During the Fourteenth General Congregation held
yesterday afternoon, Friday 22th October 2010, the Synod Fathers approved the Nuntius,
the Message to the People of God, at the conclusion of the Special Assembly for the
Middle East of the Synod of Bishops.
The full text (written in Arabic, French,
Italian and English) of the English version is published below:
“Now the company
of those who believed were of one heart and soul” (Acts 4:32)
To our brother
priests, deacons, monks, nuns, consecrated persons, our dear lay faithful and all
people of good will.
Introduction
1.May the grace of our Lord Jesus
Christ, the love of God the Father and the communion of the Holy Spirit be with you.
The
Synod of Bishops for the Middle East was for us a new Pentecost. “Pentecost is the
original event but also a permanent dynamism, and the Synod of Bishops is a privileged
moment in which the grace of Pentecost may be renewed in the Church’s journey” (Pope
Benedict XVI, Homily at the Opening Liturgy, 10 October 2010).
We have come
to Rome, We the Patriarchs and Bishops of the Catholic Churches in the Middle East
with all our spiritual, liturgical, cultural and canonical patrimonies, carrying in
our hearts the concerns of our people.
For the very first time, we have come
together in a Synod, gathered around His Holiness, Pope Benedict XVI, with both cardinals
and archbishops, who are heads of the various offices in the Roman Curia, presidents
of episcopal conferences around the world, who are concerned with the issues of the
Middle East, representatives from the Orthodox Churches and ecclesial communi¬ties
and Jewish and Muslim guests.
We express our gratitude to His Holiness,
Pope Benedict XVI for his care and for his teachings, which guide the journey of the
Church in general and that of our Eastern Churches in particular, especially in the
areas of justice and peace. We thank the episcopal conferences for their solidarity,
their presence in our midst during their pilgrimages to the holy sites and their visits
to our communities. We thank them for guiding our Churches in the various aspects
of our life. We thank the different ecclesial organisations for their effective assistance.
Guided
by the Holy Scriptures and the living Tradition, we have reflected together on the
present and the future of Christians and all peoples of the Middle East. We have meditated
on the issues of this region of the world which God willed, in the mystery of his
love, to be the birthplace of his universal plan of salvation. From there, Abraham’s
vocation was initiated. There, the Word of God, Jesus Christ, took flesh in the womb
of the Virgin Mary by the power of the Holy Spirit. There, Jesus proclaimed the Gospel
of life and the kingdom. There, he died to redeem humanity and free us from sin. There,
he rose from the dead to give new life to all. There, the Church was formed and went
forth to proclaim the Gospel of Christ to the world.
The primary aim of the
Synod is pastoral. Thus, we have carried in our hearts the life, the pains and the
hopes of our people as well as the challenges they need to confront each day “because
God’s love has been poured into our hearts through the Holy Spirit that has been given
to us” (Rm 5:5). Dear sisters and brothers, we therefore address this message to you.
We wish it to be an appeal to safeguard the faith, based on the Word of God, to collaboration
in unity and to communion in the witness of love in every aspect of life.
I.
The Church in the Middle East: Communion and Witness throughout History The Journey
of Faith in the Middle East
2. In the Middle East, the first Christian community
was born. From there, the apostles after Pentecost went evangelising the whole world.
There, the early Christian community lived amid tensions and persecutions, “they devoted
themselves to the apostles’ teaching and fellowship, to the breaking of bread and
the prayers” (Acts 2:42), and no one of them was in need. There, the first martyrs,
with their blood, fortified the foundations of the nascent Church. After them, the
hermits filled the deserts with the perfume of their holiness and their faith. There,
the Fathers of the Eastern Church lived and continued to nourish the Church in both
the East and West through their teachings. In the early centuries and later, missionaries
from our Churches departed for the Far East and the West, bringing with them the light
of Christ. We are the heirs of that heritage. We need to continue to transmit their
message to future generations.
