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APOSTOLIC LETTER
MANE NOBISCUM DOMINE
OF THE HOLY FATHER
JOHN PAUL II
TO THE BISHOPS, CLERGY
AND FAITHFUL
FOR THE YEAR OF THE EUCHARIST
OCTOBER 2004–OCTOBER 2005
INTRODUCTION
1. “Stay with us, Lord, for it is almost evening” (cf.
Lk 24:29). This was the insistent invitation that the two disciples
journeying to Emmaus on the evening of the day of the resurrection
addressed to the Wayfarer who had accompanied them on their journey.
Weighed down with sadness, they never imagined that this stranger was none
other than their Master, risen from the dead. Yet they felt their hearts
burning within them (cf. v. 32) as he spoke to them and “explained” the
Scriptures. The light of the Word unlocked the hardness of their hearts
and “opened their eyes” (cf. v. 31). Amid the shadows of the passing day
and the darkness that clouded their spirit, the Wayfarer brought a ray of
light which rekindled their hope and led their hearts to yearn for the
fullness of light. “Stay with us”, they pleaded. And he agreed. Soon
afterwards, Jesus' face would disappear, yet the Master would “stay” with
them, hidden in the “breaking of the bread” which had opened their eyes to
recognize him.
2. The image of the disciples on the way to Emmaus
can serve as a fitting guide for a Year when the Church will be
particularly engaged in living out the mystery of the Holy Eucharist. Amid
our questions and difficulties, and even our bitter disappointments, the
divine Wayfarer continues to walk at our side, opening to us the
Scriptures and leading us to a deeper understanding of the mysteries of
God. When we meet him fully, we will pass from the light of the Word to
the light streaming from the “Bread of life”, the supreme fulfilment of
his promise to “be with us always, to the end of the age” (cf. Mt
28:20).
3. The “breaking of bread”—as the Eucharist was called in
earliest times—has always been at the centre of the Church's life. Through
it Christ makes present within time the mystery of his death and
resurrection. In it he is received in person as the “living bread come
down from heaven” (Jn 6:51), and with him we receive the pledge of
eternal life and a foretaste of the eternal banquet of the heavenly
Jerusalem. Following the teaching of the Fathers, the Ecumenical Councils
and my own Predecessors, I have frequently urged the Church to reflect
upon the Eucharist, most recently in the Encyclical
Ecclesia de
Eucharistia. Here I do not intend to repeat this teaching, which I
trust will be more deeply studied and understood. At the same time I
thought it helpful for this purpose to dedicate an entire Year to this
wonderful sacrament.
4. As is known, the Year of the Eucharist will be
celebrated from October 2004 to October 2005. The idea for this
celebration came from two events which will serve to mark its beginning
and end: the International Eucharistic Congress, which will take
place from 10-17 October 2004 in Guadalajara, Mexico, and the Ordinary
Assembly of the Synod of Bishops, which will be held in the Vatican
from 2-29 October 2005 on the theme: “The Eucharist: Source and Summit of
the Life and Mission of the Church”. I was also guided by another
consideration: this year's
World
Youth Day will take place in Cologne from 16-21 August 2005. I
would like the young people to gather around the Eucharist as the vital
source which nourishes their faith and enthusiasm. A Eucharistic
initiative of this kind had been on my mind for some time: it is a natural
development of the pastoral impulse which I wanted to give to the Church,
particularly during the years of preparation for the Jubilee and in the
years that followed it.
5. In the present Apostolic Letter, I wish to reaffirm
this pastoral continuity and to help everyone to grasp its spiritual
significance. As for the particular form which the Year of the
Eucharist will take, I am counting on the personal involvement of the
Pastors of the particular Churches, whose devotion to this great Mystery
will not fail to suggest suitable approaches. My Brother Bishops will
certainly understand that this initiative, coming as it does so soon after
the celebration of the Year of the Rosary, is meant to take place
on a deeply spiritual level, so that it will in no way interfere with the
pastoral programmes of the individual Churches. Rather, it can shed light
upon those programmes, anchoring them, so to speak, in the very Mystery
which nourishes the spiritual life of the faithful and the initiatives of
each local Church. I am not asking the individual Churches to alter their
pastoral programmes, but to emphasize the Eucharistic dimension which is
part of the whole Christian life. For my part, I would like in this Letter
to offer some basic guidelines; and I am confident that the People
of God, at every level, will welcome my proposal with enthusiasm and
fervent love.
I
IN THE WAKE OF THE COUNCIL
AND THE GREAT JUBILEE
Looking towards Christ
6. Ten years ago, in
Tertio Millennio Adveniente (10 November 1994), I had the joy of
proposing to the Church a programme of preparation for the Great
Jubilee of the Year 2000. It seemed to me that this historic moment
presented itself as a great grace. I realized, of course, that a simple
chronological event, however evocative, could not by itself bring about
great changes. Unfortunately the Millennium began with events which were
in tragic continuity with the past, and often with its worst aspects. A
scenario emerged which, despite certain positive elements, is marred by
acts of violence and bloodshed which cause continued concern. Even so, in
inviting the Church to celebrate the Jubilee of the two-thousandth
anniversary of the Incarnation, I was convinced—and I still am, more than
ever!—that this celebration would be of benefit to humanity in the “long
term”.
