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| Archbishop Velasio de Paolis, CS, presides over the Mass with the Legionary priests and brothers stationed in Rome. The members of the Legion's general council concelebrated. | |
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July 13, 2010. Rome, Italy. This past July 10, the
Holy Father´s papal delegate, Archbishop Velasio De Paolis, CS, visited
the Legion´s headquarters at the General Directorate as well as the
Center for Higher Studies, both in Rome.
At the General
Directorate, he met with Fr Alvaro Corcuera, LC, and the
assembled members of the General Council. In that meeting, he
gave them the Holy Father´s letter appointing him as
the papal delegate. He also gave them a letter
of his own, addresed to the Legionaries and consecrated members
of Regnum Christi. His personal letter explained some aspects of
his assignment as the Holy Father´s delegate and offered some
exhortations on how to live this new period in their history.
After
the meeting at the General Directorate, Archbishop Velasio De Paolis
went to the Center for Higher Studies to celebrate Mass
with the Legionary priests and brothers stationed in Rome. The
complete text of his homily is presented below.
Homily of Archbishop
Velasio De Paolis, CS
In these weeks, I’ve lived in a
state of agitation ever since the Secretary of State, first,
and then the Holy Father, spoke to me about this
mission of being the pontifical delegate for the congregation of
the Legionaries of Christ.
Yesterday the official communication was made,
and now my interior state has intensified even more, hearing
so many people tell me, “Good, congratulations for your assignment,
but it will be a difficult one.” And at the
same time, everyone has assured me of their prayers, because
this assignment’s difficulty can be at least intuited in prayer.
It is an assignment that with the Lord’s grace can
and must be fulfilled.
Speaking here today, I am still a
little emotional. But seeing this spectacle of all these priests
and students who fill this chapel today, I feel more
peaceful with myself and with the task I must fulfill.
I have already spoken with your superiors, those who are
at the top of the congregation. I presented the letter
with which the Holy Father gave me this assignment, and
I also gave them a letter of my own, to
communicate my feelings and also my exhortations for you at
the beginning of this task.
I do not think it
is necessary or fitting to repeat these things, because your
superiors will find the way to convey them better and
also to help you understand them. It is about the
assignment of the pontifical delegate. The Pope says that—given the
situation—he believed it to be, on the one hand, urgent
to begin a process of reflection that he himself, the
Holy Father, wishes to accompany. The Church that helped you
earlier by sending its visitators to carry out a first
discernment, the same Church, in the person of the Holy
Father, today sends you his delegate. A delegate who, as
the Pope says in the letter, has the task of
witnessing to the Pope’s closeness to all of you. And
it is in the conviction that we are in the
Church and that we have the task of fulfilling God’s
plan that we have this mission of ours, this task.
You
yourselves, with your presence, are a testimony that brings hope
and imbues us with encouragement. The Pope sends his delegate
to tell you that he loves you and that he
is close to you. At the same time, he states—he
says in his letter—that a great number of the members
of this congregation have great zeal and live with great
fervor.
Your presence is a witness to a reality that goes
beyond us: it is your vocation, with which you celebrate
this Eucharist today. You received the vocation of being members
of this congregation from the Lord. The Lord raised up
this vocation within you and has accompanied you until today,
and the works of the Lord—as we know—are never left
incomplete. St Paul tells us, “He who began his work
in you will bring it to completion.”
It is the mystery
of Christ that we celebrate now with your presence. It
is the mystery of his love, of his mercy, of
his grace that never abandons us. And it is still
the time of departure, of an examination of conscience, because
we need to reflect at times, to pause for an
examination of conscience. Not to reflect constantly about the past,
but to take stock of our present, to realize our
situation, giving thanks to the Lord before all else. The
first word that should spring from the depths of our
heart is “thank you.” Thank you to God who called
us, who called you to priestly and religious life in
this institute. Thank you to God who accompanies you. Thank
you to God who can bring his work to completion.
Thank you to God and thank you to the Church,
because the risen Lord lives in his Church and fulfills
his work through the ministry of the Church. And this
Church that has carried out a first process of discernment
today wants to complete the work—through the pontifical delegate—of reconstruction,
of restructuring, or rather, of a new commitment in our
spiritual journey.
We know that in critical moments, so many thoughts
go through our minds; sometimes they even nestle in our
heart. And in the confusion that sometimes besets us, we
are tempted to make accelerated decisions, to make decisions in
the time of darkness without consulting. In the time of
confusion, we only need to recover our serenity, we need
to discover God’s presence, believe in a new way in
his love, and then return to the path of fidelity.
With our presence, we celebrate the eternal fidelity of God’s
love. God never fails in his love. The one who
has called you continues calling you still, and he awaits
a new response, but a deep response, on the path
of fidelity. To the Lord’s eternal fidelity we must respond
with our “Yes,” our fidelity.
