8/9/07

It's not all "No, No, No!"


Pope Benedict XVI and Vatican Secretary of State Cardinal Bertone

Thanks to Rocco at Whispers in the Loggia
for pointing us to this text of Vatican Secretary of State Cardinal Bertone's address at the Knights of Columbus convention this week in Nashville. As Rocco reminds us, when you read Bertone's words you are reading the Pope's words. The address is lengthy but here's the whole text which I hope you'll take a few minutes to read. This presentation of the Pope's theology, thinking and hopes for the Church will reveal a much more accurate picture of this pontificate than the media spin on Latin Masses.

Address of
His Eminence Tarcisio Cardinal Bertone, S.D.B.
Secretary of State of His Holiness Pope Benedict XVI
August 8, 2007
Knights of Columbus 125th Supreme Convention

First of all, allow me once again to express my sincere gratitude to Supreme Knight Carl A. Anderson and fellow Knights for the invitation to visit Nashville for this historic 125th Supreme Convention of the Knights of Columbus. I am honored by the opportunity to address all of you this evening on a topic as dear to me as it is to His Holiness Pope Benedict XVI: “Faith in Action: Witnessing to the ‘Yes’ of Jesus Christ.”

This evening, I will reflect on the importance of this “Yes” for the Church’s lay faithful. I will indicate some of the primary characteristics of the lay vocation within the Church and in society at large, and I will point to a few particular challenges facing the laity today.

Both in his work as a theologian and now in his ministry as the successor of Peter, His Holiness Pope Benedict XVI has repeatedly drawn attention to the distinctive and irreplaceable role of the laity in the renewal of the Church’s mission in the modern world. At 78 years of age, Pope Benedict said “Yes” to his brother cardinals, to the Church, and to the Holy Spirit when he was asked to accept the Petrine ministry after the long and remarkable reign of the Servant of God, Pope John Paul II. The Holy Father’s willingness to assume pastoral duties as Chief Shepherd of the universal Church bore witness to the fundamental attitude required of every Christian – Pope, Bishop, priest, consecrated, or lay person; it is the disposition exemplified in our Lady’s humble but sure response to the Lord’s heavenly messenger in Nazareth: “Fiat!” – “Yes!”

The “Yes!” of Faith in Jesus Christ

But what exactly is the essence of this “Yes”? More specifically, how is one to live it out as a member of the laity?

In regard to the first question, this “Yes” is quite simply the “Yes” of faith. It is our full, unmitigated acceptance of Jesus as Lord and our commitment to follow him as master and teacher. Indeed, the word “Yes” only makes sense within the context of a dialog between two persons: someone who utters the “Yes” and someone who accepts it. In the case of faith, the person to whom we utter this “Yes” is none other than the Son of God, the Anointed One, the Eternal Word made flesh. Pope Benedict has emphasized the critical need for each of us to encounter Jesus; more importantly, he has shown and continues to show – both in his words and through his life – that true fulfilment, joy, and lasting peace can only be found by saying “Yes” to God’s plan of salvation as revealed in the person of Jesus Christ. Only in intimate communication with the incarnate Son of God do we discover the grace to “put our faith into action.”

Your founder Father Michael McGivney was prophetic – indeed, well ahead of his time – in that he clearly understood that this complete and total “Yes” to Christ was in no way exclusive to those who received holy orders or had taken religious vows. On the contrary, it is a “Yes” required of every man and every woman.

As a young curate at Saint Mary’s Church in New Haven, Father McGivney became keenly aware of the laity’s need to be actively and fully engaged in the life of the Church by exercising virtue, cultivating prayer, and caring for others. He had a deep appreciation for the special characteristics of the lay vocation as being thoroughly immersed in the spheres of the family, civil society, and public life. He made it his goal to develop practical ways of ensuring that faith could be put into concrete action: especially by providing for the material needs of orphans, widows, the imprisoned, alcoholics, the unemployed, and the destitute.

However, it is sometimes easy to forget that Father McGivney’s conviction was based on an even more fundamental insight: namely, that our concern for the needy and our perseverance in charitable works will eventually become attenuated and deprived of their deeper meaning if they are not rooted in faith – faith understood as the indwelling of Holy Trinity in our hearts through divine grace as we renew our “Yes” each day to the person of Jesus Christ.

