5. Collegiality and
apostolate
In spite of all
appearances, the Church is now more united in the fellowship of service and in
the awareness of apostolate. This unity springs from the principle of
collegiality, mentioned by the Second Vatican Council. Christ himself made this
principle a living part of the apostolic College of the Twelve with Peter at
their head, and he is continuously renewing it in the College of the Bishops,
which is growing more and more over all the earth, remaining united with and
under the guidance of the Successor of Saint Peter. The Council did more than
mention the principle of collegiality: it gave it immense new life, by - among
other things - expressing the wish for a permanent organ of collegiality, which
Paul VI founded by setting up the Synod of the Bishops, whose activity not only
gave a new dimension to his pontificate but was also later clearly reflected in
the pontificate of John Paul I and that of his unworthy Successor from the day
they began.
The principle of
collegiality showed itself particularly relevant in the difficult postconciliar period, when the shared unanimous position of
the College of the Bishops - which displayed, chiefly through the Synod, its
union with Peter's Successor - helped to dissipate doubts and at the same time
indicated the correct ways for renewing the Church in her universal dimension.
Indeed, the Synod was the source, among other things, of that essential
momentum for evangelization that found expression in the Apostolic Exhortation Evangelii Nuntiandi17,
wich was so joyously welcomed as a programme for renewal
which was both apostolic and also pastoral. The same line was followed in the
work of the last ordinary session of the Synod of the Bishops, held about a
year before the death of Pope Paul VI and dedicated, as is known, to
catechesis. The results of this work have still to be arranged and enunciated
by the Apostolic See.
As we are dealing with the
evident development of the forms in which episcopal
collegiality is expressed, mention must be made at least of the process of
consolidation of National Episcopal Conferences throughout the Church and of
other collegial structures of an international or continental character.
Referring also to the centuriesold tradition of the
Church, attention should be directed to the activity of the various diocesan,
provincial and national Synods. It was the Council's idea, an idea consistently
put into practice by Paul VI, that structures of this kind, with their
centuries of trial by the Church, and the other forms of collegial
collaboration by Bishops, such as the metropolitan structure - not to mention
each individual diocese - should pulsate in full awareness of their own
identity and, at the same time, of their own originality within the universal
unity of the Church. The same spirit of collaboration and shared responsibility
is spreading among priests also, as is confirmed by the many Councils of
Priests that have sprung up since the Council. That spirit has extended also
among the laity, not only strengthening the already existing organizations for
lay apostolate but also creating new ones that often have a different outline
and excellent dynamism. Furthermore, lay people conscious of their
responsibility for the Church have willingly committed themselves to
collaborating with the Pastors and with the representatives of the Institutes
of consecrated life, in the spheres of the diocesan Synods and of the pastoral
Councils in the parishes and dioceses.
I must keep all this in
mind at the beginning of my pontificate as a reason for giving thanks to God,
for warmly encouraging all my brothers and sisters and for recalling with
heartfelt gratitude the work of the Second Vatican Council and my great
Predecessors, who set in motion this new surge of life for the Church, a
movement that is much stronger than the symptoms of doubt, collapse and crisis.
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