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ZENIT - The World Seen From Rome
Code: ZE06060402
Date: 2006-06-04
Bishop Clemens' Greeting at Pentecost Vigil
"We Put New Impetus Into Our Future Common Path"
VATICAN CITY, JUNE 4, 2006 (Zenit.org).-
Here is a Vatican translation of the greeting addressed by Bishop Josef Clemens,
secretary of the Pontifical Council for the Laity, to the meeting of ecclesial
movements and new communities with Benedict XVI. The meeting took place
Saturday, vigil of Pentecost, in St. Peter's Square.
* * *
Dear Brothers and Sisters!
I cordially greet all of you here present. You have joyfully and promptly
accepted the invitation from Benedict XVI to come to this gathering. The
celebration will culminate with the first vespers of the solemnity of Pentecost
that we shall pray together with the Holy Father.
I wish to extend a cordial welcome to each one of you, to those of you here
close by, but in particular to those of you at the far end of St. Peter's Square
and in the Via della Conciliazione. We all know that in a celebration of prayer,
like ours today, distances do not matter. What really counts is proximity of
hearts, unity, the one faith in God present among us. We recall the promise made
by Our Lord: "Where two or three are gathered in my name, I am there among them"
(Matthew 18:20).
I cordially greet the founders and leaders, and all the members and friends of
the ecclesial movements and new communities. Thank you all for coming -- from
Italy and from all over Europe, and from every part of the world: from Africa,
Asia, Oceania and the American continent. Thank you for coming to this second
meeting of movements and communities with the Successor of Peter. This is the
second meeting. The first one was on that unforgettable Saturday afternoon of
the May 30, 1998, with the Servant of God Pope John Paul II here in St. Peter's
Square.
Your presence in such great numbers is a great sign of the vitality and
youthfulness of the Church. The Church is young, and we can see that today here
in St. Peter's Square! The Church is universal and does not distinguish by age
or race. All is one, for the Church is truly catholic!
Dear Brothers and Sisters!
In the meditations from the "Roman Triptych" by John Paul II (2003) we find in
the second poem entitled "The Source" the following words: "If you want to find
the source, you have to go up, against the current."[1]
In this Pentecost vigil, we have come to "confess" here publicly in St. Peter's
Square, in all humility and simplicity, yet with frankness and sincerity, that
over the past few years we have tried to go up and that many times we have gone
against the current. However, we have found the source of living water that
satisfies the inexhaustible desire of our hearts, our thirst for truth, for
beauty, for happiness.
The source spoken of here is not a theory, nor is it a philosophy or a simple
abstract response. It is a person. Benedict XVI says in this regard in the
encyclical "Deus Caritas Est": "Being Christian is not the result of an ethical
choice or a lofty idea, but the encounter with an event, a person, which gives
life a new horizon and a decisive direction."[2]
For this reason, the main purpose of our meeting is gratitude for the multiple
gifts received that have helped us to find the source, the living presence of
Jesus, "the fairest of the sons of men" (Psalm 45:2).
The prayer of vespers is a privileged moment to give thanks to God for his
goodness and for the marvels he has done for us ("Magnalia Dei") in the work of
the redemption. We wish to express our deepest gratitude to the Holy Spirit
Creator. We also wish to give thanks for those people who were "touched by God."
With their testimony of a life lived in faith, they have gone before us to blaze
a trail, and they accompany us on our personal paths towards friendship with the
Son of God which gives us life and true freedom.
We thank the Lord for the founders, for they listened to the breath of the Holy
Spirit. We thank God for the help given to us by our parents, teachers and
priests on the path of faith. In particular, we wish to thank Pope John Paul II
of happy memory for his teaching and great witness.
The second purpose of our meeting is the renewal of the commitment that Pope
John Paul II asked of us eight years ago using these three verbs in the
imperative: Open! Accept! Do not forget! That evening he said, or rather, cried
out: "Open yourselves meekly to the gifts of the Spirit! Accept gratefully and
obediently the charisms which the Spirit never ceases to bestow on us! Do not
forget that every charism is given for the common good, that is, for the benefit
of the whole Church!"[3]
In this celebration each one of us has the opportunity to examine our
conscience. How have we responded to these three assignments given to us by a
true father who loves us very much? We can ask ourselves: How have we opened
ourselves to the Holy Spirit? Have we accepted his charisms? Have we kept in
mind the common good of the entire Church? We can ask ourselves as a "community
of faith" on a new stage on the path of "ecclesial maturity" opened up by Pope
John Paul II eight years ago.
This evening let us take the words of Benedict XVI that mark our encounter:
"There is nothing more beautiful than to be surprised by the Gospel, by the
encounter with Christ. There is nothing more beautiful than to know him and to
speak to others of our friendship with him."[4]
With the help of the Holy Spirit we put new impetus, new energy and new
creativity into our future common path together!
Again, I wish to thank you all for your presence here, for your missionary
engagement, and above all, for your fidelity to the gift of faith in Jesus
Christ, and your fidelity to the Successor of Peter who wishes to confirm us in
this faith.
A most sincere welcome to you all!
* * *
1. Pope John Paul II, "Roman Triptych: Meditations," Libreria Editrice Vaticana,
Vatican City, 2003
2. Benedict XVI, encyclical letter "Deus Caritas Est," Libreria Editrice
Vaticana, Vatican City, 2005, No. 1
3. Pope John Paul II, "Address on the occasion of the encounter with the
ecclesial movements and new communities" in "Movements in the Church," edited by
the Pontifical Council for the Laity, Vatican Press, 1999, p. 221-222
4. Benedict XVI, Homily, "Inauguration of the Pontificate," April 24, 2005
[Translation issued by the Pontifical Council for the Laity; adapted]
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