Vatican City, 29 October 2014 (VIS) –
The Church: spiritual nature and visible reality. “Two different
things or a single Church?”, said the Pope in this Wednesday's
general audience, returning in his catechesis to the theme of the
Church. “If the Church is always one”, he continued, “how can
we understand the relationship between the visible and spiritual
reality?”.
Francis commented that when we speak
about visible reality we must not think only of the Pope, bishops,
priests, nuns and consecrated persons. “The visible reality of the
Church is constituted by the many baptised brothers and sisters
throughout the world who believe, hope and love. … The Church is
all of us”. Therefore, the visible reality of the Church cannot be
measured or known in its entirety. “How can we know all the wonders
that Christ is capable of achieving through us, in the hearts and
lives of people?” he said. “See: even the visible reality of the
Church goes beyond our control, beyond our strength, and it is a
mysterious reality, as it comes from God”.
To understand the relationship between
the visible and spiritual realities of the Church we must look to
Christ, “whose body is the Church and from whom She is generated,
in an act of infinite love. Indeed, also in Christ, through the
mystery of the Incarnation, we recognise a human nature and a divine
reality, united in the same person in a wonderful and indissoluble
way. This applies in a similar way to the Church … who is a mystery
too, in which what we are unable to see is more important than what
we can see, and can be recognised only with the eyes of faith”.
The Holy Father went on to ask how
visible reality could be placed at the service of the spiritual
nature of the Church, explaining that it is possible by following the
example of Christ, “who made use of His humanity, as He was also a
man, to announce and implement the divine plan for redemption and
salvation, as He was God. Through her visible reality, from all that
we see, the sacraments and the witness of all Christians, the Church
is called each day to be close to every person, beginning with the
poor; to the suffering and the marginalised, so as to make them aware
of Jesus' compassionate and merciful gaze”.
Before concluding, he asked all the
faithful present to pray for the gift of faith, “so that we are
able to comprehend how, despite our limits and our poverty, the Lord
has truly made us instruments of His grace and the visible sign of
His love for all humanity. We can become the source of scandal, it is
true. But we can also become the source of witness, saying through
our lives what Jesus wants from us”.