| INTRODUCTION
1. The shepherds of the Lord's flock know that they can count
on a special divine grace as they carry out their ministry as
Bishops. In the Roman Pontifical, during the solemn prayer of
episcopal ordination, the principal ordaining Bishop, after invoking
the outpouring of the Holy Spirit who leads and guides, repeats
a phrase already found in the ancient text of the Apostolic Tradition:
“Grant, O Father, knower of all hearts, that this your servant,
whom you have chosen for the office of Bishop, may shepherd your
holy flock. May he fulfil before you without reproach the ministry
of the High Priesthood.”.1 In this way there continues to
be carried out the will of the Lord Jesus Christ, the eternal
Shepherd, who sent the Apostles even as he himself was sent by
the Father (cf. Jn 20:21), and who wishes that their successors,
the Bishops, should remain shepherds in his Church until the end
of time.2
The image of the Good Shepherd, so dear also to ancient Christian
iconography, was very much present to the Bishops from throughout
the world who gathered from 30 September to 27 October 2001 for
the Tenth Ordinary General Assembly of the Synod of Bishops. At
the tomb of the Apostle Peter, they joined me in reflecting on
the figure of The Bishop, Servant of the Gospel of Jesus Christ
for the Hope of the World. We were all agreed that the figure
of Jesus the Good Shepherd represents the primary image to which
we must constantly refer. No one, in fact, can be considered a
pastor worthy of the name, nisi per caritate efficiatur unum cum
Christo.3 This is the fundamental reason why ''the ideal figure
of the Bishop, on which the Church continues to count, is that
of the pastor who, configured to Christ by his holiness of life,
expends himself generously for the Church entrusted to him, while
at the same time bearing in his heart a concern for all the Churches
throughout the world (cf. 2 Cor 11:28)''.4
The Tenth Assembly of the Synod of Bishops
2. We give thanks to the Lord, then, for having granted us the
gift of celebrating once more an assembly of the Synod of Bishops
and thus having a truly profound experience of being Church. Held
in the wake of the Great Jubilee of the Year 2000, at the beginning
of the third Christian millennium, the Tenth Ordinary General
Assembly of the Synod of Bishops followed a long series of assemblies:
both the Special Assemblies, all of which were marked by a concern
for evangelization on the different continents – from Africa
to America, Asia, Oceania and Europe; and the Ordinary Assemblies,
the last of which were devoted to a reflection on the rich treasure
which the Church possesses in the variety of vocations raised
up by the Holy Spirit among the People of God. In this context,
the attention devoted to the specific ministry of Bishops completed
the picture of that ecclesiology of communion and mission which
must always be our fundamental point of reference.
Consequently, the work of the Synod made constant reference to
the teaching of the Second Vatican Council on the episcopate and
the ministry of Bishops, especially as set forth in the third
chapter of the Dogmatic Constitution on the Church Lumen Gentium
and in the Decree on the Pastoral Office of Bishops Christus Dominus.
Of this luminous teaching, which repeats and develops traditional
theological and juridical themes, my predecessor of venerable
memory Pope Paul VI, could rightly say: ''It seems to us that
episcopal authority emerges from the Council vindicated in its
divine institution, confirmed in its irreplaceable function, renewed
in its pastoral powers of teaching, sanctifying and governing,
honoured in its extension to the universal Church by way of collegial
communion, more clearly identified in its hierarchical aspect,
strengthened in shared and fraternal responsibility with other
Bishops for the universal and particular needs of the Church,
and more strongly associated in a spirit of hierarchical union
and joint cooperation with the head of the Church, the constitutive
centre of the College of Bishops''.5
At the same time, in keeping with the designated topic of the
Synod, the Fathers reviewed their ministry in the light of the
theological virtue of hope. This approach immediately appeared
as especially pertinent to the mission of the pastor who, in the
Church, is first and foremost to bear witness to the Paschal and
eschatological mystery.
A hope founded on Christ
3. It is in fact the task of every Bishop to proclaim hope to
the world, hope based on the proclamation of the Gospel of Jesus
Christ: a hope ''which not only concerns penultimate matters but
also and above all that eschatological hope which awaits the riches
of the glory of God (cf. Eph 1:18), which surpasses anything that
the human heart has ever conceived (cf. 1 Cor 2:9), and to which
the sufferings of the present cannot be compared (cf. Rom 8:18)''.6
A stance of theological hope, together with faith and love, must
completely shape the Bishop's pastoral ministry.
The Bishop is called in a particular way to be a prophet, witness
and servant of hope. He has the duty of instilling confidence
and proclaiming before all people the basis of Christian hope
(cf. 1 Pet 3:15). The Bishop is the prophet, witness and servant
of this hope, especially where a culture of ''the here and now''
leaves no room for openness to transcendence. Where hope is absent,
faith itself is called into question. Love too is weakened by
the loss of this virtue. Especially in times of growing unbelief
and indifference, hope is a stalwart support for faith and an
effective incentive for love. It draws its strength from the certainty
of God's desire for the salvation of all people (cf. 1 Tim 2:4)
and from the constant presence of the Lord Jesus, the Emmanuel
who remains with us always, until the end of the world (cf. Mt
28:20).
Only by the light and consolation born of the Gospel can a Bishop
succeed in keeping his own hope alive (cf. Rom 15:4) and in nourishing
the hope of those entrusted to his pastoral care. He must therefore
model himself on the Virgin Mary, the Mother of Hope, who believed
in the fulfilment of the Lord's words (cf. Lk 1:45). Relying on
the word of God and holding firmly to hope, which like a sure
and steadfast anchor reaches to the heavens (cf. Heb 6:18-20),
the Bishop stands in the midst of the Church as a vigilant sentinel,
a courageous prophet, a credible witness and a faithful servant
of Christ, ''our hope of glory'' (cf. Col 1:27), thanks to whom
''death shall be no more, neither shall there be mourning, nor
crying nor pain any more'' (cf. Rev 21:4).
Hope, when hopes are dashed
4. Everyone will remember that the sessions of the Synod of Bishops
took place at a dramatic time. The terrible events of 11 September
2001 were intensely felt by the Synod Fathers, with the dreadful
fate of countless innocent victims and for the appearance in our
world of grave new situations of uncertainty and fear, both for
human civilization and the peaceful coexistence of nations. A
new spectre of war and death appeared, which, when added to the
already existing situations of conflict, made all the more evident
the need to implore the Prince of Peace that human hearts might
open once more to reconciliation, solidarity and peace.7
Together with its prayers, the Synodal assembly spoke out in condemnation
of all forms of violence and identified their ultimate source
in human sin. Acknowledging the failure of human hopes based on
materialist, immanentist and market ideologies which claim to
measure everything in terms of efficiency, relationships of power
and market forces, the Synod Fathers reaffirmed their conviction
that only the light of the Risen One and the guidance of the Holy
Spirit can enable people to base their expectations on the hope
that does not disappoint. Thus, they proclaimed: ''We should not
allow ourselves to be intimidated by those doctrines which deny
the existence of the living God and which strive, more or less
openly, to undermine, parody or deride Christian hope. In the
joy of the Spirit we profess: 'Christ is truly risen!' In his
glorified humanity he has opened up the prospect of eternal life
for all those who accept the grace of conversion''.8
The certainty of this profession of faith must be such that it
daily strengthens a Bishop's hope and makes him increasingly confident
of the unfailing power of God's merciful goodness to open up paths
of salvation and propose them to the freedom of each person. Hope
encourages a Bishop to discern, wherever he exercises his ministry,
the signs of life which are able to uproot the seeds of destruction
and death. Hope sustains him as he transforms conflicts themselves
into an opportunity for growth and for reconciliation. Hope in
Jesus the Good Shepherd will fill his heart with compassion, prompting
him to draw near to the pain of every suffering man and woman
and to soothe their wounds, ever confident that every lost sheep
will be found. The Bishop will thus be an ever more luminous sign
of Christ, the Shepherd and Spouse of the Church. Acting as father,
brother and friend to all, he will stand beside everyone as the
living image of Christ, our hope, in whom all God's promises are
fulfilled and all the expectations of creation are brought to
completion.9
Servants of the Gospel for the hope of the world
5. In issuing this Apostolic Exhortation, I now take up the reflections
which developed during the Tenth Ordinary General Assembly of
the Synod of Bishops, from the first Lineamenta to the Instrumentum
Laboris, from the interventions made in the Hall by the Synod
Fathers to the two Relations that introduced and summarized these
interventions, from the theoretical and practical pastoral insights
that emerged from the small groups to the Propositiones presented
to me at the conclusion of the Synod to assist me in preparing
for the whole Church a document on the Synod's theme of The Bishop,
Servant of the Gospel of Jesus Christ for the Hope of the World.10
In doing so, I send my fraternal greetings and the kiss of peace
to all the Bishops in communion with this See, first entrusted
to Peter so that he might be a guarantee of unity and, as is recognized
by all, preside in love.11
To you, venerable and dear Brothers, I repeat the invitation that
I addressed to the whole Church at the beginning of the millennium:
Duc in altum! It is Christ himself who repeats these words to
the Successors of those Apostles who heard them from his lips
and who, putting their trust in him, set forth on mission along
the byways of the world: Duc in altum (Lk 5:4). In the light of
this pressing command from the Lord, ''we may reread the triple
munus entrusted to us in the Church: munus docendi, sanctificandi
et regendi ... Duc in docendo! With the Apostle we will say: 'Preach
the word, be urgent in season and out of season, convince, rebuke
and exhort – be unfailing in patience and in teaching' (2
Tim 4:2). Duc in sanctificando! The 'nets' we are called upon
to cast among men are, first of all, the sacraments, of which
we are the principal dispensers, moderators, guardians and promoters.