In the past, Our Churches provided saints, priests
and consecrated persons; they still do in the present. Our Churches have also sponsored
many institutions which contributed - and still do - to the well being of our societies
and countries, sacrificing self for the sake of the human person, who is created to
the image of God and is the bearer of his likeness. Some of our Churches continue
to send out missionaries who carry the Word of God to many places in the world. The
pastoral, apostolic and missionary needs mandate us to put together a pastoral master-plan
to promote vocations to the priesthood and religious life in order to ensure the Church
of tomorrow.
We are now at a turning point in our history: The God who
has given us the faith in our Eastern lands 2000 years ago, calls us today to persevere
with courage, strength and steadfastness in bearing the message of Christ and witnessing
to his Gospel, the Gospel of love and peace.
Challenges and Aspirations
3.1.
Today, we face many challenges. The first comes from within ourselves and our Churches.
We are asked by Christ to accept our faith and to apply it to all situations in our
lives. What he asks from our Churches is to strengthen the communion within every
Church sui iuris and that of the Catholic Churches of various traditions, and to exert
every effort in prayer and charitable acts in order to attain the full unity of all
Christians so as to fulfil the prayer of Christ: “that they may all be one; even as
you, Father, are in me, and I in you, that they also may be in us, so that the world
may believe that you have sent me” (Jn 17:21).
3.2. The second challenge comes
from the outside, namely, political conditions, security in our countries and religious
pluralism.
We have evaluated the social situation and the public security in
all our countries in the Middle East. We have taken account of the impact of the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict on the whole region, especially on the Palestinians who are suffering the
consequences of the Israeli occupation: the lack of freedom of movement, the wall
of separation and the military checkpoints, the political prisoners, the demolition
of homes, the disturbance of socio-economic life and the thousands of refugees. We
have reflected on the suffering and insecurity in which Israelis live. We have meditated
on the situation of the holy city of Jerusalem. We are anxious about the unilateral
initiatives that threaten its composition and risk to change its demographic balance.
With all this in mind, we see that a just and lasting peace is the only salvation
for everyone and for the good of the region and its peoples.
3.3. We have reflected
in our meetings and in our prayers the keen sufferings of the Iraqi people. We have
recalled the Christians assassinated in Iraq, the continued suffering of the Church
in Iraq and her sons who have been displaced and dispersed throughout the world, bringing
with them the concerns for their land and their fatherland. The synod fathers have
expressed their solidarity with the people and the Churches in Iraq and have expressed
their desire that the emigrants, forced to leave their country, might find in the
welcoming countries the necessary support to be able to return to their homeland and
live in security.
3.4. We have extensively treated relations between Christians
and Muslims. All of us share a common citizenship in our countries. Here we want to
affirm, according to our Christian vision, a fundamental principle which ought to
govern our relations, namely, God wants us to be Christians in and for our Middle
Eastern societies. This is God’s plan for us. This is our mission and vocation - to
live as Christians and Muslims together. Our actions in this area will be guided by
the commandment of love and by the power of the Spirit within us.
The second
principle which governs our relations is the fact that we are an integral part of
our societies. Our mission, based on our faith and our duty to our home countries,
obliges us to contribute to the construction of our countries as fellow-citizens,
Muslims, Jews and Christians alike.
II. Communion and Witness Within the Catholic
Churches of the Middle East To the Faithful of Our Churches
4.1. Jesus says
to us: “You are the salt of the earth, the light of the world” (Mt 5:13.14). Your
mission in our societies, beloved faithful, through faith, hope and love, is to be
like “salt” which gives savour and meaning to life; to be like “light” by proclaiming
the truth which scatters the darkness; and to be like the “leaven” which transforms
hearts and minds. The first Christians of Jerusalem were few in number, yet they were
able to take the Gospel to the ends of the earth because of the grace of “the Lord
who acted with them and confirmed their Word by signs” (Mk 16:20).
4.2. We
want to greet you, Christians of the Middle East, and we thank you for all you have
achieved in your families and societies, in your Churches and nations. We commend
you for your perseverance in times of adversity, suffering and anguish.
