LETTER OF HIS HOLINESS
POPE FRANCIS
TO THE PEOPLE OF GOD
TO THE PEOPLE OF GOD
“If one member suffers, all suffer together with it” (1 Cor 12:26). These words of Saint Paul forcefully
echo in my heart as I acknowledge once more the suffering endured by many
minors due to sexual abuse, the abuse of power and the abuse of conscience
perpetrated by a significant number of clerics and consecrated persons. Crimes
that inflict deep wounds of pain and powerlessness, primarily among the
victims, but also in their family members and in the larger community of
believers and nonbelievers alike. Looking back to the past, no effort to beg
pardon and to seek to repair the harm done will ever be sufficient. Looking ahead
to the future, no effort must be spared to create a culture able to prevent
such situations from happening, but also to prevent the possibility of their
being covered up and perpetuated. The pain of the victims and their families is
also our pain, and so it is urgent that we once more reaffirm our commitment to
ensure the protection of minors and of vulnerable adults.
1. If one member suffers…
In recent days, a report was made public which detailed the
experiences of at least a thousand survivors, victims of sexual abuse, the
abuse of power and of conscience at the hands of priests over a period of
approximately seventy years. Even though it can be said that most of these
cases belong to the past, nonetheless as time goes on we have come to know the pain
of many of the victims. We have realized that these wounds never disappear and
that they require us forcefully to condemn these atrocities and join forces in
uprooting this culture of death; these wounds never go away. The
heart-wrenching pain of these victims, which cries out to heaven, was long
ignored, kept quiet or silenced. But their outcry was more powerful than all
the measures meant to silence it, or sought even to resolve it by decisions
that increased its gravity by falling into complicity. The Lord heard that cry
and once again showed us on which side he stands. Mary’s song is not mistaken
and continues quietly to echo throughout history. For the Lord remembers the
promise he made to our fathers: “he has scattered the proud in their conceit; he
has cast down the mighty from their thrones and lifted up the lowly; he has
filled the hungry with good things, and the rich he has sent away empty” (Lk 1:51-53). We feel shame when we realize that our
style of life has denied, and continues to deny, the words we recite.
With shame and repentance, we acknowledge as an ecclesial community that we were not where we should have been, that we did not act in a timely manner, realizing the magnitude and the gravity of the damage done to so many lives. We showed no care for the little ones; we abandoned them. I make my own the words of the then Cardinal Ratzinger when, during the Way of the Cross composed for Good Friday 2005, he identified with the cry of pain of so many victims and exclaimed: “How much filth there is in the Church, and even among those who, in the priesthood, ought to belong entirely to [Christ]! How much pride, how much self-complacency! Christ’s betrayal by his disciples, their unworthy reception of his body and blood, is certainly the greatest suffering endured by the Redeemer; it pierces his heart. We can only call to him from the depths of our hearts: Kyrie eleison – Lord, save us! (cf. Mt 8:25)” (Ninth Station).
2. … all suffer together with it
The extent and the gravity of all that has happened requires
coming to grips with this reality in a comprehensive and communal way. While it
is important and necessary on every journey of conversion to acknowledge the
truth of what has happened, in itself this is not enough. Today we are
challenged as the People of God to take on the pain of our brothers and sisters
wounded in their flesh and in their spirit. If, in the past, the response was
one of omission, today we want solidarity, in the deepest and most challenging
sense, to become our way of forging present and future history. And this in an
environment where conflicts, tensions and above all the victims of every type
of abuse can encounter an outstretched hand to protect them and rescue them
from their pain (cf. Evangelii Gaudium, 228). Such solidarity demands that we in
turn condemn whatever endangers the integrity of any person. A solidarity that
summons us to fight all forms of corruption, especially spiritual corruption.
The latter is “a comfortable and self-satisfied form of blindness. Everything
then appears acceptable: deception, slander, egotism and other subtle forms of
self-centeredness, for ‘even Satan disguises himself as an angel of light’ (2 Cor 11:14)” (Gaudete et Exsultate, 165). Saint Paul’s exhortation to suffer
with those who suffer is the best antidote against all our attempts to repeat
the words of Cain: “Am I my brother's keeper?” (Gen 4:9).
I am conscious of the effort and work being carried out in
various parts of the world to come up with the necessary means to ensure the
safety and protection of the integrity of children and of vulnerable adults, as
well as implementing zero tolerance and ways of making all those who perpetrate
or cover up these crimes accountable. We have delayed in applying these actions
and sanctions that are so necessary, yet I am confident that they will help to
guarantee a greater culture of care in the present and future.
