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OPENING MASS OF THE SYNOD FOR AMERICA
HOMILY OF POPE JOHN PAUL II
Sunday, 16 November 1997
1. "Watch therefore, for you do not know on what day your
Lord is coming" (Gospel acclamation; cf. Mt 24:42, 44).
The prayerful vigilance to which today’s liturgy invites us is
well suited to the important event we are experiencing: the opening of the
Special Assembly for America of the Synod of Bishops, with the theme:
"Encounter with the Living Jesus Christ: the Way to Conversion, Communion and
Solidarity in America". This Assembly has gathered the prelates of all the
Episcopates of the American continent, from the North to the Centre and the
South, including the Caribbean region. I extend my cordial greetings to everyone
and a warm welcome to those who have come from overseas.
Today the Word of God offers us a fitting perspective for the
work of discernment we are about to undertake: that precisely of a faith-filled
look at history, an "eschatological perspective".
This is the way to consider human events that the Lord teaches
believers. We have heard a prophecy from the Book of Daniel, received by the
prophet himself from the mouth of a heavenly messenger sent to "show [him] the
truth" (Dn 11:2) about historical events. This prophecy tells of anguish and
salvation for the people: how can we fail to recognize it as a prediction of the
paschal mystery, the unique focus of history and a key to its authentic
interpretation?
The Church prepares for and takes every step of her earthly
pilgrimage in the light of the paschal mystery. And today she is celebrating the
solemn begining of an exceptional time of reflection and exchange on the mission
she is called to carry out on the American continent. God’s word offers her the
correct faith vision for reading, as the angel tells Daniel, "what is inscribed
in the book of truth" (Dn 10:21). With this outlook the Church pauses to
consider the road traveled thus far, in order to press onward to the new
millennium with renewed missionary zeal.
2. It was only a short while ago, in 1992, that we solemnly
recalled the fifth centenary of the evangelization of America. The Synod, which
is beginning its work in St Peter’s Basilica today, calls to mind those times
when the inhabitants of the so-called "Old World", thanks to Christopher
Colombus’ admirable undertaking, learned of the existence of a "New World"
previously unknown to them. The colonizers’ work began on that historic day
and so did the evangelizers’ mission of making Christ and his Gospel known to
the peoples of that continent.
One fruit of this extraordinary missionary effort was the
evangelization of America, or more precisely, of the so-called "three Americas",
which today can be considered largely Christian. It is also very important, 500
years later and at the threshold of the new millennium, that we remember the
road traveled by Christianity in all these lands. Moreover, it is appropriate
not to separate the Christian history of North America from that of Central and
South America. It is essential to consider them together, even while
safeguarding the originality of each one, because, in the eyes of those who
arrived there more than 500 years ago, they appeared as a single reality, and
especially because the communion between the local communities is a living sign
of the inborn unity of the one Church of Jesus Christ, of which they are an
organic part.
3. Everyone is aware that on the great American continent the
results of the activity of the colonizers are evident today in the political and
economic diversity of the continent, with undoubted cultural and religious
repercussions. In comparison to other countries, North America has reached a
higher level of technological advancement and economic well-being, and in the
development of democratic institutions.
Faced with these realities, we cannot but ask about the
historical causes which gave rise to such social differences. To what extent are
these differences rooted in the history of the last five centuries? To what
extent does the heritage of colonization count in them? And what influence did
the first evangelization have?
In order to furnish an exhaustive response to these questions,
it will be necessary, during the Synod, to consider the continent as a whole,
from Alaska to Tierra del Fuego, without introducing a separation between the
North, the Centre and the South, so as not to risk a contrast between them. On
the contrary, we must look for the deeper reasons which prompt this unitary
vision, by appealing to the common religious and Christian traditions.
These few indications enable us to understand the importance of
the Synod we are inaugurating today.
4. "Watch therefore, for you do not know on what day your
Lord is coming".
This exhortation that we have just heard in the Gospel
acclamation refers to the spiritual atmosphere we are experiencing as the
liturgical year draws to a close. It is an atmosphere interwoven with
eschatological themes, highlighted in particular by the passage from St Mark's
Gospel in which Christ stresses the transitory nature of heaven and earth:
"Heaven and earth will pass away, but my words will not pass away" (Mk 13:31).
The form of this world is passing away, but the Word of God will
never pass away. How eloquent this comparison is! God does not pass away
and neither will anything that comes from him. Christ’s sacrifice never passes
away, as we read today in the Letter to the Hebrews: Jesus "offered for all time
a single sacrifice for sins" (10:12); and: "for by a single offering he has
perfected for all time those who are sanctified" (10:14).
Throughout this Synod Assembly we will pause to reflect on the
past, but especially on the present moment of the American continent. We will
attempt to identify in each of its regions the signs of Christ's saving
presence, of his Word and of his sacrifice, so that we may revive our energies
for the service of conversion and evangelization.
5. How could we not remember here the comforting intentions
especially regarding collaboration between pastors in the new evangelization,
which became evident at the end of CELAM’s Fourth General Conference in Santo
Domingo in 1992? It was then a question of intensifying the missionary
apostolate of every community, in order to renew in consciences the commitment
to go beyond our frontiers "to bring to other peoples the faith that reached us
500 years ago" (Message, L'Osservatore Romano English edition, 18
November 1992, p. 7).
Let us give thanks to God because today the wish is fulfilled
that I expressed at the opening session of that conference. On that occasion, I
stressed: "This General Conference could take the opportunity in the not too
distant future of holding a meeting for representatives of the Episcopates of
the entire American continent — a meeting which could be synodal in nature —
for increased cooperation betwen the various particular Churches in the
different areas of pastoral activity and at which, in the context of the new
evangelization and as an expression of episcopal communion, the problems
relating to justice and solidarity among all the nations of America could be
faced" (Insegnamenti, vol. XV, 2, 1992; L’Osservatore Romano
English edition, 21 October 1992, p. 8), Here we are now gathered together with
the intention of carrying out these resolutions of pastoral charity, with
concern for the Church in America and in a spirit of affective and effective
collegiality among all the Pastors of the particular Churches.
6. Dear brothers and sisters, we open the Synod’s work in the
context of the imminent conclusion of the liturgical year, with the beginning of
Advent close at hand. May this significant coincidence determine the basic
direction of our reflections and decisions!
Dear brothers and sisters, this season truly invites us to great
watchfulness. We must watch and pray, remembering that one day we will come
before the Son of man as Pastors of the Church on the American continent.
We entrust this Synod Assembly to you, Mary, Mother of hope,
beloved and venerated in the many shrines across the American continent. Help
the Christians of America to be vigilant witnesses of the Gospel, that they may
be found watchful and ready on the great and mysterious day when Christ will
come as the glorious Lord of the nations to judge the living and the dead.
Amen!
© Copyright 1997 - Libreria
Editrice Vaticana
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