MESSAGE OF HIS HOLINESS POPE FRANCIS,
SIGNED BY THE SECRETARY OF STATE CARDINAL PIETRO PAROLIN,
ON THE OCCASION OF THE 74th NATIONAL LITURGICAL WEEK
[Modena, 26-29 August 2024]
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From the Vatican, 21 August 2024
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His Reverend Excellency
Archbishop CLAUDIO MANIAGO
Metropolitan of Catanzaro-Squillace
President of the Liturgical Action Centre
Your Reverend Excellency,
I am pleased to convey the Holy Father’s message for the work of the 74th National
Liturgical Week, organized by the Liturgical Action Centre and hosted by the
Church of Modena-Nonantola, rich in history and gifts of holiness. In
greeting those who are taking part in the Week as organizers, speakers,
conference participants and volunteers, Pope Francis assures a special
remembrance in prayer, for the best success of the study sessions and
celebratory moments.
The Liturgical Week you are about to experience takes as its theme: “In
the liturgy the true prayer of the Church. People of God and ars
celebrandi. “The fruit of lips that acknowledge his name” (Heb 13:15).
This theme recalls to us the specificity of liturgical prayer, which shuns
all forms of individualism and division. It is, in fact, “participation in
Christ's own prayer addressed to the Father in the Holy Spirit” (Catechism
of the Catholic Church, no. 1073); it is sharing in the loving breath of
the Church-Bride, which makes one feel part of the community of disciples of
all places and times; it is a school of communion that frees the heart from
indifference, shortens the distance between brothers and sisters, and
conforms to the sentiments of Jesus; it is the high road that transforms us,
educating us in the Church on the good life of the Gospel.
Dear friends, the liturgy – as Romano Guardini stated – “introduces the
full breadth of the truth in prayer; indeed, it is none other than the
prayed dogma, the truth relived in prayer” (The Spirit of the Liturgy).
The great theologian’s words reiterate the evidence of the objective
dimension of the liturgy, which “asks to be celebrated with fervour, so that
the grace poured out in the rite is not dispersed, but rather reaches the
experience of each one” (Pope Francis, Catechesis,
3 February 2021). This inescapable need also transpires from your study
programme, which focuses on the ars celebrandi, a commitment
and attitude that all the baptized are required to live in order to
supersede their individuality and open up to the “we” of the Church in
prayer.
In the Apostolic Letter on liturgical formation, Pope Francis recalls
that the gestures typical of the assembly, such as gathering together, the
posture of the body, remaining silent, the expressions of the voice, the
involvement of the senses, are the ways by which it participates in the
celebration (cf. Desiderio
desideravi, 51). He goes on to add that “everybody doing together
the same gesture, everyone speaking together in one voice — this transmits
to each individual the energy of the entire assembly. It is a uniformity
that not only does not deaden but, on the contrary, educates individual
believers to discover the authentic uniqueness of their personalities not in
individualistic attitudes but in the awareness of being one body” (ibid).
Starting out from this perspective, the Holy Father wishes to offer you
some concrete priorities to focus your reflection on the liturgy as the
“true” prayer of the Church.
The first commitment, which is required of us, is to rediscover the
choral nature of liturgical prayer, through which, uniting ourselves to the
mother tongue of the Church, we become one body and one voice. Saint
Augustine reminded us of the profound relationship of our prayer with
Christ: when we pray we speak to God, it is Jesus himself who “prays for us,
prays in us and is prayed to by us. [...] Let us therefore recognize in Him
our words, and His words in us’ (Expositions on the Psalms 86, 1).
The beauty of the truth of Christian prayer resides precisely in this
interweaving of voices, which we might justly call chorality. Every
Christian prayer is always made up of several voices, just as every
liturgical action is performed by several hands: we are joined to
Christ, and in Christ we rediscover all humanity. Now the value of this
chorality in liturgical prayer must not simply be asserted; it must be
experienced through our celebration. One of the most important moments in
which we can have this experience is the Liturgy of the Hours, which
still deserves commitment in order effectively to become the prayer of the
people of God. May our communities return to raising in chorus the prayer of
the Psalms, and learn to live, in the liturgy and in life, the value of
unity and communion.
The second aspect proposed to your commitment to liturgical pastoral care
is the relationship with sacred hymns. Music in the liturgy is not an
ornamental element, but rather an integral and necessary part of it (Sacrosanctum
Concilium, 112), contributing together with the other languages that
make up the liturgy to the epiphany of the mystery celebrated. Indeed, in
hymns, the faithful live and express their faith. Saint Paul VI, with great
wisdom, wrote in this regard: “If the faithful sing, they do not leave the
Church; if they do not leave the Church, they preserve the faith and
Christian life” (Address to the Plenary Assembly of the Italian
Episcopate, 14 April 1964). The Pope therefore advises special care, in
particular in the celebration of the Sunday Eucharist, recalling how in
song, through the harmony of voices, the spiritual union of those in
communion is expressed, the joy of the heart is manifested and the
communitarian nature of those who approach to receive the Eucharist is
highlighted (cf. General Instruction of the Roman Missal, 86).
The third aspect relates to the silence the liturgy teaches us, as
shown by the constant reminders in the Eucharistic synaxis of the act of
keeping silent. The Pope, therefore, asks us to counteract the frenzy, noise
and chatter that undermine us in our daily lives by valuing sacred silence,
an eloquent gesture, a favourable time and fruitful space to remain in the
love of the Lord, cultivate a contemplative gaze, give depth to the prayer
of the heart and let oneself be transformed by the Spirit. This familiarity
in welcoming silence is the true prerequisite for the Church to be able to
listen to the One who reveals Himself in “a still small voice” (cfr. 1
Kings 19:12).
The fourth and final dimension the Holy Father entrusts to your care is
the promotion of liturgical ministeriality, as the fruit of being the
Church of the Pentecost (cf. Desiderio
desideravi, 33). From this point of view, and not from a functional
perspective, it is important to interpret the ministries at the service of
the liturgy: indeed, in them, the diversity of the gifts that the Holy
Spirit inspires in the Christian community is manifested. The presence of a
diversified ministeriality, nourished by communion in Christ, fosters the
active participation of the assembly and promotes co-responsibility in the
mission, manifesting, in concrete terms, the synodal nature of the Church.
This awareness, as Pope Francis reminded us (cf. ivi 38), demands
constant commitment to formation,
so that personalism and delusions of protagonism may be avoided and a
true service to communion can be achieved.
The Holy Father, in conveying his blessing to Your Excellency, to
Archbishop Erio Castellucci of Modena-Nonantola, bishop of Carpi, the other
Prelates and all the participants, hopes that these recommendations may
encourage our Christian communities to experience liturgical prayer as an
encounter with the Risen Lord and with His Body, the Church.
In adding my personal good wishes, I avail myself of the circumstance to
confirm my distinguished reverence to
Your Most Reverend Excellency
Pietro Cardinal Parolin
Secretary of State
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Holy See Press Office Bulletin, 26 August 2024
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