| APOSTOLIC LETTER PORTA FIDEI | ||||||||||||
FOR THE INDICTION OF THE YEAR OF FAITH |
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APOSTOLIC LETTER 1. The “door of
faith” (Acts 14:27) is always open for us, ushering us
into the life of communion with God and offering entry
into his Church. It is possible to cross that threshold
when the word of God is proclaimed and the heart
allows itself to be shaped by transforming grace. To enter
through that door is to set out on a journey
that lasts a lifetime. It begins with baptism (cf. Rom
6:4), through which we can address God as Father, and
it ends with the passage through death to eternal life,
fruit of the resurrection of the Lord Jesus, whose will
it was, by the gift of the Holy Spirit, to
draw those who believe in him into his own glory
(cf. Jn 17:22). To profess faith in the Trinity –
Father, Son and Holy Spirit – is to believe in
one God who is Love (cf. 1 Jn 4:8): the
Father, who in the fullness of time sent his Son
for our salvation; Jesus Christ, who in the mystery of
his death and resurrection redeemed the world; the Holy Spirit,
who leads the Church across the centuries as we await
the Lord’s glorious return. 2. Ever since the start of my
ministry as Successor of Peter, I have spoken of the
need to rediscover the journey of faith so as to
shed ever clearer light on the joy and renewed enthusiasm
of the encounter with Christ. During the homily at the
Mass marking the inauguration of my pontificate I said: “The
Church as a whole and all her Pastors, like Christ,
must set out to lead people out of the desert,
towards the place of life, towards friendship with the Son
of God, towards the One who gives us life, and
life in abundance.”[1] It often happens that Christians
are more concerned for the social, cultural and political consequences
of their commitment, continuing to think of the faith as
a self-evident presupposition for life in society. In reality, not
only can this presupposition no longer be taken for granted,
but it is often openly denied.[2] Whereas in
the past it was possible to recognize a unitary cultural
matrix, broadly accepted in its appeal to the content of
the faith and the values inspired by it, today this
no longer seems to be the case in large swathes
of society, because of a profound crisis of faith that
has affected many people. 3. We cannot accept that salt should
become tasteless or the light be kept hidden (cf. Mt
5:13-16). The people of today can still experience the need
to go to the well, like the Samaritan woman, in
order to hear Jesus, who invites us to believe in
him and to draw upon the source of living water
welling up within him (cf. Jn 4:14). We must rediscover
a taste for feeding ourselves on the word of God,
faithfully handed down by the Church, and on the bread
of life, offered as sustenance for his disciples (cf. Jn
6:51). Indeed, the teaching of Jesus still resounds in our
day with the same power: “Do not labour for the
food which perishes, but for the food which endures to
eternal life” (Jn 6:27). The question posed by his listeners
is the same that we ask today: “What must we
do, to be doing the works of God?” (Jn 6:28).
