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ADDRESS OF HIS HOLINESS POPE FRANCIS
TO PARTICIPANTS IN THE CONFERENCE ORGANIZED BY THE
DICASTERY FOR THE CAUSES OF SAINTS

Clementine Hall
Thursday, 16 November 2023

[Multimedia]

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Dear brothers and sisters, welcome!

I greet you with joy at the end of the conference on the theme, The communal dimension of sanctity, organized by the Dicastery for the Causes of Saints. I thank Cardinal Marcello Semeraro, the other Superiors, the officials, the postulators, Msgr Paglia and all of you, participants in the work of these days.

You have given me the commentary on the Apostolic Exhortation Gaudete et exsultate, published by the Dicastery on the 10th anniversary of my pontificate. Thank you from the bottom of my heart! I hope that the reflections contained in the book will help many people to understand ever better the universal call to holiness.

This theme of the universal vocation to holiness, and within it, its communal dimension, is very dear to Vatican Council II, which spoke about it specifically in Lumen gentium (cf. Chapter V). It is not a coincidence, in this regard, that in recent years there has been an increase in the number of beatifications and canonizations of men and women belonging to different states of life: married men and women, the celibate, priests, consecrated women and men and laypeople of every age, origin and culture, also families — I’m thinking of that martyred Polish family. In particular, in Gaudete et exsultate I wished to draw attention to the fact that all these brothers and sisters belong to “God’s holy and faithful people” (no. 6) and are close to us, as “next-door” saints (no. 7), members of our communities, who have lived with great charity in the small things of daily life, even with their limitations and faults, following Jesus to the end. Therefore, I would now like to reflect with you on this very theme, highlighting three aspects of it, among the many possible: holiness that unites, family holiness and martyrial holiness.

First: holiness that unites. We know that the vocation to which we are all called is fulfilled first of all in charity  (cf. Lumen gentium, 40), which is a gift of the Holy Spirit (cf. Rom  5:5) that unites us in Christ and with our brothers and sisters: therefore, it is not merely a personal event, but also a communal one. When God calls the individual, it is always for the good of all, as in the cases of Abraham and Moses, of Peter and Paul. He calls the individual for a mission. And after all, just as Jesus, the Good Shepherd, calls each of His sheep by name (cf. Jn  10:3) and seeks out the lost one to bring it back into the fold (cf. Lk  15:4-7), so the response to His love cannot but take place in a dynamic of involvement and intercession. The Gospel shows us this, for example for Matthew who, as soon as he is called by Jesus, invites his friends to meet the Messiah (cf. Mt  9:9-13) or for Paul who, having met the Risen One, becomes the Apostle to the Gentiles. An encounter with Jesus has this communal dimension.

This reality is expressed in a particularly touching way by Saint Thérèse of the Child Jesus, to whom I dedicated the Apostolic Exhortation C'est la confiance, on the 150th anniversary of her birth. In her writings, using an evocative biblical image, she contemplates the whole of humanity as the “garden of Jesus”, whose love embraces all its flowers in a way that is both inclusive and exclusive (cf. Manuscript A, 2rv), and asks to be enflamed to the point of incandescence by the fire of such love, so as to lead all her brothers and sisters to it in turn (cf. Manuscript C, 34r-36v). This is evangelization “by attraction” (Apostolic Exhortation Evangelii Gaudium, 14), witness, a fruit at the same time of the highest mystical experience of personal love and the “‘mystique’ of living together” (Apostolic Constitution Veritatis gaudium, 4a). In it, the two modes of the Lord’s presence are interpenetrated, both in the interior of the individual person (cf. Jn  14:23), and in the midst of those gathered in His Name (cf. Mt 18:20); in the “castle of the soul” and in the “castle of the community”, to use an image dear to Teresa of Ávila (cf. The Interior Castle). Holiness unites, and through the charity of the saints we can know the mystery of God who “united [...] with every man” (Pastoral Constitution Gaudium et Spes, 22) embraces the whole of humanity in His mercy, so that all may be one (cf. Jn 17:22). How much our world needs to find unity and peace in such an embrace!

Let us move on to the second point: family holiness. It shines eminently in the Holy Family of Nazareth (cf. Gaudete et exsultate, 143). And yet the Church today offers us many other examples: “In many holy marriages too, each spouse becomes a means used by Christ for the sanctification of the other” (ibid. 141). Let us think of Saints Louis and Zelia Martin; Blesseds Louis and Maria Beltrame Quattrocchi; Venerables Tancredi and Julia of Barolo; Venerables Sergio and Domenica Bernardini. The holiness of spouses, as well as the particular holiness of two distinct persons, is also common holiness in conjugality: hence multiplication — and not mere addition — of the personal gift of each, which is communicated. And a shining example of all this — as I mentioned at the beginning — was recently offered to us in the beatification of the married couple Jozef and Wiktoria Ulma and their seven children: all martyrs. They, too, remind us that “growth in holiness is a journey in community, side by side with others” (ibid.), and not alone. Always act with the community.

And so we come to the third point: martyrial holiness. It is a powerful model, of which we have many examples throughout the history of the Church, from the original communities up to the modern age, over the course of the centuries and in various parts of the world. There is no period that has not had its martyrs, up to our times. And we think that these martyrs are things that do not exist. But let us think of a case of Christian life lived in continuous martyrdom: the case of Asia Bibi, who was in prison for many years. And her daughter would bring her the Eucharist. Many years passed before the moment when the judges said she was innocent. Almost nine years of Christian witness! She is a woman who continues to live, and there are many, many like her, who bear witness to faith and charity. And let us not forget that our time also has many martyrs! Often, they are “entire communities that lived the Gospel heroically or offered to God the lives of all their members” (ibid.). And the matter broadens further if we consider the ecumenical dimension of their martyrdom, recalling those who belong to all Christian denominations (cf. ivi., 9). Let us think, for example, of the group of 21 Coptic martyrs recently introduced into the Roman Martyrology. They died saying “Jesus”, “Jesus”, on the beach.

Dear brothers and sisters, holiness gives life to the community, and you, with your work, help us to understand and celebrate its reality and dynamics ever better, in the many and varied paths that you examine and propose for our veneration; different, but all directed towards the same goal: the fullness of love. This is the path of holiness.

I thank you so much for this, and I encourage you to continue your beautiful mission with joy, for the good of individuals and the growth of communities. I bless you from my heart and, please, do not forget to pray for me.

Thank you!

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L'Osservatore Romano, Weekly Edition in English, friday, 17 November 2023.

 

 



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