Faith and Love

This is precisely the message Pope Benedict XVI conveys through his Encyclical Letter Deus Caritas Est. When asked why he devoted his first Encyclical to the theme of love, he replied that he wished to manifest the humanity of the faith. Only by living the life of faith – that is, only by deeply immersing ourselves in the love and mercy of God as revealed in Jesus Christ – are we able to love and forgive our neighbor as ourselves. When it comes to living this faith in the midst of an increasingly complex and contradictory world, no one knows more about the obstacles and challenges that can so easily discourage us than the Church’s laity. Whether in family life, in the workplace, or in the public square, lay persons are continually tempted to compromise their “Yes” to God by diluting Gospel values and by placing limits or conditions on love of neighbor.

The Holy Father underlined the unique challenges posed by the contemporary world to the lay vocation during his Pastoral Visit to Brazil. Noting that America is a “continent of baptized Christians,” he asserted that “it is time to overcome the notable absence – in the political sphere, in the world of the media and in the universities – of the voices and initiatives of Catholic leaders with strong personalities and generous dedication, who are coherent in their ethical and religious convictions.” The Pope insisted strongly that it is necessary for Christians who are active in these social and cultural milieus to strive to safeguard ethical values. Above all, he said, “Where God is absent – God with the human face of Jesus Christ – these values fail to show themselves with their full force, nor does a consensus arise concerning them. I do not mean that non-believers cannot live a lofty and exemplary morality; I am only saying that a society in which God is absent will not find the necessary consensus on moral values or the strength to live according to the model of these values, even when they are in conflict with private interests.” In short, being a Catholic in the world today takes courage; yet it takes no more courage than it did when Jesus called his first disciples in Galilee.

The role of the lay faithful: Vatican II and Benedict XVI

The Holy Father frames his teaching on the role of the laity within the context of the Second Vatican Council, and interweaves it in an unbroken line with the teaching of Pope John Paul II. The guiding principle is always the same: namely the “universal call to holiness.”

“It is quite clear,” the Council fathers teach us, “that all Christians in whatever state or walk of life are called to the fullness of Christian life and to the perfection of charity.” Insofar as it is a call to holiness, the call to the lay state is no less a “vocation” than that of the priesthood or religious life. It has its own distinctive nature, which is absolutely essential to the healthy, overall functioning of the Body of Christ, the Church. Lumen Gentium explains: “It is the special vocation of the laity to seek the Kingdom of God by engaging in temporal affairs and directing them according to God’s will.”

Clearly, if lay persons are to “carry out” and “develop” temporal matters according to “Christ’s way,” they must first know Christ. They must take seriously Saint Paul’s exhortation to have “the mind of Christ." This vision of the Church as proposed by Saint Paul and elaborated by the Second Vatican Council demands not only our active engagement with the world, but primarily our active engagement with the person of Jesus. Otherwise, we can easily fall into the trap of confusing the way of Christ with the ways of the world.

Through Christ’s passion, death, resurrection and ascension, he has renewed the face of the earth; but – as is evident in the words he speaks in the Gospel of Saint John – the “world” still “has not known” Christ, and in fact often “hates” Christ. It is no surprise then that Christians often encounter resistance, opposition, and even persecution in the world. Pope Benedict reminds us that the only possible response for a Christian in the face of rejection is love – a response made possible for us through the grace of Christ. Because God’s very existence is love, love is the very essence of the Christian life. The universal call to holiness is about patiently, deliberately, and “programmatically” sharing this love with the world. It is for this reason that the metaphor of “leaven” – used by our Lord and adopted at the Second Vatican Council – so aptly describes the concrete reality of living as a Christian in this world: the work of Christians is often hidden, but nonetheless steady and consistent, causing the entire dough to rise.

“The Church sets out with humility on her journey, between the sorrows of this world and the glory of the Lord. On this journey, we will need to grow in patience.” Nevertheless, as the Holy Father noted, “the Catholic Church grows in every century. Today too, the presence of the Crucified and Risen Lord is growing. He still has his wounds, yet it is precisely through his wounds that he renews the world, giving that breath which also renews the Church despite our poverty…In this combination of the humility of the Cross and the joy of the Risen Lord…we can go ahead joyfully, filled with hope.”

Enthusiasm and boldness, filled with hope, have always been characteristic of the Knights of Columbus, and this will no doubt remain at the heart of their apostolate in the future.

Cooperation in the Church: A Challenge and an Opportunity

I would like to pause for a moment to reflect on this point. Our integral and persuasive witness to the truth of the Gospel depends heavily on the ability of Bishops, priests, deacons, religious and laity to work together for the spread of God’s Kingdom by acknowledging the distinctive role of each vocation within the Body of Christ. For the Knights of Columbus, perhaps this is most clearly evident at the parish level. How wonderful it is to behold the pastor, the local council of Knights, and the rest of the parish mutually supporting one another as they each exercise their unique forms of service for the building up of the local community!

