H.Em. Cardinal Robert Sarah
President,
Pontifical Council Cor Unum
Speech for Annual Gathering of
CATHOLIC CHARITIES USA
(St. Louis, USA – October 1, 2012)
I am grateful for this opportunity to speak with you and participate in
this annual gathering of Catholic Charities USA, which also marks
my first time visiting the United States. I also thank your President,
Father Larry Snyder both for his invitation to speak to you and his
dedicated leadership and service to Catholic Charities USA. I
greet each one of you from the many Dioceses and organizations that you
represent. Here in the United States, Catholic Charities USA are
well known among other Catholic charitable organizations for providing
an impressive array of charitable works: from programs for health care
for the elderly and children, work with sick patients, assistance to
expectant mothers, and adoption services to feed and legally protect the
poor. Also, I am especially happy to greet Catholic Charities of
St. Louis who is celebrating the centennial anniversary of its
foundation. Since its beginning in 1912, Catholic Charities of
St. Louis has grown to become an effective instrument of Gospel love and
service to the poor and needy of the State of Missouri. Operating at
present with a network of eight agencies, you offer more than 100
programs to benefit more than 157,000 people annually. To all of you and
to all the selfless faithful here in America who give of their time,
talents and treasure to care for those in need, in the name of the
Church and the Holy Father, I thank you!
As you well know, Cor Unum, my Dicastery at the Vatican, is
entrusted with the concrete realization of the Holy Father’s charitable
intentions, particularly when disaster strikes somewhere in the world.
Our task is to encourage and coordinate the organizations and charitable
activities promoted by the Catholic Church. Cor Unum also works
to foster the catechesis of Charity and support the faithful to give a
concrete witness to evangelical charity. Since coming to Cor Unum,
I have been able to gain greater awareness of the charitable works and
programs of Catholic charitable organizations from all over the world.
Each year, Catholic Charities USA through the generosity of over
300,000 of its volunteers lends its services in favor of the poor. This
certainly confirms that the experience of God’s generous love challenges
us and liberates us to adopt the same attitude towards our brothers and
sisters. Since the beginning of the history of the Church in the United
States, this personal experience of Christ’s love has been the unifying
force that moves Catholic men and women of all ages to get involved in
the works of mercy, justice and compassion for the poor. Numerous
Catholic charitable institutions and structures have been established to
assist the orphans, the immigrants, the ethnic groups and all people in
need. Countless Americans of different walks of life have made the
service to the poor their whole dedication. There were also religious,
men and women who have sacrificed their whole lives to be witnesses of
Gospel love through their generous service. The Church will always have
a preferential love for the poor. Faithful to the Commandment of Jesus,
she can never turn a blind eye to the sufferings of our unfortunate
brothers and sisters. Indeed, we can all attest to this significant role
that Catholic Charities has played in your nation’s history. Catholic
Charities have helped shape this service of Gospel love into an
essential part of American culture.
The Catholic Identity: our greatest challenge and our “Gateway” to
renewal
But, today, the Church in America, including Catholic Charities,
face challenges that threaten this heritage that has been passed on to
us by previous generations. The times in which we live in are
characterized by an aggressive secularism that seeks to exclude the role
of religion in public life and as a consequence, set up a culture
without God, wherein everyone can live without the law of truth and love
engraved in the heart of every human being by the Creator. Secularism
seeks to substitute God and His divine law with personal opinions,
ideologies, pleasures and needs. If God is taken out, only degradation
and sufferings will follow. If good citizens are forced to leave aside
their religious convictions, then society would not only exclude the
contribution of religion, but also would promote a culture, which
redefines man as less than what he is. If citizens whose moral judgments
are informed by their religious beliefs are ignored, then democracy
itself is emptied of real meaning. Pope Benedict XVI has already warned
us of this troubling development. He said, “it is imperative that the
entire Catholic community in the United States come to realize the grave
threats to the Church’s public moral witness presented by a radical
secularism which finds increasing expression in the political and
cultural spheres. The seriousness of these threats needs to be clearly
appreciated at every level of ecclesial life. Of particular concern are
certain attempts being made to limit that most cherished of American
freedoms, the freedom of religion.” (January
19, 2012 address to the U.S. Bishops in Ad Limina Visit).
Catholic Charities are not exempt from being affected by this
secularized mentality. In the past, some Catholic Charities have
contracted with civil authority to provide foster care and adoption
services. But recently, civil authority through its own legislation has
tried to pressure Catholic adoption agencies to place children with
same-sex couples, a clear violation of Catholic teachings. Catholic
charitable agencies are given the choice to comply or withdraw from the
adoption/care business. The economic and financial crisis that we are
experiencing at every level in both the U.S. and in other continents
continues to particularly affect the poorest of the poor, those who have
no means of protection and security. In addition, more and more we often
meet “new” forms of poverty in people who have lost their jobs or who
have some fragile family situations. There are people who are often
lost, in obvious difficulties that are not only economic.
