"If you bite and devour one another, take heed 
that you are not consumed by one another"

<http://chiesa.espresso.repubblica.it/articolo/1337492?eng=y>http://chiesa.espresso.repubblica.it/articolo/1337492?eng=y
 


The complete text of the letter written by Pope 
Benedict XVI to the Catholic bishops, in reply to 
the "avalanche of protests" against his decision 
to lift the excommunication from the Lefebvrists

by Benedict XVI


[]



Dear Brothers in the Episcopal Ministry!

The remission of the excommunication of the four 
Bishops consecrated in 1988 by Archbishop 
Lefebvre without a mandate of the Holy See has 
for many reasons caused, both within and beyond 
the Catholic Church, a discussion more heated 
than any we have seen for a long time. Many 
Bishops felt perplexed by an event which came 
about unexpectedly and was difficult to view 
positively in the light of the issues and tasks facing the Church today.

Even though many Bishops and members of the 
faithful were disposed in principle to take a 
positive view of the Pope’s concern for 
reconciliation, the question remained whether 
such a gesture was fitting in view of the 
genuinely urgent demands of the life of faith in 
our time. Some groups, on the other hand, openly 
accused the Pope of wanting to turn back the 
clock to before the Council: as a result, an 
avalanche of protests was unleashed, whose 
bitterness laid bare wounds deeper than those of the present moment.

I therefore feel obliged to offer you, dear 
Brothers, a word of clarification, which ought to 
help you understand the concerns which led me and 
the competent offices of the Holy See to take 
this step. In this way I hope to contribute to peace in the Church.

An unforeseen mishap for me was the fact that the 
Williamson case came on top of the remission of 
the excommunication. The discreet gesture of 
mercy towards four Bishops ordained validly but 
not legitimately suddenly appeared as something 
completely different: as the repudiation of 
reconciliation between Christians and Jews, and 
thus as the reversal of what the Council had laid 
down in this regard to guide the Church’s path.

A gesture of reconciliation with an ecclesial 
group engaged in a process of separation thus 
turