Search this Site
Home
Contact
Feedback
Mailing List
Topics
100+ Important Documents in United States History

Anti-Catholicism
Apostolic Fathers of the Church
Articles Worth Your Time
Biographies
& Writings of Notable Catholics
Catholic Apologetics
Catholic Calendar
Catholic News Commentary by Michael Voris, S.T.B.
Catholic Perspectives
Catholic Social Teaching
Christology
Church Around the
World

Church Contacts
Church Documents
Church
History
Church Law
Church Teaching
Demonology
Doctors of the Church
Ecumenism
Eschatology
(Death, Heaven, Purgatory, Hell)
Essays on Science
Evangelization
Fathers of the Church
Free Catholic Pamphlets
Heresies
and Falsehoods
How to Vote Catholic
Let There Be Light
Q & A on the Catholic Faith
Links to Churches and Religions
Links to Newspapers, Radio and Television
Links to Recommended Sites
Links to Specialized Agencies
Links to specialized Catholic News
services
Liturgy
Mariology
Marriage & the Family
Modern Martyrs
Mexican Martyrdom
Moral Theology
****
Pope John Paul II's
Theology of the Body
Movie Reviews (USCCB)
New Age
Occult
Parish Bulletin Inserts
Political Issues
Prayer and
Devotions
Pro-Life
****
Hope after Abortion
Project Rachel
****
Help & Information for Men
****
How to Get Pregnant
Rite of Christian Initiation for Adults
Sacraments
Scripture
Spirituality
The
Golden Legend
Vatican
Vocation Links
& Articles

What the Cardinals believe...
World Religions
Pope John
Paul II
In Memoriam
John Paul II
Beatification
Pope
Benedict XVI
In
Celebration

| |
SYNOD OF BISHOPS
X ORDINARY GENERAL ASSEMBLY
THE BISHOP:
SERVANT OF THE GOSPEL
OF JESUS CHRIST
FOR THE HOPE OF THE WORLD
INTRUMENTUM LABORIS
VATICAN CITY
2001
© The General
Secretariat of the Synod of Bishops and Libreria Editrice Vaticana.
This text can be reproduced by Bishops' Conferences, or at their authorization,
provided that the contents are not altered in any way and two copies of the same
be sent to the General Secretariat of the Synod of Bishops, 00120 Vatican City
State.
INTRODUCTION
From the Perspective of a New Millennium
1. Jesus Christ, our Hope (1 Tim 1:1), the same, yesterday, today and for ever
(Heb 13:8) and chief Shepherd (1 Pt 5:4), guides his Church to the fullness of
truth and life, until the day of his glorious return, when all promises will be
realized and the hopes of humanity fulfilled.
At the beginning of the third Christian millennium, the Church and humanity are
walking together towards a future marked by the legacy of the past century with
its array of lights and shadows.
We find ourselves in a new moment of human history in which many question the
destiny of humanity and wonder what is in store for the future. On the one hand,
the world is engaged in the dynamism of progress and a growing interdependence
in economic matters, culture and communications; on the other, it is still the
site of local conflicts and wide areas of increasing hunger, sickness and
poverty.
The beginning of a new millennium puts the building of the future at the center
of the world-conscience and, consequently, the subject of hope which is
essential to homo viator and the Christian, who eagerly look to the fulfilment
of God’s promises. This hope enlightens faith and stimulates charity as one goes
forth into an uncertain future.
2. The Tenth Ordinary General Assembly of the Synod of Bishops, initially
scheduled during the Jubilee Year and now to take place in October 2001, is part
of this new beginning.
With prophetic intuition, His Holiness, Pope John Paul II assigned to this
assembly the treatment of the theme: Episcopus minister Evangelii Iesu Christi
propter spem mundi.
Various, thought-provoking reasons make this theme particularly opportune in the
life of the Church and humanity. Though these reasons are primarily theological
and ecclesial in nature, some are associated with society and the human person.
In the Footsteps of Previous Synodal Assemblies
3. We begin by treating the theological reasons. The whole Church has joyfully
celebrated the Great Jubilee of the Year 2000, commemorating the birth of Our
Lord Jesus Christ. Not only did the Holy Year recall with gratitude his coming
into our midst some 2000 years ago, it also celebrated his living presence in
the Church throughout these twenty centuries of history and exalted his unique
role as Saviour of the world and center of the cosmos and all history.
Because of the inseparable bond between Christ and his Gospel, the synod topic
underscores that Jesus Christ, Son of God, sent by the Father and anointed by
the Holy Spirit (cf. Jn 10:36) is the hope of the world and humanity. He is the
hope of every person and the entire person.[1]
Indeed, Christ is the final word and total gift of the Father, the true Gospel
of God in which all promises are to be fulfilled, the “Amen” of God (cf. 2 Cor
1:20) and the fulfilment of the world’s hopes. His Gospel proclaims a message
which is always good and always new. It is the power of life, continuing over 20
centuries to shed light on the world’s path into the future. Inseparable is the
Person of Christ, his doctrine, his work, his teaching and his message from that
of the Church where he continues to be present. At the beginning of the third
millennium, the Church joyfully proposes again the message of life and hope for
all humanity.[2]
4. The reasons of an ecclesial nature for treating the synod theme fall into two
categories: those having an enduring validity and others resulting from the
contemporary situation.
In his final days on earth, the Lord Jesus sent his Apostles forth as his
witnesses and messengers to the ends of the earth, until the end of time. His
words underlie the dutiful task of proposing his person and doctrine to the
world as the supreme hope: “Go therefore and make disciples of all nations,
baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit,
teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you; and lo, I am with you
always, to the close of the age” (Mt 28:19-20). Today, the Bishops in communion
with the Pope are called to fulfill this task together with all members of the
Church. Though each is to be a witness of the Gospel of Christ in the world. ,
the Bishops, as Successors of the Apostles, have “the noble task of being the
first to proclaim the ‘reasons for hope’ (cf. 1 Pt 3:15); that hope which is
based on the promises of God, on fidelity to his Word and which has as its
unshakeable certitude the resurrection of Christ, his definitive victory over
evil and sin.”[3]
The importance of the Tenth Ordinary General Assembly of the Synod of Bishops on
the ministry of the Bishop as the servant of the Gospel for the hope of the
world clearly emerges when placed in sequence to preceding ordinary general
assemblies: The Vocation and Mission of the Laity in the Church and in the World
(1987), The Formation of Priests in Circumstances of the Present-Day (1990) and
The Consecrated Life and its Role in the Church and in the World (1994). All
these synods have been followed by the Holy Father’s publication of post-synodal
apostolic exhortations: Christifideles laici, Pastores Dabo Vobis and Vita
Consecrata, respectively.
Therefore, at this time it seems opportune to treat the theme of the ministry of
the Bishop, from the perspective of the proclamation of the Gospel and hope, as
almost the culmination and summing-up of former ordinary assemblies. The
preceding synods have sparked renewal in the various vocations within the People
of God, contributing to a greater complementarity of each’s role in an
ecclesiology of communion and mission, while respecting the Church’s
hierarchical and charismatic nature. The treatment of the theme of the Bishop at
this synod assembly highlights the need to direct towards the future the mission
of the entire People of God, in communion with its Pastors.
5.In the last decade of the twentieth century, at the close of the second
millennium of the Christian era, the Roman Pontiff called the Bishops of various
continents to take part in special synodal assemblies to treat the Church in
Europe (1991 and 1999), Africa (1994), America (1997), Asia (1998) and Oceania
(1998). Each of these synodal assemblies resulted in post-synodal documents,
some published and others in the process of publication.
Therefore, the next ordinary general assembly, in treating its proper theme,
will have at its disposal the experiences of these particularly intense periods
of unprecedented synodal communion.
In a certain sense, each synodal gathering over the decades has pertained to the
episcopal ministry, not only because the Synod of Bishops by its nature gathers
Bishops from around the world but also because each synod has contributed in
some way to shaping the ministerial role of the Bishop in relation to
Evangelization (1974), Catechesis (1977), Family (1981), Reconciliation and
Penance (1983), The Lay Faithful (1987), Priests (1990), The Consecrated Life
(1994) and the realization of the objectives of the Second Vatican Council in
the Extraordinary Synod of 1985.
6. The doctrinal and pastoral aspects of the theme of the synod concern the
proclamation of the Gospel of Christ for the hope of the world. From this
perspective, the theme of the next ordinary general assembly has a social and
anthropological relevance. The Church, who wishes to share in “the joys and the
hopes, the griefs and the anxieties of this age”[4] needs to question herself on
the paths humanity is to take in these times in which she is present as the salt
of the earth and light to the world (cf. Mt 5:13-14). She needs to ask herself
how the true hope of the world, Jesus Christ and his Gospel, are to be
proclaimed today.
We are at the onset of a new millennium of the Christian era, characterized by
special situations in societies and cultures, almost an aetas nova, a new epoch,
referred to oftentimes as post-modernism or post-modernity. A renewed effort is
required to make the proclamation of salvation resound in the world so as to
generate the theological dynamism inherent in the Gospel. In this way, all
humanity “in hearing might believe, in believing might hope and in hoping might
love.”[5]
Christian hope is intimately connected to the courageous proclamation of the
Gospel in its entirety, a work which stands out among the principal features of
the episcopal ministry. To accomplish this, the Bishop, in the course of his
many duties and tasks, “beyond all the concerns and difficulties which are
inevitably bound to the daily, faithful exercise of his work in the Lord’s
vineyard, must have hope, before all else.”[6]
Continuity and Newness
7. The preparation and celebration of the Tenth Ordinary General Assembly of the
Synod of Bishops can be said to be one of the many graces in recent years.
The publication of the Lineamenta in 1998 and the thorough examination of
various topics associated with the ministry of the Bishop has raised much
interest and has generated information from which common themes emerge. The
present Instrumentum Laboris results from the responses of the Episcopal
Conferences and other bodies as well as from the responses of many Bishops and
other members of the People of God. This document is meant to set forth and
illustrate the theme chosen by the Pope through the inclusion of questions and
recommendations, much like in the Lineamenta, in such a way as to provide an
orderly, clear procedure for synod discussion.
The preparation for the synodal assembly has passed from the consultation in the
Lineamenta to a report on the responses to this document in the Instrumentum
labori. In this way, the normal course of the synodal process continues in an
uninterrupted meditation on the theme chosen by the Holy Father. Such a flow of
material from the initial document to this working document is particularly
noteworthy. Indeed, the high consensus obtained by the Lineamenta has resulted
in a highly homogenous development of ideas and a marked similarity between the
two texts.
The rich experience of the world’s Bishops during the last ordinary general
assemblies and the special synodal assemblies, as well as the valuable teachings
which have resulted, provide a basis for a very fruitful preparation of the
upcoming assembly. Therefore, the Instrumentum Laboris will not give a detailed
description of the world situation, much less will it draw attention to
particular or regional questions already examined in preceding continental
assemblies.
8. The ministry of the Bishop as the servant of the Gospel of Jesus Christ for
the hope of the world is specifically treated in the context of the Church’s
magisterium and finds expression in the documents of Vatican II, particularly
the Dogmatic Constitution Lumen Gentium and the Decree Christus Dominus, due to
their doctrinal content on the subject.
The Pastoral Directory of the Congregation for Bishops Ecclesiae Imago (22
February 1973) maintains an essential validity even today, because of its
completeness and practicality in illustrating the concept of the Bishop and his
ministry in the particular Church.[7] The updated theological-juridical
viewpoint on the subject is found in the Codex Iuris Canonici (CIC) of 1983 and
the Codex Canonum Ecclesiarum Orientalium (CCEO) of 1990.
Many documents of the post-conciliar magisterium make specific reference to the
pastoral ministry of Bishops. Among these, special attention must be given to
the addresses of the Roman Pontiff to the various Episcopal Conferences on the
occasion of their ad limina visits or discourses to Bishops during papal trips
in recent decades.
More recent documents on specific questions of the pastoral ministry of Bishops
in the universal Church and the particular Churches, include, for their
ecclesiological value, the Letter of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the
Faith entitled “On Some Aspects of the Church Understood as Communion
Communionis Notio” (28 May 1992) [8] and, finally, Pope John Paul II’s motu
proprio Apostolic Letter Apostolos Suos (21 May 1998) on the theological and
juridical nature of Episcopal Conferences.[9]
9. The initial reference to “the Bishop” in the theme assigned by the Holy
Father to the upcoming synodal assembly needs clarification. The idea concerns
the episcopal ministry in its wide range of aspects and pastoral tasks as
illustrated in the Dogmatic Constitution Lumen Gentium and the Decree Christus
Dominus. All Bishops share the same grace of episcopal ordination; they are
Successors of the Apostles; and, in communion with the Roman Pontiff, they are
part of the Episcopal College.
The Second Vatican Council has returned to the idea of the Episcopal College as
succeeding the College of Apostles and as the privileged expression of the
Bishops’ pastoral service in communion among themselves and with the Successor
of Peter. As members of this College, all Bishops “are consecrated not just for
one diocese, but for the salvation of the whole world.”[10] By institution and
the will of Christ, they are “to have for the whole Church a solicitude, which,
though it is not exercised by an act of jurisdiction, contributes immensely to
the welfare of the universal Church.”[11]
Each Bishop, legitimately ordained in the Catholic Church, participates in the
fullness of the Sacrament of Orders. As minister of the Lord and Successor of
the Apostles, he ought to work with the grace of the Paraclete so that all the
Church might grow as the family of the Father, Body of the Son and Temple of the
Spirit, in the threefold office which he is called to realize, namely, to teach,
to sanctify and to govern.
The synod is concentrated in a special manner on the Diocesan Bishop and every
aspect of his ministry in the particular Church. He is the living presence of
Christ, “Shepherd and Bishop” of our souls (1 Pt 2:25); he is his vicar in the
particular Church entrusted to him, vicar not only of his Word but of his
Person.[12]
The importance of the synod theme is clearly demonstrated by the fact that the
image of the Bishop has undergone a change in recent decades. Experience teaches
that the faithful increasingly see him amidst his people and closer to them in a
role as father, brother and friend. Furthermore, they see him as more accessible
and living a simpler life. At the same time, his pastoral responsibilities have
multiplied and his ministerial tasks have expanded in a Church increasingly more
attentive to the needs of the world. This has happened to such an extent that
the Bishop appears today weighed down with a variety of ministerial tasks and
becomes oftentimes a sign of contradiction in the defense of truth. As a result,
he must personally be constantly renewed in his pastoral office through a more
in-depth living of communion and collaboration with priests, consecrated persons
and the laity.
Undoubtedly, the Tenth Ordinary General Assembly of the Synod of Bishops will
provide the opportunity to affirm that the stronger the unity of the Bishops
with the Pope, of the Bishops among themselves and of the Bishops with the
People of God, the richer will be the communion and mission of the Church, the
more effective will be their ministry and the more will that ministry be a
source of solace.
A Renewed Proclamation of the Gospel of Hope
10. The Church looks forward with much hope to the celebration of the upcoming
synod. The Great Jubilee of the Year 2000, with its many events and the years of
preparation centered on the Trinity, has provided the entire People of God with
the grace of a Holy Year of conversion, reconciliation and spiritual renewal.
The faithful in Rome and the Holy Land, in the presence of the Successor of
Peter, as well as the faithful in the particular Churches gathered around their
Bishops, have lived the joyful experience of a year of mercy and holiness. Many
have asked themselves how the graces and positive experiences of the Great
Jubilee are to be implemented as a new century and millennium begin.
Once again, the Church stands before the world as a sign of hope, particularly
through the witness of various members of the People of God, such as the young
and families, through significant gestures in ecumenism, in the healing of
memories and in requests for pardon as well as through the courageous
remembrance of the witnesses to the faith in the twentieth century.
The appeals for mercy for the imprisoned as well as those for the reduction or
total cancellation of the international debt, afflicting the destiny of many
nations, have been especially forceful and significant.
The Bishops have also had the possibility of living moments of intense communion
and spiritual renewal in their special Jubilee celebrations together with the
Holy Father and in union with the Virgin Mary, like the Apostles gathered in
prayer in the Cenacle at Pentecost.
The Gospel of Christ shows itself today to be the power of life and the Word
which makes people truly human, unites them in a single family and fosters the
well-being of all, regardless of language, race or religion.
11. On the basis of a Christian hope which does not disappoint (cf. Rm 5:5), the
Church advances towards the future with a renewed enthusiasm for a new
evangelization.
Having crossed the threshold of the new millennium, the world now awaits a word
of hope and a light to guide it into the future. The Gospel was, is and will be
a source of freedom, progress, fraternity, unity and peace throughout history,
even in the temporal sphere.[13]
The upcoming Synod of Bishops hopes to offer the Church and the world the
courageous, faithful proclamation of the Gospel of Christ, which opens hearts to
a hope both human and divine. It intends to accomplish this through the witness
of unity, joy and concern for contemporary humanity by the Successors of the
Apostles, gathered in communion with the Holy Father, to whom the Lord himself
has promised his assistance until the close of the age (cf. Mt 28:20).
CHAPTER I
A MINISTRY OF HOPE
Looking at the World with the Heart of the Good Shepherd
12. What attitude must the Bishop adopt to be a servant of the Gospel of Jesus
Christ for the hope of the world?
First of all, he must have a contemplative outlook in facing the world’s
realities, viewing them from the vantage-point of the practical aspects of his
ministry and the concept of communion with the Universal Church and the
particular Church entrusted to his care; then, he must have a compassionate
heart which is capable of entering into communion with the men and women of our
times, for whom he is to be the witness and servant of hope.
The attitude expected of the Bishop is exemplified in a Gospel image. At the
beginning of his ministry, Jesus presents himself as the herald of the Good News
of the Father. He confirms this in his approach to the needs of the people:
“When he saw the crowds, he had compassion for them, because they were harassed
and helpless, like sheep without a shepherd” (Mt 9:36).
The Bishop, through the grace of the Holy Spirit who expands and sharpens the
eyes of his faith, relives the sentiments of Christ, the Good Shepherd, as he
faces the anxieties and expectations of today’s world, by announcing a word of
truth and life and by fostering activity which goes to the heart of humanity.
Only in being united to Christ, in being faithful to his Gospel, in being
realistically open to this world and in being loved by God, can the Bishop
become the harbinger of hope.
This is his role for the men and women of our times who, after the fall of false
ideologies and utopias, oftentimes unmindful of the past and overly anxious for
the present, make rather passing, limited plans and find themselves on many
occasions manipulated by economic and political forces. As a result, they need
to rediscover the virtue of hope and possess sound reasons for believing and
hoping, and, in turn, for loving and working beyond the immediate needs of
everyday life. The Bishop is to have a serene regard for the past and a
confident outlook for the future.
The Church–and in her the Bishop as the shepherd of the flock–presents herself,
in conformity with the mind of Jesus, as the witness of the hope which does not
disappoint (cf. Rm 5:5), always mindful of the compelling force which guides her
towards the fulfillment of God’s promises: indeed “God’s love has been poured
into our hearts through the Holy Spirit who has been given to us” (Rm 5:5).
The Gospel of Hope has been entrusted to the Church and her Pastors. Hope rests
on the surety of God’s promises; the Father has regenerated us to a living hope
through the resurrection of Christ (cf. 1 Pt 1:3), which is the victory over sin
and death. Consequently, hope rests in the certainty of the abiding presence of
Christ, Lord of history, Father of the age to come (cf. Is 9:6).
Therefore, with trust in God we need to begin and live the third millennium of
Christianity in proclaiming the Gospel of God’s promises.
We find hidden in the Sacred Scriptures and the Church’s Tradition the seeds of
God’s design which must now sprout in the future of individuals and entire
peoples under the action of the Holy Spirit–the experienced weaver of the fabric
of human history–who seeks our collaboration.
Under the Sign of Theological Hope
13. At the beginning of a new century and a new millennium, a theological hope
which trusts totally in God’s promises has an important role to play. The
ten-years of preparation and the spirit of expectation geared towards
celebrating such a significant moment in human history as the year 2000, the two
thousandth anniversary of the birth of Jesus, now take on a symbolic meaning in
looking towards the future. No longer are we striving to reach a goal, but
rather we are poised looking out on a wide horizon. We now have the
responsibility patiently to build the future.
Hope is the driving force in all things new; it is the capacity to dream the
future and to indicate lasting paths by creating new initiatives; it is the
ability to make history through the power of the Gospel, or, at least, to give
it a sense of meaning before the powers of the world set purposes and aims for
the future.
This is the work of hope as Christians faithfully fulfill their task, namely, to
be the soul of the world. In the words of Diognetus, “May Christians be in the
world, what the soul is in the body.”[14] The Church of Jesus is called to be
the inspirer and promoter of history in listening to the deep-seated
expectations and hopes of the men and women of this world.
The hope required of the Bishop in his witness as servant of the Gospel of Jesus
Christ is the theological virtue of hope or the theology of hope, united to an
active faith and fruitful love.
On this subject, the Pastoral Directory Ecclesiae Imago has summarily set forth
some characteristics of the ministry of the Bishop which deserve mention in
treating the subject of hope in a God who is always faithful to his promises:
“The Gospel–by which a Bishop lives through faith and which he announces to men
on the Word of Christ–‘guarantees the blessings that we hope for, and proves the
existence of the realities that at present remain unseen’ (Heb 11:1). Relying on
this hope, therefore, the Bishop most firmly expects whatever is best from God
and places the greatest trust in God’s providence, saying with Paul, ‘There is
nothing I cannot master with the help of the One who gives me strength’ (Phil
4:13). He is mindful of the blessed Apostles and of the ancient Bishops who,
although experiencing great difficulties and facing every kind of obstacle,
still proclaimed the Gospel of God with all boldness (cf. Acts 4:29 and 31;
19:8; 28:31).”
“Hope which ‘is not deceptive’ (Rom 5:5), sharpens the Bishop’s missionary
spirit, and consequently his creativity and initiative. For he knows that he has
been sent by God, the Lord of history (cf. 1 Tim 1:17), to build up the Church
in the place, time, and moment ‘that the Father has decided by his own
authority’ (Acts 1:7); hence, the healthy optimism that animates him and that,
as it were, flows from him into others, especially his co-workers.”[15]
14. Sustained by this theological hope, the Bishop prepares himself to plan,
perceive and, as it were, dream the future, while re-reading the Word of God
under the grace of the Holy Spirit and in ecclesial communion.
The Word of God, made fruitful by the Spirit in the heart of the Bishop united
to his priests and faithful, will always be the perennial fount of inspiration
and recourse in facing the challenges of the future. In the words of Pope Paul
VI, “the Church needs her perennial Pentecost; she needs fire in the heart,
words on the lips, prophecy in the glance.”[16]
The Pope, the Episcopal College, the Bishops of the national and regional
Episcopal Conferences, indeed all the holy People of God have a common vocation
to the same hope (cf. Eph 4:4).
This communion in hope ensures the living presence of Christ and the inspiration
of the Spirit who is to bring the Gospel of Jesus Christ to completion in human
history.[17]
Communion in hope is to be deepened and shared as the source of inspiration
which is made fruitful through the prayer of the Bishop and through the dialogue
of charity with all the People of God, especially his closest collaborators. In
this way, they can participate in discussing various initiatives and the actual
planning of programs.
The hope of Christians is a driving force for the future. This virtue not only
leaves its mark on the life of humanity, it also plows furrows for planting the
seed of divine promise and for guiding, with God’s hand, future initiatives. The
Church will be an effective sign of hope, if she knows how to be attentive to
the plan of God who guarantees a full future, if she faithfully follows his will
and if she knows how to discern the genuineness of the yearnings of humanity,
yearnings for which she ought to be the interpreter and guide.
Between the Past and the Future
15. The Church crosses the threshold of hope at the beginning of the third
millennium with a particular attention on the humanity of today, sharing with it
“the joys and the hopes, the griefs and the anxieties of this age, but knowing
she possesses the word of salvation.”[18] Therefore, into what kind of world are
the Bishops sent forth to proclaim the Gospel?
Theological hope, which grows and develops as trust in the promises of God, is
oftentimes purified through waiting, thus becoming more authentic the more it is
tried. Hope is also grounded in the positive signs which spring up from moment
to moment in the Kingdom of God, namely, in this present world directed towards
its final fulfilment in glory.
Hope is remembering; it serves as an anchor, that is, it is fixed in God’s
revelation which manifests not only salvation history but also God’s design and
plan for the future. For this reason, the last book of Sacred Scripture bears
the title, Apocalypse or Revelation. Hope gives to the heart a dynamic energy
which is capable of being re-kindled every day.
It is a matter of “persevering” as exemplified in the Acts of the Apostles (cf.
Acts 1:14; 2:42), when it speaks of the attitude proper to the disciples of
Jesus, intent on living the life of faith each day. It is a solid trust in God,
the Father of the Lord Jesus Christ, who, through the resurrection of his Son,
places the present “today” on the path of the sure fulfilment of his promises.
16. On many occasions, particularly in the last ten years, the magisterium has
described the realities of the present world.
The Synod of Bishops did a similar analysis both in the special continental and
regional assemblies for Europe, Africa, America, Asia and Oceania, and in the
respective post-synodal apostolic exhortations published thus far.[19]
Such an extensive analysis, then, at this time is not needed. It is sufficient
to note that such analyses, in sharing common traits as a result of the
increasing globalization of various aspects, require that attention be given to
problems and solutions at the local level.
The Lineamenta has equally given a general treatment which in part has been
confirmed and enriched by the responses of the Episcopal Conferences.
Lights and Shadows in the World’s Realities
17. The world offers a variety of realities. With a watchful eye and the
compassionate heart of the Good Shepherd (cf. Mt 9:36), the Church cannot avoid
realistically noting–apart from a political, sociological and economic
analysis–signs of a lack of confidence or indeed a desperation in the today’s
world. In response, she offers the consolation and comfort of trust and
liberation in Christ. It is not a passing, weak message of consolation which
gives temporary relief, but one based on the certainty of faith, rediscovered by
hearts capable of love and service and founded on the unified, true vision of
the essentials of personal and social life, without pessimistic or optimistic
bias. In every situation the Church offers the Gospel of Hope.
Enduring problems today require the Church, in exercising her mission, to be the
source of a hope which leads to the continuous renewal of the world and society.
In concrete ways, this is the case also in the ministry of the Bishop in his
particular Church.
18. In many parts of our world, situations of suffering and a lack of hope are
being created by poverty, a lack of freedom, the restricted exercise of human
rights, ethnic conflicts and an underdevelopment which increases the poverty of
entire groups of people.
The mass media continually communicate the many faces of desperation: the faces
of under-nourished and unjustly abused children; the faces of unemployed youth,
condemned to desperation and indifference, an easy prey to ideological
manipulation and moral and spiritual degradation; the faces of women, deprived
of their dignity; the faces of the elderly in need of assistance; the masses of
the poor who, through emigration, are in search of hope for the future; the
faces of refugees in search of a country; and the faces of the indigent,
deprived of their lands.
The unresolved conflicts of the preceding century and millennium have provoked
death and destruction, emigration, poverty, ethnic battles and tribal hate. They
have caused much death and have left deep wounds in body and spirit.
The open wounds of some recent, local conflicts have deeply divided culture and
nationality which are called to be partners in a dialogue of peace.
Occasionally, religious fundamentalism, the enemy of dialogue and peace, arises.
Furthermore, in the more developed nations, great areas of economic and moral
depression often exist and corruption and illegality, even in the political
field, are notably on the rise.
19. The effects of globalization are now being felt through an unrelenting logic
of economic planning inspired by an unstoppable liberalism which is making the
rich, richer and the poor, poorer. Since the poor are so excluded from programs
of development, some speak today of a “New World Dis-Order.” The future is
justly a concern, if entire populations, who belong to the same family of God
and share the same rights, are unable to participate in the just distribution of
common goods. In some cases, indigenous communities are robbed of the riches of
their raw materials and the natural resources of their countries through an
unfair exploitation of territories and populations.
Despite an increasing sensitivity to ecology, even the earth is
suffering–perhaps as never before in human history–from climatic changes in the
ecosystem, thus raising questions about the future of our planet. The
degradation of the environment is a worrying concern. The Church takes it upon
herself to give voice to the true aspirations of humanity in favor of an
ecological balance which does not put at risk our earth and the whole creation
made by the Creator’s hands and given to humanity as the abode of beauty and
balance, a gift and basic resource of all human existence.
Between the Return to the Sacred and Indifference
20. Despite evidence of a religious awakening, a new interest for spiritual
realities and a certain return to the sacred, Pastors look with concern at what
is being defined as a silent, easy abandonment of Church practice by a great
number of people. A culture which lives only for the day is not open to the
transcendent. Even Christians are increasingly looking with an indifferent eye
at the world-to-come and the supernatural aspect of life which makes worldly
existence truly worth living.
