My comments embedded in the pope’s Wednesday audience text in red:
Dear brothers and sisters, good morning and welcome!
Today I would like to dwell once again on the second chapter of the Conciliar Constitution *Lumen Gentium* (LG), dedicated to the Church as the People of God.
The messianic people (LG, 9) receives from Christ a share in the priestly, prophetic, and kingly work in which His saving mission is realized. The Council Fathers teach that the Lord Jesus, through the new and eternal Covenant, established a kingdom of priests, constituting His disciples as a "royal priesthood" (1 Pt 2:9; cf. 1 Pt 2:5; Rev 1:6). This common priesthood of the faithful is bestowed through Baptism, which enables us to worship God in spirit and truth and to "publicly profess the faith received from God through the Church" (LG, 11). Furthermore, through the Sacrament of Confirmation, all the baptized "are more perfectly bound to the Church, are enriched with a special strength by the Holy Spirit, and thus are more strictly obliged to spread and defend the faith by word and deed, as true witnesses of Christ" (ibid.). This consecration lies at the root of the common mission that unites ordained ministers and the lay faithful. (We all are called to spread and defend the Faith by word and deed. It is wonderful to hear our new Pope make it clear what we are to do as Catholics and what is implied here is apologetics. For the past 13 years, we were castigated as being proselytizers if we defended the faith and tried to spread it. Pope Leo’s message is very positive and castigates no one who tries to spread the true faith!)
In this regard, Pope Francis observed: "To look at the People of God is to remember that we all enter the Church as laypeople. The first Sacrament—the one that seals our identity forever, and of which we should always be proud—is Baptism." Through it, and with the anointing of the Holy Spirit, [the faithful] “are consecrated to form a spiritual temple and a holy priesthood” (LG, 10), such that all of us together form the holy, faithful People of God” (Letter to the President of the Pontifical Commission for Latin America, March 19, 2016).
The exercise of the royal priesthood takes place in many ways, all aimed at our sanctification—primarily through participation in the offering of the Eucharist. Through prayer, asceticism, and active charity, we thus bear witness to a life renewed by the grace of God (cf. LG, 10). As the Council summarizes, “the sacred nature and the organic structure of the priestly community are realized through the sacraments and the virtues” (LG, 11).
The Council Fathers further teach that the holy People of God also shares in the prophetic mission of Christ (cf. LG, 12). In this context, the important theme of the *sensus fidei* (sense of the faith) and the *consensus fidelium* (consensus of the faithful) is introduced. The Council’s Doctrinal Commission clarified that this *sensus fidei* “is, as it were, a faculty of the entire Church, by virtue of which she recognizes the handed-down Revelation within her faith—distinguishing between what is true and what is false in matters of faith—while simultaneously penetrating more deeply into that Revelation and applying it more fully to life” (cf. *Acta Synodalia*, III/1, 199). The sense of the faith, therefore, belongs to individual believers not in their own right, but as members of the People of God as a whole. (The “sensus Fidei” and “consensus Fidelium” “sense of faith and consensus of the faithful” is clarified by Pope Leo as being linked to faithfulness to the Magisterium which must be faithful to Scripture and Tradition. The development of doctrine has to clarify truths, not change them, for to change them is infidelity not fidelity. To be faithful and a person of true faith means accepting what is handed onto us not changing it!)
*Lumen Gentium* focuses its attention on this latter aspect and relates it to the infallibility of the Church—to which the infallibility of the Roman Pontiff is intrinsic, serving as it does the infallibility of the Church. "The whole body of the faithful, who have received the anointing from the Holy One (cf. 1 Jn 2:20, 27), cannot err in believing, and manifests this particular property of theirs through the supernatural sense of the faith of the whole people, when, 'from the bishops even to the last of the lay faithful,' it expresses its universal consent in matters of faith and morals" (LG, 12). The Church, therefore—as a communion of the faithful that obviously includes the pastors—cannot err in the faith; the organ of this property of hers, founded upon the anointing of the Holy Spirit, is the supernatural sense of the faith of the entire People of God, which manifests itself in the consensus of the faithful. From this unity—which the ecclesial Magisterium safeguards—it follows that every baptized person is an active subject of evangelization, called to bear consistent witness to Christ in accordance with the prophetic gift that the Lord infuses into His entire Church. (Those trying to democratize the Magisterium of the Church through political lobbies trying to change the Faith and Morals of the Church, are the “unfaithful” pushing the “sensus and consensus of the unfaithful”. The Church, though, through the true Faith the Faithful who embrace Divine Truth and promote it, do so within the context of infallibility so that the Church cannot err in the Faith, even as some of the unfaithful try to manipulate the Truth and then falsely it for their own narcissistic purposes.)
The Holy Spirit—who comes to us from the Risen Jesus—does indeed bestow "among the faithful of every rank special graces by which He renders them fit and ready to undertake various tasks and offices useful for the renewal and greater expansion of the Church" (LG, 12). A distinctive demonstration of this charismatic vitality is offered by the consecrated life, which continually buds and blossoms through the working of grace. Ecclesial forms of association, too, stand as a luminous example of the variety and fruitfulness of spiritual gifts for the building up of the People of God.
Dearest brothers and sisters, let us reawaken within ourselves the awareness—and the gratitude—of having received the gift of belonging to the People of God, as well as the responsibility that this entails.

