4.3.
Dear priests, our co-workers in the mission of catechesis, liturgy and pastoral work,
we renew our friendship and our trust in you. Continue to transmit to your faithful
with zeal and perseverance the Gospel of life and Church’s tradition through your
preaching, catechesis, spiritual direction and the good example of your lives. Build
up the faith of the People of God to make of it a civilisation of love. Provide the
sacraments to the People of God so that this People might aspire to be renewed. Gather
them together in the union of love by the gift of the Holy Spirit.
Dear consecrated
men and women in the world, we express to you our gratitude and with you we thank
God for the gift of the evangelical counsels – of consecrated chastity, of poverty
and obedience – through which you have made the gift of yourselves as you follow Christ,
the special love to whom you long to witness. It is thanks to your diverse apostolic
initiatives that you are the true treasure and wealth of our Churches and a spiritual
oasis in our parishes, dioceses and missions.
We unite ourselves spiritually
to hermits, to monks and nuns who have dedicated their lives to prayer in contemplative
monasteries, sanctifying the hours of day and night, carrying the Church’s concerns
and needs to God in their prayers. You offer the world a sign of hope through the
witness of your life.
4.4. We express to you, faithful lay people, our esteem
and our friendship. We appreciate everything you do for your families and societies,
your Churches and home countries. Remain steadfast amidst trials and difficulties.
We are filled with gratitude to the Lord for the charisms and talents which he has
showered you and which equip you to participate, through the power of your baptism
and chrismations, in the Church’s mission and her apostolic work to permeate the temporal
world with the spirit and values of the Gospel. We invite you to give the witness
of an authentic Christian life, of a conscientious religious practice and of good
morals. Have the courage objectively to proclaim the truth.
Those of you
who suffer in body, in soul and spirit, the oppressed, those forced from your homes,
the persecuted, prisoners and detainees, we carry you all in our prayers. Unite your
suffering to that of Christ the Redeemer and seek in his cross patience and strength.
By the merit of your sufferings, you gain God’s merciful love.
We greet each
of our Christian families and we look upon your vocation and mission with esteem as
a living cell of society and a natural school of virtue and ethical and human values,
the “domestic Church” which transmits the practices of prayer and of faith from one
generation to the next. We thank parents and grandparents for the education of their
children and grandchil¬dren, who, like Jesus grow “in wisdom, in stature and grace
in the sight of God and men” (Lk 2:52). We commit ourselves to the defence of the
family through our pastoral programmes on its behalf, through marriage preparation
courses and centres, open to all but mainly to couples in difficulty, where they can
be welcomed and obtain counseling, and by defending the fundamental rights of the
family.
We now wish to speak to the women of our Churches in a special way.
We express to you our appreciation for what you are in the various states of life:
girls, mothers, educators, consecrated women and those who engaged in public life.
We revere you, because you harbour human life within you from its very beginnings,
giving it care and tenderness. God has given you a special sensitivity for everything
that pertains to education, humanitarian work and the apostolic life. We give thanks
to God for your activities and we hope that you will be able to exercise greater responsibility
in public life.
Young women and men, we look to you with the same love which
Christ had for the young man in the Gospel (cf. Mk 10:21). You are the potential and
renewing force for the future of our Churches, our communities and our countries.
Plan your life under the loving gaze of Christ. Be responsible citizens and sincere
believers. The Church joins you in your desire to find work commensurate with your
talents, work which will help to stimulate your creativity, providing for your future
and making possible the formation of a family of believers. Overcome the temptation
of materialism and consumerism. Be strong in your Christian values.
We greet
the heads of Catholic institutions of education. Pursue excellence and the Christian
spirit in your teaching and education. Aim at the consolidation of a culture of harmonious
living and concern for the poor and disabled. In spite of the challenges which confront
your institutions, we invite you to maintain them, so as to further the Church’s educative
mission and to promote the development and common good of our societies.
