Dominum et vivificantem
INTRODUCTION
Venerable Brothers, Beloved Sons
and Daughters,
Health and the Apostolic Blessing!
1. The Church professes her faith in
the Holy Spirit as "the Lord, the giver of life." She professes this
in the Creed which is called Nicene-Constantinopolitan from the name of the two
Councils - of Nicaea
(A.D. 325) and Constantinople (A.D. 381) - at
which it was formulated or promulgated. It also contains the statement that the
Holy Spirit "has spoken through the Prophets."
These are words which the Church receives from the
very source of her faith, Jesus Christ. In fact, according to the Gospel of
John, the Holy Spirit is given to us with the new life, as Jesus foretells and
promises on the great day of the Feast of Tabernacles: "If any one thirst
let him come to me and drink. He who believeth in me as the scripture has said,
'Out of his heart shall flow rivers of living water.'"1 And the
Evangelist explains: "This he said about the Spirit, which those who believed
in him were to receive."2 It is the same simile of water which
Jesus uses in his conversation with the Samaritan woman, when he speaks of
"a spring of water welling up to eternal life,"3 and in his
conversation with Nicodemus when he speaks of the need for a new birth "of
water and the Holy Spirit" in order to "enter the kingdom of
God."4
The Church, therefore, instructed by the words of
Christ, and drawing on the experience of Pentecost and her own apostolic
history, has proclaimed since the earliest centuries her faith in the Holy
Spirit, as the giver of life, the one in whom the inscrutable Triune God
communicates himself to human beings, constituting in them the source of
eternal life.
2. This faith, uninterruptedly professed
by the Church, needs to be constantly reawakened and deepened in the
consciousness of the People of God. In the course of the last hundred years
this has been done several times: by Leo XIII, who published the Encyclical
Epistle Divinum Illud Munus (1897) entirely devoted to the Holy Spirit; by Pius
XII, who in the Encyclical Letter Mystici Corporis (1943) spoke of the Holy
Spirit as the vital principle of the Church, in which he works in union with
the Head of the Mystical Body, Christ5; at the Second Vatican
Ecumenical Council which brought out the need for a new study of the doctrine
on the Holy Spirit, as Paul VI emphasized: "The Christology and
particularly the ecclesiology of the Council must be succeeded by a new study
of and devotion to the Holy Spirit, precisely as the indispensable complement
to the teaching of the Council."6
In our own age, then, we are called anew by the ever
ancient and ever new faith of the Church, to draw near to the Holy Spirit as
the giver of life. In this we are helped and stimulated also by the heritage we
share with the Oriental Churches, which have jealously guarded the
extraordinary riches of the teachings of the Fathers on the Holy Spirit. For
this reason too we can say that one of the most important ecclesial events of
recent years has been the Sixteenth Centenary of the First Council of
Constantinople, celebrated simultaneously in Constantinople
and Rome on the
Solemnity of Pentecost in 1981. The Holy Spirit was then better seen, through a
meditation on the mystery of the Church, as the one who points out the ways
leading to the union of Christians, indeed as the supreme source of this unity,
which comes from God himself and to which St. Paul gave a particular expression
in the words which are frequently used to begin the Eucharistic liturgy:
"The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ and the love of God and the fellowship
of the Holy Spirit be with you all."7
In a certain sense, my previous Encyclicals Redemptor
Hominis and Dives in Misericordia took their origin and inspiration from this
exhortation, celebrating as they do the event of our salvation accomplished in
the Son, sent by the Father into the world "that the world might be saved
through him"8 and "every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is
Lord, to the glory of God the Father."9 From this exhortation now
comes the present Encyclical on the Holy Spirit, who proceeds from the Father
and the Son; with the Father and the Son he is adored and glorified: a divine
Person, he is at the center of the Christian faith and is the source and
dynamic power of the Church's renewal.10 The Encyclical has been drawn
from the heart of the heritage of the Council. For the Conciliar texts, thanks
to their teaching on the Church in herself and the Church in the world, move us
to penetrate ever deeper into the Trinitarian mystery of God himself, through
the Gospels, the Fathers and the liturgy: to the Father, through Christ, in the
Holy Spirit.
In this way the Church is also responding to certain
deep desires which she believes she can discern in people's hearts today: a
fresh discovery of God in his transcendent reality as the infinite Spirit, just
as Jesus presents him to the Samaritan woman; the need to adore him "in
spirit and truth"11; the hope of finding in him the secret of love
and the power of a "new creation"12: yes, precisely the giver
of life.
The Church feels herself called to this mission of
proclaiming the Spirit, while together with the human family she approaches the
end of the second Millennium after Christ. Against the background of a heaven
and earth which will "pass away," she knows well that "the words
which will not pass away"13 acquire a particular eloquence. They
are the words of Christ about the Holy Spirit, the inexhaustible source of the
"water welling up to eternal life,"14 as truth and saving
grace. Upon these words she wishes to reflect, to these words she wishes to
call the attention of believers and of all people, as she prepares to celebrate
- as will be said later on - the great Jubilee which will mark the passage from
the second to the third Christian Millennium.
Naturally, the considerations that follow do not aim
to explore exhaustively the extremely rich doctrine on the Holy Spirit, nor to
favor any particular solution of questions which are still open. Their main
purpose is to develop in the Church the awareness that "she is compelled
by the Holy Spirit to do her part towards the full realization of the will of God,
who has established Christ as the source of salvation for the whole
world."15
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