We know Jesus’ reply: “This is the work of God,
that you believe in him whom he has sent” (Jn
6:29). Belief in Jesus Christ, then, is the way to
arrive definitively at salvation. 4. In the light of all this,
I have decided to announce a Year of Faith. It
will begin on 11 October 2012, the fiftieth anniversary of
the opening of the Second Vatican Council, and it will
end on the Solemnity of Our Lord Jesus Christ, Universal
King, on 24 November 2013. The starting date of 11
October 2012 also marks the twentieth anniversary of the publication
of the Catechism of the Catholic Church, a text promulgated
by my Predecessor, Blessed John Paul II,[3] with
a view to illustrating for all the faithful the power
and beauty of the faith. This document, an authentic fruit
of the Second Vatican Council, was requested by the Extraordinary
Synod of Bishops in 1985 as an instrument at the
service of catechesis[4] and it was produced in
collaboration with all the bishops of the Catholic Church. Moreover,
the theme of the General Assembly of the Synod of
Bishops that I have convoked for October 2012 is “The
New Evangelization for the Transmission of the Christian Faith”. This
will be a good opportunity to usher the whole Church
into a time of particular reflection and rediscovery of the
faith. It is not the first time that the Church
has been called to celebrate a Year of Faith. My
venerable Predecessor the Servant of God Paul VI announced one
in 1967, to commemorate the martyrdom of Saints Peter and
Paul on the 19th centenary of their supreme act of
witness. He thought of it as a solemn moment for
the whole Church to make “an authentic and sincere profession
of the same faith”; moreover, he wanted this to be
confirmed in a way that was “individual and collective, free
and conscious, inward and outward, humble and frank”.[5]
He thought that in this way the whole Church could
reappropriate “exact knowledge of the faith, so as to reinvigorate
it, purify it, confirm it, and confess it”.[6]
The great upheavals of that year made even more evident
the need for a celebration of this kind. It concluded
with the Credo of the People of God,[7]
intended to show how much the essential content that for
centuries has formed the heritage of all believers needs to
be confirmed, understood and explored ever anew, so as to
bear consistent witness in historical circumstances very different from those
of the past. 5. In some respects, my venerable predecessor saw
this Year as a “consequence and a necessity of the
postconciliar period”,[8] fully conscious of the grave difficulties
of the time, especially with regard to the profession of
the true faith and its correct interpretation. It seemed to
me that timing the launch of the Year of Faith
to coincide with the fiftieth anniversary of the opening of
the Second Vatican Council would provide a good opportunity to
help people understand that the texts bequeathed by the Council
Fathers, in the words of Blessed John Paul II, “have
lost nothing of their value or brilliance. They need to
be read correctly, to be widely known and taken to
heart as important and normative texts of the Magisterium, within
the Church´s Tradition ... I feel more than ever in
duty bound to point to the Council as the great
grace bestowed on the Church in the twentieth century: there
we find a sure compass by which to take our
bearings in the century now beginning.”[9] I would
also like to emphasize strongly what I had occasion to
say concerning the Council a few months after my election
as Successor of Peter: “if we interpret and implement it
guided by a right hermeneutic, it can be and can
become increasingly powerful for the ever necessary renewal of the
Church.”[10] 6. The renewal of the Church is also
achieved through the witness offered by the lives of believers:
by their very existence in the world, Christians are called
to radiate the word of truth that the Lord Jesus
has left us. The Council itself, in the Dogmatic Constitution
Lumen Gentium, said this: While “Christ, ‘holy, innocent and
undefiled’ (Heb 7:26) knew nothing of sin (cf. 2 Cor
5:21), but came only to expiate the sins of the
people (cf. Heb 2:17)... the Church ... clasping sinners to
its bosom, at once holy and always in need of
purification, follows constantly the path of penance and renewal. The
Church, ‘like a stranger in a foreign land, presses forward
amid the persecutions of the world and the consolations of
God’, announcing the cross and death of the Lord until
he comes (cf. 1 Cor 11:26). But by the power
of the risen Lord it is given strength to overcome,
in patience and in love, its sorrow and its difficulties,
both those that are from within and those that are
from without, so that it may reveal in the world,
faithfully, although with shadows, the mystery of its Lord until,
in the end, it shall be manifested in full light.”[11] The Year of Faith, from this perspective, is a
summons to an authentic and renewed conversion to the Lord,
the one Saviour of the world. In the mystery of
his death and resurrection, God has revealed in its fullness
the Love that saves and calls us to conversion of
life through the forgiveness of sins (cf. Acts 5:31). For
Saint Paul, this Love ushers us into a new life:
“We were buried ... with him by baptism into death,
so that as Christ was raised from the dead by
the glory of the Father, we too might walk in
newness of life” (Rom 6:4). Through faith, this new life
shapes the whole of human existence according to the radical
new reality of the resurrection. To the extent that he
freely cooperates, man’s thoughts and affections, mentality and conduct are
slowly purified and transformed, on a journey that is never
completely finished in this life. “Faith working through love” (Gal
5:6) becomes a new criterion of understanding and action that
changes the whole of man’s life (cf. Rom 12:2; Col
3:9-10; Eph 4:20-29; 2 Cor 5:17). 7. “Caritas Christi urget nos”
(2 Cor 5:14): it is the love of Christ that
fills our hearts and impels us to evangelize. Today as
in the past, he sends us through the highways of
the world to proclaim his Gospel to all the peoples
of the earth (cf. Mt 28:19). Through his love, Jesus
Christ attracts to himself the people of every generation: in
every age he convokes the Church, entrusting her with the
proclamation of the Gospel by a mandate that is ever
new. Today too, there is a need for stronger ecclesial
commitment to new evangelization in order to rediscover the joy
of believing and the enthusiasm for communicating the faith. In
rediscovering his love day by day, the missionary commitment of
believers attains force and vigour that can never fade away.