Faced with these new and complex situations, we have to exercise an
“intelligent” charity that is capable of listening and discernment; an
organized charity that is capable of innovative responses to the crisis;
a charity that understands the causes of the problems and is able to not
only provide the needed services but also accompanies those who are in
trouble. In these new situations of difficulty, we need to recognize the
significant questions on the meaning of suffering and life. This is why
we need to be able to give a comprehensive answer. In particular, we
feel guided by a principle of faith, which is valid not only for our
work “ad extra”, but also within (“ad intra”) our
organizations: the defense of life from its beginning to its natural
end.
Faced with these challenges in our service to the poor, we may be
tempted to change our principles, to compromise and give in. Being
faithful to our Catholic faith is not easy. It will even bring exclusion
and persecution. In short, being authentically Catholic is in itself a
great challenge for us in today’s society. This reality is expected of
us as followers of Jesus Crucified: “If anyone wants to be a follower of
mine, let him renounce himself and take up his cross and follow me (Mt
16, 24).”
In an episode of the Gospel, we read that Peter walked on water to reach
Jesus who was beckoning him to come. As long as Peter kept his eyes
fixed on Jesus, the strong winds and the frightening waves could do him
no harm. Pope Benedict XVI in Apostolic Letter for the Year of faith
encourages us to put our hope in Christ. He said, “we will need to keep
our gaze fixed upon Jesus Christ, the “pioneer and perfecter of our
faith” (Heb 12:2): in him, all the anguish and all the longing of
the human heart finds fulfillment. The joy of love, the answer to the
drama of suffering and pain, the power of forgiveness in the face of an
offence received and the victory of life over the emptiness of death:
all this finds fulfillment in the mystery of his Incarnation, in his
becoming man, in his sharing our human weakness so as to transform it by
the power of his resurrection” (Porta
fidei n. 13).
In a merely human point of view, we may think that such difficult
circumstances can be an obstacle to freely realize the Church’s mission
of charity. On the contrary, I believe that such time and peculiar
circumstances present us with an exceptional occasion to go back to the
roots of our Catholic identity. Thus, our Catholic identity, besides
being a challenge, is also a “gateway” to renewal for our charitable
institutions. Catholic Charities USA is defined by a heritage
that is Catholic, deeply connected to its roots in the Gospel and in the
Catholic teaching and tradition. Tapping into our Catholic roots will be
a source of renewal for you and will help you to rediscover and
appreciate this great treasure, which is our Catholic faith and
tradition. How appropriate and opportune that Pope Benedict XVI, on the
occasion of proclaiming the Year of Faith, in his Apostolic Letter “Door
of Faith”, points out the importance of faith in our charitable work:
“Faith without charity bears no fruit, while charity without faith would
be a sentiment constantly at the mercy of doubt. Indeed, many Christians
dedicate their lives with love to those who are lonely, marginalized or
excluded, … because it is in them that the reflection of Christ’s own
face is seen. Through faith, we can recognize the face of the risen Lord
in those who ask for our love” (Porta fidei n. 14).
Roots of Christian charity
Having reflected on the significant role that our Catholic beliefs
played in our charitable works and the need to renew it, I wish now to
focus more on the “Christian character” of our charity. What makes a
charitable agency “Christian”? This is the question that I wish to
treat.
Pope Benedict XVI, in the Introduction of
Deus caritas est pointed out to us the answer: “God is love, and
he who abides in love abides in God, and God abides in him” (1 John
4:16). These words, he says, express “with remarkable clarity the
heart of the Christian faith” (n. 1). In order to begin to grasp the
Church’s ancient confession, “God is love,” Pope Benedict believes that
two actions are needed simultaneously: love of God and love of neighbor.
When one of the scribes asked, “Which is the first of all the
commandments,” Jesus replied, “The First is this: ‘Hear, O Israel! The
Lord our God is Lord alone! You shall love the Lord your God with all
your heart, with all your soul, with all your mind, and with all your
strength’. The second is this: ‘You shall love your neighbor as
yourself.’ There is no other commandment greater than these” (Mk
12:29-31). Holding together this double commandment, the Pope seems to
say, is key to understanding the raison d’etre of the Church’s
charitable activity. Faith and life are indissolubly linked together;
the one implies the other. Indeed, Christian life implies the living out
of faith, hope and love. This is what makes charity “Christian”. It is
what gives Christian charity its specific and irreplaceable identity.
In the first lines of Deus caritas est, the Pope describes what
“makes” a Christian: “being Christian is not the result of an ethical
choice or a lofty idea, but the encounter with an event, a Person, which
gives life a new horizon and a decisive direction” (n. 1). God lets
Himself be so moved by man’s situation that He becomes body given out
and blood poured out in Christ in such a way that “we enter into the
very dynamic of His self-giving” (n. 13). For the one who accepts God’s
primordial love, love is the answer to the gift of love. It becomes
visible in the men and women who reflect His presence.
