11.
To provide a correct framework for
better understanding how collegial union is manifested in the joint pastoral
action of the Bishops of a geographic area, it is useful to recall—even
briefly—how individual Bishops, in their ordinary pastoral ministry, are
related to the universal Church. It is necessary, in fact, to remember that the
membership of individual Bishops in the College of Bishops is expressed,
relative to the entire Church, not only in so-called collegial acts, but also
in the care for the whole Church which, although not exercised by acts of
jurisdiction, nonetheless contributes greatly to the good of the universal
Church. All Bishops, in fact, must promote and defend the unity of faith and
the discipline which is common to the whole Church, and foster every activity
which is common to the whole Church, especially in efforts to increase faith
and to make the light of truth shine on all people.(47) “For the rest,
it is true that by governing well their own Church as a portion of the
universal Church, they themselves are effectively contributing to the welfare
of the whole Mystical Body, which is also the body of the Churches”.(48)
Bishops contribute to the good of the
universal Church not only by the proper exercise of the munus regendi in
their particular Churches, but also by the exercise of the offices of teaching
and sanctifying.
Certainly the individual Bishops, as
teachers of the faith, do not address the universal community of the faithful
except through the action of the entire College of Bishops. In fact, only the
faithful entrusted to the pastoral care of a particular Bishop are required to
accept his judgement given in the name of Christ in matters of faith and
morals, and to adhere to it with a religious assent of soul. In effect,
“Bishops, teaching in communion with the Roman Pontiff, are to be respected by
all as witnesses to divine and Catholic truth”; (49) and their
teaching, inasmuch as it transmits faithfully and illustrates the faith to be
believed and applied in living, is of great benefit to the whole Church.
The individual Bishop too, as “steward of
the grace of the supreme priesthood”,(50) in the exercise of his office
of sanctifying contributes greatly to the Church's work of glorifying God and
making men holy. This is a work of the whole Church of Christ, acting in every
legitimate liturgical celebration carried out in communion with the Bishop and
under his direction.
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