They form a sort of saving 'net,' which sets free from evil and
leads to the fullness of life. Duc in regendo! As pastors and
true fathers, assisted by the priests and other helpers, we have
the task of gathering together the family of the faithful and
in it fostering charity and brotherly communion. As arduous and
laborious a mission as this may be, we must not lose heart. With
Peter and the first disciples we too with great confidence renew
our heartfelt profession of faith: Lord, 'at your word I will
lower the nets' (Lk 5:5)! At your word, O Christ, we wish to serve
your Gospel for the hope of the world!''.12
In this way, living as men of hope and reflecting in their ministry
the ecclesiology of communion and mission, Bishops will truly
be a source of hope for their flock. We know that the world needs
the ''hope that does not disappoint'' (cf. Rom 5:5). We know that
this hope is Christ. We know it and therefore we proclaim the
hope that springs from the Cross.
Ave Crux, spes unica! May this acclamation, which echoed in the
Synod Hall at the central moment of the work of the Tenth Ordinary
General Assembly of the Synod of Bishops, remain ever on our lips,
for the Cross is a mystery of life and death. The Cross has become
for the Church a ''tree of life''. For this reason we proclaim
that life has triumphed over death.
In making this Paschal proclamation we follow in the footsteps
of a great multitude of holy pastors who have been eloquent images
of the Good Shepherd in medio Ecclesiae. This prompts us always
to praise and thank almighty and eternal God, for, as we sing
in the sacred Liturgy, he strengthens us by their example, instructs
us by their teaching and gives us protection through their intercession.13
As I said at the conclusion of the Synod's work, the face of each
of these holy Bishops, from the beginning of the Church's life
to our own day, is like a tile placed in a sort of mystical mosaic
forming the face of Christ the Good Shepherd. It is he, then,
that we contemplate, setting an example for the flock entrusted
to us by the Pastor of Pastors, so that we can become ever more
committed servants of the Gospel for the hope of the world.
As we gaze upon the face of our Master and Lord at that hour when
he ''loved his own to the end'', all of us, like the Apostle Peter,
allow our feet to be washed so that we might have a part in him
(cf. Jn 13:1-9). And with the strength that comes to us from him
in the Church, in the presence of our priests and deacons, before
all men and women of the consecrated life and all our beloved
lay people, we repeat aloud: ''Whatever we may be, let not your
hope be placed in us: if we are good, we are your servants; if
we are bad, we are still your servants. But if we are good and
faithful servants, it is then that we are truly your servants''.14
Servants of the Gospel for the hope of the world.
CHAPTER ONE
THE MYSTERY AND MINISTRY
OF THE BISHOP
''... and he chose from them Twelve'' (Lk 6:13)
6. The Lord Jesus, during his earthly pilgrimage, proclaimed the
Gospel of the Kingdom and inaugurated it in his own person, revealing
its mystery to all people.15 He called men and women to be his
followers, and from his disciples he chose Twelve ''to be with
him'' (Mk 3:14). The Gospel of Luke points out that Jesus made
this choice after a night spent in prayer on the mountain (cf.
6:12). The Gospel of Mark, for its part, appears to see in this
action of Jesus a sovereign act, a constitutive act which gives
an identity to those whom he chose: ''he appointed Twelve'' (3:14).
The mystery of the election of the Twelve is thus disclosed: it
is an act of love, freely willed by Jesus in intimate union with
the Father and the Holy Spirit.
The mission entrusted by Jesus to the Apostles is to last until
the end of time (cf. Mt 28:20), since the Gospel which they have
been charged to hand down is the life of the Church in every age.
It was precisely for this reason that the Apostles were concerned
to appoint for themselves successors, so that, as Saint Irenaeus
attests, the apostolic tradition might be manifested and preserved
down the centuries.16
The special outpouring of the Holy Spirit with which the Risen
Lord filled the Apostles (cf. Acts 1:5; 8; 2:4; Jn 20:22-23) was
shared by them through the gesture of laying hands upon their
co-workers (cf. 1 Tim 4:14; 2 Tim 1:6-7). These in turn transmitted
it by the same gesture to others, and these to others still. In
this way, the spiritual gift given in the beginning has come down
to our own day through the imposition of hands, in other words,
by episcopal consecration, which confers the fullness of the sacrament
of Orders, the high priesthood and the totality of the sacred
ministry. Thus, through the Bishops and the priests, their co-workers,
the Lord Jesus Christ, seated at the right hand of God the Father,
remains present in the midst of believers. In every time and place
it is he who proclaims the word of God to all peoples, administers
the sacraments of faith to believers and guides the people of
the New Testament on their pilgrimage to eternal happiness. The
Good Shepherd does not abandon his flock but preserves and protects
it always through those who, by their ontological share in his
life and mission, carry out in an eminent and visible way the
role of teacher, shepherd and priest, who act in his name in exercising
the functions associated with the pastoral ministry, and who are
constituted his vicars and ambassadors.17
The Trinitarian foundation of the episcopal ministry
7. The Christological dimension of the pastoral ministry, considered
in depth, leads to an understanding of the Trinitarian foundation
of ministry itself. Christ's life is Trinitarian. He is the eternal
and only-begotten Son of the Father and the anointed of the Holy
Spirit, sent into the world; it is he who, together with the Father,
pours out the Spirit upon the Church. This Trinitarian dimension,
manifested in every aspect of Christ's life and activity, also
shapes the life and activity of the Bishop. Rightly, then, the
Synod Fathers chose explicitly to describe the life and ministry
of the Bishop in the light of the Trinitarian ecclesiology contained
in the teaching of the Second Vatican Council.
The tradition which sees the Bishop as an image of God the Father
is quite ancient. As Saint Ignatius of Antioch wrote, the Father
is like an invisible Bishop, the Bishop of all. Every Bishop,
therefore, stands in the place of the Father of Jesus Christ in
such a way that, precisely because of this representation, he
is to be revered by all.18 Consonant with this symbolism, the
Bishop's chair, which especially in the tradition of the Eastern
Churches evokes God's paternal authority, can only be occupied
by the Bishop. This same symbolism is the source of every Bishop's
duty to lead the holy people of God as a devoted father and to
guide them – together with his priests, his co-workers in
the episcopal ministry, and with his deacons – in the way
of salvation.19 Conversely, as an ancient text exhorts, the faithful
are to love their Bishops who are, after God, their fathers and
mothers.20 For this reason, in accordance with a custom widespread
in certain cultures, one kisses the Bishop's hand as one would
kiss the hand of the loving Father, the giver of life.
Christ is the primordial icon of the Father and the manifestation
of his merciful presence among men and women. The Bishop, who
acts in the person and in the name of Christ himself, becomes
in the Church entrusted to him a living sign of the Lord Jesus,
Shepherd and Spouse, Teacher and High Priest of the Church.21
Here we find the source of pastoral ministry, and the reason why,
as the homily outline in the Roman Pontifical suggests, the three
functions of teaching, sanctifying and governing the People of
God are to be carried out in imitation of the Good Shepherd: with
charity, knowledge of the flock, concern for all, mercy towards
the poor, the stranger and those in need, and a willingness to
seek out the lost sheep and to bring them back to the one sheepfold.
Finally, the anointing of the Holy Spirit, by configuring the
Bishop to Christ, enables him to be a living continuation of the
mystery of Christ for the Church. Because of this Trinitarian
shaping of his existence, every Bishop in his ministry is committed
to keeping watch over the whole flock with love, for he has been
placed in their midst by the Spirit to govern the Church of God:
in the name of the Father, whose image he represents; in the name
of Jesus Christ his Son, by whom he has been established as teacher,
priest and shepherd; in the name of the Holy Spirit, who gives
life to the Church and by his power strengthens us in our human
weakness.22
The collegial nature of the episcopal ministry
8. ''And he appointed Twelve'' (Mk 3:14). The Dogmatic Constitution
Lumen Gentium employs this Gospel text to introduce its teaching
on the collegial nature of the group of the Twelve, formed ''after
the manner of a college or a fixed group, over which he placed
Peter, chosen from among them''.23 Similarly, through the personal
succession of the Bishop of Rome to Saint Peter and the succession
of all the Bishops as a group to the Apostles, the Roman Pontiff
and the Bishops are united among themselves as a College.24
The collegial union between the Bishops is based on both episcopal
ordination and hierarchical communion. It thus affects the inmost
being of each Bishop and belongs to the structure of the Church
as willed by Jesus Christ. One attains to the fullness of episcopal
ministry by virtue of episcopal consecration and through hierarchical
communion with the Head of the College and with its members, that
is, with the College, which always includes its Head. This is
how one becomes a member of the College of Bishops,25 and the
reason why the three functions received in episcopal ordination
– sanctifying, teaching and governing – must be exercised
in hierarchical communion, even though, given their different
immediate finalities, in a distinct way26.
