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BENEDICT XVI
GENERAL AUDIENCE
Paul VI Audience Hall Wednesday, 7
March 2007
St Clement, Bishop of Rome
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
In these past months we have meditated on the figures of the
individual Apostles and on the first witnesses of the Christian faith who are
mentioned in the New Testament writings.
Let us now devote our attention to the Apostolic Fathers, that
is, to the first and second generations in the Church subsequent to the
Apostles. And thus, we can see where the Church's journey begins in history.
St Clement, Bishop of Rome in the last years of the first
century, was the third Successor of Peter, after Linus and Anacletus. The most
important testimony concerning his life comes from St Irenaeus, Bishop of Lyons
until 202. He attests that Clement "had seen the blessed Apostles", "had been
conversant with them", and "might be said to have the preaching of the apostles
still echoing [in his ears], and their traditions before his eyes" (Adversus
Haer. 3, 3, 3).
Later testimonies which date back to between the fourth and
sixth centuries attribute to Clement the title of martyr.
The authority and prestige of this Bishop of Rome were such that
various writings were attributed to him, but the only one that is certainly his
is the Letter to the Corinthians. Eusebius of Caesarea, the great
"archivist" of Christian beginnings, presents it in these terms: "There is
extant an Epistle of this Clement which is acknowledged to be genuine and is of
considerable length and of remarkable merit. He wrote it in the name of the
Church of Rome to the Church of Corinth, when a sedition had arisen in the
latter Church. We know that this Epistle also has been publicly used in a great
many Churches both in former times and in our own" (Hist. Eccl. 3, 16).
An almost canonical character was attributed to this Letter. At
the beginning of this text - written in Greek - Clement expressed his regret
that "the sudden and successive calamitous events which have happened
to ourselves" (1, 1) had prevented him from intervening sooner. These
"calamitous events" can be identified with Domitian's persecution: therefore,
the Letter must have been written just after the Emperor's death and at the end
of the persecution, that is, immediately after the year 96.
Clement's intervention - we are still in the first century - was
prompted by the serious problems besetting the Church in Corinth: the elders of
the community, in fact, had been deposed by some young contestants. The
sorrowful event was recalled once again by St Irenaeus who wrote: "In the time
of this Clement, no small dissension having occurred among the brethren in
Corinth, the Church in Rome dispatched a most powerful Letter to the Corinthians
exhorting them to peace, renewing their faith and declaring the tradition which
it had lately received from the Apostles" (Adv. Haer. 3, 3, 3).
Thus, we could say that this Letter was a first exercise of the
Roman primacy after St Peter's death. Clement's Letter touches on topics that
were dear to St Paul, who had written two important Letters to the Corinthians,
in particular the theological dialectic, perennially current, between the
indicative of salvation and the imperative of moral commitment.
First of all came the joyful proclamation of saving grace. The
Lord forewarns us and gives us his forgiveness, gives us his love and the grace
to be Christians, his brothers and sisters.
It is a proclamation that fills our life with joy and gives certainty to our
action: the Lord always forewarns us with his goodness and the Lord's goodness
is always greater than all our sins.
However, we must commit ourselves in a way that is consistent
with the gift received and respond to the proclamation of salvation with a
generous and courageous journey of conversion.
In comparison with the Pauline model, the innovation added by
Clement is to the doctrinal and practical sections, which constituted all the
Pauline Letters, a "great prayer" that virtually concludes the Letter.
The Letter's immediate circumstances provided the Bishop of Rome
with ample room for an intervention on the Church's identity and mission. If
there were abuses in Corinth, Clement observed, the reason should be sought in
the weakening of charity and of the other indispensable Christian virtues.
He therefore calls the faithful to humility and fraternal love,
two truly constitutive virtues of being in the Church: "Seeing, therefore, that
we are the portion of the Holy One", he warned, "let us do all those things
which pertain to holiness" (30, 1).