We
address with great esteem those who work in the social sector. In your institutions
you are at the service of charity. We encourage and support you in this mission of
development, guided by the rich social teaching of the Church. Through your work,
you strengthen the bonds of fellowship between people and serve the poor, the marginalised,
the sick, refugees and prisoners without discrimination. You are guided by the words
of the Lord Jesus: “Everything you do to one of these little ones, you do it to me!”
(Mt 25:40).
We look with hope to prayer groups and apostolic movements. They
are schools where our faith can mature and we can be given the strength to live that
faith in family and society. We appreciate their activities in parishes and dioceses
and their support for pastors, in accordance with the Church’s directives. We thank
God for these groups and movements which are active cells in the parish and seed-beds
for vocations to both the priesthood and the consecrated life.
We appreciate
the role of the means of social communication, both printed and audio-visual. We thank
you journalists for your collaboration with the Church in broadcasting her teachings
and activities and, over the course of these days, for having given global news coverage
to the Special Assembly for the Middle East of the Synod.
We are pleased with
the contribution of the media, both international and Catholic. With regard to the
Middle East, Télé Lumiere-Noursat merits a special mention. We hope it will be able
to continue its service of providing information and forming the faith, of working
on behalf of Christian unity, of consolidating the Christian presence in the Middle
East, of strengthening interreligious dialogue and the communion of all peoples of
Middle Eastern origin, presently in every part of the globe.
To Our Faithful
in the Diaspora
5. Emigration has become a generalised phenomenon by Christians,
Muslims and Jews alike. All emigrate for reasons arising from political and economic
instability. However, Christians also emigrate from a sense of insecurity, in varying
degrees, in many Middle Eastern countries. May Christians have trust in the future
and continue to live in their dear countries.
We send our greetings to you,
members of our Churches in the various countries of the Diaspora. We ask you to keep
alive in your hearts and concerns the memory of your countries and your Churches.
You can contribute to their development and their growth by your prayers, your thoughts,
your visits and by various other means, despite the fact that you are far from the
Middle East.
Look at your goods and your properties in your home country; do
not abandon and sell them too quickly. Keep them as your patrimony and as a piece
of the homeland to which you remain attached, a homeland which you love and support.
The land is part of a person's identity and his mission. It is a vital aspect of the
lives of those who remain there and for those who one day will return there. The land
is a public good, a good of the community and a common patrimony. It should not be
reduced to a question of individual interests on the part of those who own it and
who alone decide, according to their desires, to keep or abandon it.
We accompany
you with our prayers, you the children of our Churches and of our countries, forced
to emigrate. Bear with you your faith, your culture and your patrimony, so as to enrich
your new countries which provide you with peace, freedom and work. Look towards the
future with confidence and joy. Hold fast to your spiritual values, to your cultural
traditions and to your national patrimony, in order to offer to the countries which
welcome you the best of yourselves and the best of that which you have. We thank the
Churches of the countries of the Diaspora which have received our faithful and unceasingly
collaborate with us to ensure the necessary pastoral services for them.
To
the Migrants in Our Countries and Our Churches
6. We send our greetings to
all immigrants of varying nationalities, who have come to our countries seeking employment.
We welcome you, beloved faithful, and we see your faith as a source of enrichment
and a support for the faithful of our Churches. We joyously provide you with every
spiritual assistance you might need.
We ask our Churches to pay special attention
to these brothers and sisters and their difficulties, whatever may be their religion,
especially when their rights and dignity are subject to abuse. They come to us not
simply to seek the means for living but offer the services which our countries need.
Their dignity comes from God. Like every human person, they have rights which must
be respected. No one should violate those rights. That is why we call upon the various
governments which receive them to respect and defend their rights.
Communion
and Witness Together with the Orthodox and Protestant Communities in the Middle East
7.
We send our greetings to the Orthodox and Protestant Communities in our countries.
Together we work for the good of all Christians, that they may remain, grow and prosper.