This constitutes what is called ''the spirit of collegiality''
(affectus collegialis), or ''affective'' collegiality, which is
the basis of the Bishops' concern for the other particular Churches
and for the universal Church.27 Consequently, if we must say that
a Bishop is never alone, inasmuch as he is always united to the
Father though the Son in the Holy Spirit, we must also add that
he is also never alone because he is always and continuously united
with his brothers in the episcopate and with the one whom the
Lord has chosen as the Successor of Peter.
The spirit of collegiality is realized and expressed in different
degrees and in various modalities, including institutional forms
such as, for example, the Synod of Bishops, Particular Councils,
Episcopal Conferences, the Roman Curia, ad Limina visits, missionary
cooperation, etc. In its full sense, however, the spirit of collegiality
is realized and expressed only in collegial action in the strict
sense, that is, in the action of all the Bishops together with
their Head, with whom they exercise full and supreme power over
the whole Church.28
This collegial nature of the apostolic ministry is willed by Christ
himself. Consequently, the spirit of collegiality, or affective
collegiality (collegialitas affectiva), is always present among
the Bishops as communio episcoporum, but only in certain acts
does it find expression as effective collegiality (collegialitas
effectiva). The various ways in which affective collegiality comes
to be realized in effective collegiality belong to the human order,
but in varying degrees they concretize the divine requirement
that the episcopate should express itself in a collegial manner.29
The College's supreme authority over the whole Church is solemnly
exercised in Ecumenical Councils.30
The collegial dimension gives the episcopate its character of
universality. A parallelism can thus be established between the
Church as one and universal, and therefore indivisible, and the
episcopacy as one and indivisible, and therefore universal. The
principle and foundation of this unity, be it that of the Church
or of the Bishops, is the Roman Pontiff. Indeed, as the Second
Vatican Council teaches, the College, ''insofar as it is composed
of many, expresses the variety and universality of the People
of God, but insofar as it is assembled under one head, it expresses
the unity of the flock of Christ''.31 For this reason, ''the unity
of the episcopate is one of the constitutive elements of the unity
of the Church''.32
The universal Church is not the sum of the particular Churches,
or a federation of the latter, or even the result of their communion
as such, since, in the expression of the early Fathers and the
liturgy, in her essential mystery the Church precedes creation
itself.33 In the light of this teaching, we can add that the relationship
of mutual interiority existing between the universal Church and
each particular Church, whereby the particular Churches are ''formed
in the likeness of the universal Church, and in and from the particular
Churches there comes into being the one and only Catholic Church'',34
is reproduced in the relationship between the College of Bishops
in its entirety and each Bishop as an individual. For this reason,
''the College of Bishops is not to be understood as the aggregate
of the Bishops who govern the particular Churches, nor as the
result of their communion; rather, as an essential element of
the universal Church, it is a reality which precedes the office
of being the head of a particular Church''.35
We can better understand this parallelism between the universal
Church and the College of Bishops in light of the Council's statement
that ''the Apostles were the first members of the new Israel,
and at the same time the beginning of the sacred hierarchy''.36
In the Apostles, not considered individually but as a College,
there was already contained the structure of the Church –
which in them was established in her universality and unity –
and the structure of the College of Bishops, their successors,
the sign of this universality and unity.37
It is thus that ''the power of the College of Bishops over the
whole Church is not the result of the sum of the powers of the
individual Bishops over their particular Churches; it is a pre-existing
reality in which individual Bishops participate. They have no
competence to act over the whole Church except collegially''.38
Bishops share as a body in the power of teaching and governing,
and they do so immediately by the very fact that they are members
of the College of Bishops, in which the Apostolic College truly
continues in being.39
Just as the universal Church is one and indivisible, so too the
College of Bishops is one ''indivisible theological subject,''
and hence the supreme, full and universal power possessed by the
College, and by the Roman Pontiff personally, is one and indivisible.
Precisely because the College of Bishops is a reality prior to
the office of heading a particular Church, there are many Bishops
who, while carrying out tasks that are properly episcopal, are
not heads of particular Churches.40 Each Bishop, always in union
with his brothers in the episcopate and with the Roman Pontiff,
represents Christ the Head and Shepherd of the Church: he does
this not only in a proper and specific manner when he receives
the office of pastor of a particular Church, but also when he
cooperates with the Diocesan Bishop in the governance of his Church
41 or when he shares in the Roman Pontiff's office of universal
pastor in the governance of the universal Church. In the course
of her history the Church has also recognized, in addition to
the specific form of presidency over a particular Church, other
forms of exercising the episcopal ministry – such as that
of an Auxiliary Bishop or a representative of the Roman Pontiff
in the offices of the Holy See or in Papal Legations; today too,
in accordance with the norms of law, she admits these other forms
when they are needed.42
The missionary character and the unitary nature of the episcopal
ministry
9. The Gospel of Luke (cf. 6:13) tells us that Jesus named the
Twelve ''Apostles'', which literally means ''envoys'', ''those
who are sent''. In the Gospel of Mark we read that Jesus also
appointed the Twelve ''to be sent out to preach'' (3:14). This
means that both the election and the establishment of the Twelve
as Apostles are directed towards mission. Their first sending
(cf. Mt 10:5; Mk 6:7; Lk 9:1-2) comes to its fulfilment in the
mission that Jesus entrusts to them after the Resurrection, at
the moment of his Ascension into heaven. The Lord's words remain
as timely as ever: ''All authority in heaven and on earth has
been given to me. 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
28:18-20). This apostolic mission finds its solemn confirmation
on the day of Pentecost with the outpouring of the Holy Spirit.
In the text of the Gospel of Matthew just quoted, the entire pastoral
ministry can be seen as organized according to the threefold function
of teaching, sanctifying and governing. We see here a reflection
of the threefold dimension of Christ's service and mission. We,
as Christians, and in a qualitatively new manner as priests, participate
in the mission of our Master, who is Prophet, Priest and King,
and we are called to bear special witness to him in the Church
and before the world.
These three functions (triplex munus) and the powers that derive
from them express on the level of action the pastoral ministry
(munus pastorale) that every Bishop receives with episcopal consecration.
It is a share in Christ's own love that is given in the consecration;
this love is made concrete in the proclamation of the Gospel of
hope to all peoples (cf. Lk 4:16-19), in the administration of
the sacraments to those who embrace salvation and in the guidance
of God's holy people towards eternal life. These three functions
are, in fact, deeply interconnected; they explain, influence and
clarify one another.43
For this reason, then, when the Bishop teaches, he also sanctifies
and governs the People of God; when he sanctifies, he also teaches
and governs; when he governs, he teaches and sanctifies. Saint
Augustine defines the entirety of this episcopal ministry as an
office of love: amoris officium.44 This gives us the certainty
that the pastoral charity of Jesus Christ will never be lacking
in the Church.
''He called to him those whom he desired'' (Mk 3:13-14)
10. A great crowd was following Jesus when he decided to go up
the mountain and call the Apostles. There were many disciples,
but from them he chose Twelve alone for the specific role of Apostles
(cf. Mk 3:13-19). In the Synod Hall the words of Saint Augustine
were often heard: ''For you I am a Bishop and with you I am a
Christian''.45
As a gift of the Holy Spirit to the Church, the Bishop is above
all else, like every other Christian, a son and member of the
Church. From this holy Mother he has received the gift of divine
life in the sacrament of Baptism and his first instruction in
the faith. Together with all the faithful he shares in the incomparable
dignity of the children of God, a dignity to be lived out in communion
and in a spirit of gratitude and fraternity. On the other hand,
by virtue of the fullness of the sacrament of Holy Orders, the
Bishop is also the one who, before the faithful, is teacher, sanctifier
and shepherd, charged with acting in the name and in the person
of Christ.
These are obviously two relationships which do not simply stand
side-by-side but are deeply interconnected; they are ordered to
each other inasmuch as both draw upon the richness of Christ,
the one High Priest. The Bishop becomes a ''father'' precisely
because he is fully a ''son'' of the Church. This brings up once
again the relationship between the common priesthood of the faithful
and the ministerial priesthood: two modes of participation in
the one priesthood of Christ, which involves two dimensions which
unite in the supreme act of the sacrifice of the Cross.
This is reflected in the relationship which exists in the Church
between the common priesthood and the ministerial priesthood.
The fact that for all their difference in essence each is ordered
to the other 46 gives rise to an interplay that harmoniously structures
the life of the Church as the place where the salvation brought
about by Christ is made historically present. This interplay is
present in the very person of the Bishop, who is and remains a
baptized member of the Church, yet is incorporated into the high
priesthood. This deeper reality of the Bishop is the foundation
of his ''being among'' the other faithful and of his being placed
''before'' them.
The Second Vatican Council puts this nicely: ''If therefore everyone
in the Church does not walk along the same path, nevertheless
all are called to sanctity and have received an equal privilege
of faith through the justice of God (cf 2 Pet 1:1). And if by
the will of Christ some are made teachers, dispensers of mysteries,
and shepherds on behalf of others, yet all share a true equality
with regard to the dignity and to the activity common to all the
faithful for the building up of the Body of Christ. For the distinction
which the Lord made between sacred ministers and the rest of the
People of God entails a unity, since pastors and the other faithful
are bound to each other by a common bond. The Church's pastors,
following the example of the Lord, should minister to one another
and to the rest of the faithful. The faithful in their turn should
cooperate gladly with their pastors and teachers''.47
The pastoral ministry received in episcopal consecration, which
sets the Bishop ''before'' the other faithful, finds expression
in his ''being for'' the other members of the faithful while not
detracting from his ''being with'' them. This is true with regard
both to the Bishop's personal sanctification, which must be pursued
and realized in the exercise of his ministry, and to the ''style''
with which he carries out this ministry in all its respective
functions.
