AUTHENTIC DISCERNMENT
Pope’s Full Address to Newly Appointed Bishops
The Holy Spirit, protagonist of any
authentic discernment
September 14, 2017
@ Servizio Fotografico -
L'Osservatore Romano
Pope Francis received the bishops
appointed during the course of last year on September 14, 2017 in the
Clementine Hall of the Apostolic Palace.
Here is the Vatican Press
Office-provided translation of the Pope’s address:
__
Dearest brothers,
With great joy I welcome you in this
moment, almost at the end of your Roman pilgrimage, organised by the
Congregations for Bishops and for the Eastern Churches. I thank Cardinal Marc
Ouellet and Cardinal Leonardo Sandri, and the dicasteries they preside over
respectively, for their generous efforts in organising this event, which now
allows me to meet you personally and to consider with you, new Pastors of the
Church, the grace and responsibility of the ministry we have received.
Indeed, not by our merit, but by
pure divine benevolence we have been entrusted “the ministry … to testify to
the gospel of the grace of God” ( Acts 20: 24; cf. Rm 15: 16) and “the ministry
of the Spirit” (2 Cor 3: 8-9). This year, the programme of your days in Rome
has tried to penetrate the mystery of the Episcopate through one of its central
tasks, that of offering to the “the flock, in which the Holy Spirit has made
you overseers” ( At 20 , 28) that spiritual and pastoral discernment necessary
for it to reach the knowledge and fulfilment of God’s will in which all
fullness resides.
Let me therefore share some
reflections on this subject that is increasingly important in our times,
paradoxically marked by a sense of self-referentiality, which proclaims the end
of the time of the masters, while in his solitude the real man continues to
call out the need to be helped in facing the dramatic issues that assail him,
to be paternally guided in the not always clear path that challenges him, to be
initiated in the mystery of his search for life and happiness.
It is precisely through authentic
discernment, which Paul presents as one of the gifts of the Spirit (cf. 1 Cor
12:10) and St. Thomas Aquinas calls “the superior virtue that judges according
to those higher principles” ( Sum Theol ., II -II, q, 51, a, 4, to 3) that we
can respond to this human need today.
The Holy Spirit, protagonist of any
authentic discernment
Not long ago, the Church invoked
upon you the “ Spiritus Principalis ” or the “ Pneuma hegemonikon ”, the
power that the Father gave to the Son and which They transmitted to the holy
Apostles, that is, “ the Spirit that supports and guides ”.
One has to be aware that such a
great gift, of which with gratitude we are perpetual servants, rests on fragile
shoulders. Perhaps for this reason the Church, in her prayer for episcopal
consecration, derived such an expression from the Miserere (cf. Ps 51,14b) in
which he who prays, after exposing his failure, implores that Spirit to allow
him immediate and spontaneous generosity in obedience to God, so fundamental to
those who lead a community.
Only those who are led by God have
the title and authority to be proposed as leaders of others. One may teach and
grow in discernment only if familiar with this inner teacher who, like a
compass, offers the criteria to distinguish, for himself and for others, the
times of God and His grace; to acknowledge His passage and the way of His
salvation; to indicate concrete means, pleasing to God, to accomplish the good
that He predisposes in His mysterious plan of love for each and for all. This
wisdom is the practical wisdom of the Cross, which, though it includes reason
and prudence, transcends them because it leads to the very source of life that
does not die, namely, to “knowing the Father, the only true God, and He Who
sent Jesus Christ”(cf. Jn 17: 3).
The bishop cannot take for granted
the possession of a gift of such a high and transcendent gift, as if it were a
right acquired, without falling into a ministry devoid of fruitfulness. It is
necessary to continually implore it as a primary condition for illuminating any
human, existential, psychological, sociological and moral wisdom that may be of
use to us in the task of discerning the ways of God for the salvation of those
who have been entrusted to us.
Therefore, it is imperative
continually to return in prayer to Gabaon (cf. 1 Kings 3: 5-12), to remind the
Lord that before him we are perennial “children who do not know how to settle”
and to implore “not long days or riches, nor the life of enemies”, but only
“discernment in judging among His people”. Without this grace, we will not
become good meteorologists of what can be seen “in the appearance of heaven and
earth” but rather we will be unable to “evaluate God’s time” (cf. Lk 12:
54-56).
