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News Benedict’s Love Letter to the Eucharist
The Eucharist is a mystery to be believed, to be celebrated and to be lived. Pope Benedict XVI released his post-synodal exhortation on the Eucharist.
BY EDWARD PENTIN REGISTER CORRESPONDENT March 25-31, 2007 Issue |
Posted 3/20/07 at 7:00 AM
VATICAN CITY — After months of
anticipation, Pope Benedict XVI has finally released the post-synodal
exhortation on the Eucharist. It’s a document intended to strengthen devotion
for the Blessed Sacrament. And general reaction to it has been highly
favorable.
Entitled Sacramentum
Caritatis (The Sacrament of Charity), the 130-page document was
presented at a Vatican press conference March 13 by Cardinal Angelo Scola of
Venice, who served as relator general of the Synod of Bishops on the Eucharist
held in October 2005, and Archbishop Nikola Eterovic, the synod’s secretary
general.
The lengthy document, signed by the
Pope Feb. 22, is a papal reflection of the synod. Benedict divided his
Eucharistic reflections into three parts: the Eucharist as a mystery to be
believed, to be celebrated, and to be lived.
Overall, Sacramentum
Caritatis contains little that is new, but it highlights and
re-articulates the central importance of the Eucharist to the Catholic faith.
Cardinal Scola said the exhortation reaffirms “the Holy Father’s insistence
over these two years of his pontificate on the truth of love,” a topic that
represents “one of the crucial themes upon which the future of the Church and
of humanity depend,” the cardinal said.
Archbishop Eterovic said the
document, “in presenting the great truths of Eucharistic faith in a way
accessible to modern man, considers various current aspects of [Eucharistic]
celebration and calls for a renewed commitment to building a more just and
peaceful world, in which the Bread broken for everyone’s life becomes … the
exemplary cause in the fight against hunger and all forms of poverty.”
Benedict writes in the introduction
to Sacramentum
Caritatis that its goal is to encourage the “Christian people to
deepen their understanding of the relationship between the Eucharistic mystery,
the liturgical action, and the new spiritual worship that derives from the
Eucharist as the sacrament of charity.
“Consequently,” the Pope states, “I
wish to set the present exhortation alongside my first encyclical letter, Deus
Caritas Est (God is Love), in which I frequently
mentioned the sacrament of the Eucharist and stressed its relationship to
Christian love, both of God and of neighbor.”
The message that the Eucharist is
both the “food of truth” and the “love of God” runs throughout the document.
According to the Holy Father, in the sacrament the Lord “truly becomes food for
us, to satisfy our hunger for truth and freedom,” and that since only the truth
can make us free, “Christ becomes for us the food of truth.”
Benedict’s renowned theological
scholarship is evident throughout Sacramentum Caritatis.
“The main thing to note about this
document is its theological depth — the emphasis on unity in the sacramental
life, that the Eucharist is the source and summit of the sacramental life, that
from there all the other sacraments, particularly baptism, reconciliation and
marriage, all flow,” said Father Robert Gahl, professor of moral philosophy at
the Pontifical University of the Holy Cross in Rome. “But the Holy Father not
only reaffirms traditional doctrine, he renders it more beautiful and profound
than former expressions.”
The Pope also tackles contentious
issues that were extensively discussed at the 2005 synod. Noting the
“difficulties and even occasional abuses” in the liturgy since the reforms of
the Second Vatican Council, the Holy Father stresses that the sound development
of the liturgy is an organic process.
“The changes that the council called
for need to be understood within the overall unity of the historical
development of the rite itself,” Benedict instructs, adding that emphasis on
the importance of ars celebrandi (the art of
proper celebration) “leads to an appreciation of the value of liturgical
norms.”
In many ways, say Vatican observers,
the Pope’s post-synodal document provides additional information that can
assist in correcting misinterpretations of the Second Vatican Council’s
liturgical reforms.
“There are no liturgical police — if
people are intent on abuse, no coercive backing will achieve the desired
result,” noted one Vatican official speaking on condition of anonymity. “But
the vast majority of the faithful will be grateful for this explanation of what
the Church’s thinking is.”
