Pope urges US Church to witness to unity for effective evangelization
(April 19, 2008) Pope Benedict XVI urged the Catholic Church in the United States
to move past divisions and scandal toward a "new sense of unity and purpose." The
pope, celebrating Mass in St. Patrick's Cathedral in New York on Saturday with bishops,
priests, religious and seminarians, once again addressed the damage and suffering
caused by the clerical sex abuse scandal and called for a time of purification and
healing. More generally, he said it was time to "put aside all anger and contention"
inside the church and embark on a fresh mission of evangelization in society. It
was the Pope’s 4th full day of his April 15 – 20 pastoral visit to the
US, which has as its theme, “Christ Our Hope”. Saturday, April 18 was also the third
anniversary of his election, and he arrived to congratulations from New York Cardinal
Edward M. Egan and an ovation from the 3,000 people who packed the cathedral. Many
of them held aloft cameras or even stood on pews for a glimpse of the pontiff. "We
are greatly honoured that you begin your fourth year as universal shepherd here with
us," Cardinal Egan said. The setting was New York's 130-year-old Gothic cathedral,
built with "the pennies of the poor," as the cardinal said. In his homily, the
pope used the Gothic-style architectural harmony as a metaphor for the church's inner
unity. Just as the cathedral's stained-glass windows flood the interior with splendour,
he said, the beauty of life in the church can really only be understood and experienced
from the inside. Yet sometimes "the light of faith can be dimmed by routine, and
the splendour of the church obscured by the sins and weaknesses of her members," he
said. "For all of us, I think, one of the great disappointments which followed
the Second Vatican Council, with its call for a greater engagement in the church's
mission to the world, has been the experience of division between different groups,
different generations, different members of the same religious family," he said.
The pope said it was important for everyone in the church to open themselves to points
of view that "may not necessarily conform to our own ideas or assumptions." This
is the way to hear what the Spirit is saying, he said. The pope said all those
in the cathedral were "called to be forces of unity within Christ's body." A first
step, he said, is to seek inner reconciliation through penance. He noted that he
has already spoken several times during his U.S. trip about the suffering caused by
priestly sex abuse. Today, he said, he wanted to assure the priests and religious
of his spiritual closeness as they respond to the continuing challenges of the scandal.
"I join you in praying that this will be a time of purification for each and every
particular church and religious community, and a time for healing. I also encourage
you to cooperate with your bishops, who continue to work effectively to resolve this
issue," he said. The pope said the church must be a "beacon of hope" in today's
world, and that means promoting a culture of life. "The proclamation of life, life
in abundance, must be the heart of the new evangelization," he said. "This is the
message of hope we are called to proclaim and embody in a world where self-centeredness,
greed, violence and cynicism so often seem to choke the fragile growth of grace in
people's hearts," he said. The church, he said, must work in a society that "sometimes
seems to have forgotten God and to resent even the most elementary demands of Christian
morality." At the same time, the church's leaders and its pastors should also make
it clear to people that the faith is more than a set of rules, he said. "Perhaps
we have lost sight of this: In a society where the church seems legalistic and 'institutional'
to many people, our most urgent challenge is to communicate the joy born of faith
and the experience of God's love," he said.