We share the same journey. Our challenges are the same and our future is the same.
We wish to bear witness together as disciples of Christ. Only through our unity can
we accomplish the mission that God has entrusted to us, despite the differences among
our Churches. The prayer of Christ is our support; the commandment of love unites
us, even if the road towards full communion is still distant for us.
We have
walked together in the Middle East Council of Churches and we wish, with God’s grace,
to continue on this path and to promote its activity, having as an ultimate goal a
common testimony to our faith, the service of our faithful and of all our countries.
We acknowledge and encourage all initiatives for ecumenical dialogue in each of our
countries.
We express our gratitude to the World Council of Churches and to
the different ecumenical organisations which work for the unity of the Churches and
for their support.
IV. Cooperation and Dialogue with Our Fellow-Citizens, the
Jews
8. The same Scriptures unite us; the Old Testament, the Word of God is
for both you and us. We believe all that God revealed there, since he called Abraham,
our common father in the faith, Father of Jews, of Christians and of Muslims. We believe
in the promises of God and his covenant given to Abraham and to you. We believe that
the Word of God is eternal.
The Second Vatican Council published the document
Nostra aetate which treats interreligious dialogue with Judaism, Islam and the other
religions. Other documents have subsequently clarified and developed the relationship
with Judaism. On-going dialogue is taking place between the Church and the representatives
of Judaism. We hope that this dialogue can bring us to work together to press those
in authority to put and end to the political conflict which results in separating
us and disrupting everyday life in our countries.
It is time for us to
commit ourselves together to a sincere, just and permanent peace. Both Christians
and Jews are called to this task by the Word of God. In his Word, we are invited us
to listen to the voice of God “who speaks of peace”: “Let me hear what God the Lord
will speak, for he will speak peace to his people, to his holy ones” (Ps 85:9). Recourse
to theological and biblical positions which use the Word of God to wrongly justify
injustices is not acceptable. On the contrary, recourse to religion must lead every
person to see the face of God in others and to treat them according to their God-given
prerogatives and God’s commandments, namely, according to God's bountiful goodness,
mercy, justice and love for us.
V. Cooperation and Dialogue with Our Fellow-Citizens,
the Muslims
9. We are united by the faith in one God and by the commandment
that says: do good and avoid evil. The words of the Second Vatican Council on the
relations with other religions offer the basis for the relationship between the Catholic
Church and the Muslims: “The Church regards with esteem also the Muslims. They adore
the one God, living and subsisting in Himself; merciful and all- powerful, the Creator
of heaven and earth, who has spoken to men” (Nostra aetate 3).
We say to our
Muslim fellow-citizens: we are brothers and sisters; God wishes us to be together,
united by one faith in God and by the dual commandment of love of God and neighbour.
Together we will construct our civil societies on the basis of citizenship, religious
freedom and freedom of conscience. Together we will work for the promotion of justice,
peace, the rights of persons and the values of life and of the family. The construction
of our countries is our common responsibility. We wish to offer to the East and to
the West a model of coexistence between different religions and of positive collaboration
between different civilisations for the good of our countries and that of all humanity.
Since
the appearance of Islam in the seventh century and to the present, we have lived together
and we have collaborated in the creation of our common civilisation. As in the past
and still existent today, some imbalances are present in our relations. Through dialogue
we must avoid all imbalances and misunderstandings. Pope Benedict XVI tells us that
our dialogue must not be a passing reality. It is rather a vital necessity on which
our future depends (Pope Benedict XVI, Meeting with Representatives from the Muslim
Communities, Cologne, 20 August 2005). Our duty then is to educate believers concerning
interreligious dialogue, the acceptance of pluralism and mutual esteem.
VI.
Our Participation in Public Life: An Appeal to the Governments and to the Political
Leadership in Our Countries
10. We appreciate the efforts which have been expended
for the common good and the service to our societies. You are in our prayers and
we ask God to guide your steps. We address you regarding the importance of equality
among all citizens. Christians are original and authentic citizens who are loyal
to their fatherland and assume their duties towards their country. It is natural that
they should enjoy all the rights of citizenship, freedom of conscience, freedom of
worship and freedom in education, teaching and the use of the mass media.