Therefore, love of God and love of neighbor; being inseparable formed a
single commandment. They are the source from which flows all the
Church’s practice of Love. This is what makes a charitable organization
“Christian”.
Essential Characteristics of Christian Charity
How is the splendor of Christian Charity manifest in the organizations
that we represent? Again, the Encyclical Deus caritas est, I
believe, offers at least three insights that are particularly helpful
for Catholic charitable institutions to deepen their knowledge and
appreciation of their unique identity.
(1) Christian Charity is an essential part of the Church’s mission
First, the practice of love – charitable activity (diakonia) -
along with the proclamation of God’s Word (kerygma-martyria) and
the celebration of the sacraments (leitourgia), is of the very
essence of the Church’s mission. For the Church exists in this world as
the instrument of God’s will: “His will was that men should have access
to the Father through Christ, the Word made flesh, in the Holy Spirit,
and thus become sharers in the divine nature” (Dei
verbum n. 2). Through the proclamation of the Word, the
celebration of the sacraments and the practice of charity, the Church’s
mission is to give all women and men a share in the divine nature of the
God who is love – Deus caritas est. In this way, it is possible
to accomplish what is the mission of Church.
The mutual bond of the three ecclesial munera brings us back to
the intrinsic bond between charity and evangelization. We are on the eve
of the Synod of the New Evangelization, which begins next week in Rome
and which represents a new challenge for all our charitable
organizations during this Year of Faith.
We can start with a simple question: What is the connection between our
charitable action and evangelization? If our charitable action is an
ecclesial action, then of course it is permeated by the Gospel. It is
necessary to distinguish at least three levels.
The first is our action towards the poorest of the poor. We cannot
consider them only as needy, but we must also see them as children of
God, who because being such, they also need His Word, His presence and
His consolation. In this way, we bring them the message of the Gospel
and not only to satisfy certain material needs. We give them bread and
the Word.
Secondly, our organization can make a contribution to the New
Evangelization simply by approaching those without faith. There are many
who are open, while not believing or having a weak faith, and in fact
are already working in our organizations. Even so, the exercise of
charity can be a help to develop their faith, since evangelization and
diakonia are connected. We can ask ourselves how our
organizations approach these people who are distant from their faith in
order to offer them to collaborate with us, and in this way discover the
community of the Church and faith in Christ.
But there is another level: which is the formation through the Gospel of
all those who are working in charitable organizations. The Pope speaks
of “formation of the heart”. How can we evangelize ourselves within our
organizations, allowing the Gospel to penetrate our sentiments and our
thoughts so that our work reveals God who has called us? What can we do
in our organizations to link together charity and evangelization in the
life of those who work with us? The pastoral priorities of the New
Evangelization should also be taken up by our organizations, since they
are organizations of the Church.
Another aspect of this ecclesial nature is the link with the Pastors of
the Church. Every Catholic charitable work should function faithfully
within the mission and structure of the local diocese, with special
respect for the role of the Bishop. This ecclesial communion is
essential to our mission. The link with the Church and her global
mission should not be perceived as an obstacle or a limitation in
regards to the problems we face, but instead must be understood as a
condition of possibility so that our action may be implemented and fully
understood.
(2) Christian charity serves the integral person
There is a second insight of Deus caritas est that I believe is
particularly helpful for the Church’s charitable institutions everywhere
and particularly helpful in America.
The charitable assistance given by the Church in Western countries is
often supplied in close cooperation with governments and society, both
of which has some influence on its orientation. Therefore, in our time
and day, charitable activity demands a high degree of professionalism,
and having access to public funds requires the agencies to constantly
enhance their technical structure. Labor contracts and action plans, the
entire concept of subsidies and the need to account for their intended
use, require an administration of the highest quality. We should not
complain about this, since “individuals who care for those in need must
first be professionally competent: they should be properly trained in
what to do and how to do it, and committed to continuing care” (DCE n.
31a).
However, for Christian charity, this professionalism can bring with it a
certain pragmatism, which can entail a loss of the more profound sense
of giving. Pope Benedict in his Encyclical Deus caritas est, is
evidently aware of this danger. Indeed, he pointed out “while
professional competence is a primary, fundamental requirement, it is not
of itself sufficient. We are dealing with human beings, and human beings
always need something more than technically proper care. They need
humanity. They need heartfelt concern. Those who work for the Church's
charitable organizations must be distinguished by the fact that they do
not merely meet the needs of the moment, but they dedicate themselves to
others with heartfelt concern, enabling them to experience the richness
of their humanity” (DCE 31a).
