Apostolic
Letter Apostolica Sedes by John Paul II
on the meaning of work performed for the Apostolic See
1. The
Apostolic See, in exercising its mission, has recourse to the valid and
precious work of the particular community made up of those men and women,
priests, religious and laity who devote their efforts in their dicasteries and
offices to the service of the universal Church.
Charges and duties are assigned to the members of this community; each of
those charges and duties has its own purpose and dignity, in consideration both
of the objective content and value of the work done and of the person who
accomplishes it.
This concept of community, applied to those who aid the bishop of Rome in
his ministry as pastor of the universal Church, permits us first of all to
define the unitary character of functions which are nonetheless diverse among
themselves. All persons called to perform them really participate in the
single, incessant activity of the Apostolic See; that is, in that "concern
for all the Churches" (cf. 2 Cor. 11:28) which enlivened the
apostles’ service from the earliest times and is the prerogative today in
outstanding measure of the successors of St. Peter in the Roman See. It is very
important that those who are associated in any way with the Apostolic See’s
activity should have a consciousness of that specific character of their
positions. In any case, such a consciousness has ever been the tradition and
pride of those who have chosen to dedicate themselves to that noble service.
This consideration applies to clerics and religious and to laity as well,
both to those who hold posts of high responsibility, and to office and manual
workers to whom auxiliary functions are assigned. It applies to persons
attached to the service of the same Apostolic See more directly, inasmuch as
they work in those organisms which are altogether known in fact under the name
of "Holy See;" and it applies to those who are in the service of the
Vatican City State, which is so closely linked with the Apostolic See.
In the recent Encyclical Laborem exercens, I recalled the principal
truths of the "gospel of labour" and Catholic doctrine on human work,
a doctrine always alive in the Church’s tradition. There is need for the life
of that singular community which operates sub umbra Petri — in Peter’s
shadow —, in such immediate contact with the Apostolic See, to conform itself
to these truths.
|