37.
The Church of the first millennium was
born of the blood of the martyrs: "Sanguis martyrum - semen
christianorum".(21) The historical events linked to the figure of
Constantine the Great could never have ensured the development of the Church as
it occurred during the first millennium if it had not been for the seeds
sown by the martyrs and the heritage of sanctity which marked the first
Christian generations. At the end of the second millennium, the Church
has once again become a Church of martyrs. The persecutions of believers
—priests, Religious and laity—has caused a great sowing of martyrdom in
different parts of the world. The witness to Christ borne even to the shedding
of blood has become a common inheritance of Catholics, Orthodox, Anglicans and
Protestants, as Pope Paul VI pointed out in his Homily for the Canonization of
the Ugandan Martyrs.(22)
This witness must not be forgotten. The Church of the first centuries, although facing
considerable organizational difficulties, took care to write down in special
martyrologies the witness of the martyrs. These martyrologies have been
constantly updated through the centuries, and the register of the saints and
the blessed bears the names not only of those who have shed their blood for
Christ but also of teachers of the faith, missionaries, confessors, bishops,
priests, virgins, married couples, widows and children.
In our own century the martyrs have
returned, many of them nameless, "unknown
soldiers" as it were of God's great cause. As far as possible,
their witness should not be lost to the Church. As was recommended in the Consistory,
the local Churches should do everything possible to ensure that the memory
of those who have suffered martyrdom should be safeguarded, gathering the
necessary documentation. This gesture cannot fail to have an ecumenical
character and expression. Perhaps the most convincing form of ecumenism is the
ecumenism of the saints and of the martyrs. The communio sanctorum speaks
louder than the things which divide us. The martyrologium of the first
centuries was the basis of the veneration of the Saints. By proclaiming and
venerating the holiness of her sons and daughters, the Church gave supreme
honour to God himself; in the martyrs she venerated Christ, who was at the
origin of their martyrdom and of their holiness. In later times there developed
the practice of canonization, a practice which still continues in the Catholic
Church and in the Orthodox Churches. In recent years the number of
canonizations and beatifications has increased. These show the vitality of
the local Churches, which are much more numerous today than in the first
centuries and in the first millennium. The greatest homage which all the
Churches can give to Christ on the threshold of the third millennium will be to
manifest the Redeemer's all-powerful presence through the fruits of faith, hope
and charity present in men and women of many different tongues and races who
have followed Christ in the various forms of the Christian vocation.
It will be the task of the Apostolic See, in
preparation for the Year 2000, to update the martyrologies for the
universal Church, paying careful attention to the holiness of those who in
our own time lived fully by the truth of Christ. In particular, there is a
need to foster the recognition of the heroic virtues of men and women who have
lived their Christian vocation in marriage. Precisely because we are
convinced of the abundant fruits of holiness in the married state, we need to
find the most appropriate means for discerning them and proposing them to the
whole Church as a model and encouragement for other Christian spouses.
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