On Thursday evening, Pope Francis joined the Bishops of Italy as they gathered in Saint Peter’s Basilica for their 65th General Assembly.
The
gathering began with opening remarks by Cardinal Angelo Bagnasco, the
President of the Italian Bishops’ Conference, followed by the Liturgy of
the Word.
Pope Francis then offered a brief meditation on the readings.
At the conclusion of the evening’s ceremonies, Pope Francis led the Bishops in a solemn Profession of Faith.
Below, please find the complete translation of Pope Francis’ remarks:
Dear Brothers in the Episcopate,
The
readings we have heard make us thing. They have made me think a great
deal. I have made something like a meditation. For us bishops, and first
of all for me, a bishop like you, I share it with you.
It is
significant - and I am particularly happy - that our first meeting
should be held right here in the place that preserves not only the tomb
of Peter, but also the living memory of his witness of faith, of his
service to the truth, and of the gift he gave of himself – to the point
of martyrdom – for the Gospel and for the Church.
This evening this
altar of the Confession becomes our Lake of Tiberias, on the shores of
which we listen to the wonderful dialogue between Jesus and Peter, with
the question addressed to the Apostle, but which should resound in our
own hearts, the hearts of bishops.
“Do you love me?”; “Are you my friend?” (Cf. Jn 21:15 ff)
The question is addressed to a man who, despite his solemn declaration, was overcome by fear and went back on his word.
“Do you love me?”; “Are you my friend?”
The
question is addressed to me and to each one of you, to all of us: if we
avoid reacting too hastily and superficially, it encourages us to look
within, to enter into ourselves.
“Do you love me?”; “Are you my friend?”
He
who searches hearts (cf. Rom 8:27) makes himself a beggar of love, and
questions us on the only really essential question, the premise and
condition for pastoring his sheep, his lambs, his Church. Every ministry
is based on this intimacy with the Lord; to live in him is the measure
of our ecclesial service, which is expressed in an openness to
obedience, to emptying of self, as we heard in the Letter to the
Philippians, to total giving (cf. Phil 2:6-11).
Moreover, the
consequence of loving the Lord is giving everything - absolutely
everything, even one’s very life - for Him: this is what must
distinguish our pastoral ministry; it is the litmus test that shows how
profoundly we have embraced the gift received in response to the call of
Jesus, and how we are joined to the people and the communities that
have been entrusted to us. We are not expressions of a structure or an
organizational need: even with the service of our authority we are
called to be a sign of the presence and action of the Risen Lord, and
so, to build up the community in fraternal charity.
Not that this is
taken for granted: even the greatest love, in fact, when it is not
continuously fed, fades and goes out. Not without reason the Apostle
Paul warns: “Take heed to yourselves and to all the flock, in which the
Holy Spirit has made you overseers, to care for the Church of God which
he obtained with the blood of his own Son”(Acts 20:28).
The lack of
vigilance - we know – makes the Pastor lukewarm; he becomes distracted,
forgetful and even impatient; it seduces him with the prospect of a
career, the lure of money, and the compromises with the spirit of the
world; it makes him lazy, turning him into a functionary, a cleric
worried more about himself, about organisations and structures, than
about the true good of the People of God. He runs the risk, then, like
the Apostle Peter, of denying the Lord, even if he is present to us and
speaks in His name; the holiness of the hierarchy of Mother Church is
obscured, making it less fertile.
Who are we, Brothers, before God?
What are our challenges? We all have so many, each one of us knows his
own. What is God saying to us through them? What are we relying on to
overcome them?
As it was for Peter, the insistent and heartfelt
question of Jesus can leave us saddened and may leave us more aware of
the weakness of our freedom, beset as it is by a thousand internal and
external constraints, which often cause confusion, frustration, even
disbelief.
These are certainly not the feelings and attitudes that
the Lord intends to arouse; rather, the Enemy, the Devil, takes
advantage of them to isolate us in bitterness, in complaints, and in
discouragement.
Jesus, the Good Shepherd, does not humiliate us or
abandon us to remorse: in Him, the tenderness of the Father speaks, He
who comforts and raises up; He who makes us pass from the disintegration
of shame – because shame surely causes us to disintegrate – to the
fabric of trust; who restores courage, recommits responsibility, and
consigns us to the mission.
Peter, purified by the fire of
forgiveness, can humbly say, “Lord, you know everything, you know that I
love you” (Jn 21:17). I am sure we can all say this from the heart. In
this Peter, purified, in his first letter exhorts us to feed “the flock
of God that is your charge, not by constraint but willingly, not for
shameful gain but eagerly, not as domineering over those in your charge
but being examples to the flock”(1 Peter 5,2-3).
Yes, to be pastors
means to believe every day in the grace and strength that comes to us
from the Lord, despite our weakness, and to fully assume the
responsibility of walking in front of the flock, freed from the burdens
that hinder a healthy apostolic swiftness, and without hesitation in
leading, to make our voice recognizable both to those who have embraced
the faith, but also to those who are “not of this fold” (John 10:16): we
are called to make our own the dream of God, whose house knows no
exclusion of persons or nations, as Isaiah prophetically announced in
the First Reading (cf. Is 2:2-5).
Therefore, being pastors also means
to be ready to walk in the midst of and behind the flock: capable of
listening to the silent story of the suffering and bearing up the steps
of those who are afraid of not succeeding; careful to raise up, to
reassure, and inspire hope. By sharing with the humble our faith always
comes out strengthened: let us put aside, therefore, any form of
arrogance, to incline ourselves toward those the Lord has entrusted to
our care.
Among these, a special place is reserved for our priests:
especially for them, our hearts, our hands, and our doors remain open at
all times. They are the first faithful we bishops have, our priests.
Let us love them! Let us love them from the heart! They are our sons and
our brothers.
Dear brothers, the profession of faith that we now
renew together is not a formal act, but is a renewal of our response to
the “Follow Me” with which the Gospel of John concludes (21:19): allow
your own life to unfold according to the project of God, committing your
whole self to the Lord Jesus. From here springs that discernment that
recognises and takes on the thoughts, the expectations, and the needs of
the men of our time.
With this in mind, I sincerely thank each of
you for your service, for your love for the Church and the Mother, and
here, I place you, and I place myself, too, under the mantle of Mary,
Our Mother.
Mother of the silence that preserves the mystery of God,
deliver us from the idolatry of the present, to which those who forget
are condemned. Purify the eyes of pastors with the balm of memory:that we might return to the freshness of the beginning, for a praying and penitent Church.
Mother
of the beauty that blossoms from fidelity to daily work, remove us from
the torpor of laziness, of pettiness, and defeatism. Cloak Pastors with
that compassion that unifies and integrates: that we might discover the
joy of a humble and fraternal servant Church.
Mother of the
tenderness which enfolds in patience and mercy, help us burn away the
sadness, impatience, and rigidity of those who have not known what it
means to belong.
Intercede with your Son that our hands, our feet and
our hearts may be swift: that we may build the Church with the truth in
charity.
Mother, we will be the People of God, on pilgrimage towards the Kingdom.
Amen.