Faith grows when it is lived as an experience of
love received and when it is communicated as an experience
of grace and joy. It makes us fruitful, because it
expands our hearts in hope and enables us to bear
life-giving witness: indeed, it opens the hearts and minds of
those who listen to respond to the Lord’s invitation to
adhere to his word and become his disciples. Believers, so
Saint Augustine tells us, “strengthen themselves by believing”.[12]
The saintly Bishop of Hippo had good reason to express
himself in this way. As we know, his life was
a continual search for the beauty of the faith until
such time as his heart would find rest in God.[13] His extensive writings, in which he explains the
importance of believing and the truth of the faith, continue
even now to form a heritage of incomparable riches, and
they still help many people in search of God to
find the right path towards the “door of faith”. Only through
believing, then, does faith grow and become stronger; there is
no other possibility for possessing certitude with regard to one’s
life apart from self-abandonment, in a continuous crescendo, into the
hands of a love that seems to grow constantly because
it has its origin in God. 8. On this happy occasion,
I wish to invite my brother bishops from all over
the world to join the Successor of Peter, during this
time of spiritual grace that the Lord offers us, in
recalling the precious gift of faith. We want to celebrate
this Year in a worthy and fruitful manner. Reflection on
the faith will have to be intensified, so as to
help all believers in Christ to acquire a more conscious
and vigorous adherence to the Gospel, especially at a time
of profound change such as humanity is currently experiencing. We
will have the opportunity to profess our faith in the
Risen Lord in our cathedrals and in the churches of
the whole world; in our homes and among our families,
so that everyone may feel a strong need to know
better and to transmit to future generations the faith of
all times. Religious communities as well as parish communities, and
all ecclesial bodies old and new, are to find a
way, during this Year, to make a public profession of
the Credo. 9. We want this Year to arouse in every
believer the aspiration to profess the faith in fullness and
with renewed conviction, with confidence and hope. It will also
be a good opportunity to intensify the celebration of the
faith in the liturgy, especially in the Eucharist, which is
“the summit towards which the activity of the Church is
directed; ... and also the source from which all its
power flows.”[14] At the same time, we make
it our prayer that believers’ witness of life may grow
in credibility. To rediscover the content of the faith that
is professed, celebrated, lived and prayed,[15] and to
reflect on the act of faith, is a task that
every believer must make his own, especially in the course
of this Year. Not without reason, Christians in the early centuries
were required to learn the creed from memory. It served
them as a daily prayer not to forget the commitment
they had undertaken in baptism. With words rich in meaning,
Saint Augustine speaks of this in a homily on the
redditio symboli, the handing over of the creed: “the symbol
of the holy mystery that you have all received together
and that today you have recited one by one, are
the words on which the faith of Mother Church is
firmly built above the stable foundation that is Christ the
Lord. You have received it and recited it, but in
your minds and hearts you must keep it ever present,
you must repeat it in your beds, recall it in
the public squares and not forget it during meals: even
when your body is asleep, you must watch over it
with your hearts.”[16] 10. At this point I would
like to sketch a path intended to help us understand
more profoundly not only the content of the faith, but
also the act by which we choose to entrust ourselves
fully to God, in complete freedom. In fact, there exists
a profound unity between the act by which we believe
and the content to which we give our assent. Saint
Paul helps us to enter into this reality when he
writes: “Man believes with his heart and so is justified,
and he confesses with his lips and so is saved”
(Rom 10:10). The heart indicates that the first act by
which one comes to faith is God’s gift and the
action of grace which acts and transforms the person deep
within. The example of Lydia is particularly eloquent in this regard.
