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Authority and hierarchy in the
Church: Service lived in pure giving
On Wednesday, 26 May [2010], in St Peter's
Square, the Holy Father spoke about the priest's ministry of governing,
in the name of Christ, the flock entrusted to his care, a service for
the ultimate good of the person. The following is a translation of the
Pope's Catechesis, which was given in Italian.
Dear Brothers and
Sisters,
The Year for Priests, is
drawing to a close; therefore I began to talk in the last Catecheses
about the essential tasks of the priest: to teach, to sanctify and to
govern. I have already given two Catecheses, one on the ministry of
sanctification, the Sacraments above all, and one on that of teaching.
So it remains for me today to speak of the priest's mission to govern,
to guide
—
with the authority of Christ, not his own
—
the portion of the People that God has entrusted to him.
How can we comprehend in
our modern day culture a dimension of this kind that implies the concept
of authority and has its origins in the Lord's own mandate to tend his
flock? What is authority really, for us Christians? The cultural,
political and historical experiences of the recent past, above all the
dictatorships in Eastern and Western Europe in the 20th century, have
made contemporary man suspicious of this concept. A suspicion which is
often expressed in a conviction that it is necessary to eliminate every
kind of authority does not come exclusively from man, and is not
regulated and controlled by him. But it is precisely in reviewing those
regimes which in the last century disseminated terror and death, that we
are forcibly reminded that authority, in every circumstance, when it is
exercised without reference to the Transcendent, if it neglects the
Supreme Authority, which is God, inevitably finishes by turning against
man. It is important, therefore, to recognize that human authority is
never an end in itself but always and only a means and that, necessarily
and in every age, the end is the person, created by God with his own
inviolable dignity and called to relate to his Creator, both along the
path of his earthly journey and in eternal life; it is an authority
exercised in responsibility before God, before the Creator. An authority
whose sole purpose is understood to be to serve the true good of the
person and to be a glass through which we can see the one and supreme
Good, which is God. Not only is it not foreign to man, but on the
contrary, it is a precious help on our journey towards a total
fulfilment in Christ, towards salvation.
The Church is called and commits herself to
exercise this kind of authority which is service and exercises it not in
her own name, but in the name of Jesus Christ, who received from his
Father all authority both in Heaven and on Earth (cf. Mt 28:18). Christ
tends his flock through the Pastor of the Church, in fact: it is he who
guides, protects and corrects them, because he loves them deeply. But
the Lord Jesus, the supreme Shepherd of our souls, has willed that the
Apostolic College, today the Bishops, in communion with the Successor of
Peter and the priests, their most precious collaborators, to participate
in his mission of taking care of God's People, of educating them in the
faith and of guiding, inspiring and sustaining the Christian community,
or, as the Council puts it, "to see to it... that each member of the
faithful shall be led in the Holy Spirit to the full development of his
own vocation in accordance with Gospel preaching, and to sincere and
active charity" and to exercise that liberty with which Christ has set
us free (cf. Presbyterorum Ordinis, 6). Every Pastor,
therefore, is a means through whom Christ himself loves men: it is
through our ministry, dear priests, it is through us that the Lord
reaches souls, instructs, guards and guides them. St Augustine, in his
Commentary on the Gospel of St John, says: "let it
therefore be a commitment of love to feed the flock of the Lord" (cf.
123, 5); this is the supreme rule of conduct for the ministers of God,
an unconditional love, like that of the Good Shepherd, full of joy,
given to all, attentive to those close to us and solicitous for those
who are distant (cf. St Augustine, Discourse 340, 1; Discourse
46, 15), gentle towards the weakest, the little ones, the simple,
the sinners, to manifest the infinite mercy of God with the reassuring
words of hope (cf. ibid., Epistle, 95, 1).
Even if this pastoral
task is founded on the Sacraments, its efficacy is not independent of
the personal existence of the priest. In order to be a priest according
to the heart of God (cf. Jer 3:15) it is necessary that not only the
mind, but also the freedom and the will be deeply rooted in living
friendship with Christ, a clear awareness of the identity received in
Priestly Ordination, an unconditional readiness to lead the flock
entrusted to him where the Lord desires and not in the direction which
might, apparently, seem easier or more convenient. This requires, above
all, a continuous and progressive willingness to allow Christ himself to
govern the sacerdotal life. In fact, no one is really able to feed
Christ's flock, unless he lives in profound and true obedience to Christ
and the Church, and the docility of the people towards their priests
depends on the docility of the priests towards Christ; for this reason
the personal and constant encounter with the Lord, profound knowledge of
him and the conformation of the individual will to Christ's will is
always at the root of the pastoral ministry .
During the last decades, we have heard
the adjective "pastoral" used almost as if it were in opposition to the
concept of "hierarchical", and in the same way the idea of "communion"
has also been set against it. At this point it may be useful to make a
brief comment on the word "hierarchy", which is the traditional
designation of the structure of sacramental authority within the Church,
ordered according to the three levels of the Sacrament of Holy Orders,
episcopate, presbyterate, diaconate: The concept of "hierarchy" carries,
in public opinion, an element of subordination and of judgement;
therefore to many the concept of hierarchy appears to be in contrast
with the flexibility and vitality of the pastoral meaning and also
appears contrary to the humility of the Gospel.
