HOMILY OF HIS HOLINESS JOHN PAUL II
Warsaw
Friday, 11 June 1999
1. Let me go into the field and glean among the ears of grain
(Ruth 2:2).
The liturgy of today puts before us the image of reaping. The First
Reading shows us Ruth the Moabitess going into the field of the rich man
Booz to gather up the gleanings after the reapers. Although the mode of
reaping in Israel was probably different from what is done in Poland,
there was still some similarity, and we can therefore make a comparison
with our own experience. With the image of a Polish harvest before our
eyes, we think of the Second Plenary Synod, which concludes today in the
Cathedral of Warsaw. It too is a kind of reaping. Through the years of the
Synods work, an attempt has been made to gather up all that has been
produced in the soil of the Church in Poland during the last decades of
the century. Through the Synods work, you have sought to put all
this together. Above all you have tried to observe, to identify, to
evaluate and to draw conclusions. You bring all of that today and present
it as an offering to God, as the reapers do after the harvest, bringing
the sheaves of cut grain, trusting fully that what they have reaped will
be useful like bread that is made from grain, in the hope that
future generations will be nourished by it.
2. From the first, the Polish Church has seen Synods as an effective
means for the reform and renewal of Christian life, following a practice
adopted from apostolic times of joint reflection on important and
difficult problems. After the ancient period of development of synods in
the Church, the Council of Trent gave the practice new impetus. With their
decrees, the Synods which took place after the Council of Trent became an
important means for deepening the faith and for indicating the way of the
Gospel for all generations of the People of God in our homeland. Much
credit here goes to the Archbishops of Gniezno, who convoked the various
provincial synods: Archbishops Karnkowski, Maciejowski, Gembicki, Wezyk,
and Lubienski. They were true proponents of the conciliar reform, which
saw synods as an effective method of renewal.
In our own century, synod activity increased after Poland regained
independence. Thus in 1936 there was the Plenary Synod for all five Polish
Metropolitan Sees, and many diocesan synods took place as well. These
synods sought to give new life to the religious life of the faithful after
the long years of lost independence, and to unify Church law. The
praiseworthy practice of convoking synods continued after the Second World
War. Especially after the Second Vatican Council, synods of a pastoral
nature began to be held. Their deliberations were linked with the teaching
and enactments of the Council, which involved the entire community of the
Church. This brief history allows us to see how, through these synods,
successive generations sought for themselves new ways of living the
Christian life, making a precious contribution to the development and
activity of the Church. Eight years ago, with all the Polish Bishops in
the Basilica of the Sacred Heart of Jesus in Prague, I was able to pray
that the Second Plenary Synod would be blessed. I said then: Your
Synod begins its work after the Second Vatican Council (which was the
Council of our century). At the same time, it takes place on the threshold
of the third millennium after Christ. These circumstances alone determine
the character of the Plenary Synod and its tasks. It is bound to reflect
all the new things which arose in the Second Vatican Council. It is also
bound to highlight all the signs of the times which are
present in our century as it draws to a close (8 June 1991).
3. I know that the most important themes of the Council have been part
of the Synods work, in which more than six thousand Study Groups
have taken part. The approved documents express a common concern for the
renewal of Christian life in the Polish Church in the spirit of the Second
Vatican Council and also point the way for future work.
In the Apostolic Letter Tertio Millennio Adveniente, I wrote
that the best preparation for the Jubilee of the Year 2000 is to apply as
faithfully as possible, in the lives of individuals and in the whole
Church, the teaching of Vatican II (cf. No. 20). At the same time I
pointed out how necessary it was to undertake a spiritual discernment
concerning the reception given to the Council, this great gift of
the Spirit to the Church as the end of the second millennium (No.
36). I am glad that the Second Plenary Synod has taken on this task,
seeking to reread the teaching of the Council and to assimilate its
enactments more faithfully, in keeping with the motto chosen for the
Synod: With the Message of the Council into the Third Millennium.
As a divine and human reality immersed in time, the Church needs
continuous renewal in order to become more and more like her Founder. Such
a renewal is first of all the work of the Holy Spirit, who dwells
in the Church and with the power of the Gospel keeps her ever young and
leads her to perfect union with Christ (cf. Lumen Gentium,
4).
The Second Vatican Council has played an enormous role in this process
of renewal of the Church, which requires the cooperation of all her
members. During its sessions, the Church reflected deeply upon herself and
upon her relations with the world of today. At the same time, she
indicated the path to follow in order to fulfil the mandate and mission
received from Christ. With great firmness, the Council stressed the that
all members of the Church are responsible for her well- being: Bishops,
priests, consecrated men and women, and lay people. The variety of
charisms and tasks, conferred by the Holy Spirit upon clergy and laity,
must help to build community life in the Church at the various levels
parish, diocesan, national and international.
4. The formation of a new society based upon respect for human rights,
truth and freedom, requires from all the daughters and sons of the Church
an awareness that can be the starting-point for wider responsibility in
the Church. It is good that in a situation such as this the Plenary Synod
recognized that its fundamental task was to work for the rebuilding and
deepening of this awareness in the Church, among both laity and clergy.
