The Holy Father gave
the following homily at the Mass inaugurating the Fifth General
Conference of the Bishops of Latin America and the Caribbean (CELAM),
National Sanctuary of Our Lady of Aparecida, Brazil, at 13 May 2007.
Dear
Brother Bishops,
Dear priests, and all of you, brothers and sisters in the Lord!
There are no words to express my joy in being here with you to
celebrate this solemn Eucharist on the occasion of the opening of
the Fifth General Conference of the Bishops of Latin America and the
Caribbean. I greet each of you most warmly, particularly Archbishop
Raymundo Damasceno Assis, whom I thank for the words he addressed to
me in the name of the entire assembly, and the Cardinal Presidents
of this General Conference. My respectful greeting goes to the civil
and military Authorities who have honored us with their presence.
From this Shrine my thoughts reach out, full of affection and
prayer, to all those who are spiritually united with us, especially
the communities of consecrated life, the young people belonging to
various associations and movements, the families, and also the sick
and the elderly. To all I say: "Grace to you and peace from God our
Father and the Lord Jesus Christ" (1 Cor 1:3).
I see it as a special gift of Providence that this Holy Mass is
being celebrated at this time and in this place. The time is the
liturgical season of Easter; on this Sixth Sunday of Easter, as
Pentecost rapidly approaches, the Church is called to intensify her
prayer for the coming of the Holy Spirit. The place is the National
Shrine of Our Lady of Aparecida, the Marian heart of Brazil: Mary
welcomes us to this Upper Room and, as our Mother and Teacher, helps
us to pray trustingly to God with one voice. This liturgical
celebration lays a most solid foundation for the Fifth Conference,
setting it on the firm basis of prayer and the Eucharist,
Sacramentum Caritatis. Only the love of Christ, poured out by the
Holy Spirit, can make this meeting an authentic ecclesial event, a
moment of grace for this Continent and for the whole world. This
afternoon I will be able to discuss more fully the implications of
the theme of your Conference. But now, let us leave space for the
word of God which we have the joy of receiving with open and docile
hearts, like Mary, Our Lady of the Immaculate Conception, so that,
by the power of the Holy Spirit, Christ may once again take flesh in
the "today" of our history.
The first reading, taken from the Acts of the Apostles, refers to
the so-called "Council of Jerusalem", which dealt with the question
as to whether the observance of the Mosaic Law was to be imposed on
those pagans who had become Christians. The reading leaves out the
discussion between "the apostles and the elders" (vv. 4-21) and
reports the final decision, which was then written down in the form
of a letter and entrusted to two delegates for delivery to the
community in Antioch (vv. 22-29). This passage from Acts is highly
appropriate for us, since we too are assembled here for an ecclesial
meeting. It reminds us of the importance of community discernment
with regard to the great problems and issues encountered by the
Church along her way. These are clarified by the "apostles" and
"elders" in the light of the Holy Spirit, who, as today’s Gospel
says, calls to mind the teaching of Jesus Christ (cf. Jn 14:26) and
thus helps the Christian community to advance in charity towards the
fullness of truth (cf. Jn 16:13). The Church’s leaders discuss and
argue, but in a constant attitude of religious openness to Christ’s
word in the Holy Spirit. Consequently, at the end they can say: "it
has seemed good to the Holy Spirit and to us…" (Acts 15:28).
This is the "method" by which we operate in the Church, whether in
small gatherings or in great ones. It is not only question of
procedure: it is a reflection of the Church’s very nature as a
mystery of communion with Christ in the Holy Spirit. In the case of
the General Conferences of the Bishops of Latin America and the
Caribbean, the first, held in 1955 in Rio de Janeiro, merited a
special Letter from Pope Pius XII, of venerable memory; in later
Conferences, including the present one, the Bishop of Rome has
travelled to the site of the continental gathering in order to
preside over its initial phase. With gratitude and devotion let us
remember the Servants of God Paul VI and John Paul II, who brought
to the Conferences of Medellín, Puebla and Santo Domingo the witness
of the closeness of the universal Church to the Churches in Latin
America, which constitute, proportionally, the majority of the
Catholic community.
"To the Holy Spirit and to us". This is the Church: we, the
community of believers, the People of God, with its Pastors who are
called to lead the way; together with the Holy Spirit, the Spirit of
the Father, sent in the name of his Son Jesus, the Spirit of the one
who is "greater" than all, given to us through Christ, who became
"small" for our sake. The Paraclete Spirit, our Ad-vocatus, Defender
and Consoler, makes us live in God’s presence, as hearers of his
word, freed from all anxiety and fear, bearing in our hearts the
peace which Jesus left us, the peace that the world cannot give (cf.
Jn 14:26-27). The Spirit accompanies the Church on her long
pilgrimage between Christ’s first and second coming. "I go away, and
I will come to you" (Jn 14:28), Jesus tells his Apostles. Between
Christ’s "going away" and his "return" is the time of the Church,
his Body. Two thousand years have passed so far, including these
five centuries and more in which the Church has made her pilgrim way
on the American Continent, filling believers with Christ’s life
through the sacraments and sowing in these lands the good seed of
the Gospel, which has yielded thirty, sixty and a hundredfold. The
time of the Church, the time of the Spirit: the Spirit is the
Teacher who trains disciples: he teaches them to love Jesus; he
trains them to hear his word and to contemplate his countenance; he
conforms them to Christ’s sacred humanity, a humanity which is poor
in spirit, afflicted, meek, hungry for justice, merciful, pure in
heart, peacemaking, persecuted for justice’s sake (cf. Mt 5:3-10).
