In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
Gentlemen, dear brother priests, dear sisters, dear faithful: at last
this day has come. What joy it is to see you so numerous, gathered from
the four corners of the world.
First of all, I wish to thank the generosity of all those who have
prepared this day: of all who have prepared it materially with
dedication; of all the brother priests who have prepared hearts, minds,
and intellects for this day; and of all of you, who have made the effort
to travel as pilgrims to this place, to Écône, on what is certainly a
historic day.
What, precisely, is the meaning of this day? Why are we here? How are we to understand these consecrations?
These consecrations are an event that divides, before which it is
impossible to remain indifferent. What do they mean for us? Above all,
this ceremony must be a manifestation of faith. This is very important.
We do not choose what we must believe or cease to believe. We cannot
modify, reinterpret, or reconsider the faith. We simply have the duty to
preserve the faith that the Church has always taught. We must love it,
we must live by it, and we must hand it on.
If we truly love Our Lord, we have the duty to share His gifts, which
come to us above all through the faith. Whoever lacks the desire to
transmit the faith gives the sign that he himself does not live by the
faith. And the more the faith is attacked, the more it disappears, the
more urgent these duties become.
For without faith it is impossible to please God. It is impossible to
live well. It is impossible to be saved. And today we are taking
exceptional means, proportionate to that need.
Some might then consider that we find ourselves before a dilemma: we
choose the integral faith, but we separate ourselves from the Church. We
would therefore be choosing between the faith and the Church. To
preserve the faith, would we be breaking with the Church?
It is a false dilemma.
One belongs to the Church, above all, by faith, by the integral
profession of faith, by the integral profession of the faith of the
Church. Just as one belongs to a nation because one speaks the same
language, shares the same identity and the same culture; just as one
belongs to a family because one bears the same surname and lives in the
same house; so too one belongs to the Church because one professes the
same faith.
It is, therefore, a false dilemma into which we cannot enter, because
we cannot choose between the faith and the Church. No one can do so. We
want the faith of the Church in order to remain in the Church. And we
want the Church for the sake of the faith and in the faith.
It is very important to understand this, even if those who stand
before us do not wish to understand it. And all of this is not an
opinion, nor a sensibility, nor an option: it is a necessity.
We are accused of not loving the Pope. We are accused of not
respecting him. But it is precisely because we love the Pope, sincerely,
as the Vicar of Christ, as the head of the Church, that we do not wish
to continue seeing the Pope humiliated alongside false shepherds,
representatives of false religions. How many times have we seen this
over all these years?
It is because we love the Vicar of Christ that we no longer want this
humiliation for the Pope, a humiliation that falls upon the entire
Church, treated on an equal footing with false religions.
We have explained it many times. We have explained it in almost every
language that exists upon the face of the earth. Why has it not been
understood? Why, in the end, do we speak a different language?
We speak the language of faith. We want the faith, in all its
simplicity. It is not complicated. The Creed is not complicated. The
profession of faith that the future bishops have just made is not
complicated. Everyone can understand it.
We want the language of faith, the language of Tradition. And before
us we encounter a language that is situated on another level, that
speaks of other things. It is the language of inclusion, of listening,
of dialogue, and of accompaniment.
We want the faith. And then, in the faith, we accompany persons. Why
speak of accompaniment before speaking of the faith? Where is someone
accompanied if the truth has not first been transmitted to him? Where is
a person led if the way has not first been shown to him?
It is necessary to restore the order: first the faith; then the Christian life; and finally, accompaniment.
Precisely for this reason we are here. We are not here to affirm a
sociological identity. We are not here to defend a particular
sensibility. We are not here to create a parallel Church.
We are here because we believe. Because we believe that the Church of
all time remains the Church of today. Because we believe that Tradition
cannot disappear. Because we believe that Our Lord does not abandon His
Church. And because we believe that the Catholic faith must remain
integral until the end of time.
That is why these consecrations do not constitute a rupture. They
constitute a continuity: a continuity with the faith of all time; a
continuity with the Catholic priesthood; a continuity with the sacrifice
of the Mass; a continuity with everything that the Church has handed on
for twenty centuries.
It is precisely this that we wish to preserve. And to preserve it not
only for ourselves; that would be selfishness. We want to hand it on.
We want to deliver it to future generations. We want that in fifty
years, in one hundred years, in two hundred years, there may still be
priests who celebrate the Holy Mass, who preach the true faith, and who
administer the sacraments as the Church has always administered them.
For the Church does not begin with us. Nor will it end with us. We
are simply a link in a chain. We have received. We must hand on. Nothing
more.
And this demands sacrifice. For preserving the faith has a price. It
has always had one. The martyrs paid that price. The confessors of the
faith paid that price. The holy bishops paid that price. Saint
Athanasius paid it. Saint Hilary paid it. Saint John Fisher paid it.
Saint Thomas More paid it. Monsignor Lefebvre also paid that price. And
we must accept to pay it likewise.
Not because we seek suffering, but because we do not wish to betray
Our Lord. For fidelity costs. It has always cost. And it will always
cost. But that fidelity is never sterile.
It produces fruits. It produces vocations. It produces Christian
families. It produces souls who love God. It produces hope. And that is
precisely what we see today.
Look around you. Look at these families. Look at these young people.
Look at these priests. Look at these seminarians. Who can say that
Tradition is dead? Who can say that it no longer has a future?
