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Pope Benedict XVI's First Message to the Bishops of the United States in Ad Limina Meetings

We ask our readers around the globe to offer intense prayer for all involved in these crucial sessions

The present moment can thus be seen, in positive terms, as a summons to exercise the prophetic dimension of your episcopal ministry by speaking out, humbly yet insistently, in defense of moral truth, and offering a word of hope, capable of opening hearts and minds to the truth that sets us free.

Pope benedict XVI greets the Bishops of the United States in their Ad Limina visits

Pope benedict XVI greets the Bishops of the United States in their Ad Limina visits

VATICAN CITY (Catholic Online) - The Bishops of the United States are in a series of obligatory sessions with the Holy Father called their "ad limina" meetings. These are critical sessions when the successors of the Apostles meet with the successor of the Chief of the Apostles- the successor of Peter, the Pope.

We ask our readers around the globe to offer intense prayer for all involved in these crucial sessions. The Holy Father will give five speeches to the US Bishops. Here is the text of the first speech given to the Bishops from the New York region. The topics addressed are vitally important and reveal that the Pope has a clear pastoral plan for the revitalization, renewal and resurgence of the Catholic Church in the United States:

*****

Dear Brother Bishops,

I greet you all with affection in the Lord and, through you, the Bishops from the United States who in the course of the coming year will make their visits ad limina Apostolorum.

Our meetings are the first since my 2008 Pastoral Visit to your country, which was intended to encourage the Catholics of America in the wake of the scandal and disorientation caused by the sexual abuse crisis of recent decades. I wished to acknowledge personally the suffering inflicted on the victims and the honest efforts made both to ensure the safety of our children and to deal appropriately and transparently with allegations as they arise.

It is my hope that the Church's conscientious efforts to confront this reality will help the broader community to recognize the causes, true extent and devastating consequences of sexual abuse, and to respond effectively to this scourge which affects every level of society. By the same token, just as the Church is rightly held to exacting standards in this regard, all other institutions, without exception, should be held to the same standards.

A second, equally important, purpose of my Pastoral Visit was to summon the Church in America to recognize, in the light of a dramatically changing social and religious landscape, the urgency and demands of a new evangelization. In continuity with this aim, I plan in the coming months to present for your consideration a number of reflections which I trust you will find helpful for the discernment you are called to make in your task of leading the Church into the future which Christ is opening up for us.

Many of you have shared with me your concern about the grave challenges to a consistent Christian witness presented by an increasingly secularized society. I consider it significant, however, that there is also an increased sense of concern on the part of many men and women, whatever their religious or political views, for the future of our democratic societies. They see a troubling breakdown in the intellectual, cultural and moral foundations of social life, and a growing sense of dislocation and insecurity, especially among the young, in the face of wide-ranging societal changes.

Despite attempts to still the Church's voice in the public square, many people of good will continue to look to her for wisdom, insight and sound guidance in meeting this far-reaching crisis. The present moment can thus be seen, in positive terms, as a summons to exercise the prophetic dimension of your episcopal ministry by speaking out, humbly yet insistently, in defense of moral truth, and offering a word of hope, capable of opening hearts and minds to the truth that sets us free.

At the same time, the seriousness of the challenges which the Church in America, under your leadership, is called to confront in the near future cannot be underestimated. The obstacles to Christian faith and practice raised by a secularized culture also affect the lives of believers, leading at times to that "quiet attrition" from the Church which you raised with me during my Pastoral Visit. Immersed in this culture, believers are daily beset by the objections, the troubling questions and the cynicism of a society which seems to have lost its roots, by a world in which the love of God has grown cold in so many hearts.

Evangelization thus appears not simply a task to be undertaken ad extra; we ourselves are the first to need re-evangelization. As with all spiritual crises, whether of individuals or communities, we know that the ultimate answer can only be born of a searching, critical and ongoing self-assessment and conversion in the light of Christ's truth. Only through such interior renewal will we be able to discern and meet the spiritual needs of our age with the ageless truth of the Gospel.

Here I cannot fail to express my appreciation of the real progress which the American Bishops have made, individually and as a Conference, in responding to these issues and in working together to articulate a common pastoral vision, the fruits of which can be seen, for example, in your recent documents on faithful citizenship and on the ...


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1 - 4 of 4 Comments

  1. mikem
    1 year ago

    Jesus said, "As the Father has sent me, I also send you." Jesus also told the Apostles to go and spread the Good News to all nations. The bishops are the successors to the apostles. It is their task...a task that requires supernatural assistance, without which it would be impossible, but with which it is possible. It is the BISHOPS' responsibility to spread the faith. The clergy are the bishop's helpers, and the laity too, if they so choose.
    I think the bishops certainly could use the laity more effectively, train them better, organize them, and empower the laity more to help in the living of the Faith, and the spreading of the faith.

  2. Robert Burford
    1 year ago

    His holiness did not pull any punches. The task is daunting and shows the need for more prayer for our priests and our country.

  3. Lawrence Nyankwarara
    1 year ago

    Thanks a lot your Holiness for that sweet speech to your Brothers in Christ.Indeed you are the successor of St.Peter and that`s what you are supposed to do with your Bishops as Apostles of Christ.
    One important argument i would wish to give to the Bishops in the whole world is that be brave and avoid some sins that have affected the church in the last decades by some priest in the dioceses.
    Another issue it to ambles the Catholic charismatic renewal in your dioceses as here in Africa it`s doing a good work and so many converts have been brought back to the catholic church.
    Otherwise i wish you the best in your meeting as requested by you.

  4. abey
    1 year ago

    Pope Benedict expresses the Catholic Church's Apostolic Root of Faith in our Lord Jesus Christ. Allow Mary the ordained new Eve , the antidote of the Jezebel spirit, on Behalf of Christ, to stand in front against all matters of sex & sexual perversions, brought in through Pagan cultures & being enforced in different names & reasons across the world, especially in the American/European societies, in continuation to the Word of GOD of the manner "Enmity between The Woman & The Serpent, between her seed & the Serpent's .

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