Such an attitude finds expression in an individualism separated from Church
communion and sacramental practice. Consequently, people are sometimes reduced
to seek spiritual compensation in alternative religious movements and sects and
in adopting forms of religiosity which are partly an imitation of the noblest
ascetical practices of non-Christian religions. Today, many are content to
practice a non-descript religion lacking any personal association to the true
God of Jesus Christ and to the Church community.
For many Pastors, the lack of vocations to the priesthood and the consecrated
life is a source of concern and a troubling vision for the future. This is so
even if the situation is simply viewed in light of an ordinary pastoral program
of evangelization, a suitable sacramental and Eucharistic life, and the care
required for a living faith and Christian practice.
New Ethical Problems on the Horizon
21. The rise of moral relativism is also distressing, since such a culture fails
to place a priority on life and gives it no respect, thereby depriving human
existence of its sacred character, whose beginning and end is bound to the
mystery of the God of life.
However, signs of hope in God the Creator can be seen in the acceptance of the
gift of life, the rearing of children and the duty to promote the values of
human existence in their entirety.
At the same time, in this present moment the deceptive position, namely, that
what is scientifically possible is ethically just, has brought us to a true,
proper biological manipulation, resulting in grave consequences for the person
who is made in the image and likeness of God in Christ, our Life (cf. Jn 1:4;
14:16). In recent years, related problems have come about, casting long shadows
into the future.
The ardent defense by the Church’s magisterium of the dignity of each human
life, from its beginning to its natural end, is also influencing public opinion
and bearing fruit in the sector of world ethics. At stake are the future of
humanity and the dignity of the human person with intangible, inalienable
rights.
22. Today, the crisis in the family and its instability as well as the recent
threats to the family institution are grave dangers for life and the rearing of
children.
In our time, the Church has been consistent in her teaching in favour of life,
matrimony and family life. This ongoing activity can be found in the extensive
documentation from the pontifical magisterium and the other departments of the
Holy See[20] as well as in the regular scheduling of the International Day of
the Family which is providing assistance to spouses for better marriages and a
spirituality for the family.
Emerging Situations in the Church
23. A new situation is emerging in the Church in territories long under
totalitarian regimes. The particular Churches in these areas are experiencing a
new-found freedom of worship and the opportunity to resume apostolic activity.
Vocations are flowering and an initial missionary endeavour is providing
vocations beyond the confines of the particular Churches. The prospects and joy
of a new beginning, the frequent witness of a joyous Catholic spirit and a
fervent faith, unknown in other countries, are giving them hope for a fruitful
future.
At the same time, structural and organizational problems remain, such as the
difficulty of a fraternal dialogue and a real communion and ecumenical
collaboration with other Churches, especially the Orthodox.
The Church continues, however, her task of courageously proclaiming the Gospel
in these countries which are adversely affected by the emptiness left by the
culture of totalitarian regimes. Indeed, teaching programs on freedom and the
new-found communion among all Christians need to be promoted. A proper education
in the faith can help overcome certain devotional practices which are without
sound foundations as well as provide assistance in the efforts of a new
evangelization. Promotional programs are needed towards building a strong faith
and a life of moral conviction, especially considering the aggressive measures
of the sects and the danger of falling–as some lament–into an excessive
consumerism.
24. In the future, the Church of the third millennium will slowly see a shifting
of the center of the Catholic population towards Africa and Asia, where, as
witnessed also in Latin America, young Churches are being established, full of
fervor and vitality and rich in vocations to the priesthood and the consecrated
life, a situation which oftentimes helps the scarcity of vocations in the West.
Not to be forgotten are the vast, populous territories of the Asian continent
where many faithful are still unable publically to express their Catholic faith
in communion with the universal Church and its chief Pastor. The Church also
looks to these countries with great hope, recommending herself to the silent
action of the Holy Spirit so that the faithful may be able to express full,
visible ecclesial communion and mutual assistance in making all come to know
Christ, the Saviour.
Signs of Vitality and Hope
25. Among the positive signs in the world as well as in recent synodal
assemblies, perceived at the end of the century and the millennium, we find a
true yearning for peace, the desire for nations to participate in the solution
of possible local conflicts, the growing awareness of human rights, the equal
dignity of nations and the pursuit of a greater unity on the planet through an
effective solidarity at the world level among poorer and richer nations. A ray
of hope can be witnessed in the growing dedication of many to the service of the
poor as well as in volunteer programs in very needy nations. There is also a
growing appreciation of the specific talents of women and an increase in women’s
participation in various responsibilities in society and in the Church.
Where some fears are being raised as a result of the excesses of globalization,
some list positive reactions, such as the various forms of solidarity, the
greater sensitivity in safeguarding the cultural values of peoples and nations,
and the recognition of the need to instil ethical and religious values in those
involved in economics and politics. There also exists in our world a forceful
pursuit of true freedom and a growing sense of communion in opposition to some
individualistic tendencies.
The announcement of the publication of The Compendium of the Social Doctrine of
the Church is a hope-filled sign, in light of the duties to work for the
well-being of all peoples in the social and economic fields.
Among these shadows and lights, some dangerous attitudes are circulating on the
world level. To counter the tendencies towards genetic manipulation and the
disregard for life in the womb, greater attention is being given to human life
and its transcendent value linking it to the God of life. A strong convergence
of ethical values is being sought at the international level, while the danger
of an ecological imbalance is resulting in a keener sense of the value of all
creation.
Towards a New Humanism
26. Globalization rightly stirs a keen desire for personalism and interiority.
Today, the balance between unity and pluralism is considered a major value: a
unity belonging to the design of God who has created one human nature, the
foundation of unity for the family of peoples in its origin and destiny, and
pluralism resulting from the make-up of nations, languages and cultures, all
mirroring the richness of the multi-form wisdom of God (cf. Eph 3:10). In this
context, a reawakening of cultures is also present as a reaction to a
globalization which has a tendency to reduce everything to a common denominator
and undervalue differences. On the contrary, the cultural identity, even in the
exchange of goods, also fosters mutual enrichment.
Hope inspires many acts of communion, collaboration, joint-ventures and generous
volunteer efforts in the lives of people in desperate situations, such as
loneliness, egotism and routine human projects which are often based on the
self-centeredness of persons and entire groups. The resulting values are
integrated in those of God’s great plan through personal, ecclesial and familial
life, where individuals respond according to their vocational call.
In the present-day, people are also searching for life’s meaning and a better
quality of life at all levels, including the spiritual level. A greater
sensitivity to personalism and a communal sense of interpersonal relations are
being displayed through a true communion among persons.
The world today and the Church feel the urgent need for unity, even though the
full authentic “culture” of unity and communion is oftentimes in danger.
The Fruits of the Jubilee
27. The renewal of the Christian life and a sound participation of all in the
new evangelization is continuing at the ecclesial level, especially after the
Great Jubilee of the Year 2000.
Preparations for the Jubilee of the Incarnation, according to the pastoral and
spiritual program set forth in Tertio Millennio Adveniente of John Paul II, have
been lived at the universal level through initiatives in the area of catechesis
and sacramental life. The three-year program dedicated to the contemplation of
the mystery of the Son, Holy Spirit and the Father, along with its specific
emphasis concerning the sacraments (a re-discovery of Baptism, Confirmation and
Penance), theological life (faith, hope and charity) and social ethics, is
bearing fruit.
The Jubilee of the Year 2000, lived in the spirit of the 50th Year as set forth
in the Bible (cf. Lev 25) and its full realization in Jesus of Nazareth (cf. Lk
4:16ff), has truly been a year of spiritual progress. The graces of conversion
are being multiplied, nourishing the hope that this will take place again at the
beginning of the third millennium.
28. Some moments of the Jubilee have had particular significance for the Church
and the world. The World Youth Day provided a strong witness of faith, piety and
ecclesial vitality with the joyous presence and participation of many young
people, coming to Rome from every part of the world, to gather around the Holy
Father. Their presence in the Church is a challenge, requiring initiatives in
the approaching decades towards developing pastoral programs for the young.
Christian youth feel the need for a transparent life of conviction based on the
Gospel.
Under the Guidance of the Spirit
29. The various continental synodal assemblies and the celebration of Pentecost
1998 gave evidence that the Church strongly feels that the Holy Spirit, as in
past epochs, has stirred up new energies in the spiritual and apostolic life and
has bestowed significant charisms, truly adapted to the needs of today’s world,
in the evangelical life and the missionary venture, especially in ecclesial
movements and new communities. This action bodes well for an abundant harvest of
vocations to the priestly life, the consecrated life and the lay life in many
young people desirous of dedicating their lives to the service of the Gospel.
Responding to both their ecclesial character as set forth in the magisterium[21]
and their proper charism, these new realities are, together with those already
existent, the present and the future of the Church in the world.[22]
Towards Converging Paths of Unity
30.Undoubtedly, the new century and millennium find the faithful and the Pastors
of various Churches and Christian communities more united through undeniable
progress in ecumenical dialogue, a precious fruit of the Spirit from the past
century. This dialogue has had its share of difficulties in the last ten years.
However, the resumption of ecumenical contacts in recent years is encouraging
the unyielding commitment of the Church to dialogue with other Churches and
Christian communities.
Some Jubilee events, e.g., the opening of the Holy Door of the Basilica of St.
Paul, the ecumenical commemoration of twentieth century witnesses to the faith,
the trip of the Pope to the Holy Land, together with other recent initiatives,
are signs of a renewed determination on the part of Christians to walk together
in the ways of the Lord.
Interreligious dialogue is entering a new stage in the pursuit of peace and the
acknowledgment of religious and transcendent values. In the first place, mention
must be made of relations with representatives of the People of God of the First
Covenant. Such meetings are a sign of hope at the beginning of the millennium
which many see as an era of great dialogue among the world religions, the
guardians of spiritual values.
Dialogue, understood as the encounter of persons and groups, respecting the
differences in identities and rejecting all irenism and syncretism, is not only
the new name for charity, as stated by Pope Paul VI[23] but, in today’s new
world scene, is also the new name for hope.
A Demand for Spirituality
31.Another sign of hope is people’s great desired for spirituality, which has a
particular force at the present moment and a variety of aspects.
First of all, this desire is manifested as a forceful call to the fundamental
Christian experience of encountering the living Jesus Christ. Such a knowledge
requires the passage from “the faith proclaimed” to “the faith lived.” It also
calls for a dynamic liturgy where a person can experience the goodness of a
merciful God who offers redemption and salvation as the one who is “doctor of
body and spirit.”[24]
Morally speaking, it entails “bringing to life” the Christian experience with
its ethical demands through the stirring of the Spirit. Indeed, Christian
morality “unleashes all its missionary force, when it is carried out through the
gift not only of the Word proclaimed but also of the Word lived. In particular,
the life of holiness which is resplendent in so many members of the People of
God, humble and often unseen, constitutes the simplest and most attractive way
to perceive at once the beauty of truth, the liberating force of God’s love, and
the value of unconditional fidelity to all the demands of the Lord’s law, even
in the most difficult situations.”[25]
Consequently, there is an urgent need for a more spiritual pastoral program
which responds to the demands of the new evangelization. Such a program must be
so equipped as to provide a person with a spiritual encounter with Christ,
similar to that of the Apostles before and after the resurrection and to that of
the first Christians.
The Bishop: Witness of Hope
32.At the beginning of the third millennium of the Christian era, the
afore-mentioned concept of the Church’s mission to the world with its lights and
shadows, determines the testimony required of each Bishop in both the universal
Church and in his particular Church for the sake of the Gospel of Christ for the
hope of the world.
On this basis, the Bishop concretely expresses his spiritual and pastoral
responsibility in his particular Church and in society, where he lives in a
global village of communications as a participant in the life of the entire
planet.
It is impossible to overlook the duty which such a situation creates for an
ordered vision of the Church in the world, requiring that Bishops work for the
common good through word and deed.
Faithful like the Virgin Mary to the Expectations and Promises of God
33.The Church’s hope comes from the Risen Christ, who already possesses victory.
Based on God’s promises, the Church’s hope confidently looks to the future glory
to be received at the end of time.
In the everyday trials of a world which eagerly looks to God for something new,
the Bishop is for his particular Church like Abraham who “in hope believed
against hope” and was fully convinced of the faithfulness of God to fulfill what
he had promised (cf. Rm 4:18-22). The Bishop, then, has a sure trust in the Word
and in God’s designs, as did Mary, the woman of hope, who awaited the fulfilment
of the promises of a faithful God, at Nazareth, at Bethlehem, on Calvary and in
the Cenacle.
The Church’s history is a history of faith and charity; it is also a history of
hope and courage. The Bishop who knows how to be a vigilant harbinger of hope
and God’s sentinel in the darkness of night (cf. Is 21:11) can engender trust in
his flock by forging new paths in the world.
Each Bishop, in placing his faith and hope in God alone (1 Pt 1:21), can make
his own the words of St. Augustine: “Whatever we may be, do not let your hope
rest in our person as such, but in the Person of Christ. I would readily make
little of myself as to speak like a true Bishop; I want to rejoice over you and
not be exalted by you. Without a doubt, if I find any people placing their hope
in my person, I would not commend them for this; they are to be corrected, not
confirmed in their attitude; to be changed, not to be left to continue to do
this... Don’t let your hopes rest in us as persons, don’t let your hopes rest on
men. If we are good, we are ministers; if we are bad, we are also ministers.
But, if indeed we be good, we are being ministers faithful to Christ, really and
truly ministers.”[26]
34.The Church’s ministry in the next millennium is found in this vast venture
which includes the mission of the Bishop as witness and promoter of Christian
hope.
Each of the Church’s Pastors is called to bring God’s presence to everyday life
in a courageous and conscientious manner. The entire episcopal service is a
ministry to lead the People of God and each individual to a “rebirth to a living
hope” (1 Pt 1:3). Consequently, the Bishop needs to direct the entire work of
evangelization in service of hope, above all in young people, who are threatened
by disillusion and pessimism resulting from broken dreams, as well as in the
those who, afflicted by many forms of poverty, look to the Church as their only
defense, because of her supernatural hope.
Each Bishop, faithful to hope, is to watch over this virtue in himself, because
hope is the Easter gift of the Risen Christ. Hope arises from the fact that the
Gospel, which the Bishop is principally commissioned to serve, is a total good
and the focal point of the episcopal ministry. Without this hope, all the
Bishop’s pastoral activity would be fruitless. The secret of his mission rests
on the firm foundation of his theological and eschatological hope. “Of this,”
St. Paul affirms, “you have heard before in the word of the truth, the Gospel
which has come to you” (Col 1:6).
Christian hope begins with Christ and is nourished by Christ. It is
participation in his Paschal mystery and the first-fruits of a similar end,
since, with Christ, the Father “has raised us up with him, and made us sit with
him in the heavenly places” (Eph 2:6).
The Bishop is the sign and minister of this hope. Each Bishop can make his own
the words of Pope John Paul II: “Without hope we would not only be unhappy men
and deserving of pity, but all our pastoral works would be fruitless; we would
not dare to undertake anything. In an unwavering hope rests the secret of our
mission. It is stronger than disappointment and doubt, because its force comes
from a source which is not depleted by our lack of attention or our negligence.
The wellspring of our hope is God himself, who through Christ has conquered the
world once and for all and who today, through us, continues his salvific mission
among men.”[27]
CHAPTER II
THE MYSTERY, MINISTRY AND SPIRITUALITY OF THE BISHOP
The Image of Christ, the Good Shepherd
35.The spiritual image of the Bishop is revealed in many texts in Sacred
Scripture when considered from the standpoint of Christ, the High Priest and
Shepherd of Souls. Passages from both the Old and New Testaments center on the
image of the high priest or shepherd.
All these texts point to Christ as the archetype. He is presented in the Gospel
parable as the shepherd in search of the lost sheep (cf. Lk 15:4-7). He refers
to himself as the “Good” Shepherd of the Flock (cf. Jn 10:11,14,16; Mt 26:31; Mk
14:27). He is acknowledged by the apostolic community with the following titles:
“Shepherd and Guardian of ... Souls” (1 Pt 2:25), “Chief Shepherd” (1 Pt 5:4),
and “Great Shepherd of the Sheep” (Heb 13:20), raised from the dead by the
Father. In the vision of Revelation, the Risen Lord is the Lamb-Shepherd (cf.
Rev 7:17) who joins in himself the reality of the sacrificial Paschal offering
and salvation, and the figure of priest and shepherd from the Old and New
Testaments.
Early Christian iconography liked to represent Christ as the Good Shepherd,
radiant in the splendor of his resurrection, exalted in the liturgy as the Good
Shepherd, who gave his life for the sheep and rose from the dead.[28]
Jesus Christ, therefore, is the Shepherd who joins in his person the truth,
goodness and beauty of the gift of himself for the flock. The beauty of the Good
Shepherd consists in the love with which he gives himself for each of his sheep
and the love which creates a knowing and loving relationship with each one.
The Church is the place of encounter with the Good Shepherd, where he makes
himself present, feeds his flock with his Word and sacraments, and guides her
towards the pastures of eternal life through those whom he himself has
constituted, in the Spirit, as shepherds of the flock. The beauty of the
Shepherd shines in the beauty of a Church who loves and serves; a Church who is
the reason of hope for a humanity which is driven by the divine inner stirrings
of the heart towards what is beautiful and saves, as seen in the face of the
Lamb-Shepherd.
36.Christ alone is the Good Shepherd. From him, as from a fount, flows the
pastoral ministry in the Church, entrusted to Peter by Christ (cf. Jn 21:15-17),
a grace perceived as the continuity of the apostolic ministry in guiding and
keeping watch: “Tend the flock of God that is in your charge, not by constraint
but willingly...” (1 Pt 5:2).
The image of the Bishop as shepherd is part of the Christian tradition as
witnessed in certain expressions, gestures and episcopal insignia, all of which
are to be understood in reference to the one and only Shepherd and, through the
grace received from him, done in imitation of his mind and heart.
“To the person (the Bishop) to whom the Lord, the Good Shepherd, has committed
his own powers by the sacrament of the episcopate, also goes the duty of love of
feeding the Lord’s flock. He will in turn respond in great charity with an
earnest good will to spend his life and ministry in the same disposition which
was in Christ Jesus, the Prince of Pastors (cf. 1 Pt 5:4) and the Bishop of our
Souls (cf. 1 Pt 2:25).”[29]
The episcopal ministry becomes in the Church an amoris officium, according to
the words of St. Augustine,[30] a service of unity, communion and mission. This
“ministry of love” always returns to the archetype, Christ, under the title
“Shepherd” and all the expressions which come from it.
11.I. MYSTERY AND GRACE OF THE EPISCOPATE
The Grace of Episcopal Ordination
37.Episcopal ordination confers “the fullness of the sacrament of orders, that
fullness which in the Church’s liturgical practice and in the language of the
Holy Fathers of the Church is undoubtedly called the high priesthood, the apex
of the sacred ministry.”[31] The intimate nature of the mystery and ministry of
the Bishop is expressed in the words and gestures used in the liturgy of
episcopal ordination which ancient tradition has rightly called “natalis
episcopi.”
From Christian antiquity, the image of the Bishop in the Church is described in
the various liturgies of episcopal ordination in the East and West as the moment
in which, through the imposition of hands and the words of ordination, the grace
of the Holy Spirit descends on the Bishop-elect and with the sacred character
imprints, in its fullness, the living image of Christ, Teacher, Shepherd, High
Priest, so that he might act in his name and person.[32]
The Bishop is also anointed with Holy Chrism, making him a participant in the
high priesthood of Christ. In this way, he is able to exercise fully the
ministry of the Word, sanctification and governing. As high priest, the Bishop
is taken from among men and appointed to act on behalf of all in relation to God
(cf. Heb 5:1). The episcopate, then, is not primarily a term of honor but one of
service; it is intended not for showing pre-eminence but for doing good. Indeed,
the words of Lord are intended also for the Bishop: “Let the greatest among you
become as the youngest, and the leader as one who serves” (Lk 22:26).[33]
In Communion with the Trinity
38.The Trinitarian dimension of Jesus’ life, which binds him to the Father and
the Spirit as consecrated and sent into the world and is manifested in his
entire being and conduct, has its effect on the personality of the Bishop as the
Good Shepherd, Successor of the Apostles.
This participation in the Trinitarian life and mission is first applied to the
Apostles as the first participants in communion and mission: “As the Father has
loved me, so have I loved you; abide in my love” (Jn 15:9; 17, 23); “...As the
Father has sent me, even so I send you” (Jn 20:21). Furthermore, Jesus prays for
the disciples so that they might participate in the same Trinitarian love: as
the Father and Son are one, so might the disciples be one (cf. Jn 17:21).
This reference to the Trinity highlights the source of the ministry of the
Bishop. Apostolic succession is not only physical and linked to time; it is also
ontological and spiritual, because of the grace of episcopal ordination. Indeed,
Bishops are sent by the Apostles as their Successors; the Apostles have been
sent by Christ, and Christ has been sent by the Father.[34]
39.The Trinitarian seal of the grace of the episcopate is expressed in a fitting
way in the Roman liturgy of episcopal ordination: “Attend to the whole flock in
which the Holy Spirit appoints you an overseer of the Church of God–in the name
of the Father, whose image you personify in the Church–and in the name of his
Son, Jesus Christ, whose role of Teacher, Priest and Shepherd you undertake–and
in the name of the Holy Spirit, who gives life to the Church of Christ and
supports our weakness with his strength.”[35]
This is further manifested through the ordination ritual of the imposition of
hands, a gesture which, according to Irenaeus of Lyons, brings to mind the two
hands of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit.[36] Through this action the
Bishop-elect is configured and constituted in the fullness of the priesthood,
just as the gift of the “Spirit of the High Priest” was poured out on Christ and
transmitted to the Apostles, who founded the Church in every part of the
world.[37]
From the Father, through Christ, in the Spirit
40.The Bishop as the image of the Father is based on a very ancient tradition.
Particular reference to this fact comes from the Letters of Ignatius of Antioch
where the Father is said to be the Bishop unseen and the Bishop of all.[38] For
his part, the Bishop ought to be reverenced by all, because he is the image of
the Father.[39] Similarly, an ancient text exhorts: “Love the Bishop, because,
after God, he is your father and mother.[40]
Reference to this paternal dimension is made even today in the ceremony of
episcopal ordination. The Bishop exercises his care of the Holy People of God
with paternal affection, as a real father of a family, so as to guide it, with
the assistance of priests and deacons, in the way of salvation.[41] The
rediscovery of the Church as the Family of God, as seen in the Second Vatican
Council, makes the image of the Bishop as Father particularly meaningful.[42]
Because of his continual union with the person of Christ, the true image of the
Father and manifestation of his presence and mercy, the Bishop, as head and
spouse of the Church entrusted to him, also becomes the living sign of Jesus
Christ through the grace of the sacrament. In his particular Church, he
exercises as priest the ministry of sanctification, worship and prayer; as
teacher, the service of evangelization, catechesis and teaching; and as
shepherd, the task of governing and guiding the people. Each of these ministries
ought to be imbued with those traits characteristic of the Good Shepherd, that
is, charity, knowledge of the flock, care for all, mercy towards the poor,
pilgrims and the needy as well as the pursuit of the lost sheep so as to bring
them back to the one fold of the Church.[43]
All is possible, because the Bishop receives at his ordination the fullness of
the anointing of the Holy Spirit who descended on the disciples at Pentecost,
the Spirit of the High Priest who interiorly equips him, configuring him to
Christ, so that he can be the living continuation of his mystery for the sake of
his Mystical Body.
The Trinitarian understanding of the life and ministry of the Bishop also deeply
characterizes his continual relation to the mystery which shines in the Church
as image of the Trinity and a people gathered in peace and harmony by the unity
of the Father, Son and Holy Spirit.[44]
The Ecclesial Image of the Bishop
41.The episcopal insignia which the Bishop receives during his episcopal
ordination as an expression of grace and ministry are particularly rich in
Church-related symbolism.
The book of the Gospels, placed over the head of the Bishop, is a sign of a life
totally submitted to the Word of God and spent in preaching the Gospel with the
utmost patience and teaching.
The ring is the symbol of faithfulness, through integrity of faith and purity of
life, towards the Church whom he must watch over as the Spouse of Christ. The
miter recalls episcopal holiness and the crown of glory which the Chief Shepherd
will confer on his faithful servants. The crosier is the symbol of the office of
the Good Shepherd, who watches over and leads with care the flock entrusted to
him by the Holy Spirit.[45]
The pallium, always worn by Bishops in the East and now received by some Bishops
in the West, has various meanings. For Metropolitan Bishops in the West, it is:
a sign of their communion with the Roman Pontiff; a symbol of unity; a
commitment to communion with the Apostolic See; and the bond of charity and
incentive for strength in confessing and defending the faith. As the omophorion
of Bishops in the Eastern Churches, the pallium, from antiquity to the present
day, holds other meanings of great spiritual and ecclesial value. Woven from
wool and decorated with crosses, it is a sign of the Bishop, identified with
Christ the Good Shepherd, who lays down his life for the sheep and who bears the
lost sheep on his shoulders. Moreover, it stands for his care of all, especially
those who have wandered from the flock. This significance receives support in
both Eastern[46] and Western[47] tradition.
The cross which the Bishop wears around his neck is a powerful sign of his
belonging to Christ, his confession of faith in him and the constant power which
he draws from the Lord’s cross through the gift of life. Far from being a piece
of jewelry or decoration, it represents the glorious Cross of Christ, a sign of
hope, of which St. Paul writes: “But far be it from me to glory except in the
cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, by which the world has been crucified to me, and
I to the world” (Gal 6:14).
These brief indications highlight the symbolism which is part of the solemn
character of episcopal ordination.
The symbolism of the above elements merge in the oneness or unity which exists
among those who have received episcopal ordination. In communion with the Roman
Pontiff, all Bishops are members of the Episcopal College and with the Holy
Father share concern for the entire Church.[48]
The Spirit of Holiness
42.Associated with the episcopal images expressed in the words and rites of
ordination, is the Bishop’s call to holiness, a call which requires its own
spirituality, its own program geared towards holiness and its own evangelical
perfection. Both Eastern and Western rituals confirm this tradition, attributing
to the Bishop the fullness of holiness so as to live before God and in communion
with the faithful.
The ancient Eucologion of Serapion expresses this idea in the prayer of the
ordination of the Bishop: “God of truth, make your servant an effective Bishop,
a holy Bishop in the succession of the Holy Apostles; and give him the grace of
the divine Spirit who has been given to all faithful servants, prophets and
patriarchs.”[49]
This call to holiness is living in pastoral charity, in uninterrupted service of
the Lord, in offering holy gifts, in the ministry of the forgiveness of sins, in
pleasing the Lord in meekness and purity and the Bishop’s offering himself as a
sweet-smelling sacrifice.[50]
Given the above, the Bishop is called to a special kind of holiness in virtue of
the gift received and the ministry of sanctification entrusted to him.
II. SANCTIFICATION IN HIS MINISTRY
The Spiritual Life of the Bishop
43.In common with life in Christ according to the Spirit, the spiritual life of
the Bishop has its basis in the grace of the Sacraments of Baptism and
Confirmation. Since he is a “christifidelis,” born again in Christ, the Bishop
is enabled to believe in God, hope in him and love him through the theological
virtues, and to live and act under the movement of the Holy Spirit by means of
his holy gifts. In this way, he is no different from any other disciple of the
Lord, who has been made part of his body, has become a temple of the Spirit and
lives his Christian vocation conscious of his relationship with Christ as
disciple and apostle. St. Augustine described the situation in his well-known
phrase addressed to the faithful: “For you I am a Bishop, with you I am a
Christian.”[51]
Even the Bishop, then, as baptized and confirmed, is nourished by the Holy
Eucharist and stands in need of the Father’s forgiveness, because of human
weakness. Moreover, together with all priests, he is also to follow a specific
spiritual program, since he is called to holiness through Sacred Orders.[52]
44.Given the unique ministry of the Bishop, however, he requires a spirituality
particularly his own, one geared to his living the faith in hope and charity as
evangelizer, liturgist and guide in the community. It is a Church-centred
spirituality, because each Bishop is conformed to Christ, Shepherd and Spouse,
through his loving and serving the Church.
It is impossible to love Christ and live in intimacy with him without loving the
Church whom Christ loves. Indeed, the more he possesses the Spirit of God the
more he loves the Church, “one in all and all in each one; simple in her
plurality for the unity of faith, multiple in each for the bond of charity and
the variety of charisms.”[53] A spirituality totally directed towards loving as
the Lord Jesus loved, that is, even to the cross, is born only from a love for
the Church, that is, loved by Christ to the point where he gave his life for her
(cf. Eph 5:25).