Discernment, therefore, is born in
the heart and mind of the bishop through his prayer when he puts the people and
situations entrusted to him into contact with the Divine Word pronounced by the
Spirit . It is in such intimacy that the Pastor matures the inner freedom that
makes him firm in his choices and behaviour, both personal and ecclesial. Only
in the silence of prayer can one learn the voice of God, perceive the traces of
His language, have access to His truth, which is a very different light, that “
is not above intelligence as oil is above water “, but much higher since only “
he who know the Truth knows that light ” (cf. Augustine, Confessions VII,
10.16).
Discernment is a gift of the Spirit
to the Church, to which she responds with listening
Discernment is the grace of the
Spirit to the holy faithful people of God , Who constitutes it a prophetic
people, endowed with the sense of faith and that spiritual instinct that makes
it capable of feeling cum Ecclesia . It is a gift received in the midst of the
People and is oriented towards its salvation. Since from Baptism the Spirit
already dwells in the heart of the faithful, the apostolic faith, bliss,
righteousness, and evangelical spirit are not strangers to them.
Therefore, although vested with
unavoidable personal responsibility (see the Directory Apostolorum Successores
, 160-161), the Bishop is called to live his own discernment as a Pastor as a
member of the People of God, or in an ever- ecclesial dynamic, at the service
of the koinonìa . The bishop is not the self-sufficient “father and master”,
nor is he the frightened and isolated “solitary pastor”.
The bishop’s discernment is always a
community action , which does not disregard the richness of the opinion of his
priests and deacons, of the People of God and of all those who can offer him a
useful contribution, also through concrete and not merely formal contributions.
“When one does not consider his brother in any way, and considers oneself
superior, then one ends up becoming proud even against God Himself” [1].
In serene dialogue, He is not afraid
to share, and even sometimes change, his discernment with others: with
confreres in the episcopate , to whom he is sacramentally united, and then
discernment becomes collegiate; with his own priests , for whom he the
guarantor of that unity that is not imposed by force, but rather is woven with
the patience and wisdom of an artisan; with the lay faithful , because they
retain the “sense” of the true infallibility of the faith that resides in the
Church: they know that God does not diminish in His love and does not deny His
promises.
As history teaches, the great
Pastors, in defending the true faith, have been able to converse with such a
store present in the heart and in the awareness of the faithful and, not
rarely, have been supported by them. Without this exchange “the faith of the
most educated can degenerate into indifference and that of the most humble into
superstition” [2].
Therefore, I invite you to cultivate
an attitude of listening, growing in the freedom of renouncing one’s own point
of view (when it is shown to be partial and insufficient), to assume that of
God. Without letting oneself be conditioned by the eyes of others, make efforts
to get to know with your own eyes the places and the people, the spiritual and
cultural “tradition” of the diocese entrusted to you, to respectfully enter
into the memory of its testimony of Christ and to interpret its concrete
present in the light of the Gospel outside which there is no future for the
Church.
The mission that awaits you is not
to bring your own ideas and projects, nor solutions that are abstractly
designed by those who consider the Church a home garden but humbly, without
attention-seeking or narcissism , to offer your concrete witness of union with
God, serving the Gospel that should be cultivated and helped to grow in that
specific situation.
Discerning therefore means humility
and obedience . Humility with regard to one’s own projects. Obedience to the
Gospel, the ultimate criterion; to the Magisterium, which conserves it; to the
norms of the universal Church, which serve it; and to the concrete situation of
people, for whom we want nothing other than to draw from the treasure of the
Church what is most fruitful for their salvation today (cf. Mt 13: 52).
Discernment is a remedy for the
immobility of “it has always been so” or “let us take time”. It is a creative
process that does not just apply schemas. It is an antidote against rigidity,
because the same solutions are not valid everywhere. It is always the perennial
today of the Risen Lord that demands that we do not resign ourselves to the
repetition of the past, and have the courage to ask ourselves whether the
proposals of yesterday are still evangelically valid. Do not let yourselves be
imprisoned by the nostalgia of having only one answer to apply in all cases.