The long period of struggle against the Communist totalitarian system
weakened the religious sense in many people, encouraging the tendency to
reduce the Church to the level of merely a human institution and to
relegate religion to the private realm. The attempt was made to weaken the
Church in her identity as a community gathered around Christ giving public
witness to the faith which she professes.
Thanks to the work of the Synod, the Church is called to grow stronger
as a community of believers, and this can be done chiefly through a well
informed sharing in the Churchs life, in accordance with the charism
proper to each persons state of life and with the principle of
subsidiarity. The Synod, therefore, will accomplish its task in so far as
it succeeds in reviving in the hearts of all clergy and laity
the sense of responsibility for the Church and the desire to work together
for the realization of the Churchs saving mission.
Yet the message left to us by the Second Vatican Council is much
broader. It involves not only the truth of the Church as a visible
community of faith, hope and charity, but also her relationship with the
world around us. Evangelization today requires an apostolic dynamism which
does not shut itself off from the problems of the world. I thank Almighty
God for every inspiration, for every teaching which through the Synod has
touched the minds and hearts of those who took part in it, enabling them
to stand before the world as witnesses to the Gospel.
The Polish Plenary Synod is part of the preparation of the entire People
of God for the Year 2000, in the series of Synods being held in the Church
at this time. This includes the Ordinary and Extraordinary Synods as well
as the continental, regional, national and diocesan Synods. The Second
Plenary Synod and its implementation attempt to meet the great challenge
which the Church in Poland faces today. This challenge is the need for a
new evangelization, that is, accomplishing the saving work of God which
requires new ways of spreading the Gospel of Christ.
5. I wish to thank all those who helped to prepare for this Synod and
who worked the whole time of its duration. I thank the Cardinal Primate,
the Synod President, the Bishops, the priests and the lay people who have
worked on the Permanent Commission and on the Synod Secretariat. I thank
especially all those involved in the Synod Groups and who by prayer,
reflection and concrete apostolic initiatives have shaped this Synod. May
God reward you for your work and your zeal, by which you have shown how
much you love the Church and how much you have her future at heart.
6. The Kingdom of God is like a man who scattered seed on the
ground (Mk 4:26).
Todays Gospel speaks of the growth of the Kingdom of God. It is
like a seed. It does not matter whether the man should sleep and
rise night and day, and the seed should sprout and grow, he knows not how.
The earth produces of itself first the blade, then the ear, then the full
grain in the ear. But when the grain is ripe, at once he puts in the
sickle, because the harvest has come (Mk 4:27-29). As we
close the Second Plenary Synod, Christ shows us what its purpose was from
the start and what must be its purpose in the future. It has helped to
spread the Kingdom of God. The words of the Gospel reveal how this Kingdom
grows in human history, in the history of nations and societies. It grows
organically. From a tiny beginning, like a mustard seed, it eventually
becomes a great tree. I sincerely trust that this will be the case for
this Second Plenary Synod and for the many other initiatives of the Church
in our land.
Divine Providence has surely decreed that the closure of the Synod
should fall on the Solemnity of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, instituted by
the Apostolic See in the eighteenth century following insistent requests
from the Polish Bishops. Today the whole Church ponders and venerates in a
special way the ineffable love of God, which found its human expression in
the Saviours heart pierced by the centurions lance. Today we
also recall the hundredth anniversary of the consecration of the entire
human race to the Sacred Heart of Jesus, a great event in the Church which
contributed to the development of the devotion and produced saving fruits
of holiness and apostolic zeal.
God is love (Jn 4:8) and Christianity is the
religion of love. While other systems of thought and action seek to
construct the human world on the basis of wealth, power, force, science or
pleasure, the Church proclaims love. The Sacred Heart of Jesus is
precisely the image of this infinite and merciful love which the heavenly
Father has poured out upon the world through his Son, Jesus Christ. The
goal of the new evangelization is to lead people to encounter this love.
Only love, revealed by the Heart of Christ, can transform the human heart
and open it to the whole world, making the world more human and more
divine.
A hundred years ago, Pope Leo XIII wrote that in the Heart of Jesus we
need to place all our hope. In him we must seek and from him we must
expect the salvation of all people (Annum Sacrum, 6). I too
exhort you to renew and nurture devotion to the Sacred Heart of Jesus. To
this Fount of life and holiness draw individuals, families,
parish communities, and all elements of the Church that they may obtain
from him the unsearchable riches of Christ (Eph 3:8).
Only those who are rooted and grounded in love (ibid.,
3:17) can oppose the civilization of death and, upon the ruins of hatred,
contempt and force, build a civilization which springs from the Heart of
the Saviour.
To conclude my meeting with you on this Solemnity so loved by all the
Church I entrust the entire work of the Second Plenary Synod, its
implementation and its outcome in Poland to the Sacred Heart of Jesus and
to the Immaculate Heart of his Mother, who in speaking her fiat
was totally united to the redeeming sacrifice of her Son.
© Copyright 1999 - Libreria Editrice
Vaticana