Jesus Christ stands at the centre not just of the history
of the Church, but also the history of humanity. In him, all things are
drawn together (cf. Eph 1:10; Col 1:15-20). How could we
forget the enthusiasm with which the Second Vatican Council, quoting Pope
Paul VI, proclaimed that Christ is “the goal of human history, the focal
point of the desires of history and civilization, the centre of mankind,
the joy of all hearts, and the fulfilment of all aspirations”?(1) The
Council's teaching gave added depth to our understanding of the nature of
the Church, and gave believers a clearer insight not only into the
mysteries of faith but also into earthly realities, seen in the light of
Christ. In the Incarnate Word, both the mystery of God and the mystery of
man are revealed.(2) In him, humanity finds redemption and fulfilment.
7. In the Encyclical
Redemptor Hominis,
at the beginning of my Pontificate, I developed this idea, and I have
frequently returned to it on other occasions. The Jubilee was a fitting
time to invite believers once again to consider this fundamental truth.
The preparation for the great event was fully Trinitarian and
Christocentric. Within this plan, there clearly had to be a place for the
Eucharist. At the start of this Year of the Eucharist, I repeat the words
which I wrote in
Tertio Millennio Adveniente: “The Year 2000 will be intensely
Eucharistic; in the Sacrament of the Eucharist the Saviour, who
took flesh in Mary's womb twenty centuries ago, continues to offer himself
to humanity as the source of divine life”.(3) The International
Eucharistic Congress, held that year in Rome, also helped to focus
attention on this aspect of the Great Jubilee. It is also worth recalling
that my Apostolic Letter
Dies Domini, written in preparation for the Jubilee, invited
believers to meditate on Sunday as the day of the Risen Lord and the
special day of the Church. At that time I urged everyone to rediscover the
celebration of the Eucharist as the heart of Sunday.(4)
Contemplating with Mary the face of Christ
8. The fruits of the Great Jubilee were collected in the
Apostolic Letter
Novo Millennio Ineunte. In this programmatic document, I suggested
an ever greater pastoral engagement based on the contemplation of the face
of Christ, as part of an ecclesial pedagogy aimed at “the high standard”
of holiness and carried out especially through the art of prayer.(5) How
could such a programme be complete without a commitment to the liturgy and
in particular to the cultivation of Eucharistic life? As I said at
the time: “In the twentieth century, especially since the Council, there
has been a great development in the way the Christian community celebrates
the Sacraments, especially the Eucharist. It is necessary to continue in
this direction, and to stress particularly the Sunday Eucharist and
Sunday itself, experienced as a special day of faith, the day of the
Risen Lord and of the gift of the Spirit, the true weekly Easter”.(6) In
this context of a training in prayer, I recommended the celebration of the
Liturgy of the Hours, by which the Church sanctifies the different
hours of the day and the passage of time through the liturgical year.
9. Subsequently, with the proclamation of the Year of the
Rosary and the publication of the Apostolic Letter
Rosarium Virginis Mariae, I returned to the theme of contemplating
the face of Christ, now from a Marian perspective, by encouraging
once more the recitation of the Rosary. This traditional prayer, so highly
recommended by the Magisterium and so dear to the People of God, has a
markedly biblical and evangelical character, focused on the name and the
face of Jesus as contemplated in the mysteries and by the repetition of
the “Hail Mary”. In its flow of repetitions, it represents a kind of
pedagogy of love, aimed at evoking within our hearts the same love
that Mary bore for her Son. For this reason, developing a centuries-old
tradition by the addition of the mysteries of light, I sought to make this
privileged form of contemplation an even more complete “compendium of the
Gospel”.(7) And how could the mysteries of light not culminate in the Holy
Eucharist?
From the Year of the Rosary to the Year of the
Eucharist
10. In the midst of the Year of the Rosary, I
issued the Encyclical Letter
Ecclesia de
Eucharistia, with the intention of shedding light on the mystery
of the Eucharist in its inseparable and vital relation to the Church. I
urged all the faithful to celebrate the Eucharistic sacrifice with due
reverence, offering to Jesus present in the Eucharist, both within and
outside Mass, the worship demanded by so great a Mystery. Above all, I
suggested once again the need for a Eucharistic spirituality and pointed
to Mary, “woman of the Eucharist”,(8) as its model.
The Year of the Eucharist takes place against a
background which has been enriched by the passage of the years, while
remaining ever rooted in the theme of Christ and the contemplation of his
face. In a certain sense, it is meant to be a year of synthesis, the
high-point of a journey in progress. Much could be said about how to
celebrate this year. I would simply offer some reflections intended to
help us all to experience it in a deeper and more fruitful way.
