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MEETING AND LUNCH WITH THE MEMBERS OF
THE UKRAINIAN CATHOLIC EPISCOPATE
ADDRESS OF THE HOLY
FATHER
Apostolic
Nunciature, Kyiv Sunday, 24 June 2001
Dear Brothers in the Episcopate,
1. I greet you and I embrace you all in the
Lord! It is a great joy for me to meet you in your beloved land, to listen to
you and to reflect with you upon the journey of communion and upon the promising
work of evangelization being done in your communities. In the ten years since
your country regained independence after the end of the Communist regime, your
communities have organized themselves anew for the sake of more effective
pastoral action, and they now look with hope to the future. I invoke upon them a
new outpouring of grace from him who is – as the Servant of God Pope Paul VI
said so tellingly – "the one who enlivens and sanctifies the Church, her
divine breath, the wind in her sails, her principle of unity, her inner
wellspring of light and strength, her support and consolation, the source of her
gifts and songs, her peace and her joy, her pledge and prelude of blessed and
eternal life" (General Audience, 29 November 1972, Insegnamenti X,
pp. 1210-1211).
2. The joy of today’s meeting will grow
still stronger in the days to come, when together we shall take part in the
solemn beatification of some of your brother Bishops, who exercised their
episcopal ministry in the most dangerous of circumstances. We will pay them the
homage of our gratitude for having preserved intact, by their sacrifice, the
heritage of Christian faith among the members of their Churches. In raising them
to the honours of the altar, I wish to recall with gratitude other Pastors too
who also paid dearly for their faithfulness to Christ and for their decision to
remain in union with the Successor of Peter.
How can we fail to recall, among them, the
Servant of God Metropolitan Andrii Sheptytsky? My revered predecessor, Pope Pius
XII, declared that his noble life was cut short "not so much by his
advanced age, but by the sufferings of his soul as Pastor, struck down with his
flock" (AAS XLIV [1955], p. 877). Together with him, I recall
Cardinal Joseph Slipyj, first Rector of the Greek Catholic Theological Academy
of Lviv, happily reopened in recent times. This heroic confessor of the faith
suffered the hardship of imprisonment for eighteen long years.
Among you there are still priests and Bishops
who were imprisoned and persecuted. In embracing you with deep emotion, dear
Brothers, I give praise to God for your faithful witness. It encourages me to
accomplish my own service to the universal Church with ever more courageous
dedication. I make my own the words which you say when you celebrate the Liturgy
of Saint John Chrysostom: "We give ourselves, each of us, and our entire
life to Christ, our God". This is what the martyrs and the confessors of
the faith teach us. It is a lesson which we too must learn and live as Pastors
of the flock which God has entrusted to us.
3. It is true that it is the task of the whole
Church to preserve and pass on the heritage of faith. But it is the solemn duty
of Pastors to be trustworthy guides, enlightened teachers and exemplary
witnesses for the Christian people. This special responsibility of ours is
referred to in the theme to be addressed by the Synod of Bishops of the Greek
Catholic Ukrainian Church this year: "The person and responsibility of
the Bishop". On this point, allow me in a spirit of fraternal service
to offer you some personal reflections in today’s meeting, which brings
together both Eastern and Latin Bishops.
First of all, in union with you, who have
prime responsibility for your Churches, I wish to give thanks to God for the
witness given by Catholics in this land, where the Church shows forth her divine
and human reality, embellished by the genius of Ukrainian culture. Here the
Church breathes with the two lungs of the Eastern and Western traditions. Here
there is a fraternal meeting between those who draw from the sources of
Byzantine spirituality and those who are nourished by Latin spirituality. Here
the deep sense of mystery which suffuses the holy liturgy of the Eastern
Churches and the mystical succinctness of the Latin Rite come face to face and
mutually enrich each other.
Living as members of the one Church, yet
respectful of different ritual traditions, you have a great opportunity to take
part as it were in an important "ecclesial workshop" aimed at building
unity in diversity. This is the best way to respond to the many and complex
pastoral challenges of the present time. In this search, I invite you who are
members of the Synod of Bishops of the Greek Catholic Ukrainian Church and you
who are Bishops of the Ukrainian Episcopal Conference to make your distinctive
contributions in close and active cooperation. With one heart, proclaim the
Gospel of Christ, overcoming every temptation to division and disagreement. Let
the only "competition" between you, dear Brother Bishops, be in vying
in esteem for one another (cf. Rom 12:10) and in striving for holiness.
Foster communion between yourselves and with
your priests in a climate of affection, concern and respectful and fraternal
dialogue. Success in the work of evangelization depends in large part upon the
quality of these relationships.