During your time together at this 125th Supreme Convention, I would invite you to encourage and inspire one another by sharing experiences and ideas of how to facilitate effective cooperation between yourselves, your Bishops, your pastors, members of the parish staff, and the civic communities in which you live and work. If your local community is suffering from the wounds of division, be they large or small, take the opportunity to deepen your cohesion, since when this is lacking in a parish family or a local Church, the ability to witness to Christ in the larger society is weakened. At such times, prayer and faith are all the more essential to bring about healing and reconciliation. Pope Benedict writes: “the Spirit is…the energy which transforms the heart of the ecclesial community, so that it becomes a witness before the world to the love of the Father, who wishes to make humanity a single family in his Son.”[15]

Benedict XVI’s Pauline Vision of the Church

On June 28th – the eve of the Solemnity of Saints Peter and Paul – Pope Benedict announced the opening of a special Jubilee year commemorating the bimillenary of Saint Paul’s birth. Over the next year, the Church will reflect on the life and writings of this great “Apostle to the Gentiles.”[16]

In fact, the vivid images Paul uses to describe the Church – both at the local and universal level – have always been very dear to His Holiness. He employs them often in more informal discussions with clergy and laity.

For example, in responding to a question addressed to him during an audience with members of the clergy of the Diocese of Rome, the Holy Father recently said: “The Church, though a body, is the body of Christ and therefore a spiritual body, as Saint Paul teaches. This seems extremely important to me: that people will be able to see the Church not as a super-national organization, not as an administrative body or means for power and domination, not as a social agency – even though she carries out a social and ‘supra-national’ mission – but rather as a spiritual body.

Pope Benedict is not only a man of deep theological wisdom; he also brings to the Petrine ministry extensive pastoral experience. He has no illusions about the serious challenges confronting local ecclesial communities today.

One such challenge is the tendency to focus too narrowly on the administrative, bureaucratic, and financial aspects of parish and diocesan life. Not that these are unimportant – on the contrary! However, we end up viewing worldly realities through a distorted lens if we fail to see them with the eyes of Christ. We can only be prudent stewards of worldly goods if we freely subject them to the good of eternal life.

Every concrete method and strategy taught and promoted by Father McGivney in the public square was aimed at the good of the human person destined for eternal life. Father McGivney’s legacy lives on today in the Knights’ continuing effort to keep themselves – and others – informed about complex issues regarding human life, justice, freedom, and the common good.

Friendship and Joy: The Key to Understanding Pope Benedict XVI

Finally, I must say a word about two recurring themes in Pope Benedict’s teaching which are absolutely essential for the “animation” of “the entire lives of the lay faithful”: friendship and joy. These, I believe, are the keys for grasping Pope Benedict’s thought on what it means to translate faith into action.

The words “friendship” and “joy” echo continuously throughout his preaching, especially when he addresses himself to young people as they prepare to gather for the 2008 World Youth Day in Sydney. According to Pope Benedict, “friendship” and “joy” have God as their primary reference. The Holy Father never tires of reminding us that God is near, that he is our friend, and that he is constantly speaking to us about the most essential things in life. He accompanies us on our journey through this life, in our joys and sorrows, and – as a Good Shepherd who cares only for his flock – he never abandons us.

At the 2005 World Youth Day in Cologne, His Holiness said this to the young people present: “A true revolution can take place only by radically turning to God without reserve; he alone is the measure of all that is just, while at the same time existing as love eternal. And what could possibly save us if not love?”

Love is the source of the Holy Father’s inspiration in all that he undertakes, and especially in his commitment to dialogue. He has spoken with countless lay persons, listening attentively to their practical ways of reasoning. He truly follows the agenda he set for himself at the beginning of his pontificate: “My true program for governing the Church is not to carry out my own will or pursue my own ideas, but to place myself together with the entire Church in listening to the Word of the Lord, discerning his will, and allowing myself be led by him, because he alone will guide the Church through this phase of history.”

The Holy Father always teaches with clarity and precision, and with a spirit of humility and encouragement. He wants everyone to understand how beautiful and fulfilling it is to be a Christian, to experience a personal, living encounter with a life-changing “event,” to meet the One who opens a whole new horizon and gives life a new, decisive direction. It is precisely for this reason that even the commandments are never too burdensome for us if we are abiding with Christ.