II
THE EUCHARIST, A MYSTERY OF LIGHT
“He interpreted to them in all the Scriptures the
things concerning himself” (Lk 24:27)
11. The account of the Risen Jesus appearing to the two
disciples on the road to Emmaus helps us to focus on a primary aspect of
the Eucharistic mystery, one which should always be present in the
devotion of the People of God: The Eucharist is a mystery of light!
What does this mean, and what are its implications for Christian life and
spirituality?
Jesus described himself as the “light of the world” (Jn
8:12), and this quality clearly appears at those moments in his life, like
the Transfiguration and the Resurrection, in which his divine glory shines
forth brightly. Yet in the Eucharist the glory of Christ remains veiled.
The Eucharist is pre-eminently a mysterium fidei. Through the
mystery of his complete hiddenness, Christ becomes a mystery of light,
thanks to which believers are led into the depths of the divine life. By a
happy intuition, Rublëv's celebrated icon of the Trinity clearly places
the Eucharist at the centre of the life of the Trinity.
12. The Eucharist is light above all because at every Mass
the liturgy of the Word of God precedes the liturgy of the Eucharist in
the unity of the two “tables”, the table of the Word and the table of the
Bread. This continuity is expressed in the Eucharistic discourse of Saint
John's Gospel, where Jesus begins his teaching by speaking of the mystery
of his person and then goes on to draw out its Eucharistic dimension: “My
flesh is food indeed, and my blood is drink indeed” (Jn 6:55). We
know that this was troubling for most of his listeners, which led Peter to
express the faith of the other Apostles and of the Church throughout
history: “Lord, to whom can we go? You have the words of eternal life” (Jn
6:68). In the account of the disciples on the road to Emmaus, Christ
himself intervenes to show, “beginning with Moses and all the prophets”,
how “all the Scriptures” point to the mystery of his person (cf. Lk
24:27). His words make the hearts of the disciples “burn” within them,
drawing them out of the darkness of sorrow and despair, and awakening in
them a desire to remain with him: “Stay with us, Lord” (cf. v. 29).
13. The Fathers of the Second Vatican Council, in the
Constitution
Sacrosanctum Concilium, sought to make “the table of the word”
offer the treasures of Scripture more fully to the faithful.(9)
Consequently they allowed the biblical readings of the liturgy to be
proclaimed in a language understood by all. It is Christ himself who
speaks when the Holy Scriptures are read in the Church.(10) The Council
Fathers also urged the celebrant to treat the homily as part of the
liturgy, aimed at explaining the word of God and drawing out its meaning
for the Christian life.(11) Forty years after the Council, the Year of
the Eucharist can serve as an important opportunity for Christian
communities to evaluate their progress in this area. It is not
enough that the biblical passages are read in the vernacular, if they are
not also proclaimed with the care, preparation, devout attention and
meditative silence that enable the word of God to touch people's minds and
hearts.
“They recognized him in the breaking of bread” (cf.
Lk 24:35)
14. It is significant that the two disciples on the road
to Emmaus, duly prepared by our Lord's words, recognized him at table
through the simple gesture of the “breaking of bread”. When minds are
enlightened and hearts are enkindled, signs begin to “speak”. The
Eucharist unfolds in a dynamic context of signs containing a rich and
luminous message. Through these signs the mystery in some way opens up
before the eyes of the believer.
As I emphasized in my Encyclical
Ecclesia de
Eucharistia, it is important that no dimension of this sacrament
should be neglected. We are constantly tempted to reduce the Eucharist to
our own dimensions, while in reality it is we who must open ourselves
up to the dimensions of the Mystery. “The Eucharist is too great a
gift to tolerate ambiguity and depreciation”.(12)
15. There is no doubt that the most evident dimension of
the Eucharist is that it is a meal. The Eucharist was born, on the
evening of Holy Thursday, in the setting of the Passover meal. Being a
meal is part of its very structure. “Take, eat... Then he took a cup
and... gave it to them, saying: Drink from it, all of you” (Mt
26:26, 27). As such, it expresses the fellowship which God wishes to
establish with us and which we ourselves must build with one another.
Yet it must not be forgotten that the Eucharistic meal
also has a profoundly and primarily sacrificial meaning.(13) In the
Eucharist, Christ makes present to us anew the sacrifice offered once
for all on Golgotha. Present in the Eucharist as the Risen Lord, he
nonetheless bears the marks of his passion, of which every Mass is a
“memorial”, as the Liturgy reminds us in the acclamation following the
consecration: “We announce your death, Lord, we proclaim your
resurrection...”. At the same time, while the Eucharist makes present what
occurred in the past, it also impels us towards the future, when Christ
will come again at the end of history. This “eschatological” aspect
makes the Sacrament of the Eucharist an event which draws us into itself
and fills our Christian journey with hope.