However, this is a
misunderstanding of the meaning of hierarchy, which arose in historical
times from abuses of authority and careerism. But these are, in fact,
abuses, and have nothing to do with the essential meaning of "hierarchy"
itself. Common opinion holds that "hierarchy" is something connected
with dominion and therefore cannot correspond to the real sense of the
Church, that is unity in the love of Christ. But, as I have said, this
is a mistaken interpretation, which has its origins in the abuses of the
past, but does not correspond to the real meaning of hierarchy.
Let us begin with the
word. The word hierarchy is generally said to mean "sacred dominion",
yet the real meaning is not this, but rather "sacred origin", that is to
say: this authority does not come from man himself, but it has its
origins in the sacred, in the Sacrament; so it subjects the person in
second place to the vocation, to the mystery of Christ; it makes of the
individual a servant of Christ, and only as a servant of Christ can he
govern and guide for Christ and with Christ. Therefore he who enters
into the Sacred Order of the Sacrament, the "hierarchy", is not an
autocrat but he enters into a new bond of obedience to Christ: he is
tied to Christ in communion with the other members of the Sacred Order,
the Priesthood.
Nor can the Pope,
reference point for all the Pastors and for the communion of the Church,
do what he likes; on the contrary, the Pope is the custodian of
obedience to Christ, to his word summed up in the "regula fidei",
in the Creed of the Church, and must lead the way in obedience to
Christ and to his Church. Thus hierarchy implies a triple bond: in the
first place the bond with Christ and with the order given by Our Lord to
his Church; then the bond with the other Pastors in the one communion of
the Church; and lastly, the bond with the faithful who are entrusted to
the individual, in the order of the Church.
Therefore it is clear
that communion and hierarchy are not contrary to each other, but they
influence each other. Together they form one thing (hierarchical
communion). The Pastor fulfils his role precisely when he guides and
protects his flock and sometimes prevents it from scattering. Except in
a vision which is clearly and explicitly supernatural, the task of
governing which belongs to the priest is incomprehensible. On the
contrary, sustained by a sincere desire for the salvation of each
believer, he is particularly precious and necessary, also in our time.
If the aim is to spread the message of Christ and to lead men and women
towards a saving encounter with him, so that they may have life, then
the task of guiding appears as a service lived in pure giving, for the
edification of the flock in truth and holiness, often going against the
tide, and remembering that he who is greater must act as the lesser, and
he who governs as he who serves (cf. Lumen Gentium,
n. 27).
Where can a priest today
find the strength for such an exercise of his ministry, in full fidelity
to Christ and to the Church, and complete devotion to his flock? There
is only one answer: in Christ the Lord. Jesus' way of governing was not
through dominion, but in the humble and loving service of the Washing of
the feet, and the kingship of Christ over the Universe is not an earthly
triumph, but reaches its highest point on the wood of the Cross, which
becomes a judgement for the world and a point of reference for the
exercising of that authority which is the true expression of pastoral
charity.
The saints, among them
St John Mary Vianney, carried out with love and devotion the task of
caring for the portion of God's People entrusted to them, showing
themselves to be strong and determined men with the single aim of
promoting the true good of souls, and capable of paying a price in
person, even to martyrdom, in order to remain faithful to the truth and
justice of the Gospel.
Dear priests, "tend the
flock of God that is your charge, not by constraint but willingly...
being examples to the flock" (1 Pet 5:2). Therefore, do not be afraid to
lead to Christ each one of the brethren whom he has entrusted to you,
certain that every word and every action will bear fruit if they come
from obedience to God's will: know how to live in appreciating the
merits and in recognition of the limits of the culture in which we find
ourselves, with the firm assurance that the proclamation of the Gospel
is the greatest service to render to man.
In fact, there is no
greater good, in this earthly life, than to lead people to God, to
reawaken faith, to lift the person out of his inertia and desperation,
to give the hope that God is near and directs our personal histories and
that of the world: this, in the ultimate analysis, is the deep and final
meaning of the task of governing that the Lord has given to us. To form
Christ in believers, through that process of sanctification that is a
conversion of criteria, scale of values, and patterns of behaviour, to
allow Christ to live in every one of the faithful. St Paul sums up his
pastoral action in these words, "my little children, with whom I am
again in travail until Christ be formed in you" (Gal 4:19).
Dear brothers and
sisters, I should like to invite you to pray for me, the Successor of
Peter, who have a specific task in governing the Church of Christ, as
have all your Bishops and priests. Pray that we may know how to take
care of all the sheep, including those that are lost, that make up the
flock entrusted to us. You, dear priests, I cordially invite to the
closing celebrations of the Year for Priests, to be held on the 9th,
10th, and 11th June, here in Rome: we shall meditate on conversion and
on mission, on the gift of the Holy Spirit and on the relationship with
Mary Most Holy, and we shall renew our priestly promises, sustained by
all the People of God. Thank you!
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