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Saturday, September 30, 2023

AFTER A CATASTROPHE OF ALMOST NO ONE AT THE PAPAL LITURGY FOR THE CONSISTORY FOR NEW CARDINALS , A SOMEWHAT LARGER CROWD, BUT STILL DISASTROUSLY SMALL GATHER FOR THE ECUMENICAL PRAYER VIGIL FOR THE SYNOD ON SYNODALITY…

 



Pope at vigil: May God grant Synod the “gift of listening” 

At an ecumenical prayer vigil on the eve of the General Assembly of the Synod, Pope Francis says that the truth “does not need loud cries to reach people’s hearts.”

By Joseph Tulloch

Pope Francis has addressed the thousands of pilgrims gathered in St Peter’s Square for an ecumenical prayer vigil.

The faithful – who hail from across the denominational spectrum, and include the heads of many Christian Churches – have gathered to entrust the upcoming General Assembly of the Synod to the Holy Spirit.

In his address, delivered toward the end of the vigil, Pope Francis meditated on the topic of silence, stressing in particular three values it holds for Christians today.

Silence and God’s voice

“Silence,” the Pope began, “lies at the beginning and end of Christ’s earthly existence. The Word, the Word of the Father, became 'silence' in the manger and on the cross, on the night of the Nativity and on the night of his Passion.”

Indeed, he noted, God seems to prefer silence to “shouting, gossiping and noise”. When he appears to the Prophet Elijah, God does not appear in the wind, earthquake, or fire, but in a “small still voice.”

The truth, after all, Pope Francis said, “does not need loud cries to reach people’s hearts.”

For this reason, he said, we too, as believers, need “to free ourselves from so much noise in order to hear his voice. For only in our silence does his word resound.”

Silence and the life of the Church

The Holy Father then turned his attention to the Acts of the Apostles, which say that after Peter’s speech to the Council of Jerusalem “the whole assembly kept silence.”

This reminds us, Pope Francis said, that “silence, in the ecclesial community, makes fraternal communication possible”; it is only when we fall silent to listen to others that the Holy Spirit is able to “draw together points of view.”

Moreover, silence “enables true discernment, through attentive listening to the Spirit’s sighs too deep for words, which echo, often hidden, within the People of God.”

Pope Francis therefore encouraged those gathered in St Peter’s Square to ask the Holy Spirit to “bestow the gift of listening” on the participants in the upcoming Synod meetings.

Silence and Christian unity

A final aspect of silence, the Pope said, is that it is “essential for the journey of Christian unity.”

This, he said, is because silence “is fundamental to prayer, and ecumenism begins with prayer and is sterile without it.”

Thus, “the more we turn together to the Lord in prayer, the more we feel that it is he who purifies us and unites us beyond our differences.”

Conclusion

Pope Francis brought his address to an end with a prayer that we might “learn again to be silent: to listen to the voice of the Father, the call of Jesus and the groaning of the Spirit.”

“Let us ask,” he said, “that the Synod be a kairós of fraternity, a place where the Holy Spirit will purify the Church from gossip, ideologies and polarization," and "may we know, like the Magi, how to worship in unity and in silence the mystery of God made man, certain that the closer we are to Christ, the more united we will be among ourselves.”

16 comments:

ByzRus said...

By the looks of things, the desired silence should be deafening.

TJM said...

The “gift of listening” applies only to perverts and misfits not Faithful Catholics!

Mark Thomas said...

The gift of listening applies in tremendous fashion to Pope Francis.

The holy bishops of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church made that clear recently. They praised His Holiness as a humble man who is keen to listen to others.

Bishop Schneider, following an ad limina visit to Rome, said in regard to His Holiness:

"Regarding our meeting with the Pope, he is the Vicar of Christ on earth in this time, and he was very fraternal and kind to us. It was a very kind atmosphere."

"Our meeting with him lasted two hours. I consider this an act of great generosity on the part of the Pope, to spend so much time with our group of 10 bishops and ordinaries of Kazakhstan and Central Asia."

"During the meeting, the Pope invited us to freely express our concerns and even our criticisms. He stressed that he likes a very free conversation."

One person after another who has met Pope Francis has insisted that His Holiness is a keen listener.

Pax.

Mark Thomas

Mark Thomas said...

The gift of listening applies in tremendous fashion to Pope Francis.

The holy bishops of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church made that clear recently. They praised His Holiness as a humble man who is keen to listen to others.

Bishop Schneider, following an ad limina visit to Rome, said in regard to His Holiness:

"Regarding our meeting with the Pope, he is the Vicar of Christ on earth in this time, and he was very fraternal and kind to us. It was a very kind atmosphere."

"Our meeting with him lasted two hours. I consider this an act of great generosity on the part of the Pope, to spend so much time with our group of 10 bishops and ordinaries of Kazakhstan and Central Asia."

"During the meeting, the Pope invited us to freely express our concerns and even our criticisms. He stressed that he likes a very free conversation."

One person after another who has met Pope Francis has insisted that His Holiness is a keen listener.

Pax.

Mark Thomas

rcg said...

Reading the passage on silence it struck me that if the Holy Father wanted our input he would ask for it.

