Between
memory and expectation
8. Today we often
feel ourselves prisoners of the present. It is as though man had lost his
perception of belonging to a history which precedes and follows him. This
effort to situate oneself between the past and the future, with a grateful
heart for the benefits received and for those expected, is offered by the
Eastern Churches in particular, with a clear - cut sense of continuity which
takes the name of Tradition and of eschatological expectation.
Tradition is the
heritage of Christ's Church. This is a living memory of the Risen One met and
witnessed to by the Apostles who passed on his living memory to their
successors in an uninterrupted line, guaranteed by the apostolic succession
through the laying on of hands, down to the bishops of today. This is
articulated in the historical and cultural patrimony of each Church, shaped by
the witness of the martyrs, fathers and saints, as well as by the living faith
of all Christians down the centuries to our own day. It is not an unchanging
repetition of formulas, but a heritage which preserves its original, living
kerygmatic core. It is Tradition that preserves the Church from the danger of
gathering only changing opinions, and guarantees her certitude and continuity.
When the uses and
customs belonging to each Church are considered as absolutely unchangeable,
there is a sure risk of Tradition losing that feature of a living reality which
grows and develops, and which the Spirit guarantees precisely because it has
something to say to the people of every age. As Scripture is increasingly
understood by those who read it,(23) every other element of the
Church's living heritage is increasingly understood by believers and is
enriched by new contributions, in fidelity and in continuity.(24) Only
a religious assimilation, in the obedience of faith, of what the Church calls
"Tradition" will enable Tradition to be embodied in different
cultural and historical situations and conditions.(25) Tradition is
never pure nostalgia for things or forms past, nor regret for lost privileges,
but the living memory of the Bride, kept eternally youthful by the Love that
dwells within her.
If Tradition puts
us in continuity with the past, eschatological expectation opens us to God's
future. Each Church must struggle against the temptation to make an absolute of
what it does, and thus to celebrate itself or abandon itself to sorrow. But
time belongs to God, and whatever takes place in time can never be identified
with the fullness of the Kingdom, which is always a free gift. The Lord Jesus
came to die for us and rose from the dead, while creation, saved through hope,
is still suffering its birth pangs (cf. Rom 8:22). The Lord himself will
return to give the cosmos to the Father (cf. 1 Cor 15:28). The Church
invokes this return, and the monk and the religious are its privileged
witnesses.
The East
expresses in a living way the reality of tradition and expectation. All its
liturgy, in particular, is a commemoration of salvation and an invocation of
the Lord's return. And if Tradition teaches the Churches fidelity to what give
birth to them, eschatological expectation urges them to be what they have not
yet fully become, what the Lord wants them to become, and thus to seek ever new
ways of fidelity, overcoming pessimism because they are striving for the hope
of God who does not disappoint.
We must show
people the beauty of memory, the power that comes to us from the Spirit and
makes us witnesses because we are children of witnesses; we must make them
taste the wonderful things the Spirit has wrought in history; we must show that
it is precisely Tradition which has preserved them, thus giving hope to those
who, even without seeing their efforts to do good crowned by success, know that
someone else will bring them to fulfillment; therefore man will feel less
alone, less enclosed in the narrow corner of his own individual achievement.
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