Saint Luke recounts that, while he was at Philippi, Paul
went on the Sabbath to proclaim the Gospel to some
women; among them was Lydia and “the Lord opened her
heart to give heed to what was said by Paul”
(Acts 16:14). There is an important meaning contained within this
expression. Saint Luke teaches that knowing the content to be
believed is not sufficient unless the heart, the authentic sacred
space within the person, is opened by grace that allows
the eyes to see below the surface and to understand
that what has been proclaimed is the word of God. Confessing
with the lips indicates in turn that faith implies public
testimony and commitment. A Christian may never think of belief
as a private act. Faith is choosing to stand with
the Lord so as to live with him. This “standing
with him” points towards an understanding of the reasons for
believing. Faith, precisely because it is a free act, also
demands social responsibility for what one believes. The Church on
the day of Pentecost demonstrates with utter clarity this public
dimension of believing and proclaiming one’s faith fearlessly to every
person. It is the gift of the Holy Spirit that
makes us fit for mission and strengthens our witness, making
it frank and courageous. Profession of faith is an act both
personal and communitarian. It is the Church that is the
primary subject of faith. In the faith of the Christian
community, each individual receives baptism, an effective sign of entry
into the people of believers in order to obtain salvation.
As we read in the Catechism of the Catholic Church:
“ ‘I believe’ is the faith of the Church professed
personally by each believer, principally during baptism. ‘We believe’ is
the faith of the Church confessed by the bishops assembled
in council or more generally by the liturgical assembly of
believers. ‘I believe’ is also the Church, our mother, responding
to God by faith as she teaches us to say
both ‘I believe’ and ‘we believe’.”[17] Evidently, knowledge of
the content of faith is essential for giving one’s own
assent, that is to say for adhering fully with intellect
and will to what the Church proposes. Knowledge of faith
opens a door into the fullness of the saving mystery
revealed by God. The giving of assent implies that, when
we believe, we freely accept the whole mystery of faith,
because the guarantor of its truth is God who reveals
himself and allows us to know his mystery of love.[18] On the other hand, we must not forget that
in our cultural context, very many people, while not claiming
to have the gift of faith, are nevertheless sincerely searching
for the ultimate meaning and definitive truth of their lives
and of the world. This search is an authentic “preamble”
to the faith, because it guides people onto the path
that leads to the mystery of God. Human reason, in
fact, bears within itself a demand for “what is perennially
valid and lasting”.[19] This demand constitutes a permanent
summons, indelibly written into the human heart, to set out
to find the One whom we would not be seeking
had he not already set out to meet us.[20] To this encounter, faith invites us and it opens
us in fullness. 11. In order to arrive at a systematic
knowledge of the content of the faith, all can find
in the Catechism of the Catholic Church a precious and
indispensable tool. It is one of the most important fruits
of the Second Vatican Council. In the Apostolic Constitution
Fidei Depositum, signed, not by accident, on the thirtieth
anniversary of the opening of the Second Vatican Council, Blessed
John Paul II wrote: “this catechism will make a very
important contribution to that work of renewing the whole life
of the Church ... I declare it to be a
valid and legitimate instrument for ecclesial communion and a sure
norm for teaching the faith.”[21] It is in this
sense that that the Year of Faith will have to
see a concerted effort to rediscover and study the fundamental
content of the faith that receives its systematic and organic
synthesis in the Catechism of the Catholic Church. Here, in
fact, we see the wealth of teaching that the Church
has received, safeguarded and proposed in her two thousand years
of history. From Sacred Scripture to the Fathers of the
Church, from theological masters to the saints across the centuries,
the Catechism provides a permanent record of the many ways
in which the Church has meditated on the faith and
made progress in doctrine so as to offer certitude to
believers in their lives of faith. In its very structure, the
Catechism of the Catholic Church follows the development of the
faith right up to the great themes of daily life.