The interplay between the common priesthood of the faithful and
the ministerial priesthood, present in the episcopal ministry
itself, is manifested in a kind of ''perichoresis'' between the
two forms of priesthood: a perichoresis between the common witness
to the faith given by the faithful and the Bishop's authoritative
witness to the faith through his magisterial acts; a perichoresis
between the lived holiness of the faithful and the means of sanctification
that the Bishop offers them; and finally, a perichoresis between
the personal responsibility of the Bishop for the good of the
Church entrusted to him and the shared responsibility of all the
faithful for that same Church.
CHAPTER TWO
THE SPIRITUAL LIFE OF THE BISHOP
''... he appointed Twelve that they might be with him'' (Mk 3,
14)
11. In the same act of love by which he freely established the
Twelve as Apostles, Jesus called them to share his own life. This
sharing, which is a communion of mind and heart with him, also
appears as an inner demand of their participation in Jesus' own
mission. The functions of the Bishop must not be reduced to those
of administration alone. Precisely in order to avoid this risk,
both the preparatory documents of the Synod and many interventions
by the Fathers in the Synod Hall dwelt at length on what the reality
of the episcopate as the fullness of the sacrament of Holy Orders
– in its theological, Christological and pneumatological
foundations – entails for the personal life of the Bishop
and for the exercise of the ministry entrusted to him.
Objective sanctification, which by Christ's work is present in
the sacrament through the communication of the Holy Spirit, needs
to coincide with subjective sanctification, in which the Bishop,
by the help of grace, must continuously progress through the exercise
of his ministry. The ontological transformation brought about
by episcopal consecration, as a configuration to Christ, demands
a lifestyle that manifests a ''being with him''. Consequently,
during the Synod sessions, emphasis was laid on pastoral charity
as being the fruit of the character bestowed by the sacrament
and of its particular grace. Charity, it was said, is in a sense
the heart of the ministry of the Bishop, who is drawn into a dynamic
pastoral pro-existence whereby he is impelled to live, like Christ
the Good Shepherd, for the Father and for others, in the daily
gift of self.
It is above all in exercising his own ministry, inspired by imitation
of the charity of the Good Shepherd, that the Bishop is called
to be sanctified and to sanctify, taking as his unifying principle
contemplation of the face of Christ and the proclamation of the
Gospel of salvation.48 His spirituality, therefore, draws direction
and nourishment not only from the sacraments of Baptism and Confirmation
but also from his episcopal ordination, which commits him to living
out in faith, hope and charity his ministry of evangelization,
liturgical presidency and leadership in the community. The Bishop's
spirituality will therefore be an ecclesial spirituality, since
everything in his life is directed towards the building up of
the Church in love.
This requires of the Bishop an attitude of service marked by personal
strength, apostolic courage and trusting abandonment to the inner
working of the Spirit. He will therefore strive to adopt a lifestyle
which imitates the kenosis of Christ, the poor and humble servant,
so that the exercise of his pastoral ministry will be a consistent
reflection of Jesus, the Servant of God, and will help him to
become, like Jesus, close to everyone, from the greatest to the
least. Again, by a form of reciprocal interplay, the faithful
and loving exercise of his ministry sanctifies the Bishop and
on the subjective level configures him ever more closely to the
ontological richness of sanctity which the sacrament has bestowed
upon him.
The Bishop's personal holiness, however, is never limited to the
purely subjective level, since in its efficacy it always proves
beneficial to the faithful entrusted to his pastoral care. In
the practice of charity, as the content of the pastoral ministry
he has received, the Bishop becomes a sign of Christ and acquires
that moral authority needed for the effective exercise of his
juridical authority. Unless the episcopal office is based on the
witness of a holiness manifested in pastoral charity, humility
and simplicity of life, it ends up being reduced to a solely functional
role and, tragically, it loses credibility before the clergy and
the faithful.
The call to holiness in the Church in our time
12. There is a particularly apt Biblical image to describe the
figure of the Bishop as the friend of God and the pastor and guide
of his people. It is the figure of Moses. Looking to him, the
Bishop can find inspiration for his life and activity as a pastor,
for Moses was chosen and sent by the Lord, courageous in leading
his people toward the Promised Land, a faithful interpreter of
the word and law of the living God, a mediator of the Covenant,
ardent and confident in his prayer on behalf of his people. Like
Moses, who after his dialogue with the Lord on the holy mountain
returned among his people with his face radiant (cf. Ex 34:29-30),
so the Bishop will be able to show his brothers and sisters that
he is their father, brother and friend only if he has entered
the dark yet luminous cloud of the mystery of the Father, Son
and Holy Spirit. Radiant with the light of the Trinity, he will
be a sign of the merciful goodness of the Father, a living image
of the love of the Son, and transparently a man of the Spirit,
consecrated and sent forth to lead the People of God along the
paths of history on their pilgrimage to eternity.
The Synod Fathers stressed the importance of spiritual commitment
in the life, ministry and growth of the Bishop. I myself have
spoken of its priority in conformity with the requirements of
the Church's life and the call of the Holy Spirit, who in these
years has made evident to everyone the primacy of grace, the widespread
desire for spirituality and the urgent need for a witness of holiness.
The call for spirituality arises from a consideration of the work
of the Holy Spirit in salvation history, where his presence is
active and dynamic, prophetic and missionary. The gift of the
fullness of the Holy Spirit, which the Bishop receives at his
episcopal ordination, is a precious and urgent call to cooperate
with the Spirit's activity in ecclesial communion and in universal
mission.
Held in the wake of the Great Jubilee of 2000, the Synodal Assembly
made its own from the beginning the call to holiness of life which
I set before the whole Church: ''All pastoral initiatives must
be set in relation to holiness ... Once the Jubilee is over, we
resume our normal path, but knowing that, stressing holiness remains
more than ever an urgent pastoral task''.49 An enthusiastic acceptance
of my appeal to give first place to the call to holiness was the
atmosphere in which the synodal labours took place and the environment
which, in a certain sense, unified the Fathers' interventions
and reflections. In their hearts they heard resound Saint Gregory
Nazianzen's admonition: ''First be purified and then purify others,
first allow yourself to be instructed by wisdom and then instruct
others, first become light and then enlighten others, first draw
close to God and then guide others to him, first be holy yourself
and then make others holy''.50
For this reason frequent appeals were heard during the Synodal
Assembly for a clearer specification of the properly ''episcopal''
character of the Bishop's path to holiness. This will always be
a holiness lived with his people and for his people, in a communion
which becomes a stimulus to and a mutual building up in charity.
These are not secondary or marginal demands. It is precisely the
Bishop's own spiritual life which favours the fruitfulness of
his pastoral activity. Is not the ultimate basis of all pastoral
effectiveness constant meditation on the mystery of Christ, passionate
contemplation of his Face and generous imitation of the life of
the Good Shepherd? If ours is indeed a time of continual movement
and even at times of frenzied ''doing for the sake of doing'',
then the Bishop must be the first to show by the example of his
own life the need to re-establish the primacy of ''being'' over
''doing'' and, more importantly, the primacy of grace, which,
in the Christian vision of life, remains the essential principle
for any ''planning'' of pastoral ministry.51
The Bishop's spiritual journey
13. A Bishop can be considered a genuine minister of communion
and hope for God's holy people only when he walks in the presence
of the Lord. It is not possible to be a servant of others unless
one is first a ''servant of God''. And one can only be a servant
of God if one is a ''man of God''. For this reason I stated in
my homily at the beginning of the Synod: ''The pastor must be
a man of God; his existence and his ministry are entirely under
his divine glory and from the supereminent mystery of God they
derive their light and vigour''.52
For Bishops the call to holiness is inherent in the sacramental
event that stands at the origin of their ministry, that is, their
episcopal ordination. The ancient Euchology of Serapion formulates
the ritual invocation of the consecration thus: ''God of truth,
make thy servant a living Bishop, a holy Bishop in the succession
of the holy Apostles''.53 Since episcopal ordination does not
infuse the perfection of the virtues, ''the Bishop is called to
pursue his path of perfection with greater intensity so as to
attain to the stature of Christ, the perfect Man''.54
The Christological and Trinitarian character of his mystery and
ministry demands of the Bishop a journey of holiness which consists
in a progressive advance towards an ever more profound spiritual
and apostolic maturity marked by the primacy of pastoral charity.
This journey is obviously experienced together with his people,
along a path which is at once personal and communitarian, like
the life of the Church itself. Along this path, however, the Bishop
becomes, in intimate communion with Christ and attentive docility
to the Holy Spirit, a witness, a model, and a source of encouragement
and help. This same idea is expressed by canon law: ''Mindful
that he is bound to give an example of holiness, charity, humility
and simplicity of life, the Diocesan Bishop is to seek in every
way to promote the holiness of Christ's faithful according to
the special vocation of each. Since he is the principal dispenser
of the mysteries of God, he is to strive constantly that the faithful
entrusted to his care may grow in grace through the celebration
of the sacraments, and may know and live the Paschal mystery''.55
The spiritual journey of the Bishop, like that of every Christian,
is rooted in the sacramental grace of Baptism and Confirmation.
