Vatican
City, 19 September 2013 (VIS) – At midday, in the Sala Clementina
of the Vatican Apostolic Palace, the Holy Father received in audience
the recently appointed bishops who will participate in the congress
organised by the Congregation for Bishops and the Congregation for
the Eastern Churches.
Francis
encouraged the bishops, in the words of St. Peter, to “tend the
flock of God that is in your charge”, and reminded them that “we
are called and made Shepherds not by ourselves, but by the Lord, and
not to serve ourselves, but rather to serve the flock entrusted to
our care, to serve to the extent of offering our lives, like Christ,
the Good Shepherd”.
The
Pope asked what it means to “tend”, to have “ habitual and
daily care” of the flock.
“Three
thoughts arise from this”, he explained. First, the importance of
welcoming with generosity: “Your heart must be large enough to be
able to welcome all the men and women you meet during your days and
whom you will seek out as you walk your parishes and your
communities”.
Secondly,
to accompany the flock: “to walk alongside the faithful and all
those who turn to you, sharing joys and hopes, difficulties and
suffering, as brothers and friends, but even more so as fathers, who
are able to listen, to understand, to help and to orientate”.
Francis urged the bishops not to forget the affection they hold for
their priests, who are those “closest to the bishop”, who mix
with the faithful, who have the “smell of their sheep”, and
reminded them to be humble, austere and essential in the service of
their flock. “We shepherds are not men with the psychology of
princes – ambitious men, who espouse this Church while awaiting
another, more beautiful and richer. But this is a scandal! Imagine
that a man confesses, saying, 'I am married and I live with my wife,
but I continually look at a woman who is more beautiful than her; is
this a sin, Father?' The Gospel tells us that this is the sin of
adultery. Is there such thing as 'spiritual adultery'? I don't know,
think about it yourselves. Do not await another more beautiful, more
important, richer Church. Do not fall into the trap of careerism! It
is a form of cancer!”
Finally,
Francis referred to the importance of staying with the flock: the
stability of remaining in the diocese without seeking change or
promotion. He urged the bishops as far as possible to avoid being
absent from their diocese, and if unavoidable, to do so for the
shortest period possible and not on a regular basis. “Espouse your
community, be profoundly bonded to it! I beg you, please, to stay
among your people. … Avoid the scandal of being 'airport bishops'!”
Francis urged the bishops to welcome their people “with affection,
with mercy, with fatherly gentleness and firmness, with humility and
with discretion; know how to recognise your limits, and have a good
dose of humour”.
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