Indeed, Man cannot be divided into parts: public or private, physical or
psychological, earthly or heavenly, religious or profane. Rather, he
must be seen in his wholeness and integrity as he stands before the
heavenly Father. This is why Christian charity is always at the service
of the integral person, body and soul. Only with such a holistic
approach to the person can we find solutions to the roots of his
problems and help him to develop fully his personality.
(3) Christian charity draws its source from prayer
There is a third insight of Deus caritas est that I believe is
fundamental to the distinct identity of the Church’s charitable
organizations. Love cannot be given to one’s brothers and sisters unless
it has first been drawn from the genuine source of divine Charity, and
this happens only in prolonged moments of prayer, of listening to the
word of God, of receiving the Sacraments and of adoring the Eucharist,
the source and summit of the Christian life. Blessed John Paul II
affirms that “only a worshiping and praying Church can show herself
sufficiently sensitive to the needs of the sick, the suffering, the
lonely especially in the great urban centers – and the poor everywhere.”
(Address
to US Bishops in Ad Limina, December 3, 1983).
The Encyclical Deus Caritas est focuses on the “spirituality” of
those working in charitable agencies. “… in addition to their necessary
professional training, these charity workers need a ‘formation of the
heart’: they need to be led to that encounter with God in Christ which
awakens their love and opens their spirits to others…” (DCE n. 31a).
Service to our neighbors, therefore, also makes demands upon the heart,
not primarily in the emotional sense, but in the very rational decision
to desire the best for the other person, even at the price of
self-sacrifice. To each of you, volunteers and aid workers of
Catholic Charities USA, the Holy Father recognizes your service and
dedication to the poor. He calls you “an important phenomenon of our
time” (n. 30b). As President of Cor Unum, I am deeply thankful
for each one of you who have contributed to the Church’s charitable
mission throughout the United States. You are a bright light of hope in
a society often oppressed by egotistical darkness. By dedicating
yourselves to the diakonia, you take on the opposite of
reputation, power, and rank that leaders and political entities claim
for themselves.
Furthermore, the Pope emphasizes prayer as the source by which the aid
worker’s faith can be reinvigorated. This faith is threatened by the
experience of “the immensity of others’ needs,” which, as Benedict
writes, “might tempt us to become discouraged.” It also might lead us to
lose faith in God’s providence, abandoning any hope that He could solve
the problems raised, or to fall into an arrogant contempt for man,
leading us to sacrifice human dignity and to destroy rather than
building up. It is not unusual for aid workers, both outside and inside
the Church, to be under the impression that their efforts are futile.
Pope Benedict teaches us instead that charitable service gains strength
from prayer to the Lord of Heaven and Earth. With his eye on the
activism and threatening atheism of our time, the Pope insists anew on
the need for time to be devoted to the worship of God. He demands it
especially of those who are professionally involved in love of neighbor.
In prayer, the Christian does not claim to be able to change God’s plan
or correct what he has foreseen. Rather, he or she seeks “an encounter
with the Father of Jesus Christ, asking God to be present with the
consolation of the Spirit to him and his work. Much less does one raise
oneself to be a judge of God, “accusing him of allowing poverty and
failing to have compassion for his creatures. When people claim to build
a case against God in defense of man, on whom can they depend when human
activity proves powerless?” (n. 37).
Concluding Remarks
In such a difficult time, living faithfully our Christian heritage is
itself a challenge. But, our Catholic identity can also be truly a
“gateway” of renewal and a sure path to bearing lasting fruit in our
charitable work. All this that I have told you, is eloquently summarized
in St. Paul’s hymn of charity, where he points out to us the best
program for our charitable work: “Set your mind on the higher gifts. And
now I am going to put before you the best way of all... Though I should
give away to the poor all that I possess, and even give up my body to be
burned – if I am without love, it will do me no good whatever. Love is
always patient and kind; love is never jealous; love is not boastful or
conceited, it is never rude and never seeks its own advantage, it does
not take offence or store up grievances. Love does not rejoice at
wrongdoing, but finds its joy in truth. It is always ready to make
allowances, to trust, to hope and to endure whatever comes” (1 Cor
12: 30-31; 13: 1-8).
In fact, the lives of the Saints bear witness that it is possible, with
the grace of God, to live out this Christian love. How many Saints and
Blesseds there are who have loved in this way! Their works of love and
service to the poor have endured through the ages. Look at St. Elizabeth
Ann Seton’s mission to the poor and underprivileged in terms of
schooling, St. Francis Cabrini’s tireless efforts towards defenseless
immigrants, and St. Katherine Drexel’s concern for the oppressed Native
Americans and Blacks. When we truly live out this hymn of charity in our
own personal lives and in our organization, then all our charitable
activities realized in the name of the Church will also endure; because
“love never comes to an end” (1 Cor 13: 8).
I thank you for your attention.
