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MESSAGE OF THE HOLY FATHER ON
THE OCCASION OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE WORLD UNION OF CATHOLIC
WOMEN'S ORGANIZATIONS
To Mrs María Eugenia Díaz de Pfennich
President of the World Union of Catholic Women’s Organizations
1. With joy I greet the participants in the General Assembly of
the World Union of Catholic Women’s Organizations, taking place in Rome from
17 to 21 March 2001. Since 1910 your movement has brought Catholic women
together from all the continents and from a great variety of backgrounds and
cultures. In a spirit of respect for this diversity you now form a large and
dynamic family within the Catholic Church. Your meeting at the heart of the
universal Church is a special opportunity to reaffirm your identity and to draw
on the graces of the Jubilee to open wide to Christ the doors of your hearts and
of the homes and communities in which you live, pray and follow the vocation
which God has entrusted to each one.
2. At the beginning of a new millennium, the six hundred
delegates at this Assembly have the opportunity to thank God for all that being
a woman signifies in the divine plan, and to ask his help in overcoming the many
obstacles which still hinder full recognition of the dignity and mission of
women in society and within the ecclesial community. The journey travelled in
the course of the past century has been remarkable. In many countries women
today enjoy freedom of movement, of decision and of self-expression, a freedom
which they have achieved with clear-mindedness and courage. They express their
characteristic genius in many spheres. In today’s world there exists a
growing awareness of the need to affirm women’s dignity. This is no abstract
principle for it involves a concerted effort at every level to oppose vigorously
"all practices that offend woman’s freedom or femininity. . . so-called
‘sexual tourism’, trafficking in young girls, mass sterilization and, in
general, every form of violence" (General Audience, 24 November
1999, No. 2). However, women also face many impediments to their genuine
fulfilment. The prevailing culture spreads and imposes models of life which are
contrary to women’s deeper nature. There have been serious aberrations, some
arising from individual selfishness and a refusal to love, others from a
mentality that stresses each individual’s rights to such an extent that
respect for the rights of others is weakened, and particularly those of
defenceless unborn children who in many cases are deprived of all legal
protection.
3. Your Union exists to help you to acquire a deeper
understanding of your mission and to live it to the full. It is present as a
voice even in international forums, to insist that every life is a gift of God
and deserves to be respected. Working together, you must seek to provide
increasing material and moral support to women in difficulty, victims of poverty
and violence. Never forget that this important work is rooted in God’s love
and will bear fruit to the extent that your witness reveals his infinite love
for every human person.
Feminine holiness, to which each one of you is called, is
indispensable to the life of the Church. "The Second Vatican Council,
confirming the teaching of the whole of tradition, recalled that in the
hierarchy of holiness it is precisely the ‘woman’, Mary of Nazareth,
who is the ‘figure’ of the Church. She ‘precedes’ everyone on the path
to holiness" (Mulieris Dignitatem, 27). Women who live in holiness
are "a model of the ‘sequela Christi’, an example of how the
Bride must respond with love to the love of the Bridegroom" (ibid.,
27).
4. The theme of your Assembly, The Prophetic Mission of Women,
should offer an occasion for you to engage in a broad reflection on your
commitment. The world and the Church need your specific witness. Christ’s
prophetic office is shared by the whole People of God and consists above all in
listening to God’s word and understanding it (cf. Lumen Gentium, 12).
Catholic women who live by faith and charity and give honour to God’s name in
prayer and service (cf. ibid.) have always had a supremely fruitful and
indispensable role in transmitting the genuine sense of the faith and in
applying it to all life’s circumstances. Today, at a time of a deep spiritual
and cultural crisis, this task has assumed an urgency that cannot be overstated.
The Church’s presence and action in the new millennium passes by way of
woman’s capacity to receive and keep God’s word. In virtue of her specific
charism, woman is uniquely gifted in the task of passing on the Christian
message and mystery in the family and in the world of work, study and leisure.
5. The recent Jubilee of the Laity was an opportunity to renew
the Second Vatican Council’s call to all the lay faithful to proclaim the Good
News of Christ by word and witness. In the family and in society you work
"for the sanctification of the world from within" (Lumen Gentium,
31). Every task, even the most ordinary, provided it is carried out with love,
contributes to the sanctification of the world. This is an important truth to
recall today, in a world fascinated by success and efficiency, but in which many
people have no share in the benefits of global progress and are becoming poorer
and more neglected than ever.
The Jubilee brought new energies to the whole Church. Let us go
forward in hope! (cf. Novo Millennio ineunte, 58). Today, as the Church
sets out again on her journey to proclaim Christ to the world, she needs women
who contemplate the face of Christ, who keep their gaze fixed on him and
recognize him in the weakest members of his Body. "Truly, I say to you, as
you did it to one of the least of these my brethren, you did it to me" (Mt
25:40). Keep watch, be an attentive and strong presence, never fail to look to
Christ, follow him, keep his word in your hearts. In this way, your hope will
not fail; it will spread throughout the world at this promising and challenging
time.
I once again assure you of my closeness in prayer, confident
that this Assembly will be an occasion for you to find fresh energies for your
mission. Entrusting all of you to the protection of Mary, Mother of the
Redeemer, I cordially impart my Apostolic Blessing.
From the Vatican, 7 March 2001
IOANNES PAULUS II
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