“I am with you always...” (Mt 28:20)
16. All these dimensions of the Eucharist come together in
one aspect which more than any other makes a demand on our faith: the
mystery of the “real” presence. With the entire tradition of the
Church, we believe that Jesus is truly present under the Eucharistic
species. This presence—as Pope Paul VI rightly explained—is called “real”
not in an exclusive way, as if to suggest that other forms of Christ's
presence are not real, but par excellence, because Christ thereby
becomes substantially present, whole and entire, in the reality of his
body and blood.(14) Faith demands that we approach the Eucharist fully
aware that we are approaching Christ himself. It is precisely his presence
which gives the other aspects of the Eucharist — as meal, as memorial of
the Paschal Mystery, as eschatological anticipation — a significance which
goes far beyond mere symbol- ism. The Eucharist is a mystery of presence,
the perfect fulfilment of Jesus' promise to remain with us until the end
of the world.
Celebrating, worshiping, contemplating
17. The Eucharist is a great mystery! And it is one which
above all must be well celebrated. Holy Mass needs to be set at the
centre of the Christian life and celebrated in a dignified manner by every
community, in accordance with established norms, with the participation of
the assembly, with the presence of ministers who carry out their assigned
tasks, and with a serious concern that singing and liturgical music
be suitably “sacred”. One specific project of this Year of the
Eucharist might be for each parish community to study the General
Instruction of the Roman Missal. The best way to enter into the mystery of
salvation made present in the sacred “signs” remains that of following
faithfully the unfolding of the liturgical year. Pastors should be
committed to that “mystagogical” catechesis so dear to the Fathers
of the Church, by which the faithful are helped to understand the meaning
of the liturgy's words and actions, to pass from its signs to the mystery
which they contain, and to enter into that mystery in every aspect of
their lives.
18. There is a particular need to cultivate a lively
awareness of Christ's real presence, both in the celebration of Mass
and in the worship of the Eucharist outside Mass. Care should be taken to
show that awareness through tone of voice, gestures, posture and bearing.
In this regard, liturgical law recalls—and I myself have recently
reaffirmed(15)—the importance of moments of silence both in the
celebration of Mass and in Eucharistic adoration. The way that the
ministers and the faithful treat the Eucharist should be marked by
profound respect.(16) The presence of Jesus in the tabernacle must be a
kind of magnetic pole attracting an ever greater number of souls
enamoured of him, ready to wait patiently to hear his voice and, as it
were, to sense the beating of his heart. “O taste and see that the Lord is
good!” (Ps 34:8).
During this year Eucharistic adoration outside Mass
should become a particular commitment for individual parish and religious
communities. Let us take the time to kneel before Jesus present in the
Eucharist, in order to make reparation by our faith and love for the acts
of carelessness and neglect, and even the insults which our Saviour must
endure in many parts of the world. Let us deepen through adoration our
personal and communal contemplation, drawing upon aids to prayer inspired
by the word of God and the experience of so many mystics, old and new. The
Rosary itself, when it is profoundly understood in the biblical and
christocentric form which I recommended in the Apostolic Letter
Rosarium Virginis Mariae, will prove a particularly fitting
introduction to Eucharistic contemplation, a contemplation carried out
with Mary as our companion and guide.(17)
This year let us also celebrate with particular devotion
the Solemnity of Corpus Christi, with its traditional procession.
Our faith in the God who took flesh in order to become our companion along
the way needs to be everywhere proclaimed, especially in our streets and
homes, as an expression of our grateful love and as an inexhaustible
source of blessings.
III
THE EUCHARIST
SOURCE AND MANIFESTATION
OF COMMUNION
“Abide in me, and I in you” (Jn 15:4)
19. When the disciples on the way to Emmaus asked Jesus to
stay “with” them, he responded by giving them a much greater gift: through
the Sacrament of the Eucharist he found a way to stay “in” them. Receiving
the Eucharist means entering into a profound communion with Jesus. “Abide
in me, and I in you” (Jn 15:4). This relationship of profound and
mutual “abiding” enables us to have a certain foretaste of heaven on
earth. Is this not the greatest of human yearnings? Is this not what
God had in mind when he brought about in history his plan of salvation?
God has placed in human hearts a “hunger” for his word (cf. Am
8:11), a hunger which will be satisfied only by full union with him.
Eucharistic communion was given so that we might be “sated” with God here
on earth, in expectation of our complete fulfilment in heaven.
One bread, one body
20. This special closeness which comes about in
Eucharistic “communion” cannot be adequately understood or fully
experienced apart from ecclesial communion. I emphasized this repeatedly
in my Encyclical
Ecclesia de
Eucharistia. The Church is the Body of Christ: we walk “with
Christ” to the extent that we are in relationship “with his body”. Christ
provided for the creation and growth of this unity by the outpouring of
his Holy Spirit. And he himself constantly builds it up by his Eucharistic
presence. It is the one Eucharistic bread which makes us one body. As the
Apostle Paul states: “Because there is one bread, we who are many are one
body, for we all partake of the one bread” (1Cor 10:17). In the
mystery of the Eucharist Jesus builds up the Church as a communion, in
accordance with the supreme model evoked in his priestly prayer:
“Even as you, Father, are in me, and I in you, that they may also be in
us, so that the world may believe that you have sent me” (Jn
17:21).
