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| Fr Aquilino Bocos Merino C.M.F. Superior General In Communion with our bishops IntraText CT - Text |
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We have to do everything possible so that the hope of the poor and the wretched is not disappointed (cf. Ps 9:18). There is no true hope without solidarity. Jesus, the man for others, opened up this path for us. Today it is especially necessary to exercise the prophecy of solidarity because the post-modern age has magnified individualism and egocentricity and has fostered the profit of the few, forcing into levels of desparate poverty a multitude of men and women, of children, adults, elderly people, who are suffering under the intolerable weight of misery100. The path of solidarity travels through a more itnense experience of fraternity in the mission as a sign and a foretaste of the new humanity and of the new Church101. It is necessary to enter into the dynamic of sharing and tireless striving for justice and the transformation of the world, which means far more than offering aid “for pity’s sake” or almsgiving. And, from this perspective, special care is demanded today because of migration, with all the problems it brings out: cultural, religious and political pluralism, the breakdown of the family, economic and educational needs.
Anyone who feels that he or she has been blessed from on high cannot stand evil and will rebel in hope. The world and the Church are waiting for and hoping for their prophets of peace and justice and the Bishop is the pastor of all of them102. It is absolutely necessary to work together, not only to join in diocesan justice and peace commissions, but to orient the life of the Christian community and help it become involved in the commitment to human rights and dignity. The religious Institutes have a great potential for establishing networks of solidarity, but we cannot say that we have already established any. |
96 “The dialogue of life, where people strive to live in an open and neighbourly spirit, sharing their joys and sorrows, their human problems and preoccupations. The dialogue of action, in which Christians and others collaborate for the integral development and liberation of people. …. El dialogue de las obras, en el que los cristianos and las restantes personas colaboran con vistas al desarrollo integral and la libertad de la gente. (…) d) The dialogue of religious experience, where persons, rooted in their own religious traditions, share their spiritual riches, for instance with regard to prayer and contemplation, faith and ways of searching for God or the Absolute.” Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue and the Congregation for the Evangelisation of Peoples: Dialogue andProclamation, Vatican City, (1991) n. 31. 97 VC points out the world of education, the evangelisation of culture and the means of communication, cf. nn.96-99. 98 Cf. IL chapters I and V. 99 The compassion being spoken of here “has nothing to do with affection or permissiveness but with the ardour of burning embers. If it touches you, you are enflamed. It is impossible to experience it without being impelled to live differently. To experience it is to enter into a stream that bears you along, bringing you closer to those who are more alienated, because it bears within itself the breath of a revolution, the revolution of tenderness.” LECLERC, E. El Reino escondido. Sal Terrae. Santander, 1997, 106. Cf. ROCHETTA,C: Teologia della tenerezza. Un “vangelo” da riscoprire. EDB, Bologna, 2000. 100 Cf. IL 139-140.Ever more scandalous are the differences, the inequalities, the domination of the one part and the dependence of the other; there is a growing exclusion from well-being and progress for millions of men and women. Human dignity is increasingly degraded and communion within the family, in society and in the Church increasingly threatened. We are living in a process of globalisation that is a privilege for a minority and a threat for the great majority. 101 To recreate the style of the primitive community, as found in the Acts of the Apostles, in which no one called anything his own, but everyone held everything in common. (Acts 4: 32). 102 Cf. IL 142. |
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