preserve the intimate sanctuary of their Christian conscience. In this regard, I would like to point out that in the two Documents in the form of a Motu proprio, enacted for the reform of the marriage annulment process, I have urged the establishment of the diocesan pastoral investigation in order not only to make the process more rapid, but also more just, in due knowledge of the causes and reasons that are the cause of the failure of marriage. On the other hand, in the Apostolic Exhortation Amoris Laetitia, pastoral pathways have been indicated to help engaged couples to enter without fear into discernment and in the consequent choice of the future conjugal and family life, describing in the first five chapters the extraordinary richness of the conjugal covenant as designed by God in the Scriptures and lived by the Church throughout history.

A continuous experience of faith, hope and charity is all the more necessary so that young people may again decide, with a sure and serene conscience, that conjugal union open to the gift of children is great joy for God, for the Church, for humanity. The synodal journey of reflection on marriage and the family, and the subsequent Apostolic Exhortation Amoris Laetitia, have had an obligatory path and purpose: how to save young people from the din and deafening noise of the ephemeral, which leads them to shy away from stable and positive commitments for the individual and collective good. A conditioning that silences the voice of their freedom, of that intimate cell – indeed, the conscience – that God alone illuminates and opens to life, if He is allowed to enter.

How valuable and urgent is the pastoral action of the whole Church for the recovery, safeguarding, protection of a Christian conscience, illuminated by Gospel values! It will be a long undertaking and not easy, requiring bishops and presbyters to work indefatigably to enlighten, defend and support the Christian conscience of our people. The synodal voice of the bishop Fathers and the subsequent Apostolic Exhortation Amoris Laetitia thus ensured a basic point: the necessary relationship between the regula fidei, that is, the fidelity of the Church to the untouchable Magisterium on marriage, as well as on the Eucharist, and the urgent attention of the Church herself to the psychological and religious processes of all persons called to the choice of marriage and family. Welcoming the wishes expressed by the Synod Fathers, I have already had the opportunity to recommend a marriage catechumenate, intended as an indispensable itinerary for young people and couples destined to revive their Christian conscience, sustained by the grace of the two sacraments, baptism and marriage.

As I have reiterated on other occasions, the catechumenate is unique in itself, as it is baptismal, rooted in baptism, and at the same time in life it necessitates a permanent character, inasmuch as the grace of the sacrament of marriage is permanent, that precisely because grace is the fruit of mystery, whose wealth can only be safeguarded and assisted in the conscience of spouses as individuals and as couples. These are in fact figures peculiar to that incessant cura animarum which is the raison d’ĂȘtre of the Church, and of us as Pastors first of all.

However, the care of consciences can not be the exclusive concern of Pastors; rather, with different responsibilities and methods, it is the mission of all, ministers and baptized faithful. Blessed Paul VI exhorted absolute fidelity to safeguard the 'regula fidei' (Paul VI, Teachings XV, 1977, 663), which enlightens the conscience and can not be obscured or detached. To do this – says Paul VI – it is necessary to avoid opposing extremisms, both by those who appeal to tradition to justify their disobedience to the supreme Magisterium and to the Ecumenical Council, and by those who uproot from themselves from the ecclesial humus by corrupting the genuine doctrine of the Church; both attitudes are a sign of undue and perhaps subconscious subjectivism, when it is not unfortunately of obstinacy, of stubbornness, of imbalance; these positions wound the heart of the Church, Mother and Teacher (Paul VI, Teachings XIV, 1976, 500).

Faith is a light that illuminates not only the present but also the future: marriage and family are the future of the Church and of society. It is therefore necessary to promote a state of permanent catechumenate so that the consciousness of the baptized is open to the light of the Spirit. The sacramental intention is never the result of automatism, but always of a conscience illuminated by faith, as the result of a combination of the human and the divine. In this sense, spousal union can be said to be true only if the human intention of the spouses is oriented to what Christ and the Church want. To make the future spouses more aware of this, we need the contribution not only of bishops and priests, but also of other people involved in pastoral care, religious and lay faithful who are jointly responsible in the mission of the Church.

Dear judges of the Roman Rota, the close connection between the sphere of conscience and that of the matrimonial processes that you deal with daily, demands avoiding that the exercise of justice be reduced to a mere bureaucratic accomplishment. If the ecclesiastical tribunals were to fall to this temptation, they would betray the Christian conscience. This is why, in the processus brevior procedure, I established not only that the supervisory role of the diocesan bishop be made more evident, but also that he himself, a native judge in the Church entrusted to him, considers in the first instance possible cases of matrimonial nullity. We must ensure that the conscience of the faithful in difficulty as regards their marriage does not close up to a path of grace. This aim is achieved through pastoral accompaniment, discernment of consciences (see Apostolic Exhortation Amoris Laetitia, 242) and the work of our tribunals. This work must take place in wisdom and in the search for truth: only in this way can the declaration of nullity produce a liberation of consciences.

I reaffirm my gratitude to every one of you for the good you do to God’s people, serving justice. I invoke divine assistance on your work and I cordially impart my Apostolic Blessing to you.
(Original text in Italian; translation by Libreria Editrice Vaticana)

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