21. The Eucharist is both the source of ecclesial
unity and its greatest manifestation. The Eucharist is an
epiphany of communion. For this reason the Church sets conditions for
full participation in the celebration of the Eucharist.(18) These various
limitations ought to make us ever more conscious of the demands made by
the communion which Jesus asks of us. It is a hierarchical
communion, based on the awareness of a variety of roles and ministries, as
is seen by the reference to the Pope and the Diocesan Bishop in the
Eucharistic Prayer. It is a fraternal communion, cultivated by a
“spirituality of communion” which fosters reciprocal openness, affection,
understanding and forgiveness.(19)
“... of one heart and soul” (Acts 4:32)
22. At each Holy Mass we are called to measure ourselves
against the ideal of communion which the Acts of the Apostles
paints as a model for the Church in every age. It is the Church gathered
around the Apostles, called by the word of God, capable of sharing in
spiritual goods but in material goods as well (cf. Acts 2:42-47;
4:32-35). In this Year of the Eucharist the Lord invites us to draw
as closely as possible to this ideal. Every effort should be made to
experience fully those occasions mentioned in the liturgy for the Bishop's
“Stational Mass”, which he celebrates in the cathedral together with his
presbyters and deacons, with the participation of the whole People of God.
Here we see the principal “manifestation” of the Church.(20) It would be
praiseworthy to specify other significant occasions, also on the
parochial level, which would increase a sense of communion and find in the
Eucharistic celebration a source of renewed fervour.
The Lord's Day
23. In a particular way I ask that every effort be made
this year to experience Sunday as the day of the Lord and the day of the
Church. I would be happy if everyone would reflect once more on my words
in the Apostolic Letter
Dies Domini. “At Sunday Mass, Christians relive with particular
intensity the experience of the Apostles on the evening of Easter, when
the Risen Lord appeared to them as they were gathered together (cf. Jn
20:19). In a sense, the People of God of all times were present in that
small nucleus of disciples, the first-fruits of the Church”.(21) During
this year of grace, priests in their pastoral ministry should be even
more attentive to Sunday Mass as the celebration which brings together
the entire parish community, with the participation of different groups,
movements and associations.
IV
THE EUCHARIST, PRINCIPLE AND PLAN OF “MISSION”
“They set out immediately” (cf. Lk 24:33)
24. The two disciples of Emmaus, upon recognizing the
Lord, “set out immediately” (cf. Lk 24:33), in order to report what
they had seen and heard. Once we have truly met the Risen One by partaking
of his body and blood, we cannot keep to ourselves the joy we have
experienced. The encounter with Christ, constantly intensified and
deepened in the Eucharist, issues in the Church and in every Christian
an urgent summons to testimony and evangelization. I wished to
emphasize this in my homily announcing the Year of the Eucharist,
based on the words of Saint Paul: “As often as you eat this bread and
drink the cup, you proclaim the Lord's death until he comes” (1 Cor
11:26). The Apostle closely relates meal and proclamation: entering into
communion with Christ in the memorial of his Pasch also means sensing the
duty to be a missionary of the event made present in that rite.(22) The
dismissal at the end of each Mass is a charge given to Christians,
inviting them to work for the spread of the Gospel and the imbuing of
society with Christian values.
25. The Eucharist not only provides the interior strength
needed for this mission, but is also —in some sense—its plan. For
the Eucharist is a mode of being, which passes from Jesus into each
Christian, through whose testimony it is meant to spread throughout
society and culture. For this to happen, each member of the faithful must
assimilate, through personal and communal meditation, the values which the
Eucharist expresses, the attitudes it inspires, the resolutions to which
it gives rise. Can we not see here a special charge which could
emerge from this Year of the Eucharist?
Giving thanks
26. One fundamental element of this plan is found
in the very meaning of the word “Eucharist”: thanksgiving. In Jesus, in
his sacrifice, in his unconditional “yes” to the will of the Father, is
contained the “yes”, the “thank you” and the “amen” of all humanity. The
Church is called to remind men and women of this great truth. This is
especially urgent in the context of our secularized culture, characterized
as it is by a forgetfulness of God and a vain pursuit of human
self-sufficiency. Incarnating the Eucharistic “plan” in daily life,
wherever people live and work—in families, schools, the workplace, in all
of life's settings—means bearing witness that human reality cannot be
justified without reference to the Creator: “Without the Creator the
creature would disappear”.(23) This transcendent point of reference, which
commits us constantly to give thanks for all that we have and are—in other
words, to a “Eucharistic” attitude—in no way detracts from the legitimate
autonomy of earthly realities,(24) but grounds that autonomy more firmly
by setting it within its proper limits.