Fr Martin Fox said...

The mess that is ecumenism is bigger than one pontificate; but almost no one wants to talk about it.

At the grass-roots level, much ecumenical activity consists of projects that originated decades ago, and continue as a result of inertia. It generally involves periodic gatherings, like the prayer service highlighted in the original post, with a bunch of different clerics gathering for a lowest-common-denominator prayer activity -- which is fine, no objection. But the few who attend are the same folks who always attend. What comes of it?

Further, the religious groups that tend to be represented at such events are the "mainline" groups -- Episcopal, Lutheran, Methodist and Presbyterian -- which, sorry to say, are hardly mainline anymore. They are shadows of their former selves; so even if there is some substantive work being done on greater unity -- which is what the point was! -- it's increasingly marginal. Shocking but true: these denominations are vanishing. So many congregations are propped up by substantial endowments, which Catholic parishes rarely have, if ever; they aren't being kept alive by those who show up on Sunday.

Meanwhile, the hard truth is that theologically, these various groups are diverging, not converging. But again, at the local level, at least, this obvious reality never comes up. Pastors, correct me if I am wrong. But I know I don't ever bring up theology at these events. Maybe I should, but that's not what anyone signed up for. So we gather and are courteous, and pray together, and that's nice, but...I'm not sure that this is really what we need for actual ecumenism. It seems like zombie ecumenism to me.

Also -- you have the actual problem of so many of our Catholics being so profoundly confused about the real and substantial differences between Catholic and Protestant beliefs. Yes, we have many things in common, by all means, let's talk about that.

However, if you say -- as many Catholics think the bishops have been saying for decades now -- that none of the differences between Catholic and Protestant really matter, then lots of things become clear. Why shouldn't anyone come to Holy Communion? Why should anyone worry about coming to Mass? Why should contraception matter? Why shouldn't we design Mass to "keep up with the times" (whatever that means)?

(By the way, this false ecumenism -- that says none of the differences matter -- is actually very insulting to Protestants. Many Protestants paid a high price, even the ultimate price, for what they believe is true. When you say none of it matters, what are you saying about those sacrifices?)

One last point: there is, actually, some real ecumenism happening. You see it at homeless shelters, soup kitchens, and at abortion chambers. But the official activity seems outdated to me.

Daniel said...

Waiting for Fr K's defence of his and others EcuMania...

TJM said...

Father Fox,

A good read, as always. Instead of spending money on “ecumenism” the Catholic Church needs to restore the Faith from within, starting with the Boss in Rome. If we do not have the Faith and restore unity of belief amongst Catholics I really do not know why we are pursuing ecumenism. Ut unum sint, starts with us!

Daniel said...

If Francis has in any significant way lost the faith; literally hundreds of so-called Catholic bishops, from around the world, had largely lost their faith decades before.

TJM said...

Daniel,

In the US we have plenty of those starting with Cupich of Chicago, followed by McElroy of San Diego, Tobin of Newark, etc, etc, most of whom are dim bulbs

TJM said...

I did not focus on the photo before, but man, they are a bunch of slobs and I see a faux priest aka woman is right up there with the Big Guy. I think that is a subliminal message!

Daniel said...

What scares me more are the "liberal progressive" (who've largely lost faith in centuries long tradition and moral standards) Catholic clerics, even prelates, who are not really dim but quite intelligent.

TJM said...

Daniel,

They are likely intelligent in the ways of the secular world. Do they speak Latin? Are they conversant in the Summa Theologica, De Civitate Dei and the Codex Juris Canonici? The Missale Romanum? Doubt it!

Daniel said...

TJM,

I am not sure - is anyone here aware of Uncle Ted McK...'s grades at college and seminary in Koine Greek, Latin, moral theology, Scripture etc? 😅
Yet, he was able to rise from a poor seminarian to a very influential cardinal - now that I suggest involves some degree of intelligence😉

TJM said...

Daniel,


Here is something for braindead bishops and priests to ponder this week:

The appointment of Laphonza Butler to become California's newest senator is already raising some eyebrows as she appears to be registered to vote in Maryland with an address in that state.

Registration records indicate that Butler lives in Silver Spring, Maryland, with her mailing address the same as her residential. She registered as a Democrat as of Sept. 12, 2022.

Butler is the president of EMILYs List, the self-described "nation's largest resource dedicated to electing Democratic pro-choice women to office," and a longtime leader in California before her move to Maryland.

On Sunday night, the newest California senator's biography on the EMILYs List website listed that "Laphonza grew up in Magnolia, MS, and attended one of the country's premier HBCUs, Jackson State University. She lives in Maryland with her partner Neneki Lee and their daughter Nylah."

This is the act of a racist, abortion drooler (allegedly he is Catholic), and a wannabee dictator, not even appointing a person from his own state. What contempt Newsom shows for societal norms.

Daniel said...

Such people are not just bad/evil but delusional as well.
Even after ultrasounds were introduced they could could still talk of unborn babies, even second and third unborn babies as fetal tissue and so on .

The 21st century is proving itself to be truly Satan's century...

Occasionally , I can wonder..

What the @#&$ will be next😔