This spirituality, then, is one of ecclesial communion, striving towards
upbuilding the Church with vigilance, so that each word and deed, each act and
decision in his pastoral service, might be a sign of the dynamic life of the
Trinity in communion and mission.
A Genuine Pastoral Charity
45.A key element in the spirituality proper to the Bishop is the exercise of his
ministry, interiorly nourished by faith, hope and especially pastoral charity
which is the soul of his apostolic activity. He does this in a dynamic of
pastoral “pro-existentia”, that is, in living for God and others, as Christ did,
striving to do the Father’s will and being totally at the service of others in
self-giving each day, through a free gift of love, in communion with the
Trinity. Lumen Gentium states: “The shepherds of the flock ought to carry out
their ministry with holiness, eagerness, humility and courage in imitation of
the eternal High Priest, the Shepherd and Guardian of our Souls. They will
thereby make this ministry the principal means of their own sanctification.
Those chosen for the fullness of the priesthood are gifted with sacramental
grace, enabling them to exercise a perfect role of pastoral charity through
prayer, sacrifice and preaching, as through every form of a Bishop’s care and
service. They are enabled to lay down their life for their sheep fearlessly,
and, made a model for their flock (cf. 1 Pt 5:3), can lead the Church to
ever-increasing holiness through their own example.”[54]
The Pastoral Directory Ecclesiae Imago devoted an entire chapter to specifying
the virtues essential for a Bishop.[55] In addition to the supernatural virtues
of obedience, perfect continence for the sake of the Kingdom, poverty, pastoral
prudence and strength, an appeal is made for the theological virtue of hope.
Drawing strength from this hope, the Bishop confidently awaits every good from
God and places his utmost trust in divine Providence, “mindful of the blessed
Apostles and of the ancient Bishops who, although experiencing great
difficulties and facing every kind of obstacle, still proclaimed the Gospel of
God with all boldness.”[56]
Since the first centuries of Christianity to the present, many Bishops have been
models of theological hope and pastoral charity. In their way of life they have
found the means to unite the preaching ministry and catechesis, the celebration
of the sacred mysteries and prayer, and apostolic zeal and an intense love for
the Lord. These Bishops have founded Churches, reformed customs and defended the
truth. They have been courageous witnesses through martyrdom and have left their
mark on society through initiatives of charity and justice, and acts of courage,
for the sake of their people, in the face of the powerful of this world.[57]
The Ministry of Preaching
46.The Bishop’s spirituality of ministry, grounded in pastoral charity and
expressed in the three-fold office of teaching, sanctifying and governing, is
not lived in isolation from his ministry but in union with it.
Above all, the Bishop is a minister of the truth which saves, not only in
teaching and instructing but also in leading people to hope and, therefore,
advancing in the path of hope. Indeed, if the Bishop, then, wishes to show
himself to his people as a sign, witness and minister of hope, he has to nourish
himself at the Word of Truth, in total adhesion and full disposition to it,
after the example of Mary, the Mother of God, who “believed that there would be
a fulfillment of what was spoken to her by the Lord” (Lk 1:45).
Since, then, this divine Word is contained and expressed in Sacred Scripture,
the Bishop is constantly to have recourse to it in diligent reading and accurate
study, so that it might be of assistance in his ministry.[58] He is to do this,
not only because he would be a useless preacher of the Word of God exteriorly,
if he did not listen to it from within himself,[59] but also because by not
doing so, he would empty his ministry of hope. Indeed, The Bishop uses the
Scriptures to nourish his spirituality so as truly to exercise his ministry as
evangelizer. Only in this way will he be able, like St. Paul, to recommend
himself to the faithful in saying: “by steadfastness and by the encouragement of
the Scriptures we might have hope” (Rm 15:4).
The choice of the Apostles in the early days of the Church is repeated in the
episcopal ministry: “We will devote ourselves to prayer and to the ministry of
the Word” (Acts 6:4). Origen wrote: “These are the two activities of the Priest:
both learning from God, by reading the Sacred Scriptures and often meditating on
them, and teaching the people. But, let him teach the very things that he
himself has learned from God!”[60]
One Who Prays and Teaches Prayer
47.The Bishop is also one who prays, one who intercedes for his people, through
the faithful celebration of the Liturgy of the Hours over which he is to
preside, at times, with his faithful.
Conscious that he will be able to teach prayer to his faithful only through a
personal prayer life, the Bishop has recourse to God by repeating with the
psalmist: “I hope in your Word” (Ps 119:114). Indeed, prayer is the moment in
which hope is expressed or, as St. Thomas insists, prayer “mirrors hope.”[61]
The ministry of prayer in pastoral and apostolic activity is particularly
related to the role of Bishop. The Bishop exercises this ministry of prayer
before God on behalf of people, in imitation of Jesus who prayed for his
Apostles (cf. Jn 17) and after the example of Paul who prayed for his community
(cf. Eph 3:14-21; Phil 1: 3-10). The Bishop is to bear the whole Church within
himself in prayer, interceding in a special manner for the people entrusted to
his care. Imitating Jesus in the choice of his Apostles (cf. Lk 6: 12-13), he is
also to submit to the Father his pastoral initiatives and present his hopes and
expectations to him through Christ in the Spirit. The God of hope will then fill
him with every joy and peace, because he abounds in hope through the Holy Spirit
(cf. Rm 15:13).
The Bishop is also to pursue occasions in which he can hear the Word of God and
pray together with his priests, the permanent deacons, seminarians and
consecrated men and women of his particular Church. Wherever and whenever
possible, he is to do the same also with the laity, particularly with those in
groups associated in a common apostolic activity.
In this way, the Bishop fosters the spirit of communion and sustains the
spiritual life of his diocese, showing himself to be the “teacher of perfection”
in his particular Church, whose duty is to “foster holiness among his clerics,
religious and laity according to the special vocation of each.”[62] At the same
time, he brings the bonds, existing between the various states in the Church
over which he presides and is the visible center of unity, to their divine
source, thereby strengthening them in the communion of prayer.
The Bishop is also to seek similar moments of spiritual encounter with his
brother Bishops, above all, with those of the same province or ecclesiastical
region. Such occasions not only express the joy of living together as brothers
(cf. Ps 133:1) but also manifest and foster the fellowship of the Episcopal
College.
Nourished by the Grace of the Sacraments
48.The effectiveness of the pastoral guidance of the Bishop and his witness to
Christ, Hope of the World, depends in a great part on the genuine character of
his following of the Lord and living in friendship with him.
Holiness alone is the prophetic proclamation of renewal which the Bishop
anticipates in his own life by drawing close to the very end to which he is
leading his faithful. In his spiritual journey, however, he experiences, like
every Christian, the necessity of conversion by reason of his consciousness of
his own weaknesses, his own discouragement and his own sins. But, since, as St.
Augustine preached, the hope of pardon is granted to the one who has admitted
his sin,[63] the Bishop is to have recourse to the Sacrament of Penance. Whoever
hopes to be a child of God and to see him makes himself pure as the heavenly
Father is pure (cf. 1 Jn 3:3).
Even the Apostles, to whom the Risen Christ communicated the gift of the Holy
Spirit for the remission of sins (cf. Jn 20:22-23), needed to receive from the
Lord the word of peace which brings reconciliation and the entreaty of a
penitent love which makes whole (cf. Jn 20:19-21; 21:5ff).
It is undoubtedly a sign of encouragement for the People of God to see that the
Bishop is the first to avail himself of the Sacrament of Penance, especially at
particular moments, e.g., when he presides at a communal service with the
individual celebration of the Sacrament of Penance.
The Bishop, together with all the People of God, nourishes his hope also from
the liturgy. Indeed, the Church, when she celebrates the earthly liturgy,
experiences in hope a foretaste of the liturgy of the heavenly Jerusalem towards
which she advances as a pilgrim and where Christ is seated at the right hand of
God, “a minister in the sanctuary and the true tent which is set up not by man
but by the Lord” (Heb 8:2).[64]
49.All the Church’s Sacraments are the memorial of the words, deeds and mystery
of the Lord, sacred signs of salvation, accomplished by Christ once and for all,
and an anticipation of its full possession, to be given at the end of time.[65]
This is particularly true in the Sacrament of the Eucharist. Until the Second
Coming, however, the Church celebrates them as efficacious signs in expectation,
supplication and hope.
In both the East and West, the spirituality of the episcopal ministry is linked
to the celebration of the sacred mysteries, over which the Bishop presides and
celebrates, together with his priests, deacons and the People of God.
The variety of rites in the Church and their specific character, in both the
East and West, are an essential part the People of God; they confer on the
Church her identity and are the wellspring of a rich ecclesial spirituality.
Therefore, the Bishop as high priest of his people is not only intently to
celebrate the sacred mysteries, but to make of the celebration of them a genuine
school of spirituality for the people. He is to be assisted in this task by a
knowledge of theology and the liturgical practices proper to a Bishop, as they
appear in the Caeremoniale Episcoporum.[66]
Bishops of the Eastern Churches, in fidelity to the rich liturgical patrimony of
their particular celebrations, will be able to exercise their ministry in the
Church in full harmony with the spiritual values of their respective rites.[67]
As High Priest in the Midst of His People
50.Some liturgical actions in the presence of the Bishop have particular
significance. First and foremost is the Chrism Mass, during which the Oil of the
Catechumens and the Oil of the Sick are blessed and Holy Chrism is consecrated.
This liturgy is the highest manifestation of the local Church who celebrates the
Lord Jesus, Eternal High Priest and Sacrificial Victim. For the Bishop, it is a
moment of great hope, since he gathers the diocesan presbyterate around him so
that together they can look to Jesus, the High Priest and Easter joy. In this
way, they relive the sacramental grace of Orders by renewing the promises of
their ordination day which give special meaning to their priestly ministry in
the Church. On this unique occasion in the liturgical year, the People of God,
beset by various concerns, are stirred to hope through their witnessing the
strengthening of the bonds of ecclesial communion.
Added to this celebration is the solemn liturgy of ordination to the priesthood
and to the diaconate. The Bishop sees in the reception from God of new
collaborators in Orders and in his episcopal ministry a favorable response from
the Spirit, Donum Dei and Dator Munerum, to his prayer for an abundance of
vocations and to his hope for a Church still more resplendent in her ministry.
Similar things can be said for the administration of the Sacrament of
Confirmation, in which the Bishop is the primary minister and, in the Latin
Church, the ordinary minister.
This sacrament of the outpouring of the Holy Spirit, which often requires a
significant commitment of time by Pastors and serves as an occasion for making a
pastoral visit to his parishes, provides the Bishop with a moment of intense
ministerial spirituality and communion with his faithful, especially the young.
The fact that this sacrament is administered by the diocesan Bishop shows that
one of the effects of the sacrament is to strengthen the bonds uniting people to
the mystery of Pentecost, to the Church of God in her apostolic origin and to
the local community as well as to empower those who receive the Spirit to
participate in the mission of bearing witness to Christ.[68]
A Spirituality of Communion
51.A sign of a strong spirituality of communion and an element of great value in
the holiness and sanctification of the Bishop is his communion with priests,
deacons, consecrated persons and the laity, through personal encounters or
various meetings. His words of exhortation and his spiritual message can foster
and guarantee the active, sanctifying presence of Christ in the midst of his
Church and the flow of the graces of the Spirit, which create a particular
witness to unity and charity.
To accomplish this, it is important that the Bishop animate and promote, through
his personal presence and instruction, the “moments of the Spirit” which foster
the growth of the spiritual life, such as retreats, spiritual exercises and
spiritual workshops, using also the means of social communication which have the
potential for reaching people who do not frequent the Church.
The Bishop also needs to know how to take advantage of the ordinary means of the
spiritual life, such as spiritual counsel, friendship and fraternal communion,
so as to avoid the risk of separation and the danger of discouragement in the
face of problems.
The Bishop will thus be able to exercise and animate a spirituality of communion
with the various persons who work in pastoral programs through listening,
collaboration and the responsible delegation of tasks and ministries.
A particular way in which the Bishop keeps this spirituality alive is through
his communion, in an affective and effective way, with the Pope and other
Bishops by prayer and a spirit of fraternity.
The Bishop is not alone in his ministry; he is to give and receive that
fraternal charity which flows from his relationships with his brothers in the
episcopate in a true exercise of the mutual love commanded of the Apostles by
Christ (cf. Jn 13:34; 15, 12-13), which is manifested in a sharing of prayer,
spiritual and pastoral experiences and discernment.
Important occasions in which Bishops can exercise communion and pastoral charity
are: dialogue and sharing, spiritual retreats and moments of relaxation.
Animator of Pastoral Spirituality
52.The Bishop himself is called to be in the midst of the people as a promoter
and animator of a pastoral program geared to holiness and as spiritual master of
his flock, through his style of life and credible witness in word and deed.
The Bishop’s call to holiness demands that he also foster the universal call to
holiness in his particular Church. For this reason, he is to promote the
spirituality and holiness of the People of God through specific initiatives
which take up traditional and recent charisms as a sign of the richness of the
Spirit of holiness.
In Communion with the Holy Mother of God
53.The special maternal presence of Mary offers particular encouragement to the
Bishop in his spiritual life, where Mary is honored in a personal way through a
relationship of genuine filial love.
Each Bishop is called to relive the Lord’s entrustment of Mary to the disciple,
John, at the foot of the cross (cf. Jn 19: 26-27). He is also to mirror the
wholehearted, persevering prayer of the disciples with Mary, the Mother of
Jesus, from the Ascension to Pentecost (cf. Acts 1:14). All Bishops in fraternal
communion are entrusted to the maternal care of Mary in communion, in hope and
in the ministry.
Such practices will result in a sound Marian devotion of intense communion with
the Holy Mother of God in the Bishop’s liturgical ministry of sanctification and
worship, in his teaching of doctrine, in his personal life and in his governing.
This style of acting after the example of Mary in the exercise of the episcopal
ministry has its basis in the association of the Church with Mary.
III. THE SPIRITUAL ITINERARY OF THE BISHOP
A Necessary Spiritual Itinerary
54.In a life of faithfulness to one’s vocation, Christian spirituality has its
stages, trials and unexpected occurrences. The seasons of life and the constant
striving towards perfection and personal holiness, by God’s design, assist the
Bishop to follow a true and proper spiritual itinerary in his ministry. In the
midst of the joys and trials–not lacking in the life of the Bishop–he will live
not only his personal history but that of his people. He goes ahead of his
flock, leading it in faithfulness to Christ through a life of witness to the
end.
Animated by theological hope, he can and ought to live every moment with a
serene trust, even when circumstances call for submitting his letter of
resignation from office. Even in retirement, he is to continue, to the very end,
to live in a fitting way the spirit of his episcopal ministry through prayer and
other tasks.
With the Spiritual Realism of Everyday Life
55.Spiritual realism also teaches the Bishop how he ought to live his vocation
to holiness in light of his human weaknesses, his many duties, the unforeseen
happenings of everyday life and the many personal and institutional problems. At
times, weighed down by many responsibilities, he risks being overwhelmed by
difficulties and unable to find appropriate responses and solutions.
Each day, the Bishop experiences the import of life and history.
Responsibilities and the sharing of people’s problems and joys also have their
impact. At times, he will be subject to the pressures of the social
communications’ media, because of phenomena involving the Church and the defense
of true doctrine and morality; at other times, he will face unjust accusations
or problems of a social character.
In all these cases, he needs to cultivate a serene tenor of life which fosters
mental, psychic and emotional balance and allows him to be able to maintain a
social rapport, to accept persons and their problems, to be the intermediary in
the happy or adverse situations of his people, who look to him for the maturity
and goodness of a father and spiritual master.
The Bishop needs to have courage in the trying aspects of his ministry, in
bearing the cross with dignity and experiencing the glory of serving in
communion with the Crucified yet Glorious Christ.
The Divine and Human in Harmony
56.The Bishop is called to cultivate a spirituality patterned after the
humanitas of Jesus in which he can express the divine and human aspects of his
ordination and mission. In this way, he can maintain a balance in his duties:
liturgical celebrations and personal prayer, pastoral planning, concentration
and repose, just relaxation and a congruous time for vacation, and study and
ongoing theological and pastoral formation.
The Bishop’s care of his physical, mental and spiritual health and an
equilibrium in life are also acts of love for the sake of the faithful and a
guarantee of a greater openness to the inspiration of the Spirit and a greater
willingness to follow his guidance.
Sustained by his spirituality, the Bishop acquires peace of soul and deep
communion with the Trinity who have chosen and consecrated him. In the grace
assured him by God, he will know each day how to exercise his ministry as a
witness of hope, while being attentive to the needs of the Church and the world.
Indeed, each day the Bishop renews his trust in God and boasts as the Apostle
“in our hope of sharing the glory of God....knowing that suffering produces
endurance, and endurance produces character, and character produces hope...” (Rm
5:2-4). Hope also brings joy; indeed, a Christian joy, which is a joy of hope
(cf. Rm 12:12) and also the object of hope. The Bishop bears witness to a
Christian joy which is born of the cross. He ought not only to speak of joy but
also “to hope in joy” and bear witness to it before his people.[69]
Faithfulness to the End
57.The Bishop will be patient and persevering in hope in the course of his
ministry, when he submits to trials on account of sickness, or when he is led by
the Lord to give his life as an offering for his flock, or when he is called to
render testimony to Christ in difficult situations of persecution and martyrdom,
not a rare happening in the past or present.
Even these will be invaluable opportunities for the people entrusted to the
Bishop’s care to know that their Pastor is following the Crucified Christ in his
total gift of self.
The people will also benefit from the example of the Bishop who, seriously ill,
receives the Sacrament of the Anointing of the Sick and Holy Viaticum in a
solemn ceremony in the presence of the clergy and people.[70]
In the last act of witness in his earthly life, the Bishop will have an
opportunity to teach the faithful that nothing can overcome hope and that the
pain of the present moment is eased by the hope of future glory.
In the final moment of his exodus on earth to the Father, he will be able to
take up and re-state the purpose of his ministry in the Church, namely, that of
indicating the eschatological goal to the Church’s Children, just as Moses on
Mount Nebo showed the promised land to the Sons of Israel (cf. Deut 34:1ff).
Consequently, even the end of the Bishop’s spiritual itinerary, in his death and
funeral in the cathedral, is to be a moment of great spiritual value for the
life of the faithful and a hymn of the Resurrection of the Lord who welcomes his
faithful servants. On such an occasion, the Bishop can leave an inspirational
gift to the Church by writing a spiritual testament and can show himself to the
people as a brother and friend, alongside his many predecessors.
The Example of Bishop Saints
58.In his spiritual itinerary, the Bishop is encouraged by the great number of
Pastors who, starting with the Apostles, have left their example in the life of
the Church in every time and place. It would be difficult to list all these
illustrious models who stand out in the Church, whose holiness has been or will
be acknowledged by the Church. Their names and faces can easily be seen in the
life of the Universal Church and the local Churches and also in the celebrations
of the liturgical year or in the readings of the liturgy of the hours.
We recall the Bishop-Saints who from the beginning of the Church have attained
holiness in life through preaching and wisdom and through a lived understanding
of the pastoral and social sense of the Gospel. Some have borne witness in
martyrdom or have founded Churches which rejoice in them as patron saints.
Some Pastors stand out because of their doctrine or their specific contribution
at ecumenical councils or their achievement of reform and renewal through their
wisdom. Many are missionary Bishop-Saints who carried the Gospel to new lands
and organized the life of the local emerging Churches. Many–even in our
day–witnessed to the faith and paid for their faithfulness to the Catholic
Church and communion with the see of Peter through imprisonment, exile and other
kinds of suffering. Others, in difficult circumstances, have given their lives
for their flock as defenders of human and religious rights.
Spiritual communion with these Pastors is a reason for hope and a source of
apostolic vigor. In their lives, each Bishop sees the grace and strength of the
Holy Spirit and the degree of faithfulness to which he is called in his pastoral
ministry.
CHAPTER III
THE EPISCOPATE:
THE MINISTRY OF COMMUNION AND
MISSION IN THE UNIVERSAL CHURCH
Friends of Christ, Chosen and Sent by Him
59.The words of Jesus at the Last Supper, especially those recorded by St. John
in Chapter 15 of his Gospel, concern the call of the Apostles to communion and
mission. Jesus speaks of the vine and the branches, using a biblical figure
which clearly expresses not only the necessity of communion but also
fruitfulness in mission. Although the words of Jesus have an ecclesial,
Eucharistic meaning applicable to all the faithful, they are intended primarily
for the circle of Apostles and, consequently, for their Successors.
Jesus’ discourse on the vine and the branches points to the dynamic work of the
Trinity in communion and mission. The Father is the vine dresser; Christ is the
true vine; the interior sap of communion and fruitfulness is the Holy Spirit who
gives life to the branches united to the vine which is destined to give abundant
and lasting fruit. At the center of this parable is found the fundamental
teaching that the disciples of Jesus are called to remain in vital communion
with him and with his word and commandments and to grow, through God’s pruning,
and bear fruit in abundance (cf. Jn 15:1-10).
This leads to the need of communion with Christ and, in him, with the Father and
the Spirit in the mystical vine, symbolic of the Church.
“Without me you can do nothing” (Jn 15:5). In keeping with the meaning of the
parable of the vine, Jesus tells his disciples that communion with him is
remaining faithful to the divine friendship: “You are my friend, if you do what
I command you” (Jn 15:14). Through friendship with Christ, they come to a
knowledge of the secrets of the Father and receive the gift of a life “even unto
death” and a mutual communion in love. Continuing his mandate from the Father,
Jesus, for his part, chooses his disciples and sends them out in mission: “You
did not choose me, but I chose you and appointed you that you should go and bear
fruit and that your fruit should abide” (Jn 15:16). For their part, the
disciples are called to be faithful to the Word and mission.
60.As Christ’s friend, disciple and apostle, the Bishop is a living branch
grafted on the vine which is Christ and bears in himself the personal and
ministerial call to communion and mission.
The Bishop’s identity in the Church is grounded in the dynamic action of
apostolic succession understood as not only the giving of authority but the
extension of Trinitarian communion and mission. Since the Bishop is chosen by
the Lord, called to a constant communion with him and sent forth into the world,
he is identified with the Person of Jesus in the transmission of divine life, in
the communion of love and in the sacrifice of his life.
I. THE EPISCOPAL MINISTRY IN AN ECCLESIOLOGY OF COMMUNION
In the Church, Image of the Trinity
61.In its theological teachings, the Second Vatican Council described the Church
as the place where the mysteries of faith are found, giving particular emphasis
to the central theme of communion. Indeed, the Church is defined at the outset
of the Constitution Lumen Gentium as “a sacrament or sign of intimate union with
God and of the unity of all humanity.”[71]
Therefore, the document of the Extraordinary Assembly of the Synod of Bishops of
1985 has rightly affirmed: “the ecclesiology of communion is the central and
fundamental concept in the documents of the Council.”[72] The concept of
communion is “at the heart of the Church’s understanding of herself”[73] and
always involves a double dimension: the vertical and the horizontal, communion
with God and communion among men, the gift of the Trinity and the duty of faith
and love, and the visible and the invisible.[74]
Having its foundation in the Word of God and the sacraments, especially the
Eucharist, ecclesial communion is expressed in faith, founded on hope, animated
by charity and grounded in the unity of the ministry of teaching and ruling by
the Successor of Peter and the Bishops. In this way, it possesses a force
towards unity and a dynamic energy in mission. Like the mystery of the Trinity,
which is communion and mission for the salvation of the world, the Church, the
living image of the Trinity and possessor of the power of the Spirit, is the
convocation of a people (ekklesìa) and the manifestation of a mission (epiphania)
for the salvation of the world.
The Church is to be always and everywhere, in a growing measure, the
participation and sacrament of Trinitarian love for the salvation of the world.
Consequently, she has the power of the Spirit who is, in the Trinity, the
principle of communion and mission in love.
62.The Church, therefore, is the mystery-sacrament in which everything
converges, namely, evangelization and catechesis, the celebration of the
mysteries of the faith, ecclesial spirituality, the life of charity of
Christians and missionary activity and witness. Only from an authentic ecclesial
perspective can the moral duties, pastoral programs and a lived spirituality be
understood.
Communion and mission enrich each other. The force of communion makes the Church
grow in extension and depth. At the same time, mission makes communion grow,
extending it outwards in concentric circles, until it reaches everyone. Indeed,
the Church spreads into various cultures and introduces them to the Kingdom,[75]
so that what comes from God can return to him. For this reason, it has been
said: “Communion leads to mission, and mission itself to communion.”[76]
Communion is the Church’s very being and recalls the goal of all charisms to
agape and to communion in unity, in the same plan of salvation and the same
ecclesial activity.
The unity of the Church as communion and mission is not only the essence of her
mystery and her task in the world, it is also the guarantee and seal of her
divine action. In other words, everything comes from the plan of God as Trinity,
who in his unity is the origin and final goal of all things, according to the
vision of salvation history which concerns humanity and all creation.
In an Ecclesiology of Communion and Mission
63.In our times, unity is a sign of hope concerning peoples and human endeavours
towards reconciliation for a better world. Unity is also a sign and credible
witness of the authenticity of the Gospel. As a result, the unity of the Church,
especially that of all disciples of Christ, is also an urgent need in our world,
so that the world may believe (cf. Jn 17:21).
The Trinitarian mystery, the mystery of communion in mutual self-giving, is the
pattern of life for the Church, her mission, her ministers and, therefore, for
the episcopal ministry.
Such an understanding is a hope-filled sign for a world broken by divisions,
opposing forces and conflicts. The Church’s strength is her communion; her
weakness is division and internal opposition.
Unity and Catholicity in the Episcopal Ministry
64.The episcopal ministry is set in this ecclesiology of communion and mission
which gives rise to an activity, a spirituality and a style of life, all of
which are determined by communion.
Indeed, this ministry expresses the unity of apostolic succession in the College
of Bishops under the Petrine ministry. Furthermore, in the person of the Bishop,
the particular Church, the community of the People of God with priests, deacons,
consecrated persons and the laity, come together.
This communion in unity is sustained through pastoral charity and a supernatural
hope of the fulfilment of the divine plan through the power of the Holy Spirit.
65.Since the Bishop is sent in the name of Christ as Pastor of a particular
Church, he cares for a portion of the People of God entrusted to him, making it
grow as a communion in the Spirit through the Gospel and the Eucharist. In his
person, the Bishop is the visible principle and foundation of the unity of
faith, the sacraments and ecclesiastical governance, as a result of the power he
has received.[77]
Each Bishop, in virtue of his being a Pastor of a particular Church, is a member
of the College of Bishops. In this same College, each Bishop becomes a member
through episcopal ordination and hierarchical communion with the head of the
college.[78] On this basis, certain facts emerge affecting the Bishop’s
ministry, facts which are worth considering, even if only in a summary manner.
First of all, the Bishop never stands alone. This is true not only in relation
to his position in his particular Church but also in the Universal Church,
correlated as the Church is–because of the nature of the episcopate itself, one
and undivided[79]–to the whole Episcopal College which is in succession to the
College of Apostles. For this reason, each Bishop stands, at one and the same
time, in relation to his particular Church and to the universal Church.
As the visible principle and foundation of unity in his particular Church, the
Bishop is also the visible link of ecclesial communion between his particular
Church and the universal Church. Therefore, even though living in various parts
of the world, each Bishop stands in watch, with the head of the Episcopal
College and its members, over hierarchical communion in its totality. In this
way, the Bishops give substance and form to the catholicity of the Church. At
the same time, they confer on the particular Church, over which they preside,
the same mark of catholicity.
“The Bishop is a visible source and foundation of the unity of the particular
Church entrusted to his pastoral ministry. But for each particular Church to be
fully Church, that is, the particular presence of the universal Church with all
its essential elements, and hence constituted after the model of the universal
Church, there must be present in it, as a proper element, the supreme authority
of the Church: the Episcopal College ‘together with their head, the Supreme
Pontiff, and never apart from him’.”[80]
In the communion of Churches, the Bishop represents his particular Church, and,
as a result, represents the communion of Churches. Indeed, through the episcopal
ministry, each particular Church, which is also a portio Ecclesiae universalis,[81]
lives the totality of the One-Holy Church and the Catholic-Apostolic Church is
present in each of them in its totality.[82]
66. Secondly, the unity of the college or the fraternal communion of charity or
the collegial sense is the basis for the solicitude which each Bishop, in virtue
of Christ’s institution and command, is required to have for the whole Church
and the other particular Churches. By the same token, the Bishop also shares
concern for “those parts of the world where the Word of God has not yet been
proclaimed or where, chiefly because of the small number of priests, the
faithful are in danger of departing from the precepts of the Christian life, and
even of losing the faith itself.”[83]
On the other hand, the divine gifts, through which every Bishop builds his
particular Church, namely, the Gospel and the Eucharist, are already the same as
those which not only constitute all the other particular Churches as a gathering
in the Spirit but also lead each particular Church to communion with all other
Churches. By the Lord’s will, the proclamation of the Gospel is universal; it is
addressed to all people and is always the same in every age.