He shares this grace in common with all the faithful since, as
the Second Vatican Council notes, ''all the faithful of whatever
condition or rank are called to the fullness of Christian life
and to the perfection of charity''.56 Here the celebrated expression
of Saint Augustine, with its rich realism and supernatural wisdom,
proves especially true: ''If I am in fear because I am for you,
I am consoled to be with you. Because for you I am a Bishop, with
you I am a Christian. The first name is one of responsibility,
the second, one of grace. The former is the name of a danger,
the latter of salvation''.57 Thanks to pastoral charity, however,
responsibility becomes a form of service and peril is transformed
into an opportunity for growth and maturation. The episcopal ministry
is not only a source of holiness for others, but is already a
cause of sanctification for one who allows the charity of God
to pass through his own heart and life.
The Synod Fathers presented in synthesis some of the demands of
this journey. Above all they stressed the character given in Baptism
and Confirmation, which from the beginning of our lives as Christians,
through the theological virtues, makes us capable of believing
in God, hoping in him and loving him. The Holy Spirit, in turn,
infuses his gifts and fosters our growth in goodness through the
exercise of the moral virtues that concretize, also on the human
level, our spiritual life.58 By means of the Baptism he has received,
the Bishop shares, like every Christian, in that spirituality
which is rooted in incorporation in Christ and is manifested in
following Christ in accordance with the Gospel. For this reason
the Bishop shares the call to holiness proper to all the faithful.
He must therefore cultivate a life of prayer and profound faith,
and put all his trust in God, offering his witness to the Gospel
in docile obedience to the prompting of the Holy Spirit, and maintaining
a particular filial devotion to the Blessed Virgin Mary, the perfect
teacher of the spiritual life.59
The spirituality of the Bishop will thus be a spirituality of
communion, lived in harmony with the other baptized faithful who
with him are children of one Father in heaven and one Mother on
earth, Holy Church. Like all believers in Christ, he needs to
nourish his spiritual life with the living and effective word
of the Gospel and with the living bread of the Holy Eucharist,
the food of eternal life. Because of his human frailty the Bishop
is also called to have frequent and regular recourse to the sacrament
of Penance, in order to obtain the gift of that mercy of which
he himself has been made a minister. Mindful, therefore, of his
human weaknesses and sins, each Bishop, along with his priests,
personally experiences the sacrament of Reconciliation as a profound
need and as a grace to be received ever anew, and thus renews
his own commitment to holiness in the exercise of his ministry.
In this way he also gives visible expression to the mystery of
a Church which is constitutively holy, yet also made up of sinners
in need of forgiveness.
Like all priests and, obviously, in special communion with the
priests of his diocesan presbyterate, the Bishop will strive to
progress along a specific path of holiness. He is also called
to holiness by a new title arising from Holy Orders. The Bishop
thus lives by faith, hope and love, inasmuch as he is a minister
of the Lord's word and of the sanctification and spiritual advancement
of the People of God. He must be holy because he must serve the
Church as teacher, sanctifier and guide. As such, he must also
love the Church deeply and fervently. Each Bishop is configured
to Christ in order to love the Church with the love of Christ
the Bridegroom, and in order to be in the Church a minister of
her unity, enabling her to become ''a people gathered by the unity
of the Father, of the Son and of the Holy Spirit''.60
The specific spirituality of the Bishop, as the Synod Fathers
repeatedly emphasized, is further enriched by the bestowal of
that grace inherent in the fullness of the priesthood which is
given to him at the moment of his ordination. As a pastor of the
flock and servant of the Gospel of Jesus Christ in hope, the Bishop
must become as it were a transparent reflection of the very person
of Christ, the Supreme Pastor. In the Roman Pontifical this requirement
is explicitly mentioned: ''Receive the miter, and may the splendour
of holiness shine forth in you, so that when the Chief Shepherd
appears, you may deserve to receive from him an unfading crown
of glory''.61
Hence, the Bishop constantly needs the grace of God that strengthens
and perfects his human nature. He can say with the Apostle Paul:
''Our sole credit is from God who has made us qualified ministers
of a new covenant'' (2 Cor 3:5-6). It needs to be emphasized that
the apostolic ministry is a source of spirituality for the Bishop,
who should derive from it all the spiritual resources which will
make him grow in holiness and enable him to discover the workings
of the Holy Spirit in the People of God entrusted to his pastoral
care.62
The spiritual journey of the Bishop coincides, from this perspective,
with that pastoral charity which must rightly be considered the
soul of his apostolate, as it is of the apostolate of priests
and deacons. Here it is not only a matter of an existentia but
indeed of a pro-existentia, that is to say, of a way of living
inspired by the supreme model of Christ the Lord and which is
spent totally in worship of the Father and in service of neighbour.
The Second Vatican Council rightly states that pastors, in the
image of Christ, must carry out their ministry with holiness and
zeal, with humility and fortitude, ''which, fulfilled in this
way, will be for them an excellent means of sanctification''.63
No Bishop can fail to realize that the summit of Christian holiness
is the crucified Christ in his supreme self-oblation to the Father
and to his brothers and sisters in the Holy Spirit. For this reason
configuration to Christ and a share in his sufferings (cf. 1 Pet
4:15) becomes the royal road of the Bishop's holiness in the midst
of his people.
Mary, Mother of Hope and teacher of the spiritual life
14. The Bishop will also find support for his spiritual life in
the maternal presence of the Virgin Mary, Mater spei et spes nostra,
as the Church invokes her. The Bishop will therefore nourish an
authentic and filial devotion to Mary, and feel himself called
to make her fiat his own, re-experiencing and re-appropriating
each day Jesus' entrusting of Mary at the foot of the Cross to
the Beloved Disciple, and of the Beloved Disciple to Mary (cf.
Jn 19:26-27). The Bishop is also called to reflect the unanimous
and persevering prayer of Christ's disciples and Apostles with
his Mother in preparation for Pentecost. This icon of the nascent
Church manifests the indissoluble bond uniting Mary and the successors
of the Apostles (cf. Acts 1:14).
The holy Mother of God will consequently be the Bishop's teacher
in listening to the word of God and promptly putting it into practice,
as a faithful disciple of the one Teacher, in firm faith, confident
hope and ardent charity. As Mary was the ''memory'' of the incarnation
of the Word in the first Christian community, so the Bishop must
preserve and pass on the living Tradition of the Church, in communion
with all the other Bishops, in union with, and under the authority
of, the Successor of Peter.
The Bishop's solid Marian devotion will be constantly related
to the liturgy, where the Blessed Virgin is particularly present
in the celebration of the mysteries of salvation and serves as
a model of docility and prayer, of spiritual oblation and motherhood
for the whole Church. Indeed, it will be the Bishop's responsibility
to ensure that the liturgy always appears ''as an 'exemplary form',
a source of inspiration, a constant point of reference and the
ultimate goal'' for the Marian piety of the People of God.64 While
holding to this principle, the Bishop will also nourish his personal
and communitarian Marian devotion by devotional practices approved
and recommended by the Church, especially by the recitation of
that compendium of the Gospel which is the Holy Rosary. Being
himself completely familiar with this prayer, completely centred
as it is on the contemplation of the saving events of Christ's
life with which his holy Mother was closely associated, every
Bishop is also called to promote diligently its recitation.65
Entrusting oneself to the word
15. The assembly of the Synod of Bishops indicated several indispensable
means for the sustenance and progress of the spiritual life.66
First among these is reading and meditating on the word of God.
Every Bishop should always commend himself and feel commended
''to the Lord and to the word of his grace, which is able to build
up and give the inheritance among all those who are sanctified''
(cf. Acts 20:32). Before becoming one who hands on the word, the
Bishop, together with his priests and indeed like every member
of the faithful and like the Church herself,67 must be a hearer
of the word. He should live ''within'' the word and allow himself
to be protected and nourished by it, as if by a mother's womb.
With Saint Ignatius of Antioch the Bishop must say: ''I commend
myself to the Gospel as to the flesh of Christ''.68 Each Bishop
will thus take to heart the well-known admonition of Saint Jerome
quoted by the Second Vatican Council: ''Ignorance of the Scriptures
is ignorance of Christ''.69 There can be no primacy of holiness
without attentive listening to the Word of God, which is the guide
and nourishment of all holiness.
To commend oneself to the word of God and to keep it, like the
Virgin Mary, Virgo audiens,70 requires the practice of certain
aids constantly proposed by the Church's tradition and spiritual
experience. These include, first of all, frequent personal reading
and regular study of Sacred Scripture. A Bishop would try in vain
to preach the word to others if he did not first listen to it
within himself.71 Without frequent contact with Sacred Scripture
a Bishop would hardly be a credible minister of hope, since, as
Saint Paul reminds us, it is ''from the lessons of patience and
the words of encouragement in the Scriptures that we can derive
hope'' (cf. Rom 15:4). The words of Origen remain ever applicable:
''These are the two activities of the Bishop: learning from God
by reading the divine Scriptures and meditating on them frequently,
and teaching the people. But let him teach the things that he
himself has learned from God''.72
The Synod recalled the importance of reading (lectio) and meditation
(meditatio) on the word of God in the life of pastors and in their
ministry of service to the community. As I wrote in my Apostolic
Letter Novo Millennio Ineunte, ''it is especially necessary that
listening to the word of God should become a life-giving encounter,
in the ancient and ever valid tradition of lectio divina, which
draws from the biblical text the living word which questions,
directs and shapes our lives''.73 In the realm of meditation and
lectio, the heart which has already received the word opens itself
to the contemplation of God's work and, consequently, to a conversion
of thoughts and life to him, accompanied by a heartfelt request
for his forgiveness and grace.