On page after page, we find that what is presented
here is no theory, but an encounter with a Person
who lives within the Church. The profession of faith is
followed by an account of sacramental life, in which Christ
is present, operative and continues to build his Church. Without
the liturgy and the sacraments, the profession of faith would
lack efficacy, because it would lack the grace which supports
Christian witness. By the same criterion, the teaching of the
Catechism on the moral life acquires its full meaning if
placed in relationship with faith, liturgy and prayer. 12. In this
Year, then, the Catechism of the Catholic Church will serve
as a tool providing real support for the faith, especially
for those concerned with the formation of Christians, so crucial
in our cultural context. To this end, I have invited
the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, by agreement
with the competent Dicasteries of the Holy See, to draw
up a Note, providing the Church and individual believers with
some guidelines on how to live this Year of Faith
in the most effective and appropriate ways, at the service
of belief and evangelization. To a greater extent than in the
past, faith is now being subjected to a series of
questions arising from a changed mentality which, especially today, limits
the field of rational certainties to that of scientific and
technological discoveries. Nevertheless, the Church has never been afraid of
demonstrating that there cannot be any conflict between faith and
genuine science, because both, albeit via different routes, tend towards
the truth.[22] 13. One thing that will be of
decisive importance in this Year is retracing the history of
our faith, marked as it is by the unfathomable mystery
of the interweaving of holiness and sin. While the former
highlights the great contribution that men and women have made
to the growth and development of the community through the
witness of their lives, the latter must provoke in each
person a sincere and continuing work of conversion in order
to experience the mercy of the Father which is held
out to everyone. During this time we will need to keep
our gaze fixed upon Jesus Christ, the “pioneer and perfecter
of our faith” (Heb 12:2): in him, all the anguish
and all the longing of the human heart finds fulfilment.
The joy of love, the answer to the drama of
suffering and pain, the power of forgiveness in the face
of an offence received and the victory of life over
the emptiness of death: all this finds fulfilment in the
mystery of his Incarnation, in his becoming man, in his
sharing our human weakness so as to transform it by
the power of his resurrection. In him who died and
rose again for our salvation, the examples of faith that
have marked these two thousand years of our salvation history
are brought into the fullness of light. By faith, Mary accepted
the Angel’s word and believed the message that she was
to become the Mother of God in the obedience of
her devotion (cf. Lk 1:38). Visiting Elizabeth, she raised her
hymn of praise to the Most High for the marvels
he worked in those who trust him (cf. Lk 1:46-55).
With joy and trepidation she gave birth to her only
son, keeping her virginity intact (cf. Lk 2:6-7). Trusting in
Joseph, her husband, she took Jesus to Egypt to save
him from Herod’s persecution (cf. Mt 2:13-15). With the same
faith, she followed the Lord in his preaching and remained
with him all the way to Golgotha (cf. Jn 19:25-27).
By faith, Mary tasted the fruits of Jesus’ resurrection, and
treasuring every memory in her heart (cf. Lk 2:19, 51),
she passed them on to the Twelve assembled with her
in the Upper Room to receive the Holy Spirit (cf.
Acts 1:14; 2:1-4). By faith, the Apostles left everything to follow
their Master (cf. Mk 10:28). They believed the words with
which he proclaimed the Kingdom of God present and fulfilled
in his person (cf. Lk 11:20). They lived in communion
of life with Jesus who instructed them with his teaching,
leaving them a new rule of life, by which they
would be recognized as his disciples after his death (cf.