This would perhaps calm our anxiety regarding performance, but would leave us
relegated to the margins and to “barren” lives that need to be watered by the
grace we conserve (cf. Mk 3: 1-6; Ezek 37: 4).
I recommend a special delicacy with
the culture and religiosity of the people .
They are not something to tolerate,
or mere tools to manoeuvre, or a “Cinderella” to keep hidden because they are
unworthy of access to the noble salon of the concepts and higher reasons for
faith. Indeed, it is necessary to care for and engage in dialogue with them,
because besides constituting the backbone of the people’s self-comprehension,
they are a true subject of evangelisation, which your discernment cannot ignore.
Such a charism, given to the community of believers, cannot but be recognised,
called upon and involved in the ordinary path of discernment made by the
Pastors.
Remember that God was already
present in your dioceses when you arrived and will still be there when you are
gone. And, in the end, we will all be measured not by counting our works but on
the growth of God’s work in the heart of the flock that we keep in the name of
the “Pastor and keeper of our souls” (cf. 1 Pt 2:25).
Called to grow in discernment
We must strive to grow in incarnate
and inclusive discernment, which dialogues with the consciousness of the
faithful which is to be formed and not substituted (cf. Amoris Laetitia , 37)
in a patient and courageous process of accompaniment, so as to mature the
capacity of each one – the faithful, families, priests, communities, and
societies – of all those called to advance in the freedom to choose and
accomplish the good God wants. Indeed, the activity of discernment is not
reserved to the wise, the perspicacious and the perfect. Rather, God often
resists the haughty and shows himself to the humble (cf. Mt 11:25).
The Pastor knows that God is the way
and trusts His company; knows and never doubts His truth , nor despairs of His
promise of life . But of these certainties, the Pastor is seized by the humble
darkness of faith. To send them to the flock is therefore make obvious
proclamations, but to introduce to the experience of God Who saves by
sustaining and guiding the possible steps to be accomplished.
Therefore, true discernment, though
definitive in every step, is an always open and necessary process that can be
completed and enriched. It cannot be reduced to the repetition of formulas that
“like high clouds send little rain” to the real man, often immersed in an
reality that cannot be reduced to black or white. The Shepherd is called to
make available to the flock the grace of the Spirit, Who knows how to penetrate
the folds of the real and to take account of its nuances to reveal what God
wants to achieve at all times. I particularly think of young people, families,
priests, those who have the responsibility for leading society. In your lips,
may they seek and find the steadfast witness of this Word, which is “the lamp
for the steps and light for the way” (cf. Ps 118,105).
An essential condition for
progressing in discernment is to educate ourselves in the patience of God and
His times , which are never ours. He does not “rain fire on the infidels” (cf.
Lk 9: 53-54), nor does He permit the zealots to “rip out of the field the
darnel” they see growing there (cf. Mt 13: 27-29). It is up to us every day to
welcome from God the hope that preserves us from all abstraction, because it
enables us to discover the hidden grace in the present without losing sight of
the longanimity of His design of love that surpasses us.
Dear brothers,
I beg you to keep scrupulously
before your eyes Jesus and the mission that was not His but of His Father (cf.
Jn 7: 16), and to offer to the people – confused and lost today, just as they
were yesterday – what He was able to give: the chance to encounter God
personally, to choose His way and to progress in His love.
Keep your gaze today fixed on Him
today, Feast of the Holy Cross, a permanent place of God’s discernment in our
favour, contemplating the depth of His incarnation and learning from it the
criterion of every authentic discernment (cf. 1 Jn 4: 1).
May the Virgin, who keeps her gaze
firmly on her Son, keep and bless you and your particular Churches.
[1] Dorotheus of Gaza, Communion
with God and with men , Edizioni Qiqajon, 2014, 101-102.
[2] John Henry Newman, On consulting the
faithful in matters of doctrine , Morcelliana, Brescia 1991, 123.
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