Drawing nourishment from the Eucharist
16. Just as the Paschal Mystery stands at the centre of the life
and mission of the Good Shepherd, so too the Eucharist stands
at the centre of the life and mission of the Bishop, as of every
priest.
At the daily celebration of Holy Mass, the Bishop offers himself
together with Christ. When this celebration takes place in the
cathedral or in other churches, especially parish churches, with
the presence and the active participation of the faithful, the
Bishop stands before all as Sacerdos et Pontifex, since he acts
in the person of Christ and in the power of his Spirit, and as
hiereus, the holy priest, devoted to enacting the sacred mysteries
of the altar, which he proclaims and explains by his preaching.74
The Bishop's love of the Holy Eucharist is also expressed when
in the course of the day he devotes a fair part of his time to
adoration before the tabernacle. Here the Bishop opens his heart
to the Lord, allowing it to be filled and shaped by the love poured
forth from the Cross by the great Shepherd of the sheep, who shed
his blood and gave his life for them. To him the Bishop raises
his prayer in constant intercession for the sheep entrusted to
his care.
Prayer and the Liturgy of the Hours
17. A second means (for the advancement of the Bishop's spiritual
life) mentioned by the Synod Fathers is prayer, especially the
prayer raised to the Lord in the celebration of the Liturgy of
the Hours, which remains the distinctive prayer of the Christian
community, carried out in the name of Christ and under the guidance
of the Spirit.
Prayer is itself a particular duty for a Bishop, and for all those
who ''have received the gift of a vocation to the specially consecrated
life: of its nature, their consecration makes them more open to
the experience of contemplation''.75 The Bishop himself cannot
forget that he is a successor of those Apostles who were appointed
by Christ above all ''to be with him'' (Mk 3:14), and who at the
beginning of their mission made a solemn declaration which is
a programme of life: ''We will devote ourselves to prayer and
to the ministry of the word'' (Acts 6:4). The Bishop will be a
true teacher of prayer for the faithful only if he can draw upon
his own personal experience of dialogue with God. He must be able
to turn to God continually with the words of the Psalmist: ''I
hope in your word'' (Ps 119:114). From prayer he will gain that
hope which he must in turn pass on to the faithful. Prayer is
the privileged forum where hope finds expression and nourishment,
since it is, in the words of Saint Thomas Aquinas, the ''interpreter
of hope''.76
The Bishop's personal prayer will be particularly and typically
''apostolic,'' in the sense that it is presented to the Father
as intercession for all the needs of the people entrusted to his
care. In the Roman Pontifical this is the final commitment demanded
of the candidate elected to the episcopacy before the rite of
the imposition of hands: ''Are you resolved to pray without ceasing
for the People of God, and to carry out the office of high priest
without reproach?''.77 The Bishop prays in a very special way
for the holiness of his priests, for vocations to the ordained
ministry and the consecrated life, so that missionary and apostolic
commitment will be all the more ardent in the Church..
With regard to the Liturgy of the Hours, which is meant to consecrate
and guide the course of the entire day through the praise of God,
we cannot fail to recall the impressive statement of the Second
Vatican Council: ''When this wonderful song of praise is worthily
rendered by priests and others who are deputed for this purpose
by Church ordinance, or by the faithful praying together with
the priest in an approved form, then it is truly the voice of
the Bride addressing her Bridegroom; it is the very prayer which
Christ himself, together with his Body, addresses to the Father.
Hence, all who perform this service are not only fulfilling a
duty of the Church, but also are sharing in the greatest honour
accorded to Christ's Spouse, for by offering these praises to
God they are standing before God's throne in the name of the Church,
their Mother''.78 Writing on the prayer of the Divine Office,
my predecessor of venerable memory Pope Paul VI, called it ''the
prayer of the local Church'', which expresses ''the true nature
of the praying Church''.79 The consecratio temporis, effected
by the Liturgy of the Hours, brings about that laus perennis which
is an anticipation and prefiguration of the heavenly liturgy and
a bond of union with the angels and saints who glorify God's name
throughout eternity. The Bishop will become, and will appear,
as a man of hope to the extent that he enters into the eschatological
dynamism of praying the Psalter. The Psalms resound with the voice
of the Bride (vox sponsae) as she calls upon her Bridegroom.
Every Bishop therefore prays with his people and for his people.
He himself is supported and assisted by the prayer of his faithful:
priests, deacons, consecrated persons and the lay people of all
ages. In their midst the Bishop is a teacher and a promoter of
prayer. He not only hands down what he himself has contemplated,
but he opens to Christians the way of contemplation itself. The
well-known motto contemplata aliis tradere thus becomes contemplationem
aliis tradere.
The way of the evangelical counsels and the Beatitudes
18. To all his disciples, and especially to those who while still
on this earth wish to follow him more closely like the Apostles,
the Lord proposes the way of the evangelical counsels. In addition
to being a gift of the Holy Trinity to the Church, the counsels
are a reflection of the life of the Trinity in each believer.80
This is especially the case in the Bishop, who, as a successor
of the Apostles, is called to follow Christ along the path leading
to the perfection of charity. For this reason he is consecrated,
even as Jesus was consecrated. The Bishop's life is radically
dependent on Christ and a completely transparent image of Christ
before the Church and the world. The life of the Bishop must radiate
the life of Christ and consequently Christ's own obedience to
the Father, even unto death, death on a Cross (cf. Phil 2:8),
his chaste and virginal love, and his poverty which is absolute
detachment from all earthly goods.
In this way the Bishops can lead by their example not only those
members of the Church who are called to follow Christ in the consecrated
life but also priests, to whom the radicalism of holiness in accordance
with the spirit of the evangelical counsels is also proposed.
Indeed, this radicalism is incumbent on all the faithful, including
lay people, for it is ''a fundamental, undeniable demand flowing
from the call of Christ to follow and imitate him by virtue of
the intimate communion of life with him brought about by the Spirit''.81
The faithful ought to be able to contemplate on the face of their
Bishop the grace-given qualities which in the various Beatitudes
make up the self-portrait of Christ: the face of poverty, meekness
and the thirst for righteousness; the merciful face of the Father
and of the peaceful and peacegiving man; the pure face of one
who constantly looks to God alone. The faithful should also be
able to see in their Bishop the face of one who relives Jesus'
own compassion for the afflicted and, today as much as in the
past, the face filled with strength and interior joy of one persecuted
for the truth of the Gospel.
The virtue of obedience
19. By taking on these very human features of Jesus, the Bishop
also becomes the model and promoter of a spirituality of communion,
carefully and vigilantly working to build up the Church, so that
all that he says and does will reflect a common filial submission
in Christ and in the Spirit to the loving plan of the Father.
As a teacher of holiness and minister of the sanctification of
his people, the Bishop is called to carry out faithfully the will
of the Father. The Bishop's obedience must be lived according
to the example – for it could hardly be otherwise –
of the obedience of Christ himself, who said that he came down
from heaven not to do his own will, but rather the will of the
One who sent him (cf. Jn 6:38; 8:29; Phil 2:7-8).
Walking in the footsteps of Christ, the Bishop is obedient to
the Gospel and the Church's Tradition; he is able to read the
signs of the times and to recognize the voice of the Holy Spirit
in the Petrine ministry and in episcopal collegiality. In my Apostolic
Exhortation Pastores Dabo Vobis I stressed the apostolic, communitarian
and pastoral character of priestly obedience.82 These hallmarks
naturally appear even more markedly in the obedience of the Bishop.
The fullness of the Sacrament of Holy Orders which he has received
puts him in a special relationship with the Successor of Peter,
with the members of the College of Bishops and with his own particular
Church. He must feel committed to living intensely this relationship
with the Pope and his brother Bishops in a close bond of unity
and cooperation, and thus conforming to the divine plan which
willed to unite the Apostles inseparably around Peter. This hierarchical
communion of the Bishop with the Supreme Pontiff strengthens his
ability to make present, by virtue of the Order he has received,
Jesus Christ, the invisible Head of the whole Church.
The apostolic aspect of obedience is necessarily linked also to
its communitarian aspect, since the episcopate is by its nature
''one and indivisible”.83 As a result of this communal dimension,
the Bishop is called to live out his obedience by overcoming all
temptations to individualism and by taking upon himself, within
the wider context of the mission of the College of Bishops, concern
for the good of the whole Church.
As a model of attentive listening, the Bishop will also strive
to understand, through prayer and discernment, the will of God
in what the Spirit is saying to the Church. Through the evangelical
exercise of his authority, he will be ready to dialogue with his
co-workers and the faithful in order to build effective mutual
understanding.84 This will enable him to show a pastoral appreciation
of the dignity and responsibility of each member of the People
of God, fostering in a balanced and serene way their spirit of
initiative. The faithful should be helped to grow towards a responsible
obedience which will enable them to be actively engaged on the
pastoral plane.85 Here the exhortation which Saint Ignatius of
Antioch addressed to Polycarp remains timely: ''Let nothing be
done without your consent, but do nothing yourself without the
consent of God''.86
The spirit and practice of poverty in Bishops
20. The Synod Fathers, as a sign of collegial unity, responded
to the appeal which I made at the opening Mass of the Synod that
the evangelical Beatitude of poverty should be considered an indispensable
condition for a fruitful episcopal ministry in present-day circumstances.