Jn 13:34-35). By faith, they went out to the whole
world, following the command to bring the Gospel to all
creation (cf. Mk 16:15) and they fearlessly proclaimed to all
the joy of the resurrection, of which they were faithful
witnesses. By faith, the disciples formed the first community, gathered around
the teaching of the Apostles, in prayer, in celebration of
the Eucharist, holding their possessions in common so as to
meet the needs of the brethren (cf. Acts 2:42-47). By faith,
the martyrs gave their lives, bearing witness to the truth
of the Gospel that had transformed them and made them
capable of attaining to the greatest gift of love: the
forgiveness of their persecutors. By faith, men and women have consecrated
their lives to Christ, leaving all things behind so as
to live obedience, poverty and chastity with Gospel simplicity, concrete
signs of waiting for the Lord who comes without delay.
By faith, countless Christians have promoted action for justice so
as to put into practice the word of the Lord,
who came to proclaim deliverance from oppression and a year
of favour for all (cf. Lk 4:18-19). By faith, across the
centuries, men and women of all ages, whose names are
written in the Book of Life (cf. Rev 7:9, 13:8),
have confessed the beauty of following the Lord Jesus wherever
they were called to bear witness to the fact that
they were Christian: in the family, in the workplace, in
public life, in the exercise of the charisms and ministries
to which they were called. By faith, we too live: by
the living recognition of the Lord Jesus, present in our
lives and in our history. 14. The Year of Faith will
also be a good opportunity to intensify the witness of
charity. As Saint Paul reminds us: “So faith, hope, love
abide, these three; but the greatest of these is love”
(1 Cor 13:13). With even stronger words – which have
always placed Christians under obligation – Saint James said: “What
does it profit, my brethren, if a man says he
has faith but has not works? Can his faith save
him? If a brother or sister is ill-clad and in
lack of daily food, and one of you says to
them, ‘Go in peace, be warmed and filled’, without giving
them the things needed for the body, what does it
profit? So faith by itself, if it has no works,
is dead. But some one will say, ‘You have faith
and I have works.’ Show me your faith apart from
your works, and I by my works will show you
my faith” (Jas 2:14-18). Faith without charity bears no fruit, while
charity without faith would be a sentiment constantly at the
mercy of doubt. Faith and charity each require the other,
in such a way that each allows the other to
set out along its respective path. Indeed, many Christians dedicate
their lives with love to those who are lonely, marginalized
or excluded, as to those who are the first with
a claim on our attention and the most important for
us to support, because it is in them that the
reflection of Christ’s own face is seen. Through faith, we
can recognize the face of the risen Lord in those
who ask for our love. “As you did it to
one of the least of these my brethren, you did
it to me” (Mt 25:40). These words are a warning
that must not be forgotten and a perennial invitation to
return the love by which he takes care of us.
It is faith that enables us to recognize Christ and
it is his love that impels us to assist him
whenever he becomes our neighbour along the journey of life.
