| Communion, a Gift of the Spirit and True
Participation in Trinitarian Life, is the Remedy to Fight the Loneliness
Plaguing Everyone in Today's World On Wednesday
morning, 29 March, the Holy Father reflected with the faithful gathered
for the weekly General audience in St. Peter's Square on the gift of
"communion" or fellowship, the great gift of the Holy Spirit. The
following is a translation of the Pope's Catechesis, given in Italian.
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
Through her apostolic ministry the Church, a community gathered by the
Son of God who came in the flesh, will live on through the passing times,
building up and nourishing the communion in Christ and in the Holy Spirit
to which all are called and in which they can experience the salvation
given by the Father.
The Twelve — as Pope Clement, the
third Successor of Peter, said at the end of the first century
— took pains, in fact, to prepare
successors (cf. I Clem 42:4), so that the mission entrusted to them
would be continued after their death. The Church, organically structured
under the guidance of her legitimate Pastors, has thus continued down the
ages to live in the world as a mystery of communion in which, to a certain
extent, the Trinitarian Communion itself is mirrored.
The Apostle Paul was already referring to this supreme Trinitarian
source when he wished his Christians: "The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ
and the love of God and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit be with you all"
(II Cor 13:14).
Specific gift of the Holy Spirit
These words, probably echoed in the worship of the newborn Church,
emphasize how the free gift of the Father in Jesus Christ is realized and
expressed in the communion brought about by the Holy Spirit.
This interpretation, based on the close parallelism between the three
genitives that the text establishes: ("the grace of the Lord Jesus
Christ... the love of God... and the fellowship of the Holy
Spirit), presents "fellowship" as a specific gift of the Spirit, the fruit
of the love given by God the Father and the grace offered by the Lord
Jesus.
Moreover, the immediate context, marked by the insistence on fraternal
communion, guides us to perceiving the "koinonía"
of the Holy Spirit not only as "participation" in the divine life more or
less singularly, each one individually, but also, logically, as the
"communion" among believers that the Spirit himself kindles as his builder
and principal agent (cf. Phil 2:1).
One might say that grace, love and communion, referring respectively to
Christ, to the Father and to the Holy Spirit, are different aspects of the
one divine action for our salvation. This action creates the Church and
makes the Church — as St. Cyprian said in the third century
— "a people brought into unity from
the unity of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit" (De Orat. Dom.
23; PL 4. 353, cit. in Lumen Gentium, n. 4).
Sharing the Trinitarian life
The idea of communion as participation in Trinitarian life is
illuminated with special intensity in John's Gospel.
Here, the communion of love that binds the Son to the Father and to men
and women is at the same time the model and source of the fraternal
communion that must unite disciples with one another: "Love one another as
I have loved you" (Jn 15:12: cf. 13:34): "that they may all be one... even
as we are one" (Jn 17:21-22). Hence, it is communion of men and
women with the Trinitarian God and communion of men and women with one
another.
During the time of his earthly pilgrimage, the disciple can already
share through communion with the Son in his divine life and that of the
Father: "our fellowship is with the Father and with his Son Jesus Christ"
(I Jn 1:3).
This life of fellowship with God and with one another is the proper
goal of Gospel proclamation, the goal of conversion to Christianity: "That
which we have seen and heard we proclaim also to you, so that you may have
fellowship with us" (1 Jn 1:2).
Thus, this twofold communion with God and with one another is
inseparable. Wherever communion with God, which is communion with the
Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit, is destroyed, the root and source of
our communion with one another is destroyed. And wherever we do not live
communion among ourselves, communion with the Trinitarian God is not alive
and true either, as we have heard.
Communion in brotherly relations
Let us now go a step further. Communion, a fruit of the Holy Spirit, is
nourished by the Eucharistic Bread (cf. 1 Cor 10:16.17) and is expressed
in fraternal relations in a sort of anticipation of the future world.
In the Eucharist, Jesus nourishes us, he unites us with himself, with
his Father, with the Holy Spirit and with one another. This network of
unity that embraces the world is an anticipation of the future world in
our time.
Precisely in this way, since is is an anticipation of the future world,
communion is also a gift with very real consequences. It lifts us from our
loneliness, from being closed in on ourselves, and makes us sharers in the
love that unites us to God and to one another.
It is easy to understood how great this gift is if we only think of the
fragmentation and conflicts that afflict relations between individuals,
groups and entire peoples. And if the gift of unity in the Holy Spirit
does not exist, the fragmentation of humanity is inevitable.
"Communion" is truly the Good News, the remedy given to us by the Lord
to fight the loneliness that threatens everyone today, the precious gift
that makes us feel welcomed and beloved by God, in the unity of his People
gathered in the name of the Trinity; it is the light that makes the Church
shine forth like a beacon raised among the peoples.
"If we say we have fellowship with him while we walk in darkness, we
lie and do not live according to the truth; but if we walk in the light,
as he is in the light, we have fellowship with one another" (I Jn 1:6ff.).
Thus, the Church, despite all the human frailties that mark her
historical profile, is revealed as a marvellous creation of love, brought
into being to bring Christ close to every man and every woman who truly
desire to meet him, until the end of time. And in the Church, the Lord
always remains our contemporary. Scripture is not something of the past.
The Lord does not speak in the past but speaks in the present, he speaks
to us today, he enlightens us, he shows us the way through life, he gives
us communion and thus he prepares us and opens us to peace.
|