Here too, amid the assembly of Bishops there stood out the figure
of Christ the Lord, ''who carried out the work of redemption in
poverty and under oppression'', and who invites the Church, and
above all her pastors, ''to follow the same path in communicating
to humanity the fruits of salvation''.87
Consequently, the Bishop who wishes to be an authentic witness
and minister of the Gospel of hope must be a vir pauper. This
is demanded by the witness he is called to bear to Christ, who
was himself poor. It is also demanded by the Church's concern
for the poor, who must be the object of a preferential option.
The Bishop's decision to carry out his ministry in poverty contributes
decisively to making the Church the ''home of the poor''.
This decision also provides the Bishop with inner freedom in the
exercise of his ministry and enables him to communicate effectively
the fruits of salvation. Episcopal authority must be exercised
with untiring generosity and inexhaustible liberality. On the
Bishop's part, this calls for complete trust in the providence
of the heavenly Father, an open-hearted communion of goods, an
austere way of life and continuous personal conversion. Only in
this way will he be able to share in the struggles and sufferings
of the People of God, whom he is called not only to lead and nourish
but with whom he must show fraternal solidarity, sharing their
problems and helping to build their hope.
He will carry out this service effectively if his own life is
simple, sober and at the same time active and generous, and if
it places those considered least important in our society not
on the fringes but rather at the centre of the Christian community.88
Almost without realizing it, he will foster a ''creativity in
charity'' which will bear fruit not simply in the efficiency of
the assistance offered but also in an ability to live in a spirit
of fraternal sharing. In the Church of the Apostles, as the Book
of Acts clearly witnesses, the poverty of some members of the
community called forth the solidarity of others, with the amazing
result that ''there was not a needy person among them'' (4:34).
The Church needs to bear witness to this prophecy before a world
assailed by the problems of hunger and inequality between peoples.
In this perspective of sharing and of simplicity of life, the
Bishop will administer the goods of the Church like the ''good
head of a household'', and be careful to ensure that they are
used for the Church's own specific ends: the worship of God, the
support of her ministers, the works of the apostolate and initiatives
of charity towards the poor.
The title procurator pauperum has always been applied to the Church's
pastors. This must also be the case today, so that the Gospel
of Jesus Christ can become present and be heard as a source of
hope for all, but especially for those who can expect from God
alone a more dignified life and a better future. Encouraged by
the example of their pastors, the Church and the Churches must
practise that ''preferential option for the poor'' which I have
indicated as programmatic for the third millennium.89
With chastity at the service of a Church which reflects
the purity of Christ
21. ''Receive this ring, the seal of fidelity: adorned with undefiled
faith, preserve unblemished the Bride of God, the holy Church''.
These words of the Roman Pontifical 90 urge the Bishop to realize
that he is committed to mirroring the virginal love of Christ
for all his faithful ones. He is called above all to foster relationships
inspired by the respect and esteem befitting a family where love
flourishes, in accordance with the exhortation of the Apostle
Peter: ''Love one another deeply, from the heart, for you have
been born again, not of perishable seed but of imperishable, through
the living and enduring word of God (1 Pet 1:22-23)''.
While exhorting Christians by his example and words to offer their
bodies as a living and holy sacrifice pleasing to God (cf. Rom
12:1), the Bishop must remind everyone that ''the form of this
world is passing away'' (1 Cor 7:31), and that it is our duty
to ''wait in joyful hope'' for Christ's return in glory (cf. Tit
2:13). In his pastoral concern he should be especially close with
paternal affection to all who have embraced the religious life
in the profession of the evangelical counsels and who offer their
valuable service to the Church. He will support and encourage
priests, who, called by God's grace, have freely assumed the commitment
of celibacy for the Kingdom of Heaven, and remind himself and
them of the evangelical and spiritual grounds of this choice,
so important for the service of the People of God. In the reality
of the Church and the world today, the witness of chaste love
is, on the one hand, a form of spiritual therapy for humanity
and, on the other, a form of protest against the idolatry of instinct.
In the present social context, the Bishop needs to remain particularly
close to his flock and above all to his priests, showing a father's
concern for their ascetic and spiritual difficulties, and providing
them with appropriate support to encourage them in fidelity to
their vocation and to the requirements of an exemplary life in
the exercise of the ministry. In cases of grave lapses, and even
more of crimes which do damage to the very witness of the Gospel,
especially when these involve the Church's ministers, the Bishop
must be firm and decisive, just and impartial. He is bound to
intervene in a timely manner, according to the established canonical
norms, for the correction and spiritual good of the sacred minister,
for the reparation of scandal and the restoration of justice,
and for all that is required for the protection and assistance
of victims.
By his words and example, and in his vigilance and paternal intervention,
the Bishop fulfils his duty to offer the world the reality of
a Church which is holy and chaste, in her ministers and in her
faithful. When he does so, he walks as a pastor at the head of
his flock, as did Christ the Bridegroom, who gave his life for
us and who left to all the example of a love which is transparent
and virginal, and therefore fruitful and universal.
The proponent of a spirituality of communion and mission
22. In my Apostolic Letter Novo Millennio Ineunte I pointed out
the need to ''make the Church the home and the school of communion''.91
This remark had a vast resonance and was taken up by the Synodal
Assembly. Obviously the Bishop, in his own spiritual journey,
has the primary duty of promoting and encouraging a spirituality
of communion, and tirelessly working to make it a basic educational
principle wherever human and Christian formation takes place:
in parishes, Catholic associations, ecclesial movements, Catholic
schools and youth groups. The Bishop will be particularly concerned
to ensure that the spirituality of communion takes root and grows
wherever future priests are trained, that is to say, in seminaries
and in religious novitiates, in religious houses, in institutes
and faculties of theology.
In that same Apostolic Letter I indicated the broad outlines of
this promotion of a spirituality of communion. Here it will suffice
to add that a Bishop must encourage this spirituality especially
among his presbyterate, as well as among deacons and men and women
religious. He will do so in personal dialogue and encounters,
but also in community meetings. To this end he will make an effort
to provide in his own particular Church special occasions which
facilitate listening, especially to the Spirit ''who speaks to
the Churches'' (Acts 2:7, 11 et al.). Examples of the latter would
be retreats, spiritual exercises and days of spirituality, and
also a prudent use of new communications media, should this prove
useful and effective.
For a Bishop, fostering a spirituality of communion also means
nurturing his communion with the Roman Pontiff and with his brother
Bishops, especially within the same Episcopal Conference and Ecclesiastical
Province. Here too, as an important means of overcoming the risk
of a sense of isolation and discouragement in the face of the
immensity of the problems and the time spent in dealing with them,
the Bishop, in addition to prayer, should readily avail himself
of the friendship and fraternal communion of his brother Bishops.
Communion, in its Trinitarian source and model, is always expressed
in mission. Mission is the fruit and the logical consequence of
communion. The dynamic process of communion is favoured by openness
to the horizons and demands of mission, always ensuring the witness
of unity so that the world may believe and making ever greater
room for love, so that all people may attain to the Trinitarian
unity from which they have come forth and to which they are destined.
The more intense communion is, the more mission is fostered, especially
when it is lived out in the poverty of love, which is the ability
to go forth to meet any person or group or culture with the power
of the Cross, our spes unica and the supreme witness to the love
of God, which is also manifested as a universal love of our brothers
and sisters.
A journey undertaken in everyday life
23. Spiritual realism enables us to see that the Bishop is called
to live out his vocation to holiness in a context of difficulties
within and without, amid his own weaknesses and those of others,
in daily contingencies and personal and institutional problems.
This is a constant feature of the life of pastors, as Saint Gregory
the Great acknowledged when he admitted with regret: ''After having
laid upon my heart the burden of the pastoral office, my spirit
has become incapable of frequent recollection, because it remains
divided among many things. I am obliged to judge the cases of
Churches and monasteries; often I am called to involve myself
in the lives and actions of individuals ... And so with my mind
pulled and torn, forced to think of so many things, when can it
recollect itself and concentrate totally on preaching, without
withdrawing from the ministry of proclaiming the word? ... The
life of the watchman must always be on high and on guard''.92
In order to counterbalance the centrifugal impulses which would
disperse his inner unity, the Bishop needs to cultivate a serene
lifestyle capable of ensuring his mental, emotional and affective
equilibrium and enabling him to be open to individuals and communities,
and to their needs, as one who truly shares in their different
situations, their joys and their sorrows. Caring for one's own
health in its various aspects is also for the Bishop an act of
love for his faithful and a pledge of greater openness and docility
to the prompting of the Spirit. Hence, the advice which Saint
Charles Borromeo, himself an outstanding pastor, proposed in the
last of his Synods: ''Do you have the care of souls? Do not on
this account neglect the care of yourself, and do not give yourself
to others in such a way that nothing of you remains for yourself.
You must certainly keep in mind the souls of which you are pastor,
but do not forget yourself''.93
The Bishop will therefore be concerned to have a balanced approach
to his many commitments, maintaining a harmony between them: the
celebration of the divine mysteries and personal prayer, private
study and pastoral planning, recollection and necessary rest.