Receiving Communion
Paragraph 83 alludes to the problem
of dissenting Catholic politicians receiving holy Communion. “Fundamental
values, such as respect for human life, its defense from conception to natural
death, the family built upon marriage between a man and a woman, the freedom to
educate one’s children and the promotion of the common good in all its forms:
These values are not negotiable,” the Pope writes.
“Consequently,” he states, “Catholic
politicians and legislators, conscious of their grave responsibility before
society, must feel particularly bound, on the basis of a properly formed
conscience, to introduce and support laws inspired by values grounded in human
nature.”
But the paragraph does not specify that
bishops are bound to deny Communion to all politicians who openly dissent from
Church teachings on crucial moral issues like abortion and homosexual
“marriage.”
Instead, it instructs that bishops
“are bound to reaffirm constantly these values as part of their responsibility
to the flock entrusted to them.” The English translation renders the original
Latin praecepta
(precepts) as “values.”
Archbishop Bruno Forte, a member of
the doctrinal commission of the Italian bishops conference and a member of the
2005 synod, told the Italian daily newspaper Corriere della
Sera March 14 that the paragraph underlines the obligation of
pastors to “recall” Catholic politicians to the faith so they can be an
“inspiration to others.”
But
Archbishop Forte also pointed to Paragraph 89 in which the Pope writes: “it is
not the proper task of the Church to engage in the political work of bringing
about the most just society possible; nonetheless, she cannot and must not
remain on the sidelines in the struggle for justice.” Ultimately, “each bishop
must evaluate [the situation] according to conscience,” said Archbishop Forte,
and that “objective criteria” must be taken into account with the individual
legislator concerned.
In
another section of Sacramentum
Caritatis, The Pope upholds the
need to bar reception of Communion for divorced and remarried Catholics, but he
describes the problem as “a complex and troubling pastoral problem, a real
scourge for contemporary society.”
At
the same time, the Holy Father stressed that the Church encourages couples who
are in irregular marriages because of a previous divorce “to live as fully as
possible the Christian life through regular participation at Mass,” even if
they can’t receive Communion. In doing so, the Vatican official said, Benedict
“articulates the law but at the same time underscores the pastoral reality,
that every pastor is gravely bound to reach out to divorced and remarried
Catholics in every way possible.”
Priestly
celibacy was another frequent topic for discussion at the synod. Reflecting on
that discussion, Benedict states, “While respecting the different practice and
tradition of the Eastern Churches, there is a need to reaffirm the profound
meaning of priestly celibacy, which is rightly considered a priceless treasure.”
Added the Pope, “I therefore confirm
that it remains obligatory in the Latin tradition. Priestly celibacy lived with
maturity, joy and dedication is an immense blessing for the Church and for
society itself.”
This
affirmation of priestly celibacy “was the strongest I’ve seen a papal
document,” said Father Gahl.
In
other sections, the Holy Father “heartily” recommends the practice of
Eucharistic adoration “both individually and in community.” Benedict stresses
the Eucharist cannot be “relegated to something private and individual,” and
also emphasizes that it is important not to “lose a sense of Sunday as the
Lord’s Day.”
Sacramentum
Caritatis also advocates a
greater use of Latin, and expresses the Pope’s desire that Gregorian chant “be
suitably esteemed and employed as the chant proper to Roman Liturgy.” The Holy
Father also notes in the document that he has asked relevant Vatican offices to
investigate changing the placement of the Sign of Peace to before the
Offertory, another matter that was discussed at the synod.
Bishop
Reno Fisichella, rector of the Pontifical Lateran University, said the Pope
deftly handled all of the issues Sacramentum
Caritatis addresses.
“On
each of these themes, the words of Benedict XVI are to the point, justified,
firm and decisive,” he wrote in the Italian bishops’ newspaper Avvenire
March 14.
“I
am convinced,” Bishop Fisichella said, “a spirituality of the Eucharist will
grow [out of the document], and that its complex expressions will bear fruit
and support the witness of each believer.”
Edward Pentin writes
from Rome.
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