The celebration of the Eucharist, by its nature and like all other liturgical
actions, is an act of the whole Church. The Sacrament belongs to the whole Body
of Christ which it manifests and implies.[84] This same source gives rise to the
duty of the Bishop, as a legitimate Successor of the Apostles and member of the
Episcopal College, of being, in a certain way, guarantor of the whole Church
(sponsor Ecclesiae).[85]
In Communion with the Successor of Peter
67.The ecclesiology of communion, characteristic of the Catholic Church,
expresses the multi-relational unity of the particular Churches not only in
their sharing the same faith, hope and charity and the same doctrine and
sacraments, but also in their participating in the same communion with the Roman
Pontiff, the visible principle of the Church’s unity. This reality is manifested
in sanctification, worship, doctrine and governance, according to the divine
plan of Christ, who wills that Peter and his Successors be the principle of
visible unity so that they might confirm their brothers in the faith.[86]
The Church’s unity, in communion with the Successor of Peter and under his
guidance, is also the source of hope for the future. The plan of God is the
unity of the entire human family, a precious gift which the Catholic Church
preserves in its structure.
For Christians, this unity is the source of trust and hope in the future for
their mission in the world. It is the guarantee of the continuity of the truth
and life of the Gospel, namely, the fullness of a Church which is one, holy,
catholic and apostolic, as willed by Christ, and which “subsists in the Catholic
Church, governed by the Successor of Peter and the Bishops in communion with
him.”[87]
68.Many bonds unite each Bishop with the Petrine ministry. First of all, the
communion of divine life, especially through the celebration of the Eucharist,
is the foundation of the unity of the Church in Christ.[88] Each celebration of
the Eucharist, sign of the “sanctorum communio”, that is, the communion of
saints and all things holy–as stated in Christian antiquity[89]–is fulfilled in
union not only with one’s Bishop but above all with the Pope and with the
episcopal order, and thus with the clergy and the entire People of God, as set
forth in various versions of the Eucharistic prayer.[90]
Another bond of unity is the communion in preaching the same Gospel and true
doctrine, in faithfulness to the Church’s magisterium, which the Roman Pontiff
exercises, especially in questions of faith and morals. The wholehearted
acceptance and diffusion of the pontifical magisterium is a sign of authentic
communion and a guarantee of the unity of the Church, also in guiding the People
of God on the path of truth, especially in the field of doctrine, which also
demands an accurate, special study of new problems.[91]
Collaboration in the Petrine Ministry
69.The College of Bishops cannot be conceived without communion with its visible
head, the Roman Pontiff, a communion which is exercised in various forms of
participation and collegiality.
Precisely because of the active and dynamic principle of communion, the
Episcopal College is the meeting place of each Bishop with the Bishop of Rome,
Successor of Peter and Head of the College, and with other Bishops scattered
throughout the world. Such communion is also the realization of the solicitude
for all the Churches around the world and the aspects of mission, cooperation
and collaboration in mission, which is proper to the episcopal ministry.
A specific form of collaboration with the Roman Pontiff is the Synod of Bishops,
where a fruitful exchange of information and suggestions takes place, and, in
light of the Gospel and the teachings of the Church, common trends of thought
are formulated, which, once taken and proposed to all the Church by the
Successor of Peter, return to benefit the local Churches. In this way, the whole
Church is effectively sustained by maintaining communion in the plurality of
cultures and situations.
A fruit and expression of this collegial union is the collaboration of Bishops
from every part of the globe in the offices of the Holy See, particularly in the
Departments of the Roman Curia and in various commissions, where they can
effectively make their contribution as Pastors of particular Churches.
Ad Limina Visits and Relations with the Holy See
70.An important manifestation of communion with the Pope and the offices of the
Holy See are ad limina visits, which include the celebration of the Eucharist,
common prayer and personal meetings of the Bishops with the Pope and his
collaborators. They serve as occasions for discernment in which the situations,
anxieties, hopes, joys and problems of the particular Churches are brought to
the visible center of communion for an enrichment of catholicity and a
particular experience of unity.
In recent times, the Bishops have had opportunity, on the occasion of these
visits, to share moments of prayer among themselves in the company of their
diocesan collaborators and some groups of the faithful, thereby giving a renewed
emphasis to the true and authentic meaning of such visits of the Bishops of the
particular Churches “ad limina apostolorum.”[92]
Many Bishops mentioned in the Lineamenta responses that, as a concrete
manifestation of an ecclesiology of communion, relations between the Successor
of Peter and the diocesan Bishops, through the various Departments of the Holy
See and pontifical nuncios and representatives in various countries, always
display mutual collaboration and fraternal esteem, in respect for each’s
competence.
Episcopal Conferences
71.Bishops live their communion with other Bishops in the exercise of episcopal
collegiality. Since Christian antiquity, this reality of communion has been
particularly expressed in the celebration of ecumenical councils and particular
councils, both plenary and provincial. Even today, such councils maintain their
usefulness as seen in the current institution of Episcopal Conferences.
Though Episcopal Conferences have been forming since the last century, they have
been particularly well-received in the Second Vatican Council’s Decree Christus
Dominus and have been given precise governing norms in The Code of Canon
Law.[93] Recently, following the recommendation of the 1985 Extraordinary Synod
which called for a study on the theological and juridical nature of Episcopal
Conferences, John Paul II promulgated the motu propri Apostolos suos with a
precise treatment on the subject.[94]
The Directory Ecclesia Imago states their nature in the following manner: “The
Episcopal Conference is established to provide many-sided and fruitful
assistance in our times so that this collegial sense may produce its result.
Through these Conferences a spirit of communion is admirably fostered with the
universal Church and among the different local Churches.”[95]
72.Given the authority of the each Bishop in his particular Church, the Bishops,
“jointly exercise in the Episcopal Conferences the episcopal ministry for the
good of the faithful of the territory of the Conference; but, for that exercise
to be legitimate and binding on the individual Bishops, there is needed the
intervention of the supreme authority of the Church, which, through universal
law or articular mandates, entrusts determined questions to the deliberation of
the Episcopal Conference.”[96]
“The joint exercise of the episcopal ministry also involves the teaching
office.”[97] The Bishops meeting in their Episcopal Conferences are to have,
above all, a particular concern that the universal magisterium is communicated
to the people entrusted to them.[98] Because the doctrinal declarations of the
Episcopal Conferences oblige an adherence of the faithful with a sense of
religious respect, they must be approved unanimously, or if by a majority, must
obtain the recognition of the Apostolic See.[99]
The Eastern Churches with a patriarch or major archbishop have their own
institutions of synodal character, namely, the Patriarchal Synod[100] and
patriarchal assemblies, each governed by their respective laws. The Code of
Canons of the Eastern Churches provides also for hierarchical assemblies for the
various Churches sui iuris.[101]
Episcopal bodies, such as International Meetings of Episcopal Conferences, also
exist on the continental or on the regional levels because of proximity. Though
not having the competence of properly called ‘Episcopal Conferences’ according
to the norms of canon law, they are nevertheless useful instruments through
which collaboration is fostered among Bishops for the common good.[102]
The Sense and Effectiveness of Communion
73.Relations established among Bishops, both in patriarchal synods of the
Eastern Churches and Episcopal Conferences, not to mention other forms of
collaboration and communion, each according to its proper theological and
juridical nature, must not be seen only as a way of facilitating the treatment
of internal and external questions. Indeed, in the spirit of communion among the
Bishops of the Church and in affectus collegialis, namely, in virtue of the
Bishop’s sacramental participation in the solicitude of the entire People of
God, these relations must be a true spiritual experience, an exercise of the
sense and effectiveness of communion.
Therefore, episcopal assemblies take place in a spirit of mutual listening
because of the shared responsibility and solicitude for the whole Church. They
constitute moments of pastoral responsibility, evangelical fellowship, shared
treatment of problems and true ecclesial and spiritual discernment. They are
moments in which Bishops submit the problems of the times to the wisdom of the
Gospel, in a mutual assistance which recommends all to the grace of the Lord,
present in the midst of those who are gathered in his name (cf. Mt 18:20) and to
the assistance of the Holy Spirit who guides the Church.
74.This mutual assistance among Bishops, especially on the part of
Metropolitans, can and ought to be manifested in moments of difficulty by acts
of encouragement, support in discernment, reciprocal advice and, at times,
fraternal correction according to the Gospel.
In light of fraternal communion resulting from the grace of the episcopate and
the unity of the Church, some Bishops feel that mutual assistance programs be
instituted between large dioceses and smaller ones to provide timely help such
as the exchange of pastoral personnel, economic means and subsidies as well as
the establishment of structures and offices in common, when the dioceses are
near to one another. They also recommend the “twinning” of dioceses among the
particular Churches scattered throughout the world, especially with younger
Churches and those most in need, as a sign of solicitude for the universal
Church.
Some Lineamenta responses request clarification in situations where Bishops have
overlapping jurisdiction, that is, in territories where the faithful are
comprised of members from Latin and Eastern Churches or a military ordinariate
or a personal prelature. Precise criteria are needed to foster the witness of
unity.
II. CERTAIN PROBLEMS
Various Types of Episcopal Ministry
75.Some Lineamenta responses treat questions which merit special attention so as
to clarify, in light of recent experience, tasks, rights and duties of
individual Bishops regarding particular gifts.
The first in the various types of episcopal ministry comes from Church history
and traditions.
Within the Church, the Bishop’s ministry consists in being elected and ordained
for the service of a particular Church. In this regard, the Lord has given a
special role to the Bishop of Rome. The Church in Rome presides over charity,
possesses a particular precedence, and, because of the special link to the
Apostle Peter, the Bishop of Rome is Head and Shepherd of the universal
Church.[103] Animated by the Spirit of the Good Shepherd, he pastures the
universal flock of Christ and confirms his brothers in the truth, thus bearing
witness to communion and unity before all other Churches and Christian
confessions as well as before all other religions and society-as-a-whole.
According to Church tradition, certain Bishops can also bear the title of
Patriarch and preside over Eastern Catholic Churches. Patriarchs are given the
special honor of being Father and Head of his Patriarchal Church.[104] The
Eastern Catholic Churches also have Major Archbishops who are Metropolitans of a
See determined by the supreme authority of the Church and who preside over an
entire Eastern Church sui iuris but without the title of Patriarch.[105]
Archbishops and Bishops, diocesan or eparchal, are Pastors of their particular
Churches.
Besides residential Archbishops and Bishops of particular Churches, other
Archbishops and Bishops, invested with the episcopal dignity and grace, are at
the service of the whole Church, with a particular association with the Petrine
ministry in governing the Church. Among this group are some Bishops, created
Cardinals, who have no particular See. Other Archbishops and Bishops collaborate
with the Roman Pontiff in the care of the universal Church in their being in
service to the Holy See with responsibilities in the Roman Curia, Nunciatures or
Apostolic Delegations.
Metropolitan Bishops of the Eastern Churches, having a particular right, are
placed as heads of a province within the confines of the territory of a
Patriarchate. The Latin Church also has Metropolitans who preside over an
ecclesiastical province with proper rights and duties according to the norms of
law.
Coadjutor and Auxiliary Bishops, both in a diocese or eparchate, are at the
service of their respective dioceses or eparchies, assisting the diocesan Bishop
or Eparch, when circumstances dictate, according to the norms of each.
From a theological point of view and a consideration of the institutional
character of the Church, the above listing well illustrates the rich variety in
the episcopal ministry in the Universal Church and in the particular Church.
Emeritus Bishops
76.Today, a considerable number of Bishops, for reasons foreseen in canon law,
are relieved of pastoral office, thereby prompting the recurring subject as to
their participation in ecclesial life.
Emeritus Bishops continue to be members of the Episcopal College and maintain
their right/duty to participate in the acts of the College in the manner
foreseen by law.[106]
Moreover, given their pastoral experience, they are consulted on questions of a
general nature. To remain informed of matters of major importance, they are
provided beforehand with the documents of the Holy See and receive from the
diocesan Bishop the diocesan bulletin as well as other documentation. Because of
their competence in specific subjects, Emeritus Bishops can be appointed adjunct
members or consultors of Departments of the Roman Curia. Depending on the
statutes of each Episcopal Conference, they can be elected by the Conference to
the Synod of Bishops. In those cases where the statutes of the Bishops’
Conference do not provide for their presence and deliberative vote, they can
participate in certain meetings or study commissions.[107]
The responses to the Lineamenta asked that the provisions of the law regarding
emeritus Bishops be applied faithfully.
They also requested that Emeritus Bishops be given appropriate economic support
and a living situation which does not isolate them, but rather fosters their
participation in ecclesial life.
Due consideration also needs to be given to elderly Bishops and those who are
ill. For the Church and the faithful, they are examples of the love of Christ
and self-giving in their ministry, prayer and suffering.
Finally, the counsel of brother-Bishops can be of great assistance and relief
when the time comes to leave office. The wisdom, understanding and encouragement
of other Bishops can assist a Bishop in this difficult human and spiritual
passage to make decisions concerning his future with serenity and trust in
divine providence.
The Appointment and Formation of Bishops
77.In the election of Bishops, some responses to the Lineamenta touched upon the
subject of consultation as an assistance in choosing the most suitable candidate
for the proposed episcopal mission.
In light of the Bishop’s special responsibilities, increasing consideration is
being given to the timeliness of special initiatives on behalf of newly
appointed Bishops. In recent years, special initiatives have been introduced to
better prepare them to respond to the demands of their ministry in theological,
pastoral, canonical, spiritual and administrative matters.
The necessary doctrinal, pastoral and spiritual growth of Bishops ordained for
longer periods of time is being promoted through ongoing formation. These
programs are also leading to an increase in fraternal communion among Bishops
and pastoral effectiveness in their respective dioceses.
It seems necessary to ask Bishops, before making ordinary or serious decisions,
to give sufficient time to meditation and contemplation in the course of their
daily ministry, when the pressure of urgent matters weigh on them and pastoral
solicitude calls for a devotional pause and a listening to the Spirit in the
stillness of their hearts.
CHAPTER IV
THE BISHOP IN SERVICE TO HIS CHURCH
The Biblical Image of the Washing of the Feet: Jn 13:1-16
78.In the fullness of his earthly life, when Jesus understood that the hour had
come for him to pass from this life to the Father by freely offering himself for
our salvation, he manifested himself to his disciples as the servant of all.
In the act of washing the feet of his Apostles, Jesus left an example of loving
service to the point of giving his life, thereby becoming the true model of
Gospel discipleship. Christ’s example demands imitation: “For I have given you
an example, that you also should do as I have done to you” (Jn 13:15). This
gesture of humble service, repeated ritually by the Bishop each year on Holy
Thursday in the celebration of the Lord’s Supper, is associated with the
Bishop’s ministry of charity and is linked to the new commandment to love one
another (cf. Jn 13:34-35). This act is a sign which has its fulfilment in the
Eucharist and in Christ’s sacrificial death on the Cross. Service, charity,
Eucharist and the cross and resurrection are inextricably bound up in the life
of Jesus, in his teaching, in his example for his Church and in his memorial
which she celebrates.
In the context of this Joannine image, the ministry of the Bishop in his
particular Church is seen as a service of love, with his being perceived by the
people as Christ, the servant of all. At the same time, Jesus performs this
gesture as a sign of hope, knowing that the Father had put all things in his
hands and that he came from the Father and was returning to the Father, with the
sure hope of seeing his disciples again after Easter (cf. Jn 13:3). In the
humility of his service, the Bishop is also to proclaim this hope in word, to
celebrate it in the sacraments and to make it present in the midst of his people
and together with his people. The Bishop is one who stoops in humility to serve
the needs of the faithful, especially the most needy
I. THE BISHOP IN HIS PARTICULAR CHURCH
The Particular Church
79.The specific task of the episcopal ministry acquires its special value and
concreteness in the particular Church for which the diocesan Bishop is elected
and ordained. The ministry of Bishops is specified as a service to the
particular Churches throughout the world, in which and from which (in quibus et
ex quibus) the one and only Catholic Church exists.[108]
The mutual bond between identity and representation which puts the Bishop at the
center of the particular Church, is traditionally expressed in the words of
Cyprian: “You ought to know that the Bishop is in the Church and the Church in
the Bishop, and if one is not with the Bishop, he is not with the Church.”[109]
Thus, the ministry of the Bishop is entirely related to his particular Church of
which he is a part. At the same time, his particular Church represents various
elements of the communion and unity of the Universal Church. On the other hand,
it is impossible to think of a particular Church without reference to its
Shepherd. The particular Church can be understood on the basis of the three-fold
office of the Bishop, to teach, to govern and to sanctify, directly
corresponding to the prophetic, kingly and priestly dimensions of the People of
God.[110]
Consequently, the Directory Ecclesiae Imago recalls that the Bishop “should
combine in himself at one and the same time the qualities both of a brother and
a father, of a disciple of Christ and a teacher of the faith, of a son of the
Church and, in a certain way, father of the Church, for he ministers the
spiritual birth of Christians.”[111]
A Mystery Uniting the Bishop and his People
80.Various characteristics of ecclesial communion converge in the person of the
Bishop united to his people. Trinitarian communion is manifested in him in that
he is the sign of the “Father”, the presence of Christ “head, spouse and
minister,” and the “dispenser” of grace and man of the Spirit. The Bishop
embodies apostolic communion, making him a witness of the living tradition of
the Gospel as it is linked to apostolic succession. Also at work in his person
is hierarchical communion, which unites him to the Petrine charism as the
Apostles were united to Peter in Jerusalem.
The unity of the particular Church is made concrete in the grace of his ministry
as Teacher, Priest and Shepherd. He is the point of union among priests, diverse
parishes and local assemblies which receive “legitimacy” because they are in
communion with him. Finally, he animates the communion of charisms and
ministries of the remaining parts of Christ’s Faithful, namely consecrated
persons and laypeople, who find in him their principle of unity and their
strength for mission.
The reciprocity of the universal Church and the particular Churches is also
expressed in the person of the Bishop. These particular Churches, one linked to
the other, are portions of the People of God and portiones Ecclesiae[112] in the
one, holy, catholic and apostolic Church which pre-exists in them and in them
takes flesh as communities in a given moment in history, in a given culture and
in a given territory.
The Word, Eucharist and Community
81.In the Decree on the Bishops’ Pastoral Office in the Church Christus Dominus,
the image of the particular Church is portrayed in theological terms, using the
following words in reference to dioceses: “A diocese is that portion of God’s
people which is entrusted to a Bishop to be shepherded by him with the
cooperation of the presbytery. Adhering thus to its Pastor and gathered together
by him in the Holy Spirit through the Gospel and the Eucharist, this portion
constitutes a particular Church in which the one, holy, catholic and apostolic
Church of Christ is truly present and operative.”[113]
The constitutive elements of the particular Church gathered around the Bishop
can be summarized in the following basic points taken from New Testament
ecclesiology.[114]
a) The preaching of the Gospel is the presence of the Church and his Word. This
Word brings the Church into being. First of all, the Church is born from the
Word; she is the “creatura Verbi” as a result of the life-giving breath of the
Holy Spirit. Indeed, through the Word, the Church begins to be “ecclesia”,
namely, a community of those called through the Word of the Gospel. The Church
is formed and fashioned by the Word proclaimed, received in faith and
continually preached, as taught in the Acts of the Apostles (cf. Acts 2: 42ff).
For this reason, through the life-giving power of the Holy Spirit, the
proclamation of the Word, evangelization and catechesis are inherent to the
Church’s nature.
b) The mystery of the Lord’s Supper or the Eucharist causes the Church to be.
Indeed, the Church is Christ, the Head and Spouse. The Eucharist is the
sacramental memorial of the death and resurrection of the glorious Christ, which
makes the Church one, holy, catholic and apostolic.
c) This idea, receiving concrete form also in “small, poor and scattered
communities,” presupposes and generates the theological life: love, hope and
charity, that is, the Christian existence which is expressed in the communion of
Christ’s faithful and their mission. The Eucharist remains the source and summit
of the Church’s life.[115]
The three fundamental characteristics of being a Christian are perceived in
these three signs. Indeed, in her visible link with her invisible Master,
through the Holy Spirit, the Church receives the Word of the Gospel, celebrates
the mystery of the Lord’s Supper and lives in charity through the same faith and
hope.
One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic
82.The particular Church has within herself the complex reality of the entire
Church as the People of God, in which the baptized participate through their
multi-form duties as a priestly, prophetic and kingly People, in the variety of
ordained ministries and charisms.
People bound together by the grace of the sacraments make up the Church in
Christ and the Spirit for the glory of the Father. At the same time, the Church
is also a pilgrim people on earth in the here and now, in history and in a
culture.
The particular Church must continually measure herself against the richness of
the universal Church which she realizes and makes present and operative. Though
a local, particular Church, she is patterned according to the eschatological
plan, namely, one in theology, ministry, sacraments, life, mission and communion
with Peter, holy in the lived richness of the Gospel and the mature, rich
experience of the gifts of the Holy Spirit, catholic in communion with all,
leading to the Church’s universality and her multiple richness which becomes
integrated in mutual sharing, and apostolic, through the tradition of faith and
sacramental life coming from the Apostles with the mandate to go forth in
mission to the ends of the earth, until the end of time.
One Church with a Human Face
83.The Church, the point of union of the divine and human, has her divine
foundation in the Trinity. However, as the field and God’s vineyard, she is also
planted on this earth. Since she is a Pilgrim People, she exists in a given
place and has a history, past, present and future. A particular Church possesses
certain traditions, at times even a liturgy, and conserves the moments of
salvation history, past and present, where she lives and makes plans for the
future.
This earthly aspect of the particular Church, lived in the here and now, needs
to be considered so as to become aware of her life and actions, her strengths
and weaknesses and her needs in light of evangelization and witness. As a
particular Church, then, she is aware of being a communion of the goods of
salvation (the holy things), a communion of saints in heaven and on earth,
namely, the true, great “communio sanctorum”.
Moreover, the Church is the communion of persons who have particular features;
each is unique; no individual characteristic is ever cancelled. It can be said
that people’s faces symbolize the real nature of people’s lives, men and women
of every age and condition.
It is possible to detect in this “Church of Faces” a real message, an urgent
desire to be present, to evangelize and to witness, an offer to dialogue and a
demand for genuineness. Each thought of the particular Church brings to mind
real faces, because they reflect the living image of Christ. Paul VI has
recalled that the “universal Church is in practice incarnate in the individual
Churches made up of one or another actual part of humanity, speaking such and
such a language, heirs of a cultural patrimony, of a vision of the world, of an
historical past, of a particular human substratum.”[116]
Indeed, each particular Church has specific features, human and geographic,
which determine a particular pastoral make-up. Some dioceses are concentrated in
big, modern cities; others extend over wide areas, making travel difficult for
Pastors.
Universal Church, Particular Church
84.So as to clarify some ideas and establish limits in the ecclesiology of
communion and Eucharistic ecclesiology, the document of the Congregation for the
Doctrine of the Faith Communionis Notio sets forth, from a genuinely Catholic
perspective, certain aspects concerning the full character and limits of the
particular Church.
For example, it cautioned presenting the communion of individual particular
Churches in such a way as to weaken the concept of the Church’s unity at the
visible and institutional level. The document states, “every particular Church
is a subject complete in itself and that the universal Church is the result of a
reciprocal recognition on the part of the particular Churches. This
ecclesiological unilateralism, which impoverishes not only the concept of the
universal Church but also that of the particular Church, betrays an insufficient
understanding of the concept of communion.”[117]
So as not to threaten communion in its dimension of universality, the same
document states: “...in the Church no one is a stranger. Each member of the
faithful, especially in the celebration of the Eucharist, is in his Church, in
the Church of Christ.”[118] Regardless of whether or not a person belongs to a
diocese, a parish or other particular community, each ought to feel “at home” in
the Church where the Eucharist is celebrated. Indeed, while belonging to a
particular Church where the one baptized lives or participates in the life of
Christ, that same person belongs in some fashion to all the particular
Churches.[119]
This mystical union of the particular Church and the universal Church is part of
the ministry of the Bishop.
85.In this portion of the People of God, a community, belonging to the one and
only Family of God, fully lives as a member of the Kingdom of Christ in which
all the riches of catholicity are integrated,[120] as witnessed in the Church at
Pentecost.[121]
The link with the Church of Jerusalem ensures that each Church has the necessary
bond with Peter, head of this Church of origin. The bond created by the
apostolic succession of Bishops gives the apostolic character to every local
Church. Communion in both the one and only Church and the individual Churches
supposes also the unity of the charism of Peter and, thus, the communion with
all other Churches throughout the world.
This plan of universal unity and particular individuality unfolds as a kind of
plan of the Trinity which seals the life of each particular Church in the
Catholic Church and serves as a model in their relations. Therefore, the social,
cultural, geographic and historic reality of each particular Church is not
without meaning. In the local Churches throughout the world, the universal
Church realizes the mystery of unity and reconciliation of everyone in Christ.
The Bishop is the sign and guarantor of this communion of all members of the
particular Church.
II. COMMUNION AND MISSION IN THE PARTICULAR CHURCH
Communion with the Presbyterate
86.The union of the presbyterate around its Bishop, as a result of the Sacrament
of Orders, is a necessary act of communion. According to ancient texts from the
Church’s Tradition, e.g., those of Saint Ignatius of Antioch, this communion is
an essential part of the particular Church. Between the Bishop and his priests,
there exists a “communio sacramentalis” of the priestly and hierarchical
priesthood and participation in the one priesthood of Christ, the one ordained
ecclesial ministry and the one apostolic mission, even if in differing degrees.
As a result, priests, as collaborators in the episcopal ministry, “gather the
family of God into one fellowship, animated by the spirit of unity.”[122]
Following the teaching of the Second Vatican Council, Pope John Paul II has
emphasized priests’ membership in a particular Church as the foundation of a
rich theology and spirituality: “The priest needs to be aware that his ‘being in
a particular Church’ constitutes by its very nature a significant element in his
living a Christian spirituality. In this sense, the priest finds precisely in
his belonging to and dedication to the particular Church a wealth of meaning,
criteria for discernment and action which shape both his pastoral mission and
his spiritual life.”[123]
All priests belonging to institutes of consecrated life and societies of
apostolic life are also part of the presbyterate of the diocese. They live their
proper charisms in the unity, communion and mission of the particular Church. In
the local Church, they contribute the richness of their gifts of spirituality
and their proper apostolic activity. Therefore, the particular Churches can be
enriched at the charismatic level “in the image” of the universal Church to
which certain institutions beyond the diocese correspond.[124]
The aspect of universality is inherent to the communion of all the Churches and
to the very nature of the priestly ministry which has a universal mission.[125]
87.The Second Vatican Council has used various images and terms to describe the
relationship of the Bishop to his priests. It has noted that priests are to see
the Bishop as their “father.”[126] Associated with this appeal to spiritual
fatherhood, however, is that of fellowship, friendship, necessary collaboration
and counsel. The grace of the Sacrament of Orders is extended to priests through
the ministry of the Bishop and is given to them so that they might collaborate
with the Bishop in the apostolic mission. This same grace associates priests to
various aspects of the episcopal ministry, particularly that of servant of the
Gospel of Jesus Christ for the hope of the world. In virtue of this sacramental
and hierarchical bond, priests, the Bishop’s necessary collaborators and
counselors, take upon themselves, according to their assignment, his duties and
concerns and make them present in individual communities.[127]
This sacramental/hierarchical relationship is concretely witnessed in the
Bishop’s constant, eager pursuit of real communion with the members of his
presbyterate. Based on this relationship, the interior and exterior attitudes of
the Bishop towards his priests have an importance and meaning. Such communion is
realized in the Presbyteral Council, the Bishop’s senate. Drawn from members of
the presbyterate, this Council offers assistance to the Bishop in governing his
diocese so that the well-being of all the faithful may be promoted in a more
effective way. The Bishop is to consult the Presbyteral Council and listen
willingly to its opinion.[128]
A Special Care for Priests
88.The Bishop is an example for the entire flock (cf. 1 Pt 5:3), but first and
foremost for his clergy for whom he is to be a model of prayer, of what it means
“to be Church,” of apostolic zeal, of dedication to pastoral activity and of
collaboration with all the faithful.
The Bishop, then, has the prime responsibility of sanctifying his priests and
providing for their ongoing formation. In light of this spiritual aspect, the
Bishop is to enlist the ministry of priests in the most congruous way possible.
He must make every effort to let his priests know and feel that they are not
alone or abandoned, but are members and part of “one, unique presbyterate.”