In his first public interview after having been elected Pope, the Holy Father summarized his deepest wish, both for young people and for the entire world:

“I want them to understand that it is beautiful to be a Christian! The generally prevailing idea is that Christians have to observe an immense number of commandments, prohibitions, precepts, and other such restrictions, so that Christianity is a heavy and oppressive way of living, and it would therefore be more liberating to live without all these burdens. But I would like to make it clear that to be sustained by this great Love and God’s sublime revelation is not a burden, but rather a set of wings – that it is truly beautiful to be a Christian. It is an experience that gives us room to breathe and move, but most of all, it places us within a community since, as Christians, we are never alone: first of all, there is God, who is always with us; secondly, we are always forming a great community among ourselves: a community of people together on a journey, a community with a project for the future. All of this means that we are empowered to live a life worth living. This is the joy of being a Christian; that it is beautiful and right to believe!”

Indeed, how beautiful it is to believe, for to believe is to say “Yes” to Christ; and to say “Yes” to Christ is to bear witness to our faith in action. My dear Knights of Columbus, may you always remain men firmly committed to this “Yes” – “Yes” to your families, to your Church, and to your communities – but most importantly, to Christ who is the “Yes” to all our hopes and desires. God bless you all.

10 comments:

  1. Perhaps I am reading too much into the words spoken to the K of C group, but "may you always remain MEN firmly committed...
    And also throughout the speach, the way there are still labels put on the distinctive role of each vocation in the church. Since the crisis, in my opinion, we have done just the opposite of coming together as the Body of Christ. We have, in our brokeness and fragmented roles and how we are not able to facilitate cooperation between, Bishop's, Pastor's, parish staff, men AND women and the civic communities in which we work and live. We are a church divided by mistrust and anger. Until we can all shed the roles and rules that are put upon us and work together, equally, we can only find the Body of Christ fully with our own hearts. Let us take time to pray that eventually we can work together, to change what is broken and bring together a Church that we can all work together within a system of acceptance of all who wish to be a part of the Body of Christ.

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  2. Regina seems to have focused on the fragmentation within our church. While I agree with everything she says, there is still much to do before we become the Body of Christ that the messege tries to get across to the venue to which he spoke. I know that there are other issues within the context, I, like Regina, find myself gravitating to what we don't have, but can have, rather than what we do have, with segregated groups who can't seem to come together to make changes that we so desperately need. We need to somehow find a way to piece together the brokeness through mistrust and anger.
    So, I guess I agree more than I thought with what Regina said.

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  3. I don't think we should hold our breath waiting for the pope to "shed the roles and rules" of Catholic faith and life in the interest of greater collaboration. One of the things that distinguishes Catholicism is the ministry of the many parts of the Body of Christ working together.

    I take Bertone's speech to be a genuine welcoming of the ministry of all - and the importance of each ministry, especially the ministry offered by faithful women and men everywhere.

    Anyone waiting for an overnight demise of clericalism is waiting for a bus that's not coming. It's not the abolition of "roles and rules" that is needed but rather their purification and our collaborative acceptance of them.

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  4. While I understand what The Concord Pastor is saying, and to some degree accept the information, I also still hold hard to the fact that the church's dissociation with the labels and roles of vocation are stifling people who want to and are ready to do more to bring together our church in ways that are not acceptable. When we have lay groups that are "stuck" on different rungs of the ladder, unable to do more, the church needs to open it's eyes. Do I think this will happen over night? No, I am not that naive. But, with the dwindling numbers of men entering the priesthood, the average age of the priests we have now, churches closing, numbers dropping, the only direction I see is the church relying more on the laity. Unless changes are made in the roles the church allows us to be a part of the Body of Christ, we still have the fragmentation that will in some ways hold us back. Will the church change? Who knows. I can only hope that within my lifetime, I will see at least some effort being made to bring equality to the many facets of the groups who make up The Body Of Christ. A collaborative existance of each ministry still finds us fragmented, and I believe we can all do much better if given the opportunity.

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  5. Regina: would you share with us a picture of what you envision?