In this Year of the Eucharist Christians ought to
be committed to bearing more forceful witness to God's presence in the
world. We should not be afraid to speak about God and to bear proud
witness to our faith. The “culture of the Eucharist” promotes a culture of
dialogue, which here finds strength and nourishment. It is a mistake to
think that any public reference to faith will somehow undermine the
rightful autonomy of the State and civil institutions, or that it can even
encourage attitudes of intolerance. If history demonstrates that mistakes
have also been made in this area by believers, as I acknowledged on the
occasion of the Jubilee, this must be attributed not to “Christian roots”,
but to the failure of Christians to be faithful to those roots. One who
learns to say “thank you” in the manner of the crucified Christ might end
up as a martyr, but never as a persecutor.
The way of solidarity
27. The Eucharist is not merely an expression of communion
in the Church's life; it is also a project of solidarity for all of
humanity. In the celebration of the Eucharist the Church constantly renews
her awareness of being a “sign and instrument” not only of intimate union
with God but also of the unity of the whole human race.(25) Each Mass,
even when celebrated in obscurity or in isolation, always has a universal
character. The Christian who takes part in the Eucharist learns to become
a promotor of communion, peace and solidarity in every situation.
More than ever, our troubled world, which began the new Millennium with
the spectre of terrorism and the tragedy of war, demands that Christians
learn to experience the Eucharist as a great school of peace,
forming men and women who, at various levels of responsibility in social,
cultural and political life, can become promotors of dialogue and
communion.
At the service of the least
28. There is one other point which I would like to
emphasize, since it significantly affects the authenticity of our communal
sharing in the Eucharist. It is the impulse which the Eucharist gives to
the community for a practical commitment to building a more just and
fraternal society. In the Eucharist our God has shown love in the
extreme, overturning all those criteria of power which too often govern
human relations and radically affirming the criterion of service: “If
anyone would be first, he must be last of all and servant of all” (Mc
9:35). It is not by chance that the Gospel of John contains no account of
the institution of the Eucharist, but instead relates the “washing of
feet” (cf. Jn 13:1-20): by bending down to wash the feet of his
disciples, Jesus explains the meaning of the Eucharist unequivocally.
Saint Paul vigorously reaffirms the impropriety of a Eucharistic
celebration lacking charity expressed by practical sharing with the poor
(cf.1Cor 11:17-22, 27-34).
Can we not make this Year of the Eucharist an
occasion for diocesan and parish communities to commit themselves in a
particular way to responding with fraternal solicitude to one of the many
forms of poverty present in our world? I think for example of the tragedy
of hunger which plagues hundreds of millions of human beings, the diseases
which afflict developing countries, the loneliness of the elderly, the
hardships faced by the unemployed, the struggles of immigrants. These are
evils which are present—albeit to a different degree—even in areas of
immense wealth. We cannot delude ourselves: by our mutual love and, in
particular, by our concern for those in need we will be recognized as true
followers of Christ (cf. Jn 13:35; Mt 25:31-46). This will
be the criterion by which the authenticity of our Eucharistic celebrations
is judged.
CONCLUSION
29. O Sacrum Convivium, in quo Christus sumitur!
The Year of the Eucharist has its source in the amazement with
which the Church contemplates this great Mystery. It is an amazement which
I myself constantly experience. It prompted my Encyclical
Ecclesia de
Eucharistia. As I look forward to the twenty-seventh year of my
Petrine ministry, I consider it a great grace to be able to call the whole
Church to contemplate, praise, and adore in a special way this ineffable
Sacrament. May the Year of the Eucharist be for everyone a precious
opportunity to grow in awareness of the incomparable treasure which Christ
has entrusted to his Church. May it encourage a more lively and fervent
celebration of the Eucharist, leading to a Christian life transformed by
love.
There is room here for any number of initiatives,
according to the judgement of the Pastors of the particular Churches. The
Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments
will not fail to provide some helpful suggestions and proposals. I do not
ask, however, for anything extraordinary, but rather that every initiative
be marked by a profound interiority. If the only result of this Year were
the revival in all Christian communities of the celebration of Sunday Mass
and an increase in Eucharistic worship outside Mass, this Year of grace
would be abundantly successful. At the same time, it is good to aim high,
and not to be content with mediocrity, since we know we can always count
on God's help.
30. To you, dear Brother Bishops, I commend this
Year, confident that you will welcome my invitation with full apostolic
zeal.
Dear priests, who repeat the words of consecration
each day, and are witnesses and heralds of the great miracle of love which
takes place at your hands: be challenged by the grace of this special
Year; celebrate Holy Mass each day with the same joy and fervour with
which you celebrated your first Mass, and willingly spend time in prayer
before the tabernacle.
May this be a Year of grace also for you, deacons,
who are so closely engaged in the ministry of the word and the service of
the altar. I ask you, lectors, acolytes and extraordinary ministers of
holy communion, to become ever more aware of the gift you have
received in the service entrusted to you for a more worthy celebration of
the Eucharist.