The Lineamenta responses mention that the Bishop needs to encourage priests to
have a deep spirituality. As a Father and Shepherd, the Bishop gives expression
to and fosters his relationships with priests, both personal and in a group, by
involving his priests in the Presbyteral Council or in other meetings of
pastoral and spiritual formation. Every kind of division between the Bishop and
his priests is a scandal to the faithful and, therefore, runs counter to the
proclamation of the Gospel. In fellowship, the exercise of authority becomes a
real service. Furthermore, the Bishop, in establishing deep relationships with
his priests, comes to know their talents and is thus able to entrust to each the
task for which he is most apt.
Deacons: Their Ministry and Collaboration
89.Transitional deacons, that is, those to be ordained to the priesthood, and
permanent deacons participate in the communion of the particular Church. Deacons
are at the service of the Bishop and the particular Church in their ministry to
the Word, the Eucharist and charity.[129]
Deacons, who are ordained not for the priesthood by for the ministry, are
closely joined to the Bishop and the presbyterate as a result of their rank in
Sacred Orders.[130] The Bishop is primarily responsible for discerning the
vocation of candidates to the diaconate[131] and their spiritual, theological
and pastoral formation. The Bishop is always the one who, bearing in mind
pastoral needs and the deacon’s family and profession, entrusts them with
ministerial tasks. In this regard, the Bishop is to ensure that deacons
participate organically in the life of the particular Church and that their
ongoing formation and particular spirituality are not neglected.[132]
The Seminary and Vocations Program
90.The special importance of priests and deacons in the particular Church gives
rise to the Bishop’s primary concern for a vocation program in general and a
program for vocations to the priesthood and diaconate, with major concentration
on the seminary, often called in the Church, the Bishop’s “pet project.” The
seminary, where future priests develop, mature and are formed, is a sign of hope
in the particular Church for the future.
The scarcity of vocations in a particular Church, which cannot do without the
priestly ministry in celebrating the Word and sacraments, especially the
Eucharist and Penance, requires a certain courage in recruiting priests. In this
regard, one of the more important tasks of the Bishop, indeed another instance
of bearing witness to hope, is his care of vocations and the proper interest in
the integral formation of future priests, according to the guidelines of the
magisterium. This work requires that the Bishop have a personal knowledge of
those who are to be ordained to the priesthood or the diaconate.
Today, the vocation to priesthood needs again to be promoted with confidence
with the assistance of families, parishes, consecrated persons and ecclesial
movements and communities. A particular Church without ordained priests risks
losing her identity. Considering the priestly ministry and its vital role in
teaching, leading and sanctifying in the sacraments, especially Penance, the
Anointing of the Sick and the Eucharist, it is impossible to conceive of a
Christian community without priests.
Other Ministers
91.Besides the presbyterate and the diaconate, the Church also exercises her
mission through additional instituted ministries and other tasks and offices.
Because of their great number, the Bishop needs to promote the various
ministries with which the Church is prepared to accomplish every good work. Such
ministries can be entrusted to both consecrated persons and the lay faithful, as
a result of the common vocation and mission inherent in the Sacraments of
Baptism and Confirmation and the particular talents which each joyously puts at
the service of the Gospel.
Consequently, the three-fold office of service in the Church is linked to the
three-fold dignity of the baptized in the People of God: from the prophetic
office flows evangelization and a catechesis nourished in listening to the Word;
from the priestly office comes the ministries connected with the liturgy as well
as the spiritual worship of daily life and prayer so as to make life a gift and
an act of adoration in spirit and in truth; from the kingly office proceeds all
ministries at the service of the Kingdom of God in the world, the structures of
society, the family and the workplace, which are expressed in all forms of
charity, social action and the sound and committed “charity in civil life.”
If communion is truly at work in everyone, the power of charity in the Trinity
will be manifested and fruitful, and the mutual act of communion will cause hope
to be renewed.
Solicitude for the Consecrated Life
92.The Church manifests herself as the Spouse of the Word in a privileged manner
through the consecrated life. The Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Vita
Consecrata refers to the consecrated life as the integrating element placed “in
the heart itself of the Church as the decisive element of her mission.”[133] In
the variety of its forms, the consecrated life with its characteristic,
permanent visibility, makes present in some visible manner the features of
Christ as chaste, poor and obedient, and shows their absolute, eschatological
value. The whole Church gives thanks to the Blessed Trinity for the gift of the
consecrated life which demonstrates how the life of the Church is not limited to
the hierarchical structure nor to sacred ministers and the lay faithful only.
Instead, the Church is also made up of a wider, richer and more articulated
charismatic-institutional structure, willed by Christ and brought together in
the consecrated life.[134]
The consecrated life comes from the Spirit and is part of his gift of life and
holiness to the Church. It necessarily has a link to the hierarchy through the
sacred ministry, particularly through that of the Roman Pontiff and the Bishops.
In the Apostolic Exhortation Vita Consecrata, Pope John Paul II recalled that
the various institutes of consecrated life and the societies of apostolic life
have a particular bond of communion with the Successor of Peter, a bond which
ensures their universal character and meaning beyond the diocese.[135]
The Directive Mutuae Relationes states that Christ, the Head, entrusts to the
Bishops in union with the Roman Pontiff, the task “of caring for religious
charisms, all the more so because the very indivisibility of their pastoral
ministry makes them responsible for perfecting the entire flock. In this way, by
fostering religious life and protecting it in conformity with its own definite
characteristics, Bishops fulfill a real pastoral duty. ”[136]
The Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Vita Consecrata makes frequent mention of
improving the relations between a given Episcopal Conference and the major
superiors and their conferences so as to foster the richness of charisms and a
collaboration for the well-being of the universal and particular Church.
Consecrated persons everywhere live their vocation for the universal Church in a
particular Church, where they express their Church membership and fulfill their
important tasks. In a special manner, by reason of the prophetic character
inherent to the consecrated life, they are the living proclamation of the Gospel
of hope and eloquent witnesses of the primacy of God in the Christian life and
of the power of his love in the fragility of the human condition.[137] This
gives rise to the importance of harmonious relations in diocesan pastoral
activity and collaboration between Bishops and consecrated persons.[138]
The Church is grateful to the great number of Bishops who throughout the ages
have esteemed the consecrated life as a special gift of the Spirit to the People
of God, many of whom have founded religious families which are still active
today in service to the universal Church and the particular Churches. The Bishop
who dedicates himself to assisting institutes remain faithful to their charism
is a reason for hope for these institutes, especially for those in
difficulty.[139]
A Committed and Responsible Laity
93.The Second Vatican Council and the Seventh Ordinary General Assembly of the
Synod of Bishops (1987), from which came Pope John Paul II’s Apostolic
Exhortation Christifideles Laici, have amply illustrated the vocation and
mission of the lay faithful in the Church and in the world.[140] The baptismal
dignity which makes them sharers in the priesthood of Christ and the special
gift of the Spirit confer on them a unique place in the Body of the Church and
call them to participate, in their own way, in the redeeming mission which the
Church, in response to Christ’s mandate, accomplishes until the close of the
age.
The laity exercise their proper Christian responsibility in various areas
associated with life, the family, society, politics, the professional world,
economy, culture, science, the arts, international relations and the mass-media.
In their multi-form activities, the laity unite their personal talents and their
acquired competence in making a clear testimony of their faith in Jesus Christ.
Engaged in the temporal things of this world, the laity are called to take
theological hope into account (cf. 1 Pt 3:15) and be concerned to work on this
earth precisely because they are impelled by the expectation of a “new
earth.”[141] They are in a position to exercise a great influence on culture by
widening its outlook and its horizons of hope. In this way, they also render a
necessary service to both the Gospel and culture, which the times have so
persistently attempted to keep apart. The lay faithful have a particular
responsibility in the field of communications, which exerts much influence on
people’s mentality, especially with regard to the proper diffusion of ethical
values.
The Lineamenta responses recommend that Bishops, so as to avoid improperly
treating emerging problems, create “fora” where the laity can speak according to
their proper charism of lay secularity and competency, and thus bridge the gap
between the Gospel and contemporary society.
94.Although the laity, by vocation, have predominantly secular concerns, they
nonetheless belong to the one ecclesial community of which they form a major
part. After the Second Vatican Council, new forms of responsible participation
by lay women and men happily developed in the life of individual, diocesan
communities and parishes. The laity are now members of various pastoral
councils; they exercise a growing role in various services, such as the
animation of the liturgy or catechesis; and they are engaged in the teaching of
Catholic religion in schools, etc.
A certain number of lay people also dedicate themselves to such tasks in an
extended and oftentimes permanent commitment. This collaboration of the lay
faithful is certainly valuable in the demands of the “new evangelization,”
particularly in places with an insufficient number of ordained ministers.
The need for an adequate formation program should also be included in treating
the subject of the lay faithful. Obviously, the Bishop is to be attentive in
offering assistance, particularly on the spiritual level, to those who
collaborate closely in the Church’s mission.
Formation programs for the laity ought to give particular emphasis to the social
doctrine of the Church so that the laity might be informed and encouraged in
their work as they respond to the urgent demands of justice and the common good.
In this regard, they ought to make a decisive contribution through works and
services which make an appeal to society. In the formation of the laity, the
promotion of diocesan centres for social and civil formation is necessary as an
indispensable pastoral instrument.
The responses to the Lineamenta consistently reveal that an adult laity, which
is well-formed not only in doctrine but also in a sense of the Church, is
essential for evangelization. Without such a laity, there is the danger that the
evangelizing mission of the Church will end in certain areas, especially where
there is a severe lack of priests and the laity exercise the role of assistant
ministers. In many territories, catechists have great relevance. Therefore, a
sound doctrinal, pastoral and spiritual formation is needed not only for
catechists but also for other pastoral workers who are capable of collaborating
in dioceses and parishes in authentic ecclesial activities as well as in various
fields in which the Gospel ought to become the leaven in society as the sign of
transformation and hope. This requires Bishops and priests to have a major trust
in the laity, who oftentimes do not feel appreciated as mature Christians and
want to feel more like participants in Church life and diocesan projects,
especially in evangelization.
In Service to the Family
95.Equally important is the formation of the young to the married life and
family by responding to their hopes and expectations and educating them towards
a deep, authentic love in light of God’s plan for marriage and the family. The
effective means to combat the crisis of instability and infidelity in the
marriage covenant are pastoral and spirituality programs for the family, care of
couples in difficulty, the sharing of experiences by mature couples and
formation for the Sacrament of Marriage through marriage preparation programs.
The closeness of the Bishop to married couples and their children, especially in
diocesan days for the family, provides for mutual encouragement.
Youth: A Pastoral Priority for the Future
96.The Bishop has a special care for young people, who are the future of the
Church and humanity. A minister of hope cannot do any better than construct the
future with those to whom the future has been entrusted. As “sentinels of the
night,” the young wait for the dawn of a new world, ready to commit themselves
to the Church’s life and activity, if authentic responsibilities are proposed to
them as well as a truly Christian formation. Since young people are evangelizers
to persons their own age, they prompt the Bishop to look for ways to spur the
interior renewal of parishes, especially in those cases where the young do not
frequent Church.
The example of Pope John Paul II, who has demonstrated at World Youth Days his
belief in the future and forged a path of hope, is able to sustain the Church’s
Bishops as they set forth an authentic, pastoral, Christ-centred program for
youth. The Bishop’s great love for the spiritual well-being of the young people
of the third millennium will motivate him to educate them to transmit the Gospel
to future generations.
Parishes
97.The life of the particular Church revolves around parishes, the fabric of
Christianity. The Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Christifideles Laici,
clearly drawing from the theology and language of Lumen Gentium, describes the
parish community as the presence of the particular Church in a given place.
Consequently, it can be said that the “mystery” of the Church is present and at
work in the parish, even if they lack people and means or are almost completely
absorbed by the buildings of chaotic, crowded, modern sections of cities or are
scattered among the mountains and valleys or in vast expanses of various
regions.[142]
The parish, then, is seen as the family of God, a fellowship afire with the
Spirit,[143] and a familial, welcoming home.[144] It is the community of the
faithful,[145] which can truly be called a Eucharistic community: a community of
faith where Christ’s faithful dwell as those gifted with charisms and engaged in
ministerial services and where the pastor, priests and deacons fulfill their
ministry. Consequently, the parish, in communion with the Bishop, expresses the
organic and hierarchical unity with the entire particular Church.
The laity are the human agents in evangelization, namely in their being
evangelized and their being evangelizers. They are the meeting point of the
Church and the world, between the assembly meeting in unity and the people going
forth in mission.
Inside parish communities, women and men religious, members of secular
institutes and societies of the apostolic life, diverse associations of the
faithful as well as ecclesial movements need to be present and gathered for
special occasions, all the while respecting the proper vocation and charism of
each. All represent, by their life in common, the Church who is united in
prayer, work and the sharing of the basic aspects of daily life.
As a result, families become the domestic Church, where Christ is made present.
Thus, the Church can become, in her traditional and truly parish way–as Blessed
Pope John XXIII used to say–the “village fountain,” an overflowing spring to
quench one’s thirst for God and to provide the living water of the Gospel of
Christ.[146]
98.The Bishop’s task is to coordinate pastoral activity and cause unity to grow
in the particular Churches by fostering the coordination of parishes through
vicars forane, deaneries, prefectures or other designations, according to the
diverse forms of pastoral work within a diocese. Oftentimes, this is a matter of
revising structures so that they might better respond to the goals of individual
particular Churches.
Structures of communion and mission promote fellowship among priests,
discernment and planning through periodic meetings under competent guidance.
Such action can offer assistance where substitutes and help in the ministry are
needed. It can also provide support to brother-priests who are ill or in
difficulty. In a similar way, initiatives for evangelization, catechesis,
formation and witness on an inter-parish level can also be done among the
faithful in the same territory.[147]
Ecclesial Movements and New Communities
99.The Bishop is to give attention to ecclesial movements and other new
realities which arise in the particular Church as a result of bringing the
Gospel to life. Their institutional and charismatic aspects–both essential in
God’s plan for the Church–converge and reenforce each other in the particular
Church. In an experience of true communion, these gifts, given by God for the
common good, are never lacking; they are not decreased in the celebration of
agape and the Eucharist; nor are they bestowed for the benefit of the group
only. Quite the contrary, these movements show their humble, reasoned and
necessary measure by their being integrated among the other gifts of the Spirit.
The diverse charisms–religious, lay and missionary–make the local Church open to
the dimension of universality. They are expressed in service and a commitment to
the apostolate as willed by their founders.
The responses to the Lineamenta stress that many ecclesial movements are truly
constructive at the universal, diocesan and parochial level; that some,
remaining on the periphery of parish and diocesan life, are not beneficial to
the growth of the local Church; and that others, because of certain pretenses,
risk undermining the communion of the entire particular Church.
Consequently, various responses request that attention be given at the synod to
discussing the theological and juridic statutes of such movements within the
particular Church and to setting down precise norms governing their relations
with the Bishop.
Pastors also need to make needed discernment concerning the new communities
which have not yet received ecclesial approval. In their regard, the Bishop
ought to evaluate the persons and spirituality of these new communities and, if
needs be, require a trial period.
A more in-depth concern is required of the Bishop when examining priestly
vocations within these groups. Candidates need a sound formation under the
guidance of the Bishop who is responsible for discerning whether to ordain the
candidate to the priestly ministry and whether to assign him to an apostolic
task within the diocese.[148]
In faithfulness to the Spirit, the various charisms are to be integrated in the
Church’s communion and mission so as to avoid the danger of isolation and to
favour, for the sake of the good of the Church, generosity in self-giving,
fellowship and effectiveness in mission.
III. THE EPISCOPAL MINISTRY IN SERVICE TO THE GOSPEL
100.The three-fold office of teaching, sanctifying and governing constitutes a
service to the Gospel of Christ for the hope of the world. The Bishop proclaims
the Gospel of Hope in word; he celebrates it in the liturgy; he lives and
spreads it through his pastoral service.
It is not a matter of three different kinds of hope but a single one, proclaimed
and received through faith, celebrated in the depths of the paschal mystery
which is the Eucharist, and lived so that it inspires and influences every
aspect of the personal and social life of believers.
However, in considering the oneness of hope, the intention of the Second Vatican
Council needs to be adopted when, in treating the tria munera of the Bishop and
priests, it prefers that of teaching to the other two. In this regard, the
Council took up the succession of ideas in the Risen Saviour’s words addressed
to his disciples: “All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. Go
therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them...teaching them to
observe all that I have commanded you” (Mt 28:18-20). In the priority given to
the episcopal task of proclaiming the Gospel, characteristic of the ecclesiology
of the Second Vatican Council, each Bishop can re-discover the meaning of the
spiritual paternity exalted by the Apostle Paul with the words: “For though you
have countless guides in Christ, you do not have many fathers. For I became your
father in Christ Jesus through the Gospel” (1 Cor 4:15).
1. The Ministry of the Word
Proclaiming the Gospel of Hope
101.The role which characterizes the Bishop more than all others and which, in a
certain sense, summarizes his entire ministry is, as the Council taught, that of
Vicar and Ambassador of Christ in the particular Church entrusted to him.[149]
The Bishop fulfills his sacramental role as the living sign of Jesus Christ
through preaching the Gospel. As minister of the Word of God who works through
the Spirit and through the charism of episcopal service, the Bishop manifests
Christ to the world, makes him present in the community and communicates him
effectively to those who make room for him in their lives.
Proclaiming the Gospel of Hope is the basic task of the episcopal ministry.
Preaching the Gospel, then, surpasses all the Bishop’s duties, since Bishops are
“the preachers of faith...authentic teachers, that is, teachers endowed with the
authority of Christ, who preach to the people committed to them the faith they
must believe and put into practice.”[150] Therefore, all the activities of the
Bishop ought to be geared to the proclamation of the Gospel, “the power of God
for everyone who has faith” (Rm 1:16) and to be directed to helping the People
of God render the obedience of faith (cf. Rm 1:5) to the Word of God and
integrally to embrace the teaching of Christ.
The Center of Proclamation
102.The object of the magisterium of the Bishop is expressed by the Second
Vatican Council as the faith to be believed and practiced in life.[151] Since
the living center of the proclamation is Christ, namely, the crucified and risen
Christ, the Bishop is to proclaim: Christ, the one and only Saviour of humanity,
the same yesterday today and for ever (cf. Heb 13:8), the center of history and
every moment of life for the faithful.
All other truths of the faith revolve around this central truth of the mystery
of Christ. The hope of every individual rests on this one truth. Christ is the
light for every person. Whoever is born again in Christ receives the first
fruits of the Spirit who enables the believer to fulfill the new law of
love.[152]
103.The task of preaching and safeguarding the deposit of faith implies the duty
to defend the Word of God from everything which might compromise its purity and
integrity, while acknowledging the just freedom to further investigate the
faith.[153] Indeed, through apostolic succession, the Bishop has received,
according to the Father’s will, the sure charism of the truth which must be
transmitted.[154]
No Bishop can shrink from this duty, even if it should result in sacrifice or
being misunderstood. Like the Apostle Paul, the Bishop is conscious of being
sent to proclaim the Gospel “not with eloquent wisdom, lest the cross of Christ
be emptied of its power” (1 Cor 1:17); like Paul, the Bishop also proclaims the
“word of the Cross” (1 Cor 1:18), not for human consensus but as divine
revelation.
The Teaching of the Faith and Catechesis
104.As Master-Teacher of the faith, the Bishop also instructs others in the
faith, according to the Word of God and the magisterium of the Church. The work
of catechesis merits the full attention of the Bishop in virtue of his role as
Shepherd and Teacher as well as “Catechist par excellence.”
The Bishop exercises his service to the Word of God in a variety of ways and
forms. The Directory Ecclesiae Imago makes mention of a certain form of
preaching, directed towards an already evangelized community, namely, the
Homily, which is pre-eminent among all others, because of its liturgical context
and its connection with the proclamation of the Word through readings from
Sacred Scripture. The Bishop exercises another form of proclamation through his
Pastoral Letters.[155]
Furthermore, the proper use of the diocesan, inter-diocesan and national means
of communication can greatly assist the diffusion of the documents of the
magisterium, pastoral programs and ecclesial events.
The Entire Church Committed to Catechesis
105.The episcopal charism of teaching is uniquely the responsibility of each
Bishop and cannot be delegated in any way. Nevertheless, the responses to the
Lineamenta give ample witness that the Bishop does not live in isolation within
the Church. Every Bishop fulfills his pastoral service in a particular Church
where he has priests as his primary collaborators, who, under his authority, are
intimately united to his ministry. Deacons collaborate with the Bishop as well.
According to the make-up of the Church, men and women religious and a growing
number of the lay faithful also render valuable assistance to the Bishop in
proclaiming and living the Word of God.
The Bishops ensure that the authentic Catholic faith is transmitted to parents
so that they, in turn, can pass it on to their children. Teachers and educators
at all levels also assist in this process. The laity bear witness to that purity
of faith which Bishops take pains to maintain. It is important that each Bishop
endeavour to provide the laity with the means for a suitable formation through
centres set up for this purpose.
Dialogue and Collaboration with Theologians and the Faithful
106. Particularly useful for the purposes of proclamation is dialogue and
collaboration with theologians, who apply themselves to the study of the
unfathomable riches of the mystery of Christ. Both the magisterium of Pastors
and the work of theologians, though having different roles, rely on the one and
only Word of God and have the same goal of conserving the People of God in
truth. This is why Bishops have the task of offering encouragement to
theologians and the support which might help them to conduct their work in
faithfulness to Divine Tradition and due regard for the necessities of the
historical situation.[156]
Through dialogue with his faithful, the Bishop comes to know how to recognize
and appreciate their faith, to strengthen it, to free it from anything
superficial and to give it proper doctrinal content. To accomplish this task as
well as to assist in formulating local catechisms which take into consideration
various situations and cultures, the Catechism of the Catholic Church serves as
a point of reference. In this way, the unity of the faith and adherence to
Catholic doctrine will be carefully maintained.[157]
The Witness of Truth
107. Called to proclaim salvation in Jesus Christ, the Bishop in his preaching
is a sign of certainty of the faith for the People of God. If he, like the
Church, does not always have at hand the solution to people’s problems,
nevertheless, he is the minister of the splendor of the one truth which is
capable of illuminating the path to follow.[158] Even though he does not possess
specialized knowledge in promoting the temporal order, the Bishop, in exercising
his teaching office and educating in the faith the persons and communities
entrusted to him, prepares the faithful, nonetheless, through solutions which
the Bishops have the responsibility to offer in keeping with their respective
abilities.
The Lineamenta responses repeatedly allude to a secularistic mentality in a
major part of society, as well as an exaggerated emphasis on freedom of thought
and a relativistic culture which brings people to consider the intervention of
the Bishop, or even the Pope, especially in sexual morality and the family, as
mere opinion without any impact on life. Where this situation poses a
fundamental challenge, it also provides another area where the Bishop can
proclaim hope.
108.Furthermore, the Bishop, while respecting the autonomy of those who are
competent in secular matters, cannot deny the prophetic character of his message
as a bearer of hope, even if he knows that he will not be accepted. This occurs
especially when he courageously denounces, not only in word but with every
effective means, such subjects as war, injustice and what is destructive to the
dignity of the person.
In making present in the world the power of the Word which saves, the Bishop
performs for people a great act of pastoral charity and also offers them the
primary reason to hope.
Tasks for the Future
109.Some Lineamenta responses make the precise request to extend and re-consider
the tasks of the magisterium of Bishops.
Circumstances seem to dictate a broadening of diocesan and inter-diocesan
initiatives such as the creation of Catholic universities which can have an
effect in social life and assist in the formation of lay people who are emerging
in various fields of science and technology in service to humanity and truth. In
this regard, particular efforts are needed in the pastoral activity on
university campuses, in keeping with the directives of the Holy See.
As a commitment in the educational field, priests and lay people need to work to
establish suitable institutions for the promotion and defense of Catholic
schools. Governments are asked to recognize Catholic schools and the rights of
parents to an adequate education for their children and their free choice of
cultural and religious values to be taught them.
The promotion of the means of social communication in a pluralistic society
requires that communicators receive an adequate formation through various
diocesan and inter-diocesan initiatives.
Culture and Inculturation
110.The Bishop’s proclamation of the Gospel in the area of culture requires
promoting the faith in fields which stand in most need of the Gospel’s message.
Preference needs to be given to dialogue with lay cultural institutions in
meetings between competent persons during which the Church can show herself as
the friend of everything which is authentically human.
Useful in this dialogue is due regard for the cultural, artistic and historical
patrimony of dioceses. Indeed, the cultural, historical richness of dioceses
with their archives, libraries and works of art deserve particular attention as
a witness in the field of culture. The initiatives in favour of museums and
expositions as well as the fitting conservation, cataloguing and exposition of
treasures from the artistic and literary traditions can be instruments for
evangelization and the contemplation of beauty, not to mention a witness to the
Church’s particular concern for human, geographic and cultural history.[159]
According to the directives of the Holy See and in collaboration with the
Episcopal Conference, the Bishop’s ministry includes bringing the faith and
Christian life to various cultures as set forth on the occasion of the
assemblies of the Synod of Bishops, particularly in the areas of liturgy,
priestly formation and the consecrated life.[160]
2. The Ministry of Sanctification
111.The proclamation of the Word of God serves as the basis for gathering the
People of God in Ekklesìa, namely, into a worshiping assembly. This
proclamation, however, reaches its fullness in the Sacrament of the Eucharist.
Indeed, Word and Sacrament are one and inseparable, two aspects in one single
salvific work. Both make present and operative all salvation’s effects
accomplished by Christ. Christ himself, the Word-Made-Flesh, is the very source
of the intimate bond which joins Word and Sacrament. Where this is true for all
the sacraments, it takes place in a particularly excellent way in the Holy
Eucharist, which is the source and summit of all evangelization.[161]
On behalf of this unity of Word and Sacrament, the Bishops, Successors of the
Apostles who were sent forth by the Risen Lord to teach and baptize all nations
(cf. Mt 28:19), are marked by the fullness of the Sacrament of Orders, and
receive, in addition to their mission as Heralds of the Gospel, that of being
“stewards of the grace of the Supreme Priesthood.”[162] The ministry of
proclaiming the Gospel “is ordered to the service of grace in the Church’s
sacraments. As minister of grace, the Bishop exercises in the Sacraments the
munus sanctificandi which is the aim of the munus docendi he fulfils among the
People of God entrusted to him.”[163]
The ministry of sanctification is intimately bound to the celebration of
salvation in Christ, which, in the context of hope, encourages the faithful to
look to the fulfilment of God’s promises while in pilgrimage through this world
towards that city which has no comparison.
The Bishop as Priest and Liturgist in his Cathedral
112.The role of sanctifying is inherent to the mission of the Bishop. Indeed, in
his particular Church, the Bishop is the principal dispenser of the mysteries of
God, primarily of the Eucharist. In presiding over these Sacred Mysteries, he
appears to his people primarily as the man of the new and eternal worship of
God, instituted by Jesus Christ through the sacrifice of his Cross. He also
regulates the administration of Baptism, through which the faithful participate
in the royal priesthood of Christ. He is the ordinary minister of Confirmation,
the dispenser of Holy Orders and moderator of the penitential discipline.[164]
The Bishop is the liturgist of the particular Church, principally in presiding
over the Eucharistic gathering.[165]
The Eucharist, where the Church experiences the supreme moment of her life, is
also the place where the munus sanctificandi, exercised by the Bishop in the
Person of Christ, high and Eternal Priest, achieves its supreme moment. The
Second Vatican Council aptly states: “Therefore all should hold in very high
esteem the liturgical life of the diocese which centers around the Bishop,
especially in his cathedral church. Let them be persuaded that the Church
reveals herself most clearly when a full complement of God’s holy people, united
in prayer and in a common liturgical service (especially the Eucharist),
exercise a thorough and active participation at the very altar where the Bishop
presides in the company of his priests and other assistants.”[166]
The privileged place of episcopal celebrations is the cathedral, where the chair
of the Bishop is located and where he teaches his people. It is the
Mother-Church and Center of the Diocese, a sign of the continuity of its history
and of its unity. The Caeremoniale Episcoporum dedicates an entire chapter to
the subject, under the heading: “The Cathedral Church.”[167]
The Cathedral is the site of the most solemn celebrations of the liturgical
year; particularly noteworthy are those for the consecration of chrism and
sacred ordinations. The Cathedral is a sign of the Church of Christ, of her
unity in the mystical body, of the assembly of the baptized and of the heavenly
Jerusalem. Therefore, it ought to be an example for the parish churches of the
diocese in the ordering of sacred space, in decoration and in the manner in
which the liturgy is celebrated according to the prescribed rubrics.[168]
The image of the Bishop-Celebrant expresses and displays its interior truth in
the appointments associated with the liturgy: the Bishop’s chair, from where he
presides over the assembly and guides prayer;[169] the altar, symbol of the Body
of Christ and table of the Lord where the Eucharist is celebrated;[170] the
presbyterium, the place for the Bishop, priests, deacons and other
ministers;[171] the ambo where the Gospel is proclaimed and the Word preached,
unless the Bishop prefers to do it from his chair;[172] and the baptistry where
baptisms are administered during the Easter Vigil.[173]
The Eucharist at the Center of the Particular Church
113.One of the more pre-eminent duties of the Bishop is to provide that, in the
community of the particular Church, the faithful have the possibility of
approaching the table of the Lord, above all on Sundays, the day on which both
the Church celebrates the paschal mystery and the faithful, in a spirit of joy
and rest from work, give thanks to God by whose great mercy regenerates us anew
“to a living hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead” (1 Pt
1:3).[174]
In many parts of the Church, because of the scarcity of priests or other grave
reasons, it is becoming more difficult to provide for celebrations of the
Eucharist. This situation makes all the more important the Bishop’s duty to be
the steward of the grace. While always being mindful of discerning the existence
of actual need and serious circumstances, the Bishop endeavours to distribute
wisely the members of his presbyterate in such a way that, even in such
emergencies, the community of the faithful not be long deprived of the
Eucharist. This is also true in reference to the faithful who, because of
sickness, old age or other reasonable motives, can receive the Eucharist only in
their homes or in places where they reside.