Together with those efforts, every one of the baptized should feel involved in the ecclesial and social change that we so greatly need. This change calls for a personal and communal conversion that makes us see things as the Lord does. For as Saint John Paul II liked to say: “If we have truly started out anew from the contemplation of Christ, we must learn to see him especially in the faces of those with whom he wished to be identified” (Novo Millennio Ineunte, 49). To see things as the Lord does, to be where the Lord wants us to be, to experience a conversion of heart in his presence. To do so, prayer and penance will help. I invite the entire holy faithful People of God to a penitential exercise of prayer and fasting, following the Lord’s command.[1] This can awaken our conscience and arouse our solidarity and commitment to a culture of care that says “never again” to every form of abuse.
It is impossible to think of a conversion of our activity as a
Church that does not include the active participation of all the members of
God’s People. Indeed, whenever we have tried to replace, or silence, or ignore,
or reduce the People of God to small elites, we end up creating communities,
projects, theological approaches, spiritualities and structures without roots,
without memory, without faces, without bodies and ultimately, without lives.[2]
This is clearly seen in a peculiar way of understanding the Church’s authority,
one common in many communities where sexual abuse and the abuse of power and
conscience have occurred. Such is the case with clericalism, an approach that
“not only nullifies the character of Christians, but also tends to diminish and
undervalue the baptismal grace that the Holy Spirit has placed in the heart of
our people”.[3] Clericalism, whether fostered by
priests themselves or by lay persons, leads to an excision in the ecclesial
body that supports and helps to perpetuate many of the evils that we are
condemning today. To say “no” to abuse is to say an emphatic “no” to all forms
of clericalism.
It is always helpful to remember that “in salvation history, the
Lord saved one people. We are never completely ourselves unless we belong to a
people. That is why no one is saved alone, as an isolated individual. Rather,
God draws us to himself, taking into account the complex fabric of
interpersonal relationships present in the human community. God wanted to enter
into the life and history of a people” (Gaudete et Exsultate, 6). Consequently, the only way that we have
to respond to this evil that has darkened so many lives is to experience it as
a task regarding all of us as the People of God. This awareness of being part
of a people and a shared history will enable us to acknowledge our past sins and
mistakes with a penitential openness that can allow us to be renewed from
within. Without the active participation of all the Church’s members,
everything being done to uproot the culture of abuse in our communities will
not be successful in generating the necessary dynamics for sound and realistic
change. The penitential dimension of fasting and prayer will help us as God’s
People to come before the Lord and our wounded brothers and sisters as sinners
imploring forgiveness and the grace of shame and conversion. In this way, we
will come up with actions that can generate resources attuned to the Gospel.
For “whenever we make the effort to return to the source and to recover the
original freshness of the Gospel, new avenues arise, new paths of creativity open
up, with different forms of expression, more eloquent signs and words with new
meaning for today’s world” (Evangelii Gaudium, 11).
t is essential that we, as a Church, be able to acknowledge and condemn, with sorrow and shame, the atrocities perpetrated by consecrated persons, clerics, and all those entrusted with the mission of watching over and caring for those most vulnerable. Let us beg forgiveness for our own sins and the sins of others. An awareness of sin helps us to acknowledge the errors, the crimes and the wounds caused in the past and allows us, in the present, to be more open and committed along a journey of renewed conversion.
Likewise, penance and prayer will help us to open our eyes and
our hearts to other people’s sufferings and to overcome the thirst for power
and possessions that are so often the root of those evils. May fasting and
prayer open our ears to the hushed pain felt by children, young people and the
disabled. A fasting that can make us hunger and thirst for justice and impel us
to walk in the truth, supporting all the judicial measures that may be necessary.
A fasting that shakes us up and leads us to be committed in truth and charity
with all men and women of good will, and with society in general, to combatting
all forms of the abuse of power, sexual abuse and the abuse of conscience.
In this way, we can show clearly our calling to be “a sign and
instrument of communion with God and of the unity of the entire human race” (Lumen Gentium, 1).
“If one member suffers, all suffer together with it”, said Saint
Paul. By an attitude of prayer and penance, we will become attuned as
individuals and as a community to this exhortation, so that we may grow in the
gift of compassion, in justice, prevention and reparation. Mary chose to stand
at the foot of her Son’s cross. She did so unhesitatingly, standing firmly by
Jesus’ side. In this way, she reveals the way she lived her entire life. When
we experience the desolation caused by these ecclesial wounds, we will do well,
with Mary, “to insist more upon prayer”, seeking to grow all the more in love
and fidelity to the Church (SAINT IGNATIUS OF LOYOLA, Spiritual
Exercises, 319). She, the first of the disciples, teaches all of us as
disciples how we are to halt before the sufferings of the innocent, without
excuses or cowardice. To look to Mary is to discover the model of a true
follower of Christ.
May the Holy Spirit grant us the grace of conversion and the interior anointing needed to express before these crimes of abuse our compunction and our resolve courageously to combat them.
Vatican City, 20 August
2018
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