In particular I appeal to you, the priests of the
future. During your time in the seminary make every effort to
experience the beauty not only of taking part daily in Holy Mass, but also
of spending a certain amount of time in dialogue with the Eucharistic
Lord.
Consecrated men and women, called by that very
consecration to more prolonged contemplation: never forget that Jesus in
the tabernacle wants you to be at his side, so that he can fill your
hearts with the experience of his friendship, which alone gives meaning
and fulfilment to your lives.
May all of you, the Christian faithful, rediscover
the gift of the Eucharist as light and strength for your daily lives in
the world, in the exercise of your respective professions amid so many
different situations. Rediscover this above all in order to experience
fully the beauty and the mission of the family.
I have great expectations of you, young people, as
I look forward to our meeting at the next World Youth Day in
Cologne. The theme of our meeting—“We have come to worship him”—suggests
how you can best experience this Eucharistic year. Bring to your encounter
with Jesus, hidden in the Eucharist, all the enthusiasm of your age, all
your hopes, all your desire to love.
31. We have before us the example of the Saints, who in
the Eucharist found nourishment on their journey towards perfection. How
many times did they shed tears of profound emotion in the presence of this
great mystery, or experience hours of inexpressible “spousal” joy before
the sacrament of the altar! May we be helped above all by the Blessed
Virgin Mary, whose whole life incarnated the meaning of the Eucharist.
“The Church, which looks to Mary as a model, is also called to imitate her
in her relationship with this most holy mystery”.(26) The Eucharistic
Bread which we receive is the spotless flesh of her Son: Ave verum
corpus natum de Maria Virgine. In this Year of grace, sustained by
Mary, may the Church discover new enthusiasm for her mission and come to
acknowledge ever more fully that the Eucharist is the source and summit of
her entire life.
To all of you I impart my Blessing as a pledge of grace
and joy.
From the Vatican, on 7 October, the Memorial of Our
Lady of the Rosary, in the year 2004, the twenty-sixth of my Pontificate.
IOANNES PAULUS PP.II
(1) Pastoral Constitution on the Church in the Modern World Gaudium
et Spes, 45.
(2) Cf. ibid., 22.
(3) No. 55: AAS 87 (1995), 38.
(4) Cf. Nos. 32-34: AAS 90 (1998), 732-734.
(5) Cf. Nos. 30-32: AAS 93 (2001), 287-289.
(6) Ibid., 35: loc. cit., 290-291.
(7) Cf. Apostolic Letter Rosarium Virginis Mariae (16 October
2002), 19-21: AAS 95 (2003), 18-20.
(8) Encyclical Letter Ecclesia de Eucharistia (17 April 2003),
53: AAS 95 (2003), 469.
(9) Cf. No. 51.
(10) Ibid., 7.
(11) Cf ibid., 52.
(12) Encyclical Letter Ecclesia de Eucharistia (17 April 2003),
10: AAS 95 (2003), 439.
(13) Cf. John Paul II, Encyclical Letter Ecclesia de Eucharistia
(17 April 2003), 10: AAS 95 (2003), 439. Congregation for Divine
Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments, Instruction Redemptionis
Sacramentum on certain matters to be observed or to be avoided
regarding the Most Holy Eucharist (25 March 2004), 38: L'Osservatore
Romano, Weekly Edition in English, 28 April 2004, Special Insert, p.3.
(14) Cf. Encyclical Letter Mysterium Fidei (3 September 1965),
39: AAS 57 (1965), 764; Sacred Congregation of Rites, Instruction
Eucharisticum Mysterium on the Worship of the Eucharistic Mystery (25
May 1967), 9: AAS 59 (1967), 547.
(15) Cf. Message Spiritus et Sponsa, for the fortieth
anniversary of the Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy Sacrosanctum
Concilium (4 December 2003), 13: AAS 96 (2004), 425.
(16) Cf. Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the
Sacraments, Instruction Redemptionis Sacramentum on certain matters
to be observed or to be avoided regarding the Most Holy Eucharist (25
March 2004): L'Osservatore Romano, Weekly Edition in English, 28
April 2004, Special Insert.
(17) Cf. ibid., 137, loc. cit., p.11.
(18) Cf. John Paul II, Encyclical Letter Ecclesia de Eucharistia
(17 April 2003), 44: AAS 95 (2003), 462; Code of Canon Law,
canon 908; Code of Canons of the Eastern Churches, canon 702;
Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity, Directorium
Oecumenicum (25 March 1993), 122-125, 129-131: AAS 85 (1993),
1086-1089; Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, Letter Ad
Exsequendam (18 May 2001): AAS 93 (2001), 786.
(19) Cf. John Paul II, Apostolic Letter Novo Millennio Ineunte
(6 January 2001), 43: AAS 93 (2001), 297.
(20) Cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Constitution on the Sacred
Liturgy Sacrosanctum Concilium, 41.