Supported by faith, let us look with hope at our
commitment in the world, as we await “new heavens and
a new earth in which righteousness dwells” (2 Pet 3:13;
cf. Rev 21:1). 15. Having reached the end of his life,
Saint Paul asks his disciple Timothy to “aim at faith”
(2 Tim 2:22) with the same constancy as when he
was a boy (cf. 2 Tim 3:15). We hear this
invitation directed to each of us, that none of us
grow lazy in the faith. It is the lifelong companion
that makes it possible to perceive, ever anew, the marvels
that God works for us. Intent on gathering the signs
of the times in the present of history, faith commits
every one of us to become a living sign of
the presence of the Risen Lord in the world. What
the world is in particular need of today is the
credible witness of people enlightened in mind and heart by
the word of the Lord, and capable of opening the
hearts and minds of many to the desire for God
and for true life, life without end. “That the word of
the Lord may speed on and triumph” (2 Th 3:1):
may this Year of Faith make our relationship with Christ
the Lord increasingly firm, since only in him is there
the certitude for looking to the future and the guarantee
of an authentic and lasting love. The words of Saint
Peter shed one final ray of light on faith: “In
this you rejoice, though now for a little while you
may have to suffer various trials, so that the genuineness
of your faith, more precious than gold which though perishable
is tested by fire, may redound to praise and glory
and honour at the revelation of Jesus Christ. Without having
seen him you love him; though you do not now
see him you believe in him and rejoice with unutterable
and exalted joy. As the outcome of your faith you
obtain the salvation of your souls” (1 Pet 1:6-9). The
life of Christians knows the experience of joy as well
as the experience of suffering. How many of the saints
have lived in solitude! How many believers, even in our
own day, are tested by God’s silence when they would
rather hear his consoling voice! The trials of life, while
helping us to understand the mystery of the Cross and
to participate in the sufferings of Christ (cf. Col 1:24),
are a prelude to the joy and hope to which
faith leads: “when I am weak, then I am strong”
(2 Cor 12:10). We believe with firm certitude that the
Lord Jesus has conquered evil and death. With this sure
confidence we entrust ourselves to him: he, present in our
midst, overcomes the power of the evil one (cf. Lk
11:20); and the Church, the visible community of his mercy,
abides in him as a sign of definitive reconciliation with
the Father. Let us entrust this time of grace to the
Mother of God, proclaimed “blessed because she believed” (Lk 1:45). Given in Rome, at Saint Peter’s, on 11 October in
the year 2011, the seventh of my Pontificate. BENEDICTUS PP. XVI [1] Homily for the beginning of
the Petrine Ministry of the Bishop of Rome (24 April
2005): AAS 97 (2005), 710. [2] Cf. Benedict XVI,
Homily at Holy Mass in Lisbon’s “Terreiro do Paço”
(11 May 2010): Insegnamenti VI:1 (2010), 673. [3] Cf.
John Paul II, Apostolic Constitution Fidei Depositum (11 October
1992): AAS 86 (1994), 113-118. [4] Cf. Final Report
of the Second Extraordinary Synod of Bishops (7 December 1985),
II, B, a, 4 in Enchiridion Vaticanum, ix, n. 1797. [5] Paul VI, Apostolic Exhortation Petrum et Paulum Apostolos
on the XIX centenary of the martyrdom of Saints Peter
and Paul (22 February 1967): AAS 59 (1967), 196. [7] Paul VI, Credo of the
People of God, cf. Homily at Mass on the XIX
centenary of the martyrdom of Saints Peter and Paul at
the conclusion of the “Year of Faith” (30 June 1968):
AAS 60 (1968), 433-445. [8] Paul VI, General Audience
(14 June 1967): Insegnamenti V (1967), 801. [9] John
Paul II, Apostolic Letter Novo Millennio Ineunte (6 January
2001), 57: AAS 93 (2001), 308. [10] Address
to the Roman Curia (22 December 2005): AAS 98 (2006),
52. [11] Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Dogmatic Constitution on
the Church Lumen Gentium, 8. [12] De Utilitate
Credendi, I:2. [13] Cf. Saint Augustine, Confessions, I:1. [14] Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy
Sacrosanctum Concilium, 10. [15] Cf. John Paul II,
Apostolic Constitution Fidei Depositum (11 October 1992): AAS 86
(1994), 116. [17] Catechism of
the Catholic Church, 167. [18] Cf. First Vatican Ecumenical
Council, Dogmatic Constitution on the Catholic Faith Dei Filius, chap.
III: DS 3008-3009: Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Dogmatic Constitution on
Divine Revelation Dei Verbum, 5. [19] Benedict XVI,
Address at the Collège des Bernardins, Paris (12 September
2008): AAS 100 (2008), 722. [20] Cf. Saint Augustine,
Confessions, XIII:1. [21] John Paul II, Apostolic Constitution Fidei Depositum (11 October 1992): AAS 86 (1994), 115 and
117. [22] Cf. John Paul II, Encyclical Letter Fides et Ratio (14 September 1998), 34, 106: AAS 91
(1999), 31-32, 86-87. |
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