114.The Liturgy is the highest form of praise of the Blessed Trinity. In the
Liturgy, above all in the celebration of the Sacraments, the People of God,
locally gathered together, expresses and realizes its sacred and organic
structure as the priestly community.[175] Exercising the munus sanctificandi,
the Bishop labors so that the entire particular Church become a praying
community, a community of the faithful persevering and of one accord in prayer
(cf. Acts 1:14).
Imbued with the Spirit and the power of the Liturgy, beginning first with
himself together with his presbyterate, the Bishop oversees in his diocese the
promotion and development of an intensive educational program where the faithful
may come to know the rich content of the Liturgy, celebrated according to the
approved texts and whose mysteries are lived, above all, in the spiritual order.
As the one responsible for divine worship in the particular Church, the Bishop
guides and safeguards the liturgical life of the diocese. He does this in union
with the Bishops of the Episcopal Conference to which he belongs and in
faithfulness to the one faith. He also concerns himself with sustaining its
dynamic aspect so that, corresponding to the needs of the times and locality,
the Liturgy might be grounded in cultures. The Bishop does this by taking into
account what has an unchanging character in the Liturgy, because it is divinely
instituted, and what instead is possible to change.[176]
Attention to Prayer and Popular Piety
115.Prayer, in its various forms, is an act which expresses the Church’s hope.
The Church’s every prayer as Bride, bearing the seal of perfect union to her
Spouse, Christ, is summed up in the invocation of the Spirit who inspires her:
“Come!” (Rev 22:17).[177] The Spirit pronounces this prayer with and in the
Church. This prayer is one of eschatological hope, a hope which is definitively
fulfilled in God, a hope of the Kingdom to come, realized through participation
in the life of the Trinity. The Holy Spirit, given to the Apostles as consoler,
is the guardian and animator of this hope in the heart of the Church. In the
third millennium since Christ’s birth, as “the Spirit and the bride say to the
Lord Jesus ‘Come!’,”[178] their prayer is filled as always with an
eschatological significance.
Conscious of this, the Bishop has the duty each day to communicate to the
faithful the fullness of life in Christ through his personal witness in word,
prayer and the sacraments.
In such a context, the Bishop also gives attention to various forms of popular
Christian piety and to their relation to liturgical life. In so far as they
express the religious mentality of humankind, this popular piety cannot be
overlooked or treated with indifference or undervalued–as Pope Paul VI
writes–because of their rich value.[179] However, they are always in need of
evangelization so that the faith which they express always becomes more mature.
A genuine liturgical pastoral program, having a biblical basis, will know how to
draw from the riches of popular piety, purify them and direct them towards the
liturgy as the offering of the people.[180]
Some Special Questions
116.The Lineamenta responses refer to certain tasks associated with the
liturgical ministry of the Bishop which deserve a brief treatment.
First of all, the Bishop is the one primarily responsible in his Church for the
celebration of Christian initiation and for its discipline. In a special way, he
is the promoter, the vigilant guardian and minister of the rites of the
Christian initiation of adults. Consequently, it is appropriate that he preside
over the more significant celebrations of the catechumenate, especially in the
proximate preparation for Baptism and in the Christian initiation of adults at
the Easter Vigil.
To prompt a more genuine and profound liturgical promotion, the Bishop should
frequently preside, also on the occasion of episcopal visitations, over the
Liturgy of the Word or the Liturgy of the Hours, as foreseen in the Caeremoniale
Episcoporum.[181] In this way, he can appear in his characteristic role as
Teacher, who celebrates the Word of salvation, and as Priest, who prays and
intercedes for his people.
3. The Exercise of the Ministry of Leading
The Service of Leading
117. The ministerial role of the Bishop is completed in the office of guiding
the portion of the People of God entrusted to him. Church Tradition has always
associated this work with two figures taken from the Gospels, which Jesus
applies to himself, namely, Shepherd and Servant. The Council uses the following
words to describe the Bishop’s office of governing the faithful: “(they) govern
the particular Churches entrusted to them as the vicars and ambassadors of
Christ. This they do by their counsel, exhortations, and example, as well,
indeed, as by their authority and sacred power. This power they use only for the
edification of their flock in truth and holiness, remembering that he who is
greater should become as the lesser and he who is the more distinguished, as the
servant (cf. Lk 22:26-27).”[182]
Pope John Paul II explains that “it is necessary to insist on the concept of
service, which applies to every ecclesiastical ministry, beginning with that of
Bishops. Indeed, the Episcopate is more a service than an honour. And if it is
also an honor, it is so when the Bishop, a Successor of the Apostles, serves in
a spirit of Gospel humility following the example of the Son of Man...It is in
the light of this service as the Good Shepherd that the authority which the
Bishop possesses in proprio must be understood, although it is always subject to
that of the Supreme Pontiff.”[183] With good reason, then, The Code of Canon Law
indicates that such an office is a munus pastoris and attributes to it the
characteristic of pastoral solicitude.[184]
Exercise of Authentic Pastoral Charity
118.Pastoral charity is the virtue, characteristic of the Bishop, with which he
imitates Christ, the “Good” Shepherd, to the point of giving his life. This is
accomplished not only in acts of service but even more in the gift of self,
which manifests the love of Christ for his flock.
One of the forms taken by pastoral charity is compassion, in imitation of
Christ, the High Priest, who is able to sympathize with human weakness, since he
himself has been tempted in all things as we are, yet without sin (cf. Heb
4:15). Such compassion, which the Bishop exemplifies and lives as a sign of the
compassion of Christ, cannot, however, be separated from the truth of Christ.
Indeed, another expression of pastoral charity is the responsibility, before God
and the Church, of announcing the truth “in season and out of season” (2 Tim
4:2).
Pastoral charity makes the Bishop eager to serve the common good of his diocese,
which is ordained to the good of the whole Church and takes precedence over the
good of particular communities of a diocese. In this regard, the Directory
Ecclesiae Imago sets forth the basic principles of unity, responsible
collaboration and coordination.[185]
As a result of pastoral charity, which is the interior unifying principle of all
ministerial activity, “the essential and permanent demand for unity between the
priest’s interior life and all his external actions and the obligations of the
ministry can be properly fulfilled, a demand particularly urgent in a
socio-cultural and ecclesial context strongly marked by complexity,
fragmentation and dispersion.”[186] Pastoral charity, then, ought to determine
the Bishop’s manner of thinking and acting as well as his relations with people.
In governing the diocese, the Bishop also has to be concerned that the faithful
see the value of canon law in the Church, which has as its objective the
well-being of persons and the ecclesial community.[187]
A Pastoral Style Authenticated by Life
119.Pastoral charity demands as a consequence a certain life style and conduct,
in imitation of the poor and humble Christ, which permits the Bishop to be
responsive to all members of the flock, from the greatest to the least, sharing
their joys and sorrows not only in his thoughts and prayers but also in
personally being with them. In this way, through his presence and ministry, the
Bishop can approach all without self-consciousness and they can approach him in
the same manner, so as to experience the love of God for humanity.[188]
The responses to the Lineamenta from the Episcopal Conferences refer to some
perceptions of the Bishop by people in various places and society. Sometimes,
people see the Bishop as “self-important” or “authoritarian”, an attitude which
gives the Bishop an improper position in the Church and the world; at other
times, the Bishop is seen as “shepherd in the midst of his flock”, “father in
the faith”, so that priests, religious and laity are not simply “assistants” of
the Bishop but his “collaborators”.
A deepening of the reality of communio can lead people to view the Bishop as an
authentic “servant of the servants of God”, namely, the first among the servants
of God. In fact, the Bishop is to be faithful to his mission, remembering that
his personal responsibility as Shepherd is shared by the lay faithful in virtue
of their Baptism, by those in sacred orders and by those specially consecrated
through the evangelical counsels, each in his own way.
120.Many mention that this communio is sometimes hindered on account of the
vastness of the diocese and the Bishop’s many duties.
Other responses refer to possible dangers in the Bishop’s governing from certain
elements unbecoming of a true, pastoral activity based on the Gospel. At times,
they lead to the risk of people’s comparing the Bishop to celebrities in
society. The Bishop’s alignment with civil authorities can also threaten his
autonomy and, consequently, the people’s conception of him.
Furthermore, people in societies which nurture ideas contrary to authority,
mistakenly interpret the Bishop’s role in light of the principle of subsidiarity
and the juridic institution of consultation. This occurs oftentimes as a result
of perceiving authority only as “power.”
Such situations can be overcome, if Bishops exercise their role in a fatherly
fashion, presenting themselves as Successors of the Apostles not only from the
point of view of the authority they exercise, but in the manner in which they
live the Gospel, namely, in coherency to what they announce, in the sacrifices
they make in the apostolate, in the loving and merciful care with which they
attend to the faithful, especially the poor, the needy and the suffering.
In this way, they will be the living sign of Christ in the midst of the People
of God and their pastoral governing will truly be a proclamation of the Gospel
of Hope. Certain externals to the office, such as titles of honor and episcopal
dress, ought not to detract from the episcopal ministry of teaching in word and
deed.
Through a simple and modest life, the Bishop, who is to be the living sign of
Christ who as Lord and Master washed the feet of his disciples, ought to reflect
the features of Jesus as recorded in the Gospel and his character as a true “Man
of God” (cf. 2 Tim 3:17).
Pastoral Visitation
121.Traditionally, the Church has given specific form to the ministry which the
Bishop exercises in his particular Church. Two forms deserve particular mention:
the first involves personal contacts; the second, a synodal gathering.
Pastoral visitations are not simply a juridic institution prescribed for the
Bishop by ecclesiastic discipline nor are they a tool of inquiry.[189] In
visiting parishes, the Bishop permits the people to see him as the visible
principal and foundation of unity in his particular Church. The Bishop’s
pastoral visit “is an apostolic work, a grace-laden event, resembling that
unique and altogether marvelous visitation of the ‘Chief Shepherd’ (1 Pt 5:4),
the Guardian of Souls (1 Pt 2:25), Christ Jesus, who visited and redeemed his
people (Lk 1:68).”[190] Furthermore, a diocese, before being a territory of
ecclesiastical jurisdiction, is a portion of the People of God entrusted to the
pastoral care of a Bishop. Thus, the Directory Ecclesiae Imago appropriately
states that people are the priority in pastoral visitations. Therefore, to
better dedicate himself to the people, the Bishop ought to delegate to others
the treatment of matters which are more administrative in character.
Pastoral visitations, which are prepared and well-planned, are propitious
occasions for both the Bishop and people to come to a knowledge of each other.
A privileged moment in parishes is the Bishop’s meeting with the parish priest
and the other priests. Pastoral visits provide occasions for exercising the
ministry of preaching and catechesis, dialogue and direct contact with the
problems of the people, for the celebration of communion in the Eucharist and
the sacraments, and for sharing prayer and popular devotions. In these
circumstances, certain people call for the particular attention of the Bishop,
for example, the young, children, the sick, the poor, the marginalized, and the
unchurched.
Experience suggests that the Bishop have additional meetings with others who
make-up the diocese, such as, diocesan assemblies of pastoral planning and
evaluation, visits at priestly or diaconal ordination and patronal feasts, or,
lastly, days of special observance by the clergy, religious or families.
The Diocesan Synod
122.The celebration of the Diocesan Synod, whose nature and norms are set forth
in The Code of Canon Law,[191] undoubtedly has a prominent place among the
pastoral duties of the Bishop. Indeed. Church discipline lists the Synod first
among the organs through which the life of a particular Church proceeds and
develops. Its structure–as that of other so-called organs of
“participation”–corresponds to the basic requirements of ecclesiology and
expresses certain theological realities, e.g., the necessary cooperation among
priests and the Bishop, the participation of all the baptized in the prophetic
office of Christ, the duty of Pastors to acknowledge and foster the dignity of
the lay faithful and to avail themselves freely of their prudent counsel.[192]
By its nature, the Diocesan Synod can be viewed in the context of the
co-responsibility of all members in the diocese, gathered around their Bishop
for the well-being of the diocese. In its composition, as provided in present
canonical discipline, the Synod is the choice expression of the organic
communion of the particular Church. The Diocesan Synod ought to be well prepared
and be convoked with well-defined objectives.[193] At its sessions, the Bishop,
who is ultimately responsible for the decisions made,[194] listens to what the
Spirit is saying to the particular Church in such a manner that everyone remains
sound in the faith, united in communion, open to a sense of mission, disposed to
the spiritual needs of the world and full of hope before its challenges.
A Governing Imbued with a Spirit of Communion
123.Because of his pastoral office, the Bishop is the minister of charity in his
particular Church, building her up through the Word and the Eucharist. Already
in apostolic times, the Twelve provided for the institution of “seven men of
good repute, full of the Spirit and of wisdom” (Acts 6:2-3), to whom they
entrusted the task to serve at table. A dominant feature of the apostolate of
St. Paul was his care of the poor, which remains as the basic sign of communion
among Christians. Even today, the Bishop is called in a personal manner to
exercise this charity in his diocese by adopting suitable structures.
In such a way, the Bishop attests that the griefs and anxieties of people,
primarily the poor and all who suffer, are also the anxieties of Christ’s
disciples.[195] Today, poverty takes many forms; the accustomed forms of the
past have been joined by more contemporary ones. In these situations, the Bishop
is in the forefront of efforts which will lead to new approaches in the
apostolate and in charity, where needs are revealing themselves in new ways. To
serve, to encourage and to make people aware of the duties of solidarity,
renewing each day the ancient story of the Good Samaritan, are already signs of
hope for the world.
124.To fulfill the pastoral ministry of guiding and discerning, the Bishop needs
the collaboration of all the faithful in a spirit of communion and a sense of
mission.
Structures of dialogue, communion and discernment, such as the Presbyteral
Council and the Pastoral Council already mentioned, are established for this
purpose.
Growing pastoral needs have resulted in an orderly structuring, based on
canonical norms, of the various offices of the diocesan curia. This structuring
is done according to the possibilities of each particular Church and the
competence of the diocesan clergy, consecrated persons and the laity, so as to
respond to every diocesan need.
It is the task of the Bishop not only to foster serious, coordinated activity,
initiatives and arduous work by those responsible for the different diocesan
offices, but also to stimulate these efforts through his example and collegial
meetings of coordination. A sure sense of trust, friendship and responsibility
needs to be demonstrated by everyone in the various structures of the Curia so
that unity and mutual understanding might create a properly ecclesial style of
work.
Administration of Funds
125.In recent times, the administration of the goods of the diocese has assumed
a certain importance, especially in view of civil responsibilities. Vigilance
and serious-mindedness in the overall administration of diocesan funds, which
can also serve as an example in other diocesan institutions, requires the work
of competent persons and Church experts trained in diocesan administration.
This is one of the most important aspects of governing, namely, guaranteeing the
common good of the diocese and the communion of goods and fulfilling the
obligation of charity towards the missions and the poorest of the poor.
Practical Questions Pertaining to the Particular Church
126.Practical questions, some previously treated, deserve mentioning at this
time so that, on the basis of the information in the Lineamenta responses, they
might be given proper attention by the Synod.
Many Episcopal Conferences call for the full-time presence of the Bishop in his
diocese, since frequent or prolonged absences threaten the continuity of
pastoral service.
The continual presence of the Bishop in his See or in visiting parishes, his
availability to priests, religious and the laity and his engagement in other
kinds of pastoral visitation are a guarantee of stability and co-responsibility
in the daily exercise of his ministry. In this way, the Bishop appears as a
model of lasting service to his Church.
Other responses recommend that the Bishop remain assigned to the diocese to
which he is elected, so as to reenforce his mentality of self-giving to the
Church entrusted to him through the bond of a faithfulness and spousal love, so
as to avoid, as much as possible, such problems as a passing outlook towards his
diocese, the interruption of programs and pastoral initiatives and a desire to
change or transfer to particular Churches which might be more prestigious or
might have fewer problems.
Reference was also made to dioceses left without a Pastor for a long period of
time due to a delay in the appointment of Bishops. Such situations create a
disadvantage in the presbyterate and the People of God who are deprived of the
episcopal ministry of unity and communion.
Finally, some responses mention a conflict today between civil and
ecclesiastical fora in the processes dealing with ecclesiastical persons. The
responses often ask for public recognition of the Church’s canon law in these
processes. The Bishop ought to be allowed the freedom and responsibility to deal
with those in his charge in such a way as to avoid scandal and provide
adequately, in justice and charity, for the salvation of souls, which is always
the supreme law of the Church.[196]
CHAPTER V
IN SERVICE TO THE GOSPEL FOR THE HOPE OF THE WORLD
In Jesus Christ: the Perennial Jubilee of the Church
127.The recently concluded Jubilee of the Year 2000 provided occasion for the
Church and the world to fix their gaze on Christ, who came to announce the good
news to the poor (cf. Lk 4:16ff). Sent by the Father, he came to call everyone
to conversion, to give hope to humanity, to reveal each person’s dignity as a
child of God and future glory. Christ manifested in his words, especially in his
paschal mystery, the love of God which goes out in pursuit of persons, reveals
to them their vocation and makes them aware of their high calling.[197]
Jesus’ entire life was a great jubilee period, in which he communicated God’s
grace and forgiveness, indicated the path leading to truth and drew near to
everyone. He announced salvation and brought it to fulfilment through his words
and deeds and the outpouring of the Holy Spirit.
In the Gospel accounts of Jesus of Nazareth, the Church acknowledges a Jubilee
Messiah who lives through his total gift of self, who communicates his truth and
life to all, who calls everyone to conversion and who teaches the new
commandment of love which he brings to the world as a way of living the
Trinitarian vocation and mission.
Christ reveals that God wills all people to be saved. He who unites himself with
humanity through his Incarnation and to each person who suffers through his
Passion and Death, becomes, through his Resurrection, the cause of salvation and
hope for every human being, destined for communion with God in glory.
From the time of Pentecost, the Church has continued the mission of Jesus
through the grace of the Holy Spirit, announcing each day the good news of
salvation and liberation from evil.
The Church’s Ministry of Salvation
128.In the spirit of collegiality and hierarchical communion, all Bishops
continue this announcement which is focused on Jesus Christ, true God and true
man, one and only Saviour of the world.
Even though unaware of how Christ exercises this salvation beyond the
sacramental structures of his Body to which he himself has entrusted the
ministry of preaching and sanctification, the Church believes that all humanity
belongs to Christ, the firstborn of all creation (cf. Col 1:15ff).
Consequently, hope has as its ultimate goal the reconciliation of everything and
everyone in Christ. This is the kind of hope which inspires the Church who
announces peace and salvation “to you who were far off and to you who are near,
for through him we both have access in one Spirit to the Father” (Eph 2:17-18).
Hope also underlies the Church’s many dialogues of salvation so that even
history’s future belongs to the Lord who, known and loved as a Brother, is the
revelation of the Father’s love. “As a consequence, men throughout the world
will be aroused to a lively hope–the gift of the Holy Spirit–that they will
finally be caught up in peace and utter happiness in that fatherland radiant
with the splendor of the Lord.”[198]
A New Religious Situation
129.The very complex religious situation at the beginning of the millennium
poses challenges for the Church in exercising her mission. The great religions,
as bearers of authentic human values, require that the Church seek a respectful
encounter with them so that they might understand the plan of the one
Saviour-God.
At the same time, due to today’s immigration, which is bound to increase in the
future along with mobility and economic/cultural exchanges, a new, multi-ethnic,
multi-religious situation exists on continents where traditional religions have
been prominent.
The younger particular Churches, especially in Asia, Africa and Oceania, are
living alongside other religions. While they are very involved in
inter-religious dialogue, these particular Churches are also providing a
considerable missionary assistance in other parts of the People of God.
130.Some Episcopal Conferences refer in the Lineamenta responses to the Church’s
need to give attention to the immigration of peoples, a recent, well-known
phenomenon which, though not a new occurrence in history, has perhaps
unprecedented dimensions today. Immigration creates practical problems in
pastoral activity–similar to those in the work of evangelization and
interreligious dialogue–especially when people profess non-Christian religions.
Pastoral care of Catholic immigrants, uprooted from their lands and customs,
requires the collaboration of native clergy to sustain and strengthen their
faith and to help them live the Christian life.
Consequently, the entire Church needs to make renewed efforts in evangelization,
an evangelization which is always to include: a clear proclamation of revelation
as a sure gift; dialogue as the method of mutual understanding; and a witness
arising from the Gospel, especially a witness to charity, in everything and
before all else, as the guarantee of the truth proclaimed and the basis for
dialogue, so that Christ might be seen in his disciples. Furthermore, the
integral proclamation of salvation requires the Church’s concern for every
genuine, human value.
The above elements underlie the Church’s task of proclaiming the meaning of life
and history in light of the mystery of Christ. In her mission, the Church trusts
in the power of the Gospel and the assistance of the Holy Spirit, the gift of
the Risen Christ, to make known and realize the fullness of truth and divine
life.[199]
Ecumenical Dialogue
131.The Church’s commitment to ecumenical dialogue in achieving Christian unity,
the cherished fruit of the action of the Holy Spirit, must be unwavering.
Ecumenical dialogue is a response to the prayer and intention of Christ (cf. Jn
17:21-23), a response to his sacrifice on the cross to draw all into unity (cf.
Jn11:52) and a response to the Church’s required witness in the world (cf. Eph
4:4-5).
In this regard, Bishops participate in the solicitude of the Roman Pontiff as
expressed in the Vatican Council Decree Unitatis Redintegratio. They also share
in the Church’s renewed efforts, a priority in the new millennium for the hope
of the world, to foster the unity of all baptized Christians, as re-stated in
the Encyclical Ut Unum Sint,.[200]
Each Bishop, in keeping with the directives of the Holy See and in communion
with his Episcopal Conference, is a promoter of unity and an apostle of
spiritual ecumenism and dialogue through his fraternal contacts with Churches
and Christian communities. Fostering what is positive in dialogue must exclude
all unclear, hasty actions which can damage true ecumenism through impatience.
The Bishop shares with his faithful the passion for unity which burns in the
heart of Christ, awaiting with hope the grace which, according to the design of
the Holy Spirit, will bring all into communion in the one Church of Christ.
The specific task of ecumenism at the local level is entrusted to the Bishop and
his collaborators in each diocese,[201] who have at their disposal such
initiatives as the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity, prayer services in common
and the mutual witness to the one Gospel of Christ. In this regard, a “dialogue
of life”, namely, everyday encounters, and an ecumenism of simple, daily
gestures of communion and service are invaluable in the cause of bringing the
hearts and minds of Christians closer together.
The Proclamation of the Gospel
132.The Church is now facing new tasks in accomplishing her mission as a result
of new social phenomena and cultural situations, new arenas for evangelization
and new duties based on a deeper understanding of the Gospel message, for
example, the promotion of peace, the development and liberation of peoples, the
recognition of the rights of minorities, the promotion of women, a renewed
concern for children and the young, the safeguarding of creation, the promotion
of an authentic culture and scientific research respectful of the value of life,
the dialogue among nations and recent global projects.[202]
In this social and cultural context, the unchanging message of the Gospel of
hope is proclaimed with a new language, new enthusiasm and new methods,
especially with the power flowing from the holiness of the Church and the
witness of her unity. This task is entrusted to those who, through the power of
the Holy Spirit, have been appointed as Bishops to pasture the Church of God
(cf. Acts 20:28).
Missionary Activity and Cooperation
133.In imitation of Jesus of Nazareth, sent by the Father to evangelize, the
Bishop is inspired by the hope which is the content of the proclamation of the
Good News and the penetrating force in every aspect of his ministry to the
world, since his pastoral concern extends to everyone. The Bishop’s call and
role in the Church make him first and foremost responsible for the abiding
mission of bringing the Gospel to those who still do not know Christ, the
Redeemer of Humanity. The mission of the Bishop is intimately bound to his
universal ministry of teaching and his relationship to the community over which
he presides in the name of Christ the Shepherd.
The mandate entrusted by the Risen Christ to his Apostles includes all peoples.
In fact, in the Apostles, “the Church (has) received a universal mission–one
which knows no boundaries–which involves the communication of salvation in its
integrity, according to that fullness of life which Christ came to bring (cf. Jn
10:10).”[203]
The same is true for the Successors of the Apostles. The task of proclaiming the
Gospel is not restricted to the Church community; the Gospel is intended for all
peoples. The Church herself is the sacrament of salvation for all humanity. She
is “the dynamic force in mankind’s journey towards the eschatological Kingdom,
and is the sign and promoter of Gospel values.”[204] For this reason, the
Successors of the Apostles will always have the responsibility of spreading the
Gospel to the ends of the earth.
Bishops are ordained not only for a diocese but for the salvation of the whole
world.[205] They are members of the Episcopal College and individual Pastors of
particular Churches. Together with the Bishop of Rome, they are directly
responsible for the evangelization of all those who still do not know Christ as
the one and only Saviour and those who have not as yet placed their hope in him.
With this in mind, the Church calls to mind the many missionary Bishops who,
today as in the past, shine out in the Church through their holiness of life and
the generosity of their apostolic zeal. Some of them have also been founders of
missionary institutes.
134.As Pastor of a particular Church, the Bishop has the responsibility to guide
all missionary endeavours by directing and coordinating them. He fulfills his
duty of deeply instilling the missionary spirit in his particular Church when he
inspires, promotes and guides the work of the diocese on behalf of the missions.
In doing so, “he makes present the mission spirit and zeal of the People of God
and, as it were, visible, so that the whole diocese becomes missionary.”[206]
In his zeal for missionary activity, the Bishop shows himself to be the servant
and witness of hope. Mission is undoubtedly “an accurate indicator of our faith
in Christ and his love for us.”[207] While leading peoples of all times to a new
life, mission is also animated by hope and is itself the fruit of Christian
hope.
In proclaiming the Risen Christ, Christians announce the One who begins a new
era in human history. They proclaim to the world the Good News of an integral
and universal salvation which contains in itself the seeds of a new world in
which pain and injustice will yield to joy and beauty. Therefore, Christians
pray as Jesus taught them: “Thy Kingdom come” (Mt 6:10). Finally, missionary
activity, in its ultimate purpose of proposing to every person the salvation
accomplished by Christ once and for all, tends by its very nature towards
eschatological fulfillment. Through missionary activity, the People of God
increases, the Body of Christ grows and the Temple of the Holy Spirit continues
to be built up until the consummation of the age.[208]
At the beginning of the third millennium, with an increased awareness of the
universality of salvation and a lived experience of the necessity each day to
proclaim the Gospel, the Church is unrelenting in her missionary duty. Indeed, a
new, more profound missionary cooperation exists through the collaboration of
all the Successors of the Apostles and their particular Churches.[209]
Interreligious Dialogue and Meetings with Other Religions
135.As Master-Teachers of the Faith, Bishops also have to give due attention to
interreligious dialogue, above all, with the brothers and sisters of Israel, the
People of the First Covenant.
Everyone is aware that present historical circumstances have given
interreligious dialogue a particularly urgent character. Indeed, for many
Christian communities, e.g., in Africa and Asia, interreligious dialogue has
almost become an essential part of daily living for families and entire
communities as well as for individuals in the workplace and in service to the
public. On the other hand, in some places, e.g., in Western Europe and to a
certain extent in traditionally Christian countries, interreligious dialogue is
a relatively new phenomenon. In this situation, what frequently happens is that
believers of different religions and forms of worship more easily come in
contact with one another, often living side-by- side, because of the migration
of peoples, tourism, social communications and personal choice.
