Vatican City, 10 May 2014 (VIS) –
“In the heart of human history: the challenges of a complex
society” is the theme of the assembly of the Institutes of Secular
Life, a form of consecrated life that has more adherents in Italy
than in any other country in the world, and which was established
“with a revolutionary gesture in the Church” by Pope Pius XII
with the apostolic constitution “Provida Mater Ecclesia” in 1947.
This morning the Holy Father,
receiving in audience the participants in the assembly, set aside his
official address and spoke to them off-the-cuff, underlining that the
secular Institutes are “effectively an act of bravery on the part
of the Church in that moment, giving structure and institutional
character” to them.
“From that moment up to the present
you have done great good for the Church, with bravery, as it takes
bravery to live in the world. Many of you come and go, alone, in your
apartment; others are in small communities. Every day, you live the
life of someone who lives in the world, and at the same time protect
the dimension of contemplation, in relation to the Lord and to the
world; contemplating reality, contemplating the beauty of the world,
and also the great sins of society, deviations, all these things, and
always in spiritual tension. … For this reason, your vocation is
fascinating, as it is a vocation that is located right there, where
the salvation of not only people but also institutions is at play”.
“I hope that you will always
maintain this attitude of going beyond, not only beyond, but even
further, where everything is at play: politics, the economy,
education, the family. It is perhaps possible that at times you are
tempted to think, 'But what can I do?'”, the Pope added. “When
this temptation rears, remember that the Lord has spoken to us about
the grain of wheat. And your life is like the grain of wheat. It is
like leaven. Do everything possible so that the Kingdom
might come, grow and be great, and that it may protect many people,
like the mustard tree. Think about this. A small life, a small
gesture; a normal life, but it is leaven, it is a seed, it allows
growth. And this brings consolation. The results in the balance of
the Kingdom of God cannot be seen, but only the Lord enables us to
perceive something. … We will see the results there, above”.
“This
is why it is important to have so much hope! It is a grace that you
must ask of the Lord, always: the hope that never disappoints. It
never disappoints? A hope that goes ahead. I would advise you to read
very frequently Chapter 11 of the Letter to the Hebrews, the chapter
of hope. And learn that many of our forefathers have taken that road
and have not seen the results, but they perceived them from afar.
Hope … this is what I wish upon you. Many thanks for what you have
done for the Church; many thanks for your prayer and your action.
Thank you for your hope. And do not forget: be revolutionaries!”
The
Pope then handed the participants a copy of his official discourse,
extensive extracts from which are published below:
The vocation of the Secular Institutes
is “one of the most recent forms of consecrated life recognised and
approved by the Church and which is therefore perhaps not fully
understood. Do not be discouraged: you form part of that poor and
outgoing Church that I dream of!”.
“By vocation you are laypeople and
priests others and in the midst of others, you lead a normal life,
without any outward signs, without the support of community life,
without the visibility of an organised apostolate or specific works.
You are rich only in the totalising experience of God's love and are
therefore capable of knowing and sharing the burden of life in its
many expressions, fermenting them with the light and strength of the
Gospel. You are a sign of that Church in dialogue that Paul VI spoke
of. … Your vocation makes you interesting to every person and to
their deepest yearnings, which often remain unexpressed or masked.
Through the strength of God's love, that you have encountered and
known, you are capable of proximity and tenderness. … Like the
Samaritan who passed by, saw and had compassion. This is the moment
to which your vocation commits you: to place yourself next to each
man and to make yourselves close to every person you meet; because
your stay in the world is not simply a sociological condition, but
rather a theological reality that calls you to a conscious, careful
presence, in which you are able to perceive, see and touch your
brother's flesh”.
“If this does not happen, if you
became distracted, or worse still, you do not know this contemporary
world but instead know and frequent only the world that is most
comfortable to you, or that most entices you, then conversion is
urgent! Yours is a vocation that is by nature outgoing, not only
because it brings you to others, but also and above all because it
requires to you dwell where all men reside”.
“Never lose the impulse to walk the
streets of the world, with the knowledge that walking, even with an
faltering steps or limping, is always better than standing still,
closed up in our own questions or our own certainties. Missionary
passion, the joy of the encounter with Christ that leads us to share
the beauty of faith with others, is a bulwark against the risk of
being paralysed by individualism”.
“You are like antennae, ready to
gather the seeds of newness inspired by the Holy Spirit, and can help
the ecclesial community to take on this benevolent gaze and find
brave new paths to reach everyone. Poor among the poor, but with a
burning heart. Never still, always on the way. Together, and sent,
even when you are alone, since consecration makes you a living spark
of the Church. Always in motion, with that pilgrim virtue: joy!”.
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