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  6. Well, in a perfect world, the church would accept everyone as we are,and would encourage us all to be more active in the decisions the church makes, WITH the promise that our ideas and and opinions would be thoughtfully and truthfully looked at and acknowledged. Along with the reality that what we are saying can indeed be accepted by the teachers within the church. As I said before. I find the church to be splintered in ways that still leave us with the feelings that what we try to do, want to do, pray that we can do, leaves us in more vulnerable and fragmented in the roles we chose. I hate to keep bringing up the crisis, but that, I beieve, was the catalist in the brokeness and fragmentation of our church. When we, the laity, as a group came together with VOF, the heirarchy should have embraced what we were and still are attempting to do. Help fix what brought us to this place that we are in. Instead, they tried to squash even the existance of VOF. When good priests spoke up, they too were shut down for fear of repercutions. I still don't see the heiarchy coming together with the individual vocations to make changes in our church. I DO see it happening on our own church's level, but I still see such a large gap between the two facets of our church and heirarchy that seems to widen eack day as opposed to coming together. Unfortunately, our church still stands firm in a veil of secrecy. We see a church that protected Cardinal Law from what is clearly criminal behavior. They swept him away to Rome where he has safely found refuge from repercutions of crimes so heinous that because of him both directly and indirectly lives were destroyed. With a gap so wide withing the church, how can we heal? Surely the church is aware of the issues that are pulling us apart. The "good old boy" mentality just doesn't cut it anymore. There are too many of us that won't tolerate it. Given larger roles within the context of our church and it's teachings, women, VOF, Pastors, Priest's and lay groups, coming together WITH a Cardinal who is willing to hear the words, see the actions, understand the frustration and agenda that we have, and be willing to stand up and bring to fruition, these words so that the heirachy in Rome know what we want, at least we would allow ourselves at that point to accept that we are not just "beating our heads against a stone wall", and give us more input into how, working together, we can emerge with a new sense of equality. A new sense of cooperation, and a new sense of renewal. It would bring us hope for perhaps not in our own lifetime, but leave us with work to do to protect what we so dearly want for our future generations.And have the sincere hope it can be done.
    Again, am I being naive? Absolutely! But my prayers and actions call for change, and if I give up on them, then I must indeed give up on the church that has been a part of me all my life. Not a scenario that is easy to look at. But I want better for my family. And it is my sincere hope that somewhere along the way, the church will look at all these facets, and work diligently to create a more embracable existance and equality with our church. I wish they could put things into perspective and realize that this and these issues are at the top of the list of priorities. Not worry about whether the Mass is being said in Latin. Is anything being done at all? Are they hearing us at all? Are we fighting a losing battle? All I want is to see the church I love, work together to be indeed, the Body of Christ.

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  7. As the pastor of a church I sometimes feel like I'm driving a bus down Main Street in Concord. The problem is that the bus is four lanes wide and about 3 football fields in length! As the driver, I've got a pretty good idea about where we're going and I think my passengers agree on our destination - but there's serious disagreement on how to get where we're going. Some folks are partial to Route 2A, others to Route 2 and still others want to get to 495 as fast as possible! And some folks think we've already arrived and we should just pull over and park.

    That's the sense of a pastor of a moderate size parish in suburban parish. I wonder what images Cardinal O'Malley or the Pope might use to describe their work?

    Regina: I agree with SO much of what you say! I choose to work on growth in the Church from the inside and I see my contribution as, at best, a short paragraph on one page in the church's history. I love the Church enough to spend my life doing this. And, along the way, I know I have the opportunity to write my ministry into the lives of hundreds, even thousands of people as I preach the gospel, minister the sacraments and serve God's holy people in a variety of ways. I offer this as a way of your seeing how I view the contemporary ecclesial scene.

    Post-conciliar periods have, historically, been troubled times in the church's life - certainly not periods of serenity built on conciliar hopes. There are millions of Catholic people in the world who know nothing of the concerns expressed in this thread. That's not to diminish the concerns but simply to point out how wide and long is this "bus" on the road of faith's life.

    Work together collaboratively after the crisis? It's like pulling teeth to get parish volunteers fill out CORI forms or come to safety training sessions for the sake of our children. We have a long, long way to go and I don't think it will begin with redefining ministries.

    An addendum: Cardinal Law's actions (or inactions) might be called many things - but not criminal. The Attorney General of the Commonwealth tried to find grounds for charges but came up with nothing. The same action/inaction TODAY would be criminal but such was not the case in the time Bernard Law was archbishop here.

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  8. Regina, I empathize with your frustrations. Tony Massimini has an interesting piece entitled "A Guide for Renewing and Restructuring the Catholic Church." You might find it helpful. http://www.votf.org/Educating_Ourselves/massimini.html

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  9. In my prior comment re Anthony Massimini's article - the end of web address is html not ht !!!

    I thought I had sent this, but I don't see it. Sorry if I am repeating!

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  10. Thank you anonymous for the web page you recommended. I look forward to reading it.

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