Pope John Paul II has recalled that interreligious dialogue is a part of the
evangelizing mission of the Church; it was a recurring theme during the Great
Jubilee of the Year 2000; and is presently the challenge of the third
millennium.[210] Among the principal reasons for dialogue, the Decree Nostra
Aetate refers to those which come to mind in the course of professing Christian
hope. Indeed, all peoples have a common origin in God, in that they are created
in love and have a common destiny in God as their ultimate end.
Christians can learn much from interreligious dialogue. In the process, however,
they are always to bear witness to their hope in Christ, the one and only
Saviour of humanity, cultivating the duty and determination of proclaiming,
without hesitation, the unique character of Christ the Redeemer. Indeed, there
is no other in whom Christians place their hope, since Christ is the fulfilment
of every hope. He is “the long-awaited one for those in every people who yearn
for the manifestation of divine goodness,”[211] Moreover, the Catholic faithful
have to undertake and pursue dialogue with the conviction that the one true
religion subsists “in the Catholic and Apostolic Church to which the Lord Jesus
has entrusted the mission of communicating that religion to all people.”[212]
136.Every one of the faithful and every Christian community have the
responsibility to practice interreligious dialogue, even if not always at the
same level or intensity. However, the Bishop has the duty in his particular
Church, where required or permitted, to assist all the faithful through his
teaching and pastoral activity to respect and esteem the values, traditions and
convictions of other believers, and also to promote a sound and appropriate
religious formation for Christians, so that they might know how to bear witness
with conviction to the great gift of the Christian faith.
The Bishop also has to keep watch over the theological dimension of
interreligious dialogue, ensuring that in his particular Church the exchange be
pursued in such a manner as never to be silent about, nor hesitate to affirm,
the universality and unique character of the Redemption accomplished by Christ,
the one and only Saviour of the World and the one who reveals the Mystery of
God.[213] Indeed, only in remaining consistent with the faith, is it also
possible to share, approach and enrich spiritual experiences and forms of prayer
as paths of encounter with God.
Interreligious dialogue, however, is not a matter of doctrine only; it extends
to a multiplicity of everyday encounters with believers of every type who are
called to mutual respect and understanding. It is a question of a dialogue of
life where believers of various religions reciprocally bear witness to each
religion’s human and spiritual values so as to foster peace in their living
together and collaboration for a more just and fraternal society. In promoting
and attentively following such dialogue, the Bishop is always to remind the
faithful that this duty flows from the theological virtues of faith, hope and
charity, the same virtues which ensure an increased awareness of that duty.
A Particular Attention to the Phenomenon of the Sects
137.The Bishop’s solicitude for his faithful should also include the very real
danger of the allurement of religious sects and alternative movements of various
kinds on persons who are unprepared to properly deal with them. Oftentimes,
these movements seek to erode the Catholic faith, to take advantage of social
and familial problems, and to manipulate persons and consciences. Satanic cults,
with aberrant rites and behaviour, are also spreading with an anti-Christian
intent.
An accurate study needs to be done of the sects and their ways of operating so
that recourse can be made to those who might be able to help the faithful
trapped in them or are threatened by them. Such assistance can also restore
peace of soul to persons and bring them back to the faith.[214]
Above all, however, what is needed to counteract the influence of these sects
and movements are authentic Christian communities, full of life and enthusiasm
and promoters of hope, namely, communities characterized by Gospel-sharing,
missionary commitment, regard for persons, mutual help and a true and proper
spiritual formation, through prayer and the sacraments, for the men and women of
our world.
In the fight against evil and the Evil One, the Bishop must enlist, according to
canon law, priests endowed with piety, knowledge, prudence and integrity of life
to perform exorcisms and practice prayer so as to obtain healing from God.[215]
Dialogue with Persons of Other Persuasions
138.The Church, in her duty to evangelize and announce salvation in Christ to
all, also seeks, in the most appropriate manner possible, to establish dialogue
with persons of other religious persuasions. Oftentimes, these people are open
to the appeal of the Gospel, to the Person of Jesus Christ and to the authentic
human values of his preaching and example. In many ways, they expect the Church
to teach clearly, rise above prejudice and attentively pursue the credible
values of truth and justice. Sometimes, they feel a secret longing for a
Christianity in which the reasons for faith and hope meet, especially at a time
when, after much disillusionment, a lack of faith keeps many people from
crossing the threshold of hope.
To accomplish this, the Bishop in his particular Church ought to promote
meetings which can involve people who are in search of the truth, who are
responsive to the transcendent values of goodness, justice and beauty and who
have a concern for humanity in our times. This should be done so as to foster
the common pursuit of promoting human values, especially through dialogue with
authoritative exponents of culture and spirituality.
As Shepherd of all and responsible for the proclamation of the Gospel in our
complex society, the Bishop ought not to forget that he is the defender of the
rights of the Catholic Faithful and those of the Church, rights which are
oftentimes denied or contested in various places or in certain areas of social
or political life. As the support of his faithful, the Bishop ought to instill
and promote hope in times of persecution or hostility against the faithful by
being staunch in his witness to the truth and in a life in keeping with his
office.
Attention to New Social Problems and the New Forms of Poverty
139.A special moment in proclaiming hope is concern for the poor in our society,
where no one ought to forget that the person–as recalled by the Second Vatican
Council–is the source, center and purpose of economic and social life.[216] Part
of the Church’s concern is that development might not be understood exclusively
in an economic sense but rather in one which considers every aspect of the human
person.
Christian hope is directed towards the heavenly Kingdom and eternal life.
However, this eschatological goal does not lessen the commitment to the
advancement of the earthly city. On the contrary, it gives it meaning and
incentive. Indeed “buoyed up by hope, he is preserved from selfishness and lead
to the happiness that flows from charity.”[217] Earthly progress and the growth
of the Kingdom are not separate entities, because the vocation of humanity to
eternal life, instead of relieving the person from expending his God-given
energies for the development of his life in this world, makes it all the more
imperative.
140.It is not the specific task of the Church to offer solutions to economic and
social questions. However, her teachings contain general principles which are
indispensable for the construction of a just social and economic order. Even in
this matter, the Church must proclaim the Gospel. Each Bishop in his particular
Church has to become the Herald of the Gospel, indicating that the core of its
message can be found in the Beatitudes.[218]
Finally, since the commandment of love of neighbour has concrete implications,
the Bishop needs to promote appropriate initiatives in his diocese and to exhort
the people to overcome possible attitudes of apathy, passivity and egoism,
whether in individuals or entire groups. Equally important for the Bishop is to
awaken through his preaching the Christian conscience of every citizen,
exhorting each one to work in an active solidarity and with the means available
to defend all persons from whatever abuses might assail their human dignity. In
this regard, he has continually to remind the faithful that Christ is present in
every poor and needy person (cf. Mt 25:31-46). The image of the Lord as the one
who is to come as Judge at the end of time is the promise of definitive justice
for the living and the dead and for all people of all times and places.[219]
Near to Those Who Suffer
141.Mindful of his title as Father and Defender of the Poor, the Bishop has the
duty to inspire charitable works towards the poor with his example and his works
of mercy and justice, through individual acts as well as through an ample
variety of programs of solidarity.
The responses to the Lineamenta gave particular attention to some commitments
assigned to the Bishop as Promoter of Charity in our time.
In the field of physical and mental health, each Pastor in his diocese proclaims
the Gospel with the help of persons qualified in the pastoral care of the sick.
Healthcare occupies a special place in our society. Medicine and healthcare
which are both centered on the person and being near to people in time of
suffering awaken in the heart of the Christian the image of the compassionate
Christ, the Physician of Body and Soul, and calls to mind his authoritative
words in the Church’s mission: “Cure the sick” (Mt 10:8).
Organizing and continually promoting pastoral activity in this area are a
priority in the heart and life of the Bishop.
Promoter of Justice and Peace
142. The subjects of justice and love of neighbor readily evoke that of peace:
“the harvest of righteousness is sown in peace by those who make peace” (James
3:18). The Church proclaims the peace of Christ, the “Prince of Peace”, who has
proclaimed, “Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be called the sons of
God” (Mt 5:9). These are not only those who renounce the use of violence as an
unacceptable method, but also those who have the courage to work for the removal
of whatever stands in the way of peace. These workers of peace know well that
peace is something which begins in a person’s heart. Therefore, they work
against a selfishness which keeps a person from seeing others as brothers and
sisters in one human family. They are sustained in their work by hope in Jesus
Christ, the sinless Redeemer, whose suffering is an unfailing sign of hope for
humanity. Christ is Peace (cf. Eph 2:14); and humanity will not find peace until
it encounters Christ.
Peace is everyone’s responsibility; it is one of the thousand little acts
performed in daily life. Depending on how they live each day with others, people
are making choices to promote peace or work against peace. Peace stands awaiting
those who will be its prophets and artisans.[220] These builders of peace must
necessarily be present in the ecclesial community over which the Bishop is
Pastor.
The Bishop, therefore, needs to take every occasion to stir in people’s
consciences the desire to live together in peace and to promote a shared
determination to dedicate themselves to the cause of justice and peace. It is an
arduous task requiring dedication, enduring strength and constant education,
above all directed towards the new generations so that they will commit
themselves, with renewed joy and Christian hope, to the construction of a more
peaceful and friendly world. Working for peace is also one of the primary tasks
of evangelization. Consequently, the promotion of an authentic culture of
dialogue and peace is also a fundamental duty in the pastoral activity of the
Bishop.
143. The Bishop is the Church’s voice calling out to people and gathering them
together. In his evangelizing efforts, the Bishop always works in concrete ways
to make his perceptive, balanced message known and heard, so that those
responsible in the political, social and economic spheres might seek just
solutions in resolving the problems of living together in civil society.
In fulfilling his mission in these areas, the Bishop often faces difficult
circumstances in both evangelization and human promotion. Such conditions
uniquely demonstrate the element of suffering which is often a part of the
episcopal ministry. Without the acceptance of suffering, the Bishop is unable to
dedicate himself to his mission. Therefore, his faith in the Spirit of the Risen
Lord has to be great and his heart always full of “ the hope which does not
disappoint” (Rom 5:5).
Guardian of Hope, Witness of Christ’s Charity
144.Christians fulfill their prophetic mission received from Christ by being
present in the world as bearers of hope. For this reason, the Second Vatican
Council recalls that the Church “goes forward together with humanity and
experiences the same earthly lot which the world does. She serves as a leaven
and as a kind of soul for human society as it is to be renewed in Christ and
transformed into God’s family.”[221]
Responsibility towards the whole world and its problems, its questioning and its
expectations is also part of the duty of evangelization to which the Church is
called by the Lord. The Bishop, then, is particularly involved in this work,
requiring him to be attentive in reading the “signs of the times” so as to
reawaken hope in every person. In this endeavour, he works as the minister of
the Spirit who, even today on the threshold of the third millennium, does not
cease to bring great things about so as to renew the face of the earth. After
the example of the Good Shepherd, the Bishop points to each person as the way to
follow, and following the example of the Good Samaritan, he bends towards each
individual to bind up his wounds.
145.Each person is essentially a “being who hopes.” At the same time, due to the
many ways in which hope is challenged today, events in various parts of the
world tempt persons to skepticism and a lack of trust. The Church, however,
finds in the mystery of the cross and resurrection of her Lord the basis of a
“blessed hope” which gives a person the power to commit oneself–and to continue
in that commitment–to the service of humanity and to each individual.
The Church is the Servant of the Gospel which is the message of freedom and the
power for liberation. The Gospel of Christ strips away and passes judgment on
the illusory and false hopes of this world and carries the most authentic
aspirations of humanity to their fulfilment. The central point in this
proclamation is that Christ, through his cross and resurrection and the gift of
the Holy Spirit, has opened the new way to freedom and liberation for humanity.
A number of tasks and activities among those situations in which the Bishop is
called to guide his community provide opportunities for renewing the power of
the Gospel and reenforcing effective signs of hope. Particularly relevant are
those tasks and activities associated with the Church’s social doctrine which,
far from being an addition to the Christian message, is an essential part of it,
because it teaches the direct implications of the Gospel on life and society. On
many occasions, the magisterium has affirmed this fact, displaying its
connection to the Paschal Mystery, where the Church always draws the truth about
history and humanity. At these times, she has also recalled that the particular
Churches have the responsibility, in communion with the See of Peter and among
themselves, to apply the Church’s social doctrine to situations in a concrete
way.
146.The list of tasks and activities begins with the Church’s relation to civil
society and the political life. In this regard, it is evident that the Church’s
mission is religious in nature and that the proper end of her missionary action
is to proclaim to all Jesus Christ, the one and only Name “under heaven, given
among men by which we must be saved” (Acts 4:12). On this basis–the Second
Vatican Council emphasized–rests the distinction between the political community
and the Church. Though independent and autonomous, each share in different ways
a common service of individuals who are called to be persons and members of
society.[222]
Therefore, the Church, accessible to all people of good will as a result of the
Lord’s mandate, cannot now or ever undertake the political life. Nevertheless,
she is not immune to the problems which arise from living in society.
Consequently, while each remains within its sphere of competence in the integral
promotion of the person, the Church can also search for solutions to problems in
the temporal order, especially in those cases where the dignity of the person is
compromised and basic rights are violated.
147.Such are the circumstances in which the Bishop is to discharge his duties.
He recognizes the autonomous character of the State and, therefore, avoids
causing confusion between faith and politics, preferring rather to serve
everyone’s freedom. Totally excluding whatever may lead to identifying faith
with a determined political form, the Bishop seeks first the Kingdom of God. In
this way, he undertakes an authentic, pure love in assisting his brothers and
sisters and in accomplishing, under the inspiration of charity, the works of
justice. As a result, the Bishop is seen to be the guardian of the transcendent
character of the human person and a sign of hope.[223] The specific contribution
made by the Bishop in this area is that of the Church, namely, “her vision of
the dignity of the person revealed in all its fullness in the mystery of the
Incarnate Word.”[224]
The autonomous nature of the political community does not mean that it is exempt
from following moral principles; indeed, a political life deprived of a point of
reference in morality leads inevitably to the degradation of social life and the
violation of the dignity and rights of the human person. Consequently, the
Church eagerly desires that political life maintain–or regain, as the case may
be–its traditional character of service to the person and society. Since the lay
faithful have the primary duty in the temporal order, the Bishop must be
concerned to assist the lay faithful to discuss any questions they might have
and help them make proper decisions in light of the Word of Truth. He is also to
promote and care for their formation in such a way that the laity’s choices
might be motivated by a sincere concern for the common good of society, i.e.,
the well-being of all people and the whole person. Likewise, the Bishop needs to
insist that there be no contradiction between a person’s public and private
life.
The Ranks of Witnesses and the Anchor of Hope
148.As a Disciple and Witness of Christ, the Bishop has the responsibility at
the beginning of the new century and millennium to proclaim, celebrate and
promote, like Jesus, the Father’s Kingdom in hope.
The Bishop, grounded in a faith which is “the assurance of things hoped for, the
conviction of things not seen (Heb 11:1), prepares himself to make the people
advance, like Israel in the desert, as the living image of the pilgrim Church on
earth “between the persecutions of the world and the consolations of God.”[225]
With her eyes fixed on Christ, the Author and Perfector of the Faith, the
Church, empowered by the countless number of people who have testified to faith
and hope, becomes a credible witness of the faithfulness of God in each age.
Consequently, at the end of the century and the millennium, the Church desired,
among other things, to make an ecumenical commemoration of the witnesses to the
faith in the twentieth century, who can serve as heralds of Christian hope for
new generations.
In a globalized world, the Bishop proclaims communion, solidarity, unity and
reconciliation. In a society in search of life’s meaning, he offers the
liberating words of the Gospel, the Word of Truth, which opens the horizon of
humanity beyond death and illumines life’s path with the light of Christ’s
Easter Mystery.[226]
The Bishop, seizing hope as a sure and steadfast anchor of soul (cf. Heb 6:18ff)
guides his people in trust as the servant of the Gospel of Jesus Christ for the
hope of the world.
CONCLUSION
149. From 6-8 October 2000, Bishops from around the world celebrated their
Jubilee in communion with the Pope, in an atmosphere of conversion and prayer,
inspired, at the same time, by the theme of the next Ordinary General Assembly
of the Synod of Bishops: The Bishop: Servant of the Gospel of Jesus Christ for
the Hope of the World.[227] As noted above, it was the first time, since the
Second Vatican Council, that so many Bishops from all parts of the world
assembled to experience together a truly spiritual Jubilee event: the
penitential rite at St. John Lateran, the missionary celebration at St. Paul
Outside the Walls, the Rosary in the Paul VI Audience Hall, the moments with the
Roman Pontiff, especially the solemn Eucharistic celebration on Sunday, 8
October, the culminating event of the Jubilee for Bishops.
Devotion to the Virgin Mary, culminating in the veneration of the statue of the
Virgin of Fatima who has guided the laboured history of the Church in the path
of hope in the twentieth century, made the Jubilee encounter particularly
moving. The Pope often repeated that he felt as if the Successors of the
Apostles had returned to the Cenacle at Pentecost, with Mary, the Mother of
Jesus.
150. In this particular circumstance, John Paul II entrusted to Mary, with a
particularly moving prayer, the fruits of the Jubilee and the cares and concerns
of the new millennium.
The words of the prayer of entrustment to the Virgin Mary focused on hopes for
the future in the surety that the Lord Christ is the one and only Saviour and
that the Spirit of Truth is the indispensable source of life for the Church.
Noting the great progress of humanity which is now at the critical point in
history, the Holy Father recalled the needs of those who are particularly
defenseless: unborn children or those born into poverty and suffering; the young
in search for life’s meaning; persons deprived of work or tried by famine or
sickness, broken families, the elderly without assistance and persons alone and
without hope.[228]
The hope of humanity depends on the value placed on human life. The Church,
entrusting herself to the God of life and to the Mother of him who is the way,
the truth and the life, rigourously defends and courageously speaks out against
anything which threatens human life.
Taking up the words of the Successor of Peter in his prayer on behalf of
humanity, we again heed the plea on behalf of a world in search of reasons for
belief and hope.
In logical continuity, the Church’s Bishops are to gather in the next synodal
assembly to proclaim their hope in both Christ and the action of the Spirit for
the future of the Church and humanity.
The Church learns from Mary, humble maidservant who entrusted herself to God, to
proclaim the Gospel of salvation and hope. The Magnificat re-echoes in song the
surety of the Lord’s poor who hope in his Word. The Church has in Mary, the
woman clothed with the sun and now with her Risen Son in glory, the guarantee of
the fulfilment of the Lord’s promises for humanity, which is called to a final
victory over evil and death. The Church looks to her, who is for pilgrims “a
sign of sure hope and solace, until the day of the Lord shall come,”[229] and
invokes her in prayer as Mother of Hope, the first fruits of the world to come.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[1] Cf. SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Pastoral Constitution on the Church
in the Modern World Gaudium et Spes, 45; PAUL VI, Encyclical Letter Populorum
Progressio (26 March 1967), 14: AAS 59 (1967) 264.
[2] CONGREGATION FOR THE DOCTRINE OF THE FAITH, Declaration Dominus Iesus (6
August 2000), 1-2: AAS 92 (2000) 742-744.
[3] JOHN PAUL II, Discourse to the Episcopal Conference of Colombia (2 July
1986), 8: L’Osservatore Romano: Weekly Edition in English, 28 July 1986, p. 7.
[4] SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Pastoral Constitution on the Church in
the Modern World Gaudium et Spes, 1.
[5] JOHN PAUL II, Discourse to the Bishops of Austria on the Occasion of their
Ad Limina Visit (6 July 1982), 2: AAS 74 (1982) 1123.
[6] SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Dogmatic Constitution on Divine
Revelation Dei Verbum, 1.
[7] Cf. SACRED CONGREGATION FOR BISHOPS, The Directory on the Pastoral Ministry
of Bishops Ecclesiae Imago (22 February 1973).
[8] CONGREGATION FOR THE DOCTRINE OF THE FAITH, Letter to the Bishops of the
Catholic Church on Some Aspects of the Church Understood as Communion
Communionis Notio: AAS 85 (1993) 838-850.
[9] AAS 90 (1998) 641-658.
[10] SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Decree on the Mission Activity of the
Church Ad Gentes, 38.
[11] SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church
Lumen Gentium, 23.
[12] Cf. ibid., 27.
[13] SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Decree on the Mission Activity of the
Church Ad Gentes, 8.
[14] DIOGNETUS, Epist. ad Diognetum, 6; Patres Apostolici I, ed. F.X. Funk,
Tubingae, 1901, 400; cf. SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Dogmatic
Constitution on the Church Lumen Gentium, 38.
[15] SACRED CONGREGATION FOR BISHOPS, Directory on the Pastoral Ministry of
Bishops Ecclesiae Imago (22 February 1973), 25.
[16] PAUL VI, Discourse during the Wednesday General Audience (29 November
1972); L’Osservatore Romano: Weekly Edition in English, 7 December 1972, p. 1.
[17] SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Dogmatic Constitution on Divine
Revelation Dei Verbum, 8.
[18] SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Pastoral Constitution on the Church in
the Modern World Gaudium et Spes, 1.
[19] SYNOD OF BISHOPS, (Coetus Specialis pro Europa, 1991) Declaratio “Ut testes
simus Christi qui nos liberavit” (13 December 1991); JOHN PAUL II, Post-Synodal
Apostolic Exhortation Ecclesia in Africa (14 September 1995), 46-52;
Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Ecclesia in America (22 January 1999),
13-25), 13-25; Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Ecclesia in Asia (6 November
1999), 5-9.
[20] Cf. SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, The Pastoral Constitution on the
Church in the Modern World Gaudium et Spes; PAUL VI, Encyclical Letter Humanae
Vitae (25 July 1968): AAS 60 (1968) 481-503; JOHN PAUL II, Apostolic Exhortation
Familiaris Consortio (23 November 1981): AAS 84 (1982) 81-191; and Encyclical
Letter Evangelium Vitae (25 March 1995): AAS 87 (1995) 401-522; Apostolic Letter
to Families (2 February 1994) as well as various documents from the PONTIFICAL
COUNCIL FOR THE FAMILY and the PONTIFICAL ACADEMY FOR LIFE.
[21] Cf. JOHN PAUL II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Christifideles Laici
(30 December 1988), 30: AAS 81 (1989) 446.
[22] Cf. JOHN PAUL II, Message to the IV World Congress of Ecclesial Movements
and New Communities (27 May 1998): L’Osservatore Romano: Weekly Edition in
English, 10 June 1998, p. 2.
[23] Cf. PAUL VI, Encyclical Letter Ecclesiam Suam (6 August 1964), III: AAS 56
(1964) 639.
[24] SAINT IGNATIUS OF ANTIOCH, Ad Ephesios 7,2; Patres Apostolici I, Ed. F.X.
Funk, Tubingae, 1901, 218; cf. SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Constitution
on the Sacred Liturgy Sacrosanctum Concilium, 5.
[25] JOHN PAUL II, Encyclical Letter Veritatis Splendor (6 August 1993), 107:
AAS 85 (1993) 1217.
[26] SAINT AUGUSTINE, Sermones 340/A, 9: PLS 2, 644.
[27] JOHN PAUL II, Discourse to the Bishops of Austria on the Occasion of their
Ad Limina Visit, 6 July 1982, 2: AAS 74 (1982) 1123.
[28] Surrexit pastor bonus qui animam suam posuit pro ovibus suis et pro grege
suo mori dignatus est: Roman Missal, Fourth Sunday of Easter, Communion
Antiphon.
[29] SACRED CONGREGATION FOR BISHOPS, Directory on the Pastoral Ministry of
Bishops Ecclesiae imago, 22.
[30] Cf. SAINT AUGUSTINE, Tractatus 123 in Ioannem: PL 35, 1967.
[31] SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church
Lumen Gentium, 21.
[32] Cf. ibid.
[33] PONTIFICALE ROMANUM, De Ordinatione Episcopi, 39, Homilia, Typis
Poliglottis Vaticanis, 1990, pp. 10-11.
[34] Cf. SAINT CLEMENT OF ROME, Episc. ad Corinthios, 42-44: Patres Apostolici
I, ed. F.X. Funk, Tubingae, 1901, 154-159.
[35] PONTIFICALE ROMANUM, De Ordinatione Episcopi, 39.
[36] Cf. SAINT IRENAEUS, Adversus haereses, IV, 20, 1.3: PG 7, 1032;
Demonstratio Praedicationis Apostolicae, 11, Sources Chrétienne, 62, 48-49; cf.
THE CATECHISM OF THE CATHOLIC CHURCH, 704.
[37] PONTIFICALE ROMANUM, De Ordinatione Episcopi, 47: Prex Ordinationis.
[38] Cf. SAINT IGNATIUS OF ANTIOCH, Ad Magnesios, 6,1; 3,1; Patres Apostolici I,
ed. F.X. Funk, Tubingae, 1901, 232-233; 234-235.
[39] Cf. SAINT IGNATIUS OF ANTIOCH, Ad Trallianos 3,1: Ibid., pp. 244-245.
[40] Didascalia Apostolorum II, 33, 1, in Didascalia et Constitutiones
Apostolorum, II, ed. F.X. Funk, Paderborn 1905, 114-105.
[41] Cf. PONTIFICALE ROMANUM, De Ordinatione Episcopi, 40: Promissio Electi
“plebem Dei sanctam ut pius pater fovere et in viam salutis dirigere”.
[42] Cf. SECOND VATYICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church
Lumen Gentium, 6, 28; JOHN PAUL II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Ecclesia
in Africa, 65: AAS 88 (1996) 41.
[43] Cf. PONTIFICALE ROMANUM, De Ordinatione Episcopi, 40: Promissio Electi.
[44] Cf. SAINT CYPRIAN, De Oratione Dominica, 23: PL 4, 553: “Sacrificium Deo
maius est pax nostra et fraterna concordia, et de unitate Patris, et Filii et
Spiritus sancti, plebs adunata”; SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Dogmatic
Constitution on the Church Lumen Gentium, 4.
[45] Cf. PONTIFICALE ROMANUM, De Ordinatione Episcopi, 50-54: Traditio libri
evangeliorum atque insignium,
[46] Cf. ISIDORE OF PELUSIUM Erminio comiti, Epistularum lib. I, 136: PG 78,
271-272: “Id autem amiculum, quod sacerdos humeris gestat, atque ex lana, non ex
lino contextum est, ovis illius, quam Dominus aberrantem quaesivit inventam que
humeris suis sustulit, pellem designat. Episcopus enim qui Christi typum gerit,
ipsius munere fungitur...”
[47] Cf. BENEDICT XIV, Constitution Rerum Ecclesiasticarum (12 August 1748): De
pallii benedictione et traditione, in S.D.N. Benedicti Papae XIV Bullarium, tom
II, 494-497: “Ut quam mysticae repraesentant pastoralis officii plentitudinem,
atque excellentiam, pleno quoque operentus effectu...Sit boni magnique illius
imitator pastoris, qui errantem ovem humeris suis impositam adunavit, pro quibus
animam posuit”.
[48] Cf. PONTIFICALE ROMANUM, De Ordinatione Episcopi, 49-54: Unctio capitis et
traditio Libri Evangeliorum atque insignium.
[49] SACRAMENTARY OF SERAPION, 28, in Didascalia et Constitutiones Apostolorum,
II, Ed. F.X. Funk, Paderborn, 1905, 191.
[50] Cf. PONTIFICALE ROMANUM, De Ordinatione Episcopi, 47: Prex Ordinationis.
[51] SAINT AUGUSTINE, In Natale Episcopi: CCL 104, 919, 1: “Vobis enim sum
episcopus; vobiscum sum christianus. Illud est nomen suscepti officii, hoc
gratiae; illud periculi est, hoc salutis.”
[52] Cf. SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Presbyterorum Ordinis, Chapter III;
cf. JOHN PAUL II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Pastores Dabo Vobis (25
March 1992), Chapter III: AAS
[53] SAINT PETER DAMIAN, Opusc. XI (Liber qui appellatur Dominus vobiscum), 5:
PL 145, 235; cf. SAINT AUGUSTINE, In Ioann. 32, 8: PL 35, 1645.
[54] SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church
Lumen Gentium, 41.
[55] Cf. SACRED CONGREGATION FOR BISHOPS, Directory on the Pastoral Ministry of
Bishops Ecclesiae Imago (22 February 1973), Part I, Chapter IV, 21-31.
[56] Ibid., 25.
[57] Cf. JOHN PAUL II, Homily at the Eucharistic Celebration of the Jubilee of
Bishops (8 October 2000), 4: L’Osservatore Romano: Weekly Edition in English, 11
October 2000, p. 6/7.