No. Tradition is alive. It is profoundly alive. And that life does not come from us. It comes from Our Lord.
Precisely because this work is not ours, we have no fear. We do not
know what will happen tomorrow. We do not know what the consequences
will be. We do not know what trials we shall have to face. But we know
one thing: the Church belongs to Our Lord. It does not belong to us. It
has never belonged to us. And it will never belong to us.
That is why we can have confidence. Because it is He who guides His
Church, not we. We need only remain faithful: faithful to the faith,
faithful to the Mass, faithful to the priesthood, and faithful to the
grace received. That suffices.
Some ask why four bishops. The answer is very simple: because we must
secure the future. We do not know how much time Providence will grant
us. We do not know how long the present bishops will live. We cannot
wait until we find ourselves in an emergency situation. Prudence
requires us to foresee, not to act when it is already too late.
That is why these consecrations are an act of prudence. Not a
challenge. Not a provocation. Not a declaration of war. An act of
prudence at the service of the Church. Nothing more.
I would also like to say a word to the four future bishops.
Dear friends, you are about to receive an immense grace. But you will
also receive a very heavy cross. You must never seek your personal
interest. You must never seek honor. You must never seek power. You must
disappear so that Our Lord may be known.
You must be bishops to hand on, not to innovate. You must preserve,
not invent. You must be men of prayer, men of sacrifice, men of
doctrine, and men of charity. For truth without charity wounds, and
charity without truth deceives. You must always keep both united, as the
Church has always done.
Never forget that the bishop exists to sanctify souls. Not to
administer a business. Not to direct an organization. Not to become a
public figure. He exists to lead souls to Heaven.
That will be your judgment. You will not be asked how many
conferences you have given, nor how many projects you have carried out,
nor how many applauses you have received. You will be asked whether you
have preserved the faith, whether you have transmitted grace, and
whether you have sanctified the souls entrusted to you. That is all. And
that suffices.
That is why we entrust you today in a very special way to the Blessed
Virgin. She preserved the faith when almost everyone had fled. She
remained at the foot of the Cross. She never doubted. She never
abandoned Our Lord. May she form you. May she protect you. May she keep
you faithful to the end.
Dear faithful, I would also like to address you.
Without you, this work would not exist. You have remained faithful.
You have accepted sacrifices. You have traveled many kilometers to
assist at the Holy Mass. You have educated your children in a Christian
manner. You have supported our seminaries. You have prayed for our
priests. You have suffered with us. And today you also share this joy.
Never think that your fidelity is of no importance. It is thanks to
families like yours that the Church continues to live. It is thanks to
your daily fidelity that Our Lord continues to reign in souls.
Continue to be simple. Continue to be profoundly Catholic. Never seek
controversy for its own sake. Never seek to overcome anyone. Seek only
the truth and live that truth with humility.
We have no enemies. We have souls to love. We have persons for whom
to pray. We have a Church to serve. And we have a Heaven to conquer.
That is why we must always preserve peace: the peace that is born of
truth, the peace that is born of grace, and the peace that is born of
trust in God.
Never allow bitterness to enter your hearts. Never allow resentment
to replace charity. Never allow trials to make you lose hope.
For God directs all things, even when we do not understand; even when
it seems that everything is collapsing; even when the Church passes
through the night.
Victory already belongs to Our Lord. He has conquered the world. He
has conquered sin. He has conquered death. And therefore we can walk
with serenity.
We do not know how long this crisis will last. We do not know how it
will end. But we know how history ends. And it ends with the triumph of
Christ.
That is why we must not be afraid. We must pray. We must work. We must remain faithful. And we must always keep an immense hope.
Dear friends, these consecrations are not a point of arrival. They
are a point of departure. From tomorrow a still greater work will begin.
It will be necessary to continue forming priests, to continue
preaching, to continue sanctifying souls, to continue building Christian
families, and to continue handing on the faith in its integrity.
That is our duty. And, with the help of God, we shall continue to fulfill it.
Let us now entrust this day to the Blessed Virgin Mary. May she
preserve the Church. May she protect the Holy Father. May she strengthen
our new bishops. May she sustain our priests. And may she obtain for us
the grace to remain faithful until the last day of our life.
In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
Even Broadcasting House, when it was opened in 1931, was dedicated as a “temple of the arts and muses” to “Almighty God” Himself.
Nearly 100 years later, the Archbishop of York, the Most Rev’d Stephen Cottrell, has given us his contemporary Christian perspective on public service broadcasting in an address to the Religion Media Festival. They have diverged somewhat from the wisdom of these earlier visions.
Cottrell rightly said in his address that we cannot understand the world around us, this nation, or even our individual selves without an understanding of faith. He correctly identified a general lack of religious literacy that can contribute to escalating tensions within society. He also spoke of the general lack of trust in contemporary media. However, his remedy for this is in tension with some essential tenets of biblical thought.
He argues that “21st-century Britain is a network of communities”, many of which “find their identity in ethnic origin and religious faith more than geographic location”.
Public service broadcasting, he says, needs to reflect diversity, and that trust can only be rebuilt when everyone feels included. This needs more than “presenters with a regional accent”.
Aside from it being unclear what has made Archbishop Cottrell think the BBC doesn’t reflect contemporary British diversity – perhaps, thanks to a life of prayer, he hasn’t switched on a television in the last 30 years – it is troubling he thinks that we should be content with a future vision of broadcasting, and our nation itself, divided up into “communities”.