Supported by these aids to the spiritual life, he will find peace
of heart and experience profound communion with the Holy Trinity
who chose and consecrated him. With God's unfailing grace, he
will carry out his daily ministry as a witness to hope, attentive
to the needs of the Church and the world.
The permanent formation of Bishops
24. The Bishop's untiring commitment to the pursuit of holiness
through a Christocentric and ecclesial spirituality was closely
linked in the Synodal Assembly to his urgent need for permanent
formation. As was stressed in previous Synods and reaffirmed in
the successive Apostolic Exhortations Christifideles Laici, Pastores
Dabo Vobis and Vita Consecrata, permanent formation is necessary
for all the faithful and should be considered particularly necessary
for the Bishop, who bears personal responsibility for the harmonious
progress of all in the Church.
For the Bishop, as for priests and religious, permanent formation
is an intrinsic requirement of his vocation and mission. Through
permanent formation he is able to discern the new calls by which
God clarifies the initial call and applies it to different situations.
The Apostle Peter, after hearing the words ''follow me'' at his
first meeting with Christ (cf. Mt 4:19), heard this command again
from the Risen One, who before leaving the earth foretold to him
the trials and tribulations of his future ministry and then added:
''You follow me'' (cf. Jn 21:22). ''Consequently, there is a 'follow
me' which accompanies the Apostle's whole life and mission. It
is a 'follow me' in line with the call and the demand of faithfulness
unto death, a 'follow me' which can signify a sequela Christi
to the point of total self-giving in martyrdom''.94 Clearly it
is not simply a matter of setting up adequate programmes of continuing
education aimed at providing a realistic acquaintance with the
situation of the Church and the world, which would then enable
pastors to deal with contemporary issues with an open mind and
a compassionate heart. This is in itself a good reason for permanent
formation, but there are also anthropological reasons, based on
the fact that life itself is a continuing journey towards maturity,
as well as theological reasons, deeply connected to the sacrament
once received: the Bishop in fact must ''safeguard with vigilant
love the 'mystery' which he bears within his heart for the good
of the Church and mankind''.95
Periodic updating, especially on certain more important subjects,
calls for longer periods for listening, fellowship and dialogue
with experts – Bishops, priests, religious men and women,
and lay people – in an exchange of pastoral experiences,
sound doctrine and spiritual resources which will ensure genuine
personal enrichment. To this end the Synod Fathers emphasized
the usefulness of special courses of formation for Bishops, like
the annual sessions sponsored by the Congregation for Bishops
or by the Congregation for the Evangelization of Peoples for recently
ordained Bishops. Likewise, there was a call to make available
short courses of formation or days of study and updating, as well
as programmes of spiritual exercises for Bishops, organized by
Patriarchal Synods, Episcopal Conferences at the regional and
national levels and also by the continental Assemblies of Bishops.
It would also be appropriate for the Officers of the Episcopal
Conference to take on the responsibility of providing for the
preparation and implementation of such programmes of permanent
formation, and to encourage Bishops to take part in these courses,
so as to build greater communion among them and to ensure more
effective pastoral care in the individual Dioceses.96
It is in any case evident that, like the life of the Church itself,
pastoral styles and initiatives and forms of episcopal ministry
are evolving. For this reason too, updating is needed, in conformity
with the norms of the Code of Canon Law and in view of the new
challenges and commitments of the Church in society. In this context
the Synodal Assembly proposed a revision of the Directory Ecclesiae
Imago, issued by the Congregation for Bishops on 22 February 1973,
and its adaptation to the needs of the times and the changes which
have taken place in the Church and pastoral life.97
The example of sainted Bishops
25. In their life and ministry, in their spiritual journey and
their efforts to carry out their pastoral activity, Bishops have
always found encouragement in the lives of the saints who were
themselves pastors. In my homily at the concluding Eucharistic
celebration of the Synod, I held up the example of the holy pastors
canonized during the last century as a testimony to a grace of
the Holy Spirit which has never been lacking and will never be
lacking in the Church.98
Throughout the history of the Church, from the Apostles onwards,
there has been an extraordinary number of pastors whose teaching
and holiness are capable of giving light and direction for the
spiritual journey of Bishops in the third millennium. The glorious
witness of the great pastors of the early centuries of the Church,
of the founders of particular Churches, of the confessors and
martyrs who in times of persecution gave their life for Christ,
remains as a beacon to which the Bishops of our time can refer
and from which they can derive guidance and encouragement in their
service to the Gospel.
Many of those Bishops were exemplary in the practice of the virtue
of hope, when in difficult times they revived the spirits of their
people, rebuilt churches after times of persecution or calamity,
constructed hospices for pilgrims and the poor, and opened hospitals
to care for the sick and the elderly. Many others were enlightened
leaders who blazed new trails for their people. In times of difficulty,
with their gaze firmly fixed on the crucified and risen Christ,
our hope, they reacted positively and creatively to the challenges
of the moment. At the beginning of the third millennium, some
of those pastors are still among us, and they have a story to
tell, a story of faith firmly anchored to the Cross. They are
pastors who have a sense of people's aspirations and can take
them up, purify them and interpret them in the light of the Gospel,
and for this reason they too have a future to build, together
with the people entrusted to their care.
Consequently, each particular Church should be concerned to celebrate
its own saints who were Bishops and also to remember those pastors
who by virtue of their holy lives and enlightened teachings handed
down to their people a particular legacy of admiration and affection.
They are the spiritual sentinels who from heaven guide the way
of the pilgrim Church through time. In order to keep ever alive
the memory of those faithful Bishops who were outstanding in the
exercise of their ministry, the Synodal Assembly recommended that
particular Churches or, when suitable, the Bishops' Conferences,
should make the lives of these Bishops known to the faithful through
updated biographies and, when the case warrants, consider the
possibility of introducing their cause for canonization.99
Today too, the testimony of a fully realized spiritual and apostolic
life remains the greatest proof of the power of the Gospel to
transform individuals and communities, thus enabling God's own
holiness to break into the world and history. Here we find yet
another reason for hope, especially for the younger generation,
which looks to the Church for exciting ideas and a vision capable
of inspiring their efforts to renew in Christ the society of our
time.
CHAPTER THREE
TEACHER OF THE FAITH
AND HERALD OF THE WORD
''Go into all the world and preach the Gospel...” (Mk 16,
15)
26. The risen Jesus entrusted to his Apostles the mission of ''making
disciples'' of all nations, teaching them to observe all that
he himself had commanded. The task of proclaiming the Gospel to
the whole world has thus been solemnly entrusted to the Church,
the community of the disciples of the crucified and risen Lord.
It is a task which will continue until the end of time. From the
beginning, this mission of evangelization has been an integral
part of the Church's identity. The Apostle Paul was well aware
of this when he wrote: ''If I preach the Gospel, that gives me
no ground for boasting. For necessity is laid upon me. Woe to
me if I do not preach the Gospel! (1 Cor 9:16).
If the duty of proclaiming the Gospel is incumbent upon the whole
Church and each of her children, it is particularly so upon Bishops,
who on the day of their sacred ordination, which places them in
apostolic succession, assume as one of their principal responsibilities
the proclamation of the Gospel; ''with the courage imparted by
the Spirit, they are to call people to faith and strengthen them
in living faith''.100
The Bishop's work of evangelization, aimed at leading men and
women to faith or to strengthening the faith within them, is an
outstanding manifestation of his spiritual fatherhood. He can
thus repeat with Paul: ''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). Precisely because of
this constant process of begetting new life in the Spirit, the
episcopal ministry appears in the world as a sign of hope for
every individual and people.
The Synod Fathers rightly stated that the proclamation of Christ
always takes first place and that the Bishop is the first preacher
of the Gospel by his words and by the witness of his life. He
must be aware of the challenges of the present hour and have the
courage to face them. All Bishops, as ministers of truth, will
carry out this task with strength and trust.101
Christ at the heart of the Gospel and of humanity
27. The proclamation of the Gospel emerged as a prominent theme
in the interventions of the Synod Fathers, who on several occasions
and in a wide variety of ways stated that the living centre of
the preaching of the Gospel is Christ, crucified and risen for
the salvation of all peoples.102
Christ is in fact the heart of evangelization and, as I myself
have often insisted, is the very programme of the new evangelization,
which ''ultimately has its centre in Christ himself, who is to
be known, loved and imitated, so that in him we may live the life
of the Trinity, and with him transform history until its fulfilment
in the heavenly Jerusalem. This is a programme which does not
change with shifts of times and cultures, even though it takes
account of time and culture for the sake of true dialogue and
effective communication. This programme for all times is our programme
for the Third Millennium''.103
From Christ, the heart of the Gospel, all the other truths of
faith are derived, and hope shines forth for all humanity. Christ
is the light which enlightens everyone, and all those reborn in
him receive the first fruits of the Spirit, which enable them
to fulfil the new law of love.104
By virtue of his apostolic mission the Bishop is enabled to lead
his people to the heart of the mystery of faith, where they will
be able to encounter the living person of Jesus Christ. In this
way they will come to understand that all Christian experience
has its source and its unfailing point of reference in the Paschal
mystery of Jesus, the victor over sin and death.105
The proclamation of the Lord's death and Resurrection thus includes
''the prophetic proclamation of a hereafter, which is man's deepest
and definitive calling, in continuity and discontinuity with his
present s |