[58] Cf. SAINT ISIDORE OF SEVILLE, De Ecclesiasticis Officiis, Lib. II, 16-17:
PL 83, 785.
[59] Cf. SAINT AUGUSTINE, Serm. 1279, 1: PL 38, 966.
[60] ORIGIN, In Leviticum Hom. VI: PG 12, 474 C.
[61] SAINT THOMAS AQUINAS, Summa Theologica, II-II, q. 17, a: 4,3: Petitio est
interpretativa spei.
[62] SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Decree on the Bishops’ Pastoral Office
in the Church Christus Dominus, 15.
[63] Cf. SAINT AUGUSTINE, Ennarr in psalm., 50, 5: PL 36, 588.
[64] SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy
Sacrosanctum Concilium, 8.
[65] Cf. SAINT THOMAS AQUINAS, Summa Theologica, III, q. 60, a. 3.
[66] Cf. CAEREMONIALE EPISCOPORUM, Editio Typica, Typis Poliglottis Vaticani,
1984.
[67] Cf. JOHN PAUL II, Apostolic Letter Orientale Lumen (2 May 1995): AAS 87
(1995) 745-794; cf. CONGREGATION FOR THE EASTERN CHURCHES Instruction on the
Application of the Liturgical Regulations of The Code of Canons of the Eastern
Churches (6 January 1996).
[68] Cf. THE CATECHISM OF THE CATHOLIC CHURCH, 1313.
[69] Cf. PAUL VI, Apostolic Exhortation Gaudete in Domino (9 May 1975), I: AAS
67 (1975) 293.
[70] Cf. SACRED CONGREGATION FOR BISHOPS, Directory on the Pastoral Ministry of
Bishops Ecclesiae Imago (22 February 1973), 89.
[71] SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church
Lumen Gentium, 1.
[72] SECOND EXTRAORDINARY GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE SYNOD OF BISHOPS, 1985,
Relatio Finalis, II, C, 1.
[73] CONGREGATION FOR THE DOCTRINE OF THE FAITH, Letter Communionis Notio (28
May 1992), 3: AAS 85 (1993) 839.
[74] Cf. ibid.
[75] Cf. SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church
Lumen Gentium, 13.
[76] JOHN PAUL II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Christifideles Laici (30
December 1988), 31: AAS 81 (1989) 448.
[77] Cf. SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church
Lumen Gentium, 23: THE CODE OF CANON LAW, can 381§1; THE CODE OF CANONS OF THE
EASTERN CHURCHES, can 178.
[78] Cf. SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church
Lumen Gentium, 22; THE CODE OF CANON LAW, can 336; THE CODE OF CANONS OF THE
EASTERN CHURCHES, can 49.
[79] Cf. SAINT CYPRIAN, De Catholicae Ecclesiae Unitate, 5: PL 4, 516; cf. FIRST
VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Dogmatic Constitution Pastor Aeternus, Prologue: DS
3051; SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church
Lumen Gentium, 18.
[80] CONGREGATION FOR THE DOCTRINE OF THE FAITH, Letter to the Bishops of the
Catholic Church on Some Aspects of the Church Understood as Communion
Communionis Notio (28 May 1992), 13: AAS 85 (1993) 846.
[81] Cf. SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church
Lumen Gentium, 23.
[82] Cf. CONGREGATION FOR THE DOCTRINE OF THE FAITH, Letter to the Bishops of
the Catholic Church on Some Aspects of the Church Understood as Communion
Communionis Notio (28 May 1992), 9, 11-14: AAS 85 (1993) 844-847.
[83] SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Decree on the Bishops’ Pastoral Office
in the Church Christus Dominus, 6; cf. Dogmatic Constitution on the Church Lumen
Gentium, 23; Decree on the Bishops’ Pastoral Office in the Church Christus
Dominus, 3,5.
[84] Cf. SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy
Sacrosanctum Concilium, 26.
[85] Cf. SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Decree on the Bishops’ Pastoral
Office in the Church Christus Dominus, 6.
[86] Cf. SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church
Lumen Gentium, 22-23.
[87] Ibid., 8; cf. CONGREGATION FOR THE DOCTRINE OF THE FAITH,, Declaration
Dominus Iesus (6 August 2000), 17.
[88] Ibid., 26.
[89] Ibid., 6.
[90] CONGREGATION FOR THE DOCTRINE OF THE FAITH, Letter to the Bishops of the
Catholic Church on Some Aspects of the Church Understood as Communion
Communionis Notio (28 May 1992), 14: AAS 85 (1993) 846.
[91] Cf. SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church
Lumen Gentium, 25.
[92] Cf. CONGREGATION FOR BISHOPS, Directorium pro Visitatione ad limina
Constitutioni Apostolicae Pastor Bonus adnexum (29 June 1988).
[93] Cf. SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Decree on the Bishops’ Pastoral
Office in the Church Christus Dominus, 37-38; CIC, c. 447-449.
[94] Cf. JOHN PAUL II, Apostolic Letter Apostolos Suos (21 May 1998); AAS 90
(1998) 641-658; cf. CONGREGATION FOR BISHOPS, Episctola Praesidibus
Conferentiarum Episcopalium missa, nomine quoque Congregationis pro Gentium
Evangelizatione (21 June 1999): AAS 91 (1999) 996-999.
[95] SACRED CONGREGATION FOR BISHOPS, Directory on the Pastoral Ministry of
Bishops Ecclesiae Imago, 210; cf. JOHN PAUL II, Apostolic Letter Apostolos Suos,
5.
[96] JOHN PAUL II, Apostolic Letter Apostolos Suos (21 May 1998), 20: AAS 90
(1998) 654.
[97] Ibid., 21: AAS 90 (1998) 655.
[98] Cf. ibid.
[99] Cf. ibid., 22: AAS 90 (1998) 655.
[100] Cf. THE CODE OF CANONS OF THE EASTERN CHURCHES, canons 110 and 152.
[101] Cf. ibid., canon 322.
[102] Cf. JOHN PAUL II, Apostolic Letter Apostolos Suos, 5, note 32: AAS 90
(1998) 645.
[103] Cf. SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church
Lumen Gentium, 22-23, cum notis.
[104] Cf. SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Decree on Eastern Catholic Churches
Orientalium Ecclesiarum, 9; THE CODE OF CANONS OF THE EASTERN CHURCHES, canons
55-56.
[105] Cf. THE CODE OF CANONS OF THE EASTERN CHURCHES, canons 151-152.
[106] Cf. THE CODE OF CANON LAW, canons 336, 337, 339.
[107] Cf. CONGREGATION FOR BISHOPS, Norms on Bishops Who Leave Office In Vita
Ecclesiae (31 October 1988); PONTIFICAL COUNCIL FOR THE INTERPRETATION OF
LEGISLATIVE TEXTS, Response (3 December 1991): AAS 83 (1991) 1093.
[108] Cf. SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church
Lumen Gentium, 23.
[109] SAINT CYPRIAN, Epistola 69, 8: PL 4, 418-419:
[110] Cf. SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church
Lumen Gentium, 9-13.
[111] SACRED CONGREGATION FOR BISHOPS,. Directory on the Pastoral Ministry of
Bishops Ecclesiae Imago (22 February 1973), 14.
[112] Cf. SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church
Lumen Gentium, 23.
[113] SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Decree on the Bishops’ Pastoral Office
in the Church Christus Dominus, 11: cf. THE CODE OF CANON LAW, can 368; THE CODE
OF CANONS OF THE EASTERN CHURCHES, canon 177.
[114] Cf. SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church
Lumen Gentium, 26.
[115] Cf. SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy
Sacrosanctum Concilium, 10.
[116] PAUL VI, Apostolic Exhortation Evangelii Nunitiandi (8 December 1975), 62:
AAS 68 (1976), 52.
[117] CONGREGATION FOR THE DOCTRINE OF THE FAITH, Letter to the Bishops of the
Catholic Church on Some Aspects of the Church Understood as Communion
Communionis Notio (28 May 1992), 8: AAS 85 (1993) 842.
[118] Ibid., 10: AAS 85 (1993) 844.
[119] Cf. ibid.
[120] Cf. SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church
Lumen Gentium, 9, 13.
[121] Cf. CONGREGATION FOR THE DOCTRINE OF THE FAITH, Letter to the Bishops of
the Catholic Church on Some Aspects of the Church Understood as Communion
Communionis Notio (28 May 1992, 9: AAS 85 (1993) 843.
[122] Cf. SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church
Lumen Gentium, 28.
[123] JOHN PAUL II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Pastores Dabo Vobis (25
March 1992), 31: AAS 84 (1992) 708.
[124] CONGREGATION FOR THE DOCTRINE OF THE FAITH, Letter to the Bishops of the
Catholic Church on some Aspects of the Church Understood as Communion
Communionis Notio (28 May 1992), 16: AAS 85 (1993) 847-48.
[125] Cf. SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Decree on the Ministry and Life of
Priests Presbyterorum Ordinis, 10; JOHN PAUL II, Post-Synodal Apostolic
Exhortation Pastores Dabo Vobis (25 March 1992), 32: AAS 84 (1992) 709-710;
Encyclical Letter Redemptoris Missio (7 December 1990), 67: AAS 83 (1991)
329-330.
[126] Cf. SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church
Lumen Gentium, 28.
[127] Cf. ibid.
[128] Cf. ibid., 7; THE CODE OF CANON LAW, canon 495.
[129] Cf. SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church
Lumen Gentium, 29.
[130] Cf. ibid., 29, 41.
[131] Cf. JOHN PAUL II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Pastores Dabo Vobis
(25 March 1992), 65: AAS 84 (1992) 770-772.
[132] Cf. CONGREGATION FOR CATHOLIC EDUCATION and CONGREGATION FOR THE CLERGY,
Declaration on the Basic Norms for the Formation of Permanent Deacons Diaconatus
permanens (22 February 1998): AAS 90 (1998) 835-842; CONGREGATION FOR CATHOLIC
EDUCATION, Ratio Fundamentalis on the Permanent Diaconate Institutio Diaconorum
(22 February 1998): AAS 90 (1998) 843-879; CONGREGATION FOR THE CLERGY,
Directory for the Ministry and Life of Permanent Deacons Diaconatus Originem (22
February 1998): AAS 90 (1998) 879-927.
[133] JOHN PAUL II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Vita Consecrata (25 March
1996), 3: AAS 88 (1996) 379.
[134] Cf. ibid., 29; SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Dogmatic Constitution on
the Church Lumen Gentium, 44.
[135] Cf. JOHN PAUL II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Vita Consecrata (25
March 1996), 47: AAS 88 (1996) 420-421.
[136] SACRED CONGREGATION FOR RELIGIOUS AND SECULAR INSTITUTES AND SACRED
CONGREGATION FOR BISHOPS, Directives for the Mutual Relations between Bishops
and Religious in the Church Mutuae Relationes (14 May 1978), 9c: AAS 70 (1978)
479.
[137] Cf. JOHN PAUL II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Vita Consecrata (25
March 1996), 84,88: AAS 88 (1996) 461-461, 464.
[138] Cf. ibid., 48: AAS 88 (1996) 421-422; SACRED CONGREGATION FOR BISHOPS,
Directory on the Pastoral Ministry of Bishops Ecclesiae Imago (22 February
1973), 207.
[139] Cf. JOHN PAUL II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Vita Consecrata (25
March 1996), 48-49: AAS 88 (1996) 421-423.
[140] Cf. SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church
Lumen Gentium, Chapter IV; Decree on the Apostolate of the Laity Apostolicam
Actuositatem; JOHN PAUL II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Christifideles
Laici (30 December 1988): AAS 81 (1989) 393-521; SACRED CONGREGATION FOR
BISHOPS, Directory on the Pastoral Ministry of Bishops Ecclesiae Imago (22
February 1973), 153-161, 208.
[141] Cf. SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Pastoral Constitution on the Church
in the Modern World Gaudium et Spes, 39.
[142] Cf. JOHN PAUL II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Christifideles Laici
(30 December 1988), 26: AAS 81 (1989) 437-440.
[143] Cf. SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church
Lumen Gentium, 28.
[144] Cf. JOHN PAUL II, Apostolic Exhortation Catechesi Tradendae (16 October
1979), 67: AAS 71 (1979) 1331-1333.
[145] Cf. THE CODE OF CANON LAW, canon 515.
[146] Cf. JOHN PAUL II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Christifideles Laici
(30 December 1988), 27: AAS 81 (1989) 442.
[147] Cf. ibid., 48: AAS 88 (1996) 421-422; SACRED CONGREGATION FOR BISHOPS,
Directory on the Pastoral Ministry of Bishops Ecclesiae Imago (22 February
1973), 184-188.
[148] Cf. SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church
Lumen Gentium, 12; JOHN PAUL II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Vita
Consecrata (25 March 1996), 62: AAS 88 (1996) 435-437.
[149] Cf. SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church
Lumen Gentium, 27.
[150] Ibid., 25: cf. SACRED CONGREGATION FOR BISHOPS, Directory on the Pastoral
Ministry of Bishops Ecclesiae Imago (22 February 1973), 55-65.
[151] Cf. THE CODE OF CANON LAW, canon 386.
[152] Cf. SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Pastoral Constitution on the Church
in the Modern World Gaudium et Spes, 22.
[153] Cf. THE CODE OF CANON LAW, canon 386, §2.
[154] Cf. SAINT IRENAEUS, Adversus Haereses, IV, 26, 2: PG 7, 1053-1054.
[155] SACRED CONGREGATION FOR BISHOPS, Directory on the Pastoral Ministry of
Bishops Ecclesiae Imago (22 February 1973), 59-60.
[156] Cf. CONGREGATION FOR THE DOCTRINE OF THE FAITH, Instruction on the
Vocation of Church Theologians Donum Veritatis (24 May 1990), 21: AAS 82 (1990)
1559.
[157] Cf. JOHN PAUL II, Apostolic Constitution Fidei Depositum (11 October
1992), 4: AAS 86 (1994) 113-118.
[158] Cf. CONGREGATION FOR THE DOCTRINE OF THE FAITH, Instruction on the
Vocation of Church Theologians Donum Veritatis (24 May 1990), 21: AAS 82 (1990)
1559.
[159] PONTIFICAL COMMISSION FOR THE CULTURAL GOODS OF THE CHURCH, Circular
Letter on the Pastoral Value of Ecclesiastical Archives (2 February 1997).
[160] Cf. JOHN PAUL II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Ecclesia in Africa
(14 September 1995), 59-62; AAS 88 (1996) 37-39; Ecclesia in Asia (6 November
1999), 21-22: AAS 92 (2000) 482-487; Vita Consecrata (25 March 1996), 80-81: AAS
88 (1996) 456-458.
[161] Cf. Cf. SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Decree on the Ministry and Life
of Priests Presbyterorum Ordinis, 5.
[162] SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church
Lumen Gentium, 26.
[163] JOHN PAUL II, Discourse during the Wednesday General Audience (11 November
1992), 1: L’Osservatore Romano: Weekly Edition in English, 18 November 1992, p.
11.
[164] Cf. SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church
Lumen Gentium, 26.
[165] Cf. SAINT IGNATIUS OF ANTIOCH, Ad Magn. 7: PA I, Ed. F.X. Funk, Tubingae
1897, 194-196; SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Constitution on the Sacred
Liturgy Sacrocanctum Concilium, 41; Dogmatic Constitution on the Church Lumen
Gentium, 26; Decree on Ecumenism Unitatis Redintegratio, 15.
[166] SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy
Sacrocanctum Concilium, 41
[167] Cf. CAEREMONIALE EPISCOPORUM, 42-54.
[168] Cf. ibid., 42-46.
[169] Cf. ibid., 42-46.
[170] Cf. ibid., 47.
[171] Cf. ibid., 48.
[172] Cf. ibid., 50.
[173] Cf. ibid., 51, 17.
[174] SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy
Sacrocanctum Concilium, 106; JOHN PAUL II, Apostolic Letter Dies Domini (31 May
1998): AAS 90 (1998) 713-766.
[175] Cf. SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church
Lumen Gentium, 11.
[176] Cf. SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy
Sacrocanctum Concilium, 21.
[177] Cf. SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church
Lumen Gentium, 4.
[178] JOHN PAUL II, Encyclical Letter Dominum et Vivificatem (18 May 1986), 66:
AAS 78 (1986), 897.
[179] Cf. PAUL VI, Apostolic Exhortation Evangelii Nuntiandi (8 December 1975),
48: AAS 68 (1976) 37-38.
[180] Cf. THE CATECHISM OF THE CATHOLIC CHURCH, 1674-1676.
[181] CAEREMONIALE EPISCOPORUM, Pars III.
[182] SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church
Lumen Gentium, 27; cf. Decree on the Bishops’ Pastoral Office in the Church
Christus Dominus, 16.
[183] JOHN PAUL II, Discourse during the Wednesday General Audience (18 November
1992), 2,4: L’Osservatore Romano: Weekly Edition in English, 25 November 1992,
p. 11.
[184] Cf. THE CODE OF CANON LAW, canon 383, §1; 384.
[185] Cf. SACRED CONGREGATION FOR BISHOPS, Directory on the Pastoral Ministry of
Bishops Ecclesiae Imago (22 February 1973), 93-98.
[186] JOHN PAUL II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Pastores Dabo Vobis (25
March 1992), 23: AAS 84 (1992) 694.
[187] Cf. JOHN PAUL II, Discourse to the Bishops of the Northern Region of the
Bishops’ Conference of Brazil during their Ad Limina Visit (28 October 1995), 5:
L’Osservatore Romano: Weekly Edition in English, 1 November 1995, p. 5, 8.
[188] Cf. SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Decree on the Ministry and Life of
Priests Presbyterorum Ordinis, 17.
[189] Cf. THE CODE OF CANON LAW, canon 396, §1; canon 398.
[190] SACRED CONGREGATION FOR BISHOPS, Directory on the Pastoral Ministry of
Bishops Ecclesiae Imago (22 February 1973), 166; cf. ibid., 166-170.
[191] Cf. THE CODE OF CANON LAW, canon 460-468; SACRED CONGREGATION FOR BISHOPS,
Directory on the Pastoral Ministry of Bishops Ecclesiae Imago (22 February
1973), 163-165.
[192] Cf. THE CODE OF CANON LAW, canon 212, §2.3.
[193] Cf. CONGREGATION FOR BISHOPS AND CONGREGATION FOR THE EVANGELIZATION OF
PEOPLES, Instruction In Constitutione Apostolica de Synodis dioecesanis agendis
(19 March 1997): AAS 89 (1997) 706-727.
[194] Cf. ibid., V, 2,3,4,: THE CODE OF CANON LAW, canon 466.
[195] Cf. SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Pastoral Constitution on the Church
in the Modern World Gaudium et Spes, 1
[196] Cf. THE CODE OF CANON LAW, canon 1752.
[197] Cf. SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Pastoral Constitution on the Church
in the Modern World Gaudium et Spes, 22.
[198] Ibid., 93; cf. PAUL VI, Encyclical Letter Ecclesiam Suam, III: AAS 56
(1964) 637-659.
[199] Cf. CONGREGATION FOR THE DOCTRINE OF THE FAITH, Declaration on the Unicity
and Salvific Universality of Jesus Christ and the Church Dominus Iesus (6 August
2000), 20-22; AAS 92 (2000) 761-764.
[200] Cf. JOHN PAUL II, Encyclical Letter Ut Unum Sint (25 May 1995): AAS 87
(1995) 921-982.
[201] Cf. PONTIFICAL COUNCIL FOR PROMOTING THE UNITY OF CHRISTIANS, Directory on
the Application of Principles and Norms in Ecumenism (25 March 1993), especially
numbers 37-47: AAS 85 (1993) 1039-1119.
[202] Cf. JOHN PAUL II, Encyclical Letter Redemptoris Missio (7 December 1990),
37: AAS 83 (1991) 282-286.
[203] Ibid., 31: AAS 83 (1991) 276-277.
[204] Ibid., 20: AAS 83 (1991) 267-268.
[205] Cf. SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Decree on the Church’s Missionary
Activity Ad Gentes, 38.
[206] Ibid., 38; cf. JOHN PAUL II, Encyclical Letter Redemptoris Missio, 63: AAS
83 (1991) 311-312.
[207] JOHN PAUL II, Encyclical Letter Redemptoris Missio, 11: AAS 83 (1991)
259-260.
[208] Cf. SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Decree on the Church’s Missionary
Activity Ad Gentes, 9.
[209] Cf. CONGREGATION FOR THE EVANGELIZATION OF PEOPLES, Instruction Cooperatio
Missionalis (1 October 1998): AAS 91 (1999) 306-324.
[210] Cf. JOHN PAUL II, Encyclical Letter Redemptoris Missio (7 December 1990),
55: AAS 83 (1991) 302-304; Apostolic Letter Tertio Millennio Adveniente (10
November 1994), 53: AAS 87 (1995) 37.
[211] SAINT JUSTIN, Dialogus cum Tryphone, 11: PG 6, 499; cf. CONGREGATION FOR
THE DOCTRINE OF THE FAITH,Declaration on the Unicity and Salvific Universality
of Jesus Christ and the Church Dominus Iesus (6 August 2000), 13-15: AAS 92
(2000) 754-756.
[212] SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Decree on Religious Freedom Dignitatis
Humanae, 1; CONGREGATION FOR THE DOCTRINE OF THE FAITH, Declaration on the
Unicity and Salvific Universality of Jesus Christ and the Church Dominus Iesus
(6 August 2000), 16-17: AAS 92 (2000) 756-759.
[213] Cf. JOHN PAUL II, Encyclical Letter Redemptoris Missio (7 December 1990),
5: AAS 83 (1991) 253-254.
[214] Cf. SECRETARIAT FOR THE UNION OF CHRISTIANS - SECRETARIAT FOR NON
CHRISTIANS - PONTIFICAL COUNCIL FOR CULTURE, Provisional Report on the
Phenomenon of the Sects and New Religious Movements (7 May 1986), 10.
[215] Cf. CONGREGATION FOR DIVINE WORSHIP AND THE DISCIPLINE OF THE SACRAMENTS,
Rituale Romanum. de Exorcismis et Supplicationibus Quibusdam, Editio Typica
1999; CONGREGATION FOR THE DOCTRINE OF THE FAITH, Instructio de Orantionibus ad
Obtinendam a Deo Sanationem (14 September 2000).
[216] Cf. SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Pastoral Constitution on the Church
in the Modern World Gaudium et Spes, 63.
[217] THE CATECHISM OF THE CATHOLIC CHURCH, 1818.
[218] Cf. CONGREGATION FOR THE DOCTRINE OF THE FAITH, Instruction on Christian
Freedom and Liberation Libertatis Conscientia (22 March 1986), 62: AAS 79 (1987)
580-581.
[219] Cf. ibid., 60: AAS 79 (1987) 579.
[220] Cf. JOHN PAUL II, Concluding Address for the World Day of Prayer for Peace
(27 October 1986), Assisi, Italy, 7: L’Osservatore Romano: Weekly Edition in
English, 3 November 1986, p. 3.
[221] SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Pastoral Constitution of the Church in
the Modern World Gaudium et Spes, 40.
[222] Ibid., 76.
[223] Cf. ibid., 72, 76.
[224] JOHN PAUL II, Encyclical Letter Centesimus Annus (1 May 1991), 47: AAS 83
(1991) 851-852.
[225] SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church
Lumen Gentium, 8.
[226] SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Pastoral Constitution on the Church
Gaudium et Spes, 22.
[227] Cf. JUBILEE FOR BISHOPS, Rome, 6-8 October 2000: Participation booklet.
[228] Cf. JOHN PAUL II, Act of Entrustment to the Blessed Virgin Mary, 3-4:
L’Osservatore Romano: Weekly Edition in English, 11 October 2000, 7.
[229] SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church
Lumen Gentium, 68.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
INDEX
INTRODUCTION
From the Perspective of a New Millennium
In the Footsteps of Previous Synodal Assemblies
Continuity and Newness
A Renewed Proclamation of the Gospel of Hope
CHAPTER I
A MINISTRY OF HOPE
Looking at the World with the Heart of the Good Shepherd
Under the Sign of Theological Hope
Between the Past and the Future
Lights and Shadows in the World’s Realities
Between the Return to the Sacred and Indifference
New Ethical Problems on the Horizon
Emerging Situations in the Church
Signs of Vitality and Hope
Towards a New Humanism
The Fruits of the Jubilee
Under the Guidance of the Spirit
Towards Converging Paths of Unity
A Demand for Spirituality
The Bishop: Witness of Hope
Faithful like the Virgin Mary to the Expectations and Promises of God
CHAPTER II
THE MYSTERY, MINISTRY AND SPIRITUALITY OF THE BISHOP
The Image of Christ, the Good Shepherd
I. MYSTERY AND GRACE OF THE EPISCOPATE
The Grace of Episcopal Ordination
In Communion with the Trinity
From the Father, through Christ, in the Spirit
The Ecclesial Image of the Bishop
The Spirit of Holiness
II. SANCTIFICATION IN HIS MINISTRY
The Spiritual Life of the Bishop
A Genuine Pastoral Charity
The Ministry of Preaching
One Who Prays and Teaches Prayer
Nourished by the Grace of the Sacraments
As High Priest in the Midst of His People
A Spirituality of Communion
Animator of Pastoral Spirituality
In Communion with the Holy Mother of God
III. THE SPIRITUAL ITINERARY OF THE BISHOP
A Necessary Spiritual Itinerary
With the Spiritual Realism of Everyday Life
The Divine and Human in Harmony
Faithfulness to the End
The Example of Bishop Saints
CHAPTER III
THE EPISCOPATE: THE MINISTRY OF COMMUNION
AND MISSION IN THE UNIVERSAL CHURCH
Friends of Christ, Chosen and Sent by Him
I. THE EPISCOPAL MINISTRY IN AN ECCLESIOLOGY OF COMMUNION
In the Church, Image of the Trinity
In an Ecclesiology of Communion and Mission
Unity and Catholicity in the Episcopal Ministry
In Communion with the Successor of Peter
Collaboration in the Petrine Ministry
Ad Limina Visits and Relations with the Holy See
Episcopal Conferences
The Sense and Effectiveness of Communion
II. CERTAIN PROBLEMS
Various Types of Episcopal Ministry
Emeritus Bishops
The Appointment and Formation of Bishops
CHAPTER IV
THE BISHOP IN SERVICE TO HIS CHURCH
The Biblical Image of the Washing of the Feet: Jn 13:1-16
I. THE BISHOP IN HIS PARTICULAR CHURCH
The Particular Church
A Mystery Uniting the Bishop and his People
The Word, Eucharist and Community
One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic
One Church with a Human Face
Universal Church, Particular Church
II. COMMUNION AND MISSION IN THE PARTICULAR CHURCH
Communion with the Presbyterate
A Special Care for Priests
Deacons: Their Ministry and Collaboration
The Seminary and Vocations Program
Other Ministers
Solicitude for the Consecrated Life
A Committed and Responsible Laity
In Service to the Family
Youth: A Pastoral Priority for the Future
Parishes
Ecclesial Movements and New Communities
III. THE EPISCOPAL MINISTRY IN SERVICE TO THE GOSPEL
1. The Ministry of the Word
Proclaiming the Gospel of Hope
The Center of Proclamation
The Teaching of the Faith and Catechesis
The Entire Church Committed to Catechesis
Dialogue and Collaboration with Theologians and the Faithful
The Witness of Truth
Tasks for the Future
Culture and Inculturation
2. The Ministry of Sanctification
The Bishop as Priest and Liturgist in his Cathedral
The Eucharist at the Center of the Particular Church
Attention to Prayer and Popular Piety
Some Special Questions
3. The Exercise of the Ministry of Leading
The Service of Leading
Exercise of Authentic Pastoral Charity
A Pastoral Style Authenticated by Life
Pastoral Visitation
The Diocesan Synod
A Governing Imbued with a Spirit of Communion
Administration of Funds
Practical Questions Pertaining to the Particular Church
CHAPTER V
IN SERVICE TO THE GOSPEL
FOR THE HOPE OF THE WORLD
In Jesus Christ: the Perennial Jubilee of the Church
The Church’s Ministry of Salvation
A New Religious Situation
Ecumenical Dialogue
The Proclamation of the Gospel
Missionary Activity and Cooperation
Interreligious Dialogue and Meetings with Other Religions
A Particular Attention to the Phenomenon of the Sects
Dialogue with Persons of Other Persuasions
Attention to New Social Problems and the New Forms of Poverty
Near to Those Who Suffer
Promoter of Justice and Peace
Guardian of Hope, Witness of Christ’s Charity
The Ranks of Witnesses and the Anchor of Hope
CONCLUSION
| |
|