We are called to walk a
path, the Pope tells us, a path of renewal particularly
in the norms with which we govern our life, so
to proceed—renewed and with new understanding, new awareness, and new
strength—to the celebration of an extraordinary chapter in which we
will re-confirm our fidelity to the Lord, where we will
re-confirm our commitment to follow Christ in the profession of
the evangelical counsels, where we will re-confirm that the Lord
is our everything. We have given our life for him,
and we want this life to belong to him totally
and forever; this is my desire at the start of
this process we want to undertake. We will be more
secure, more serene, more full of confidence if we renew
our alliance with the Lord; and since the Lord is
always faithful and never fails, thus we will also find
the courage of our fidelity, our self-giving, and our total
dedication to the Lord.
Today, Saturday, the day dedicated to the
Blessed Virgin Mary, we want to remember the presence of
Mary alongside the mystery of Jesus. On Sunday we remember
the mystery of the glorious resurrection of the Lord and
the new creation. On Good Friday we remember the day
of the passion and death of Our Lord Jesus Christ.
And Saturday is the day of silence. It is always
the day of shadows; it is the day on which
the entire earth falls silent before the mystery of the
death and burial of the Lord Jesus. But on that
Saturday, there was also one heart, at least one, in
which the believer, Christian tradition, represents the image of Mary
who kept her faith and her love for Christ, her
Son, intact in the silence on that Saturday. She knows
that death cannot be the last word; she knows that
her Son lives; she knows that her Son has triumphed
over the darkness and has triumphed over death. And Christian
tradition represents Jesus who, after his resurrection, appeared to the
Blessed Virgin Mary before all others.
To celebrate Sunday well, we
must pass not only through Friday, but also through the
silence of Holy Saturday, keeping intact our faith in the
presence of Jesus among us and in the midst of
any circumstance of life, but with the certainty that the
last word is the triumph of Our Lord Jesus Christ,
that the last word is the triumph of life over
death, that the last word is the mystery of God’s
love that transforms our heart and with his grace makes
it capable of responding with the same love to Our
Lord Jesus Christ. We will overcome the darkness that at
times can oppress us; we will overcome the difficulties also
of our human weakness and fragility, because the mystery of
God is greater than all human weakness.
It is the mystery
of God that, upon entering into our life, makes us
capable of the impossible: the vocation of Isaiah, whose story
we heard. Every man is a vocation, the Pope tells
us in the encyclical Caritas in veritate; he has a
vocation. Why? Because man is by nature a being who
listens, a given being; before him, there is another who
gives meaning to his life. We came into the world
because there is someone who loved us first: at the
beginning is always love, the gift, and when we consider
ourselves, we realize that we feel the need to redirect
ourselves toward the source from which we come. We came
from the eternal love of God.
And when we enter into
the mystery of God’s love, we feel almost a fear,
a tremor, like the prophet Isaiah. Contemplating the mystery of
God, it almost seems like we are dying, because we
feel all our fragility and weakness; but when the mystery
of God enters into even our fragility, into our weakness,
it purifies us. God does not enter into our lives
to annihilate us, but to free us and allow life
to be manifested in its fullness. And purified by God,
we discover untold energy within us, and then if man
by himself can do nothing, man with God can do
everything. Nothing is impossible for God, and we are called
every day— we created beings, we who have a vocation—
we are called every day to rediscover the eternal mystery
of God, to experience our weakness and fragility, and at
the same time, to experience the merciful and renewing grace
of God. And on God’s side, under the protection of
the Blessed Virgin Mary, with Jesus who has risen and
called us to be his friends and brothers, we can
do great things. We can be at the service of
his kingdom and make the kingdom of God triumph first
in ourselves and then by the witness of life we
want to give.
With grace, everything is possible, and the grace
of God has triumphed in us, in you, up to
today. And it will triumph again today and also tomorrow
until the mystery of God is fully revealed. With this
confidence, we want to commit ourselves to prayer, in humility,
in the awareness of our limitations, but above all in
the certainty of God’s infinite and merciful love. The Lord
has big plans for each one of us; the Lord
has a mission for each one of us. Let us
not abandon the Lord. He is always faithful. May we
also remain faithful in our meeting with the Lord at
this time, particularly in this Eucharist. He nourishes us with
his word, and he becomes our body and blood. He
becomes our life, and with the Lord’s life in us,
we become transfigured people, always able to bear witness to
the mystery of the love of God who walks in
time.
Related documents:
• Decree from the Holy See defining
the modalities of the papal delegate’s work.
• The Holy Father’s
letter to Archbishop Velasio De Paolis, SC, appointing him
papal delegate for the Legionaries of Christ (June 16, 2010).
• Archbishop Velasio De Paolis’ letter to the Legionaries of
Christ (July 10, 2010).