We appeal to you to redouble your efforts to establish a just and lasting peace
throughout the region and to stop the arms race, which will lead to security and economic
prosperity and stop the hemorrhage of emigration which empties our countries of its
vital forces. Peace is a precious gift entrusted by God to human family, whose members
are to be “peacemakers who will be called children of God” (Mt 5:9).
VII. Appeal
to the International Community
11. The citizens of the countries of the Middle
East call upon the international community, particularly the United Nations conscientiously
to work to find a peaceful, just and definitive solution in the region, through the
application of the Security Council’s resolutions and taking the necessary legal
steps to put an end to the occupation of the different Arab territories.
The
Palestinian people will thus have an independent and sovereign homeland where they
can live with dignity and security. The State of Israel will be able to enjoy peace
and security within their internationally recognized borders. The Holy City of Jerusalem
will be able to acquire its proper status, which respects its particular character,
its holiness and the religious patrimony of the three religions: Jewish, Christian
and Muslim. We hope that the two-State-solution might become a reality and not a dream
only.
Iraq will be able to put an end to the consequences of its deadly war
and re-establish a secure way of life which will protect all its citizens with all
their social structures, both religious and national. Lebanon will be able to enjoy
sovereignty over its entire territory, strengthen its national unity and carry on
in its vocation to be the model of coexistence between Christians and Muslims, of
dialogue between different cultures and religions, and of the promotion of basic public
freedoms.
We condemn violence and terrorism from wherever it may proceed as
well as all religious extremism. We condemn all forms of racism, anti-Semitism, anti-Christianism
and Islamophobia and we call upon the religions to assume their responsibility to
promote dialogue between cultures and civilisations in our region and in the entire
world.
Conclusion: Continue to Bear Witness to the Divine Path That Has Been
Shown to Us in the Person of Jesus
12. Brothers and sisters, in closing, we
say with the St. John the Apostle: “What was from the beginning, what we have heard,
what we have seen with our eyes, what we looked upon and touched with our hands concerns
the Word of life for the life was made visible; we have seen it and testify to it
and proclaim to you the eternal life that was with the Father and was made visible
to us what we have seen and heard we proclaim now to you, so that you too may have
fellowship with us; for our fellowship is with the Father and with his Son, Jesus
Christ.”(1 Jn 1:1-3).
This Divine Life which has appeared to the apostles over
2000 years ago in the Person of our Lord Jesus Christ and to which the Church has
witnessed throughout the course of her history will always remain the life of our
Churches in the Middle East and the object of our witness, sustained by the promise
of the Lord:“Behold, I am with you always, until the end of the time” (Mt 28:20).
Together we proceed on our journey with hope,“and hope does not disappoint, because
the love of God has been poured out into our hearts through the holy Spirit that has
been given to us” (Rm 5:5).
We confess that, until now, we have not done what
is possible to better live communion in our communities. We have not done enough to
better live communion among our communities. We have not done everything possible
to confirm you in your faith and to give you the spiritual nourishment you need in
your difficulties. The Lord invites us to a conversion as individuals and communities.
Today
we return to you full of hope, strength and resolution, bearing with us the message
of the Synod and its recommendations in order to study them together and to put them
into practice in our Churches, each one according to the Church’s states of life.
We hope also that this new effort might be ecumenical.
We make a humble and
sincere appeal to you, that together we might embark on the road of conversion, allowing
ourselves to be renewed through the grace of the Holy Spirit and again draw close
to God.
To the Most Holy Virgin Mary, Mother of the Church and Queen of Peace,
under whose protection we have accomplished our Synodal task, we entrust our journey
towards new, Christian horizons in the faith of Christ and through the power of his
word: “Behold, I make all things new” (Rev 21:5).