(21) No. 33: AAS 90 (1998), 733.
(22) Cf. Homily for the Solemnity of the Body and Blood of Christ (10
June 2004): L'Osservatore Romano, 11-12 June 2004, p.6.
(23) Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Pastoral Constitution on the
Church in the Modern World Gaudium et Spes, 36.
(24) Ibid.
(25) Cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Pastoral Constitution on
the Church Lumen Gentium, 1.
(26) John Paul II, Encyclical Letter Ecclesia de Eucharistia (17
April 2003), 53: AAS 95 (2003), 469.
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Plenary Indulgences
On January 14, 2005, Pope Paul II has granted Catholics who
venerate the Blessed Sacrament during the Year of the
Eucharist, a Plenary Indulgence.
A plenary indulgence is the remission of all temporal
punishment due to sin. The indulgences are subject to the
usual conditions: that the individual seeking the indulgence
must make a full sacramental Confession, be free from all
attachment to sin, receive the Eucharist, and pray for the
intentions of the Holy Father.
The Pope indicated that the faithful may obtain the
indulgence "each and every time they participate
attentively and piously in a sacred function or a devotional
exercise undertaken in honor of the Blessed Sacrament,
solemnly exposed and conserved in the tabernacle."
Similarly clerics, religious, and others who pray the Liturgy
of the Hours can obtain the indulgence "each and every time
they recite-- at the end of the day, in company or in
private-- Vespers and Night Prayers before the Lord
present in the tabernacle."
Based on an article of CWNews
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"Mission: Bread broken for
the life of the world."
Pope John Paul II
Released posthumously, written for World Mission Day, October 23,
2005, closing the Eucharistic Year
VATICAN CITY, APR 15, 2005 (VIS) - Made public
today was a message written by John Paul II for World Mission Day,
which is due to be celebrated on October 23 and which has as its
theme: "Mission: Bread broken for the life of the world." The
Message is dated February 22, 2005, Feast of the Chair of St Peter,
and has been published in English, French, Italian, Spanish,
Portuguese and Chinese.
Extracts from the Message are given below:
"World Mission Sunday, in this year
dedicated to the Eucharist, helps us to better understand the 'eucharistic'
sense of our life as we relive the emotion of the Upper Room when,
on the eve of His passion, Jesus offered Himself to the world."
"In my recent Apostolic Letter 'Mane
nobiscum Domine' I invited you to contemplate Jesus in the 'breaking
of the bread' offered for the whole of humanity. Following His
example we too are called to offer our life for our brothers and
sisters, especially those most in need. ... In this way, while the
Eucharist helps us to understand more fully the significance of
mission, it leads every individual believer, the missionary in
particular, to be 'bread, broken for the life of the world.'
"In our day human society appears to be
shrouded in dark shadows while it is shaken by tragic events and
shattered by catastrophic natural disasters. ... Present in the
Eucharist, the same Redeemer ... continues through the centuries to
show compassion for humanity poor and suffering.
"And it is in His name that pastoral workers
and missionaries travel unexplored paths to carry the 'bread' of
salvation to all. ... Jesus alone can satisfy humanity's hunger for
love and thirst for justice; He alone makes it possible for every
human person to share in eternal life: 'I am the living bread which
has come down from heaven. Anyone who eats this bread will live for
ever' (Jn 6,51)."
"We who nourish ourselves with the Body and
Blood of the crucified and risen Lord, cannot keep this 'gift' to
ourselves; on the contrary we must share it. Passionate love for
Christ leads to courageous proclamation of Christ; proclamation
which, with martyrdom, becomes a supreme offering of love for God
and for mankind. The Eucharist leads us to be generous evangelizers,
actively committed to building a more just and fraternal world.
"I sincerely hope the Year of the Eucharist
will inspire every Christian community to respond with 'fraternal
solicitude to some of the many forms of poverty present in our
world" (Mane nobiscum Domine 28), because 'by our mutual love and,
in particular, by our concern for those in need we will be
recognized as true followers of Christ (cf. Jn 13:35; Mt 25:31-46).
This will be the criterion by which the authenticity of our
Eucharistic celebrations is judged.' (Mane nobiscum Domine 28)."
In Christ's name "missionaries all over the
world proclaim and witness to the Gospel. ... How many missionary
martyrs in our day! May their example draw numerous young men and
women to tread the path of heroic fidelity to Christ! The Church has
need of men and women willing to consecrate themselves wholly to the
great cause of the Gospel.
"World Mission Sunday is an opportune
occasion to increase our awareness of the urgent necessity to
participate in the evangelizing mission undertaken by the local
communities and many Church organizations, in particular the
Pontifical Mission Societies and the Missionary Institutes. This
mission requires the support not only of prayer and sacrifice, but
also of concrete material offerings. I take this opportunity to
recall once again the valuable service rendered by the Pontifical
Mission Societies and I ask you all to support them generously with
spiritual and material cooperation."
© Vatican
Information Service.
Used with
permission.
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