By the working of the Holy Spirit, Jesus becomes the "Way" along
which the disciple walks. "If a man loves me, he will keep my word",
Jesus says at the beginning of today’s Gospel. "The word which you
hear is not mine but the Father’s who sent me" (Jn 14:23-24). Just
as Jesus makes known the words of the Father, so the Spirit reminds
the Church of Christ’s own words (cf. Jn 14:26). And just as love of
the Father led Jesus to feed on his will, so our love for Jesus is
shown by our obedience to his words. Jesus’ fidelity to the Father’s
will can be communicated to his disciples through the Holy Spirit,
who pours the love of God into their hearts (cf. Rom 5:5).
The New Testament presents Christ as the missionary of the Father.
Especially in the Gospel of John, Jesus often speaks of himself in
relation to the Father who sent him into the world. And so in
today’s Gospel he says: "the word which you hear is not mine but the
Father’s who sent me" (Jn 14:24). At this moment, dear friends, we
are invited to turn our gaze to him, for the Church’s mission exists
only as a prolongation of Christ’s mission: "As the Father has sent
me, even so I send you" (Jn 20:21). The evangelist stresses, in
striking language, that the passing on of this commission takes
place in the Holy Spirit: "he breathed on them and said to them:
‘Receive the Holy Spirit’" (Jn 20:22). Christ’s mission is
accomplished in love. He has kindled in the world the fire of God’s
love (cf. Lk 12:49). It is Love that gives life: and so the Church
has been sent forth to spread Christ’s Love throughout the world, so
that individuals and peoples "may have life, and have it abundantly"
(Jn 10:10). To you, who represent the Church in Latin America, today
I symbolically entrust my Encyclical Deus Caritas Est, in which I
sought to point out to everyone the essence of the Christian
message. The Church considers herself the disciple and missionary of
this Love: missionary only insofar as she is a disciple, capable of
being attracted constantly and with renewed wonder by the God who
has loved us and who loves us first (cf. 1 Jn 4:10). The Church does
not engage in proselytism. Instead, she grows by "attraction": just
as Christ "draws all to himself" by the power of his love,
culminating in the sacrifice of the Cross, so the Church fulfils her
mission to the extent that, in union with Christ, she accomplishes
every one of her works in spiritual and practical imitation of the
love of her Lord.
Dear brothers and sisters! This is the priceless treasure that is so
abundant in Latin America, this is her most precious inheritance:
faith in the God who is Love, who has shown us his face in Jesus
Christ. You believe in the God who is Love: this is your strength,
which overcomes the world, the joy that nothing and no one can ever
take from you, the peace that Christ won for you by his Cross! This
is the faith that has made America the "Continent of Hope." Not a
political ideology, not a social movement, not an economic system:
faith in the God who is Love—who took flesh, died and rose in Jesus
Christ—is the authentic basis for this hope which has brought forth
such a magnificent harvest from the time of the first evangelization
until today, as attested by the ranks of Saints and Beati whom the
Spirit has raised up throughout the Continent. Pope John Paul II
called you to a new evangelization, and you accepted his commission
with your customary generosity and commitment. I now confirm it with
you, and in the words of this Fifth Conference I say to you: be
faithful disciples, so as to be courageous and effective
missionaries.
The second reading sets before us the magnificent vision of the
heavenly Jerusalem. It is an image of awesome beauty, where nothing
is superfluous, but everything contributes to the perfect harmony of
the holy City. In his vision John sees the city "coming down out of
heaven from God, having the glory of God" (Rev 21:10). And since the
glory of God is Love, the heavenly Jerusalem is the icon of the
Church, utterly holy and glorious, without spot or wrinkle (cf. Eph
5:27), permeated at her heart and in every part of her by the
presence of the God who is Love. She is called a "bride", "the bride
of the Lamb" (Rev 20:9), because in her is fulfilled the nuptial
figure which pervades biblical revelation from beginning to end. The
City and Bride is the locus of God’s full communion with humanity;
she has no need of a temple or of any external source of light,
because the indwelling presence of God and of the Lamb illuminates
her from within.
This magnificent icon has an eschatological value: it expresses the
mystery of the beauty that is already the essential form of the
Church, even if it has not yet arrived at its fullness. It is the
goal of our pilgrimage, the homeland which awaits us and for which
we long. Seeing that beauty with the eyes of faith, contemplating it
and yearning for it, must not serve as an excuse for avoiding the
historical reality in which the Church lives as she shares the joys
and hopes, the grief and anguish of the people of our time,
especially those who are poor or afflicted (cf. Constitution Gaudium
et Spes, 1). If the beauty of the heavenly Jerusalem is the glory of
God—his love in other words—then it is in charity, and in charity
alone, that we can approach it and to a certain degree dwell within
it even now. Whoever loves the Lord Jesus and keeps his word,
already experiences in this world the mysterious presence of the
Triune God. We heard this in the Gospel: "we will come to him and
make our home with him" (Jn 14:23). Every Christian is therefore
called to become a living stone of this splendid "dwelling place of
God with men". What a magnificent vocation!
A Church totally enlivened and impelled by the love of Christ, the
Lamb slain for love, is the image within history of the heavenly
Jerusalem, prefiguring the holy city that is radiant with the glory
of God. It releases an irresistible missionary power which is the
power of holiness. Through the prayers of the Virgin Mary, may the
Church in Latin America and the Caribbean be abundantly clothed with
power from on high (cf. Lk 24:49), in order to spread throughout
this Continent and the whole world the holiness of Christ. To him be
glory, with the Father and the Holy Spirit, for ever and ever.
Amen.
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