4. In the last ten years, your Churches have
known an extraordinary flourishing of vocations to the priestly and religious
life. This calls for special care in the spiritual, intellectual and pastoral
formation of those called to the priesthood or the consecrated life. It is
necessary first of all to ensure that future priests have a deep spirituality, a
rigorous philosophical and theological preparation, and a solid introduction to
pastoral life, anchored in the enduring values of the Catholic tradition but
attentive to the signs of the times. An essential condition for achieving these
goals is the presence in seminaries and houses of formation of first-rate
educators and highly trained teachers, who can ensure a solid intellectual and
spiritual foundation for the priests of tomorrow. The same care needs to be
given to the formation of members of Institutes of consecrated life, especially
Religious women.
Another fundamental task for your Churches is
a comprehensive, competent and up-to-date catechesis of adults and young people.
In this regard, you will find great help in the Catechism of the Catholic
Church, which is a providential means of presenting the Catholic faith in an
ordered and complete way to those near and far. It should be remembered,
however, that catechetical instruction is only one element in the much wider
process of Christian initiation, which includes, alongside proclamation of the
truths of the faith, education in personal and liturgical prayer, the experience
of fraternal communion and training for service in the Church. Only an integral
Christian formation can lead to the specific goal of catechesis, which "is
to develop, with God’s help, an as yet initial faith, and to advance in
fullness and to nourish day by day the Christian life of the faithful, young and
old", so that the Lord’s disciples can learn "to think like him, to
judge like him, to act in conformity with his commandments, and to hope as he
invites us to" (Catechesi Tradendae, 20).
5. In recent years, which have been marked by
rapid and profound social change in Ukraine as elsewhere, the family has been
passing through a severe crisis, as we see in the large number of divorces and
the widespread practice of abortion. Let the family therefore be one of your
pastoral priorities. In particular, be concerned to lead Christian families to a
powerful experience of God and to a full awareness of the Creator’s plan for
marriage so that, renewing the spiritual fabric of their life together, they can
help improve the quality of society as a whole.
Pastoral care of the young is linked to the
evangelization of the family. The models of hedonistic and materialistic life
often presented by the mass media, the crisis of values affecting the family,
the illusion of an easy life without effort, the problems of unemployment and
uncertainty about the future often create serious disorientation in young
people, making them susceptible to ephemeral visions of life stripped of values
or to worrying forms of escapism. Energy and resources must be invested in their
human and Christian formation. In this regard, I was pleased to learn that you
plan to establish an Institute of Social Sciences, which will provide a deeper
understanding of the Church’s social teaching. This is an initiative which
seems very timely, and I am therefore glad to offer my encouragement and
blessing.
5. Venerable Brothers, before you there
stretches an important time which will determine the "quality" of the
Church’s presence in Ukraine in the next millennium. During the Communist
persecution, relations between the Greek Catholic Church and the Latin Catholic
Church were exemplary, and this provided the solid basis for the subsequent
flourishing of the Church. Treasuring that experience, you must now continue to
work together in order to carry out the demanding task of the new
evangelization. May your Churches, as is already happening in various pastoral
situations, be successful in finding structured forms of cooperation and mutual
assistance in the field of catechesis, in Catholic centres of learning, in the
mass media, and in the vast and complex sector of human development. In every
circumstance, let Catholics be one in heart and open to dialogue and mutual
solidarity.
The Synod of the Greek Catholic Ukrainian
Church embraces many faithful in the diaspora, and this presents new pastoral
challenges. To respond to these, it is again essential to be united. There must
be effective unity, first of all among the Bishops and priests, in the light of
the teaching of the Second Vatican Council which invites Bishops to consider
priests as "brothers and friends" (Presbyterorum Ordinis, 7).
Then this unity will go on to embrace consecrated men and women and committed
lay people, for the spiritual welfare of the entire mystical Body of Christ.
6. This deep experience of communion within
the Catholic Church will doubtless stimulate appropriate forms of fraternal
cooperation with our Orthodox brethren, so that together we can respond to
contemporary man’s quest for truth and joy, which Jesus Christ alone can fully
satisfy. Ecumenical dialogue must therefore be an indispensable priority for
believers and for the Churches in Ukraine. The division of Christians into
different confessions represents one of the greatest challenges of our time. We
have a long way to go to reach full reconciliation and visible communion among
Christ’s disciples, but the experience of the past helps us to look to the
future with confidence.
The thirst for unity has become more intense
since the Second Vatican Council, and today awareness of the need for courageous
understanding and closer cooperation is growing in all Christians. As the
Successor of Peter, I encourage and exhort you today, dear Brother Bishops, to
pursue this path and I assure you of the Holy See’s support for your generous
efforts. The Pope is with you in your daily task of serving the faithful and his
prayer accompanies you. With these heartfelt sentiments, I entrust you, your
Churches, and the plans and hopes of the People of God in Ukraine to the Mother
of God in heaven, and I cordially impart my blessing.
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