IN COMMUNION WITH OUR BISHOPS FOR THE HOPE OF
THE WORLD
0.- THE CONTEXT OF THIS SYNOD
The coming Synod deals with “The Bishop: Servant of the Gospel of Jesus
Christ For the Hope of the World.” Its preparation offers us a new opportunity
to shed light on the path of the consecrated life in our day and find new
perspectives for inspiring in us a deeper awareness of our “sensus Ecclesiae” and foster a new
spirituality and practice of communion, which is always a missionary
communion1.
The presence of our communities in many countries of the world and in
many particular Churches makes it possible for us to have a sufficiently global
view of the college of bishops and its ministry and has allowed us to have
personal contact with quite a few of the Pastors of the particular Churches.
Similarly, our institutes, almost all of which are of pontifical right, have as
their primary reference point the Church in its universality and, therefore,
feel called to maintain and foster a special bond with the Successor of
Peter2.
My intervention, which is based on the Instrumentum Laboris (IL), is to be interpreted from our ecclesial
state of life – as consecrated persons – is not based on the context that has
given rise to tension, conflict, mutual lamentation, but wherever it is
possible to discern the light of a new future that nourishes communion for the
sake of Christian hope.
Each Synod is a call to communion
for all the members of the Church, a call to journey together in the same
direction, to join forces to pursue the objective for which it has been
convoked. Keeping this in mind helps the members to overcome the temptations to
self-absorption and self-complacency. More than being devoted to the ecclesial
relevance or praiseworthiness of the consecrated life, we must be concerned to
discover the urgencies and the places in which our charismatic and prophet
contribution may be more necessary. Ours is a time of unity and not of
division, of going ahead and not of staying, of reconciliation and not of
fighting. It is a time of “conversion,” of evangelical life, of responsibly
using the grace and ministry received for the common good.
The consecrated life is not
reaffirmed and renewed by defending its right, but by offering itself for its
own sake3. Through the Post-Synodal Exhortation
Vita Consecrata (VC), John Paul II
has taught us the way to act in the Church: recognise and appreciate the gift
we have received, clarify its urgent demands and foster its evangelising
commitment. It is the path of affirmation
and not of differentiation that
spreads the Reign of God. Another thing that must be said of the consecrated
life: to the degree to which it bears witness to the gift that has been
received and shares it through many forms of service it is recreated and grows.
We must admit that we need a “new awareness” of the raison d’etre and the exercise of the episcopal ministry within the
ecclesiology of Vatican II. At times this aspect has been overlooked in some
way and that we have not been able to wisely include in the process of the
renewal of our identity and mission. Just as we ask the Church to know and
recognise our charism and our raison
d’etre, so too we know have the opportunity to know and recognise the
episcopal ministry in all its charismatic, theological and providential
richness.
We are in a time of grace. The Synod journey that has been travelled has
focused its attention on all the forms of Christian life and on the
evangelising mission of the Church in the context of the various continents.
Now, with this deeper study into the episcopal form of life and ministry, it
seems that one stage concludes and we enter into a new, more complete and
thorough, deeper and communicative, synthesis of the Church. It is time to make
this correlation between the forms of life, the exchange of gifts, and the
complementary quality of the various forms of life to bear fruit and testify to
ecclesial communion and make pastoral ministry more fruitful.
The choice of the theme of the coming Synod of Bishops is more than
fitting. Examining, at the beginning of the millennium, the social, cultural,
economic, political and religious context of today’s world, evangelisation is seen
as a proclamation of the Gospel of Jesus Christ, the true hope for humanity.
Our post-modern, globalised world asks for a word of hope and light to lead it
into the future. Throughout history the Gospel has been, is, and will be a
leaven of freedom and progress, of fraternity, unity and peace4.
This 10th Ordinary
Assembly of the Synod places us before the ministry of the Bishops and prepares
us to rethink the relations between Bishops, priests, consecrated persons and
laity in light of a more intense communion and a better articulated commitment
to evangelisation. It is an invitation to continue journeying in the same
direction, under the leadership of the Pastors, so as to arouse that
theological dynamism proper to the Gospel so that the whole of humanity “in hearing might believe, in believing
might hope, and in hoping might love” 5.
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