In particular, the Bishop of Rome recalls that the Lord himself,
"where and by whom he desires these things to be done, he himself has fixed by
his own supreme will, in order that all things, being piously done according to
his good pleasure, may be acceptable unto him.... For his own peculiar services
are assigned to the high priest, and their own proper place is prescribed to the
priests, and their own special ministries devolve on the Levites. The layman is
bound by the laws that pertain to laymen" (40, 1-5: it can be noted that here,
in this early first-century Letter, the Greek word "laikós" appears for
the first time in Christian literature, meaning "a member of the laos",
that is, "of the People of God").
In this way, referring to the liturgy of ancient Israel, Clement
revealed his ideal Church. She was assembled by "the one Spirit of grace poured
out upon us" which breathes on the various members of the Body of Christ, where
all, united without any divisions, are "members of one another" (46, 6-7).
The clear distinction between the "lay person" and the hierarchy
in no way signifies opposition, but only this organic connection of a body, an
organism with its different functions. The Church, in fact, is not a place of
confusion and anarchy where one can do what one likes all the time: each one in
this organism, with an articulated structure, exercises his ministry in
accordance with the vocation he has received.
With regard to community leaders, Clement clearly explains the
doctrine of Apostolic Succession. The norms that regulate it derive ultimately
from God himself. The Father sent Jesus Christ, who in turn sent the Apostles.
They then sent the first heads of communities and established that they would be
succeeded by other worthy men.
Everything, therefore, was made "in an orderly way, according to
the will of God" (42). With these words, these sentences, St Clement underlined
that the Church's structure was sacramental and not political.
The action of God who comes to meet us in the liturgy precedes
our decisions and our ideas. The Church is above all a gift of God and not
something we ourselves created; consequently, this sacramental structure does
not only guarantee the common order but also this precedence of God's gift which
we all need.
Finally, the "great prayer" confers a cosmic breath to the
previous reasoning. Clement praises and thanks God for his marvellous providence
of love that created the world and continues to save and sanctify it.
The prayer for rulers and governors acquires special importance.
Subsequent to the New Testament texts, it is the oldest prayer extant for
political institutions. Thus, in the period following their persecution,
Christians, well aware that the persecutions would continue, never ceased to
pray for the very authorities who had unjustly condemned them.
The reason is primarily Christological: it is necessary to pray
for one's persecutors as Jesus did on the Cross.
But this prayer also contains a teaching that guides the
attitude of Christians towards politics and the State down the centuries. In
praying for the Authorities, Clement recognized the legitimacy of political
institutions in the order established by God; at the same time, he expressed his
concern that the Authorities would be docile to God, "devoutly in peace and
meekness exercising the power given them by [God]" (61, 2).
Caesar is not everything. Another sovereignty emerges whose
origins and essence are not of this world but of "the heavens above": it is
that of Truth, which also claims a right to be heard by the State.
Thus, Clement's Letter addresses numerous themes of perennial
timeliness. It is all the more meaningful since it represents, from the first
century, the concern of the Church of Rome which presides in charity over all
the other Churches.
In this same Spirit, let us make our own the invocations of the
"great prayer" in which the Bishop of Rome makes himself the voice of the entire
world: "Yes, O Lord, make your face to shine upon us for good in peace, that we
may be shielded by your mighty hand... through the High Priest and Guardian of
our souls, Jesus Christ, through whom be glory and majesty to you both now and
from generation to generation, for evermore" (60-61).
To special groups
I offer a warm welcome to all the English-speaking visitors and
pilgrims present at today's Audience, especially the groups from Scotland,
Denmark, Japan, Canada and the United States of America. May your pilgrimage
renew your love for the Lord and his Church and may God bless you all!
Lastly, my thoughts go to the sick and to newly-weds.
Dear sick people, by taking part patiently and lovingly in the very
suffering of the incarnate Son of God, may you share from this moment in the joy
of his Resurrection. And may you, dear newly-weds, find support for your
conjugal covenant and your mission in the Church and in society in the Covenant
which Christ made with his Church at the price of his Blood.
© Copyright 2007 - Libreria
Editrice Vaticana
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