Vatican City, 12 November 2014 (VIS) –
What is required of ministers of the Church – bishops, priests and
deacons – for their service to be authentic and fruitful?”. This
was the question posed by Pope Francis in his catechesis during this
Wednesday's general audience in St. Peter's Square.
In his pastoral epistles, St. Paul
lists, alongside faith and spiritual life, a number of human
qualities essential for these ministries: hospitality, temperance,
patience, gentleness, reliability, and goodness of heart. These, said
the Holy Father, are “the alphabet, the grammar at the base of
every ministry! Without this predisposition to encounter, know, enter
into dialogue with, appreciate and relate to one's brethren in a
respectful and sincere way, it is impossible to offer a service and
a truly joyful and credible witness”.
There is another basic attitude that
Paul recommends to his disciples and, consequently, to all those in
whom pastoral ministry is invested: the continual renewal of the gift
received. “This means always keeping alive the awareness that one
does not become a bishop, priest or deacon for being more intelligent
or better than others, but by receiving a gift from God … for the
good of His people. This knowledge is truly important and constitutes
a grace to be asked for every day. Indeed, a pastor who is aware that
his ministry stems solely from the mercy and from the heart of God
can never assume an authoritarian attitude, as if he had everyone at
his feet and as if the community were his own property, his own
personal kingdom”.
“The awareness that it is all a gift,
it is a grace, also helps the pastor not to give in to the temptation
to place himself at the centre of attention and to trust only in
himself. These are the temptations of vanity, pride, sufficiency,
arrogance. God does not like it when a bishop, priest or deacon
thinks that he knows it all, that he always has the right answer for
everything and has no need for anyone else”, exclaimed Francis. “On
the contrary, the knowledge that he, first and foremost, is the
object of God's mercy and compassion must lead a minister of the
Church always to be humble and understanding towards others. While in
the knowledge of being required to courageously guard the faith
entrusted to him, he must always be willing to listen to the people.
Indeed, he is aware that there is always something to learn, even
from those who may be distant from the faith and from the Church. All
this must lead him to assume, with his brethren, a new attitude
characterised by sharing, corresponsibility and communion”.
“We must always be grateful to the
Lord Who, in the person and the ministry of the bishops, priests and
deacons, continues to guide and form His Church, enabling her to grow
along the path of sanctity. At the same time, we must continue to
pray, so that the pastors of our communities may be the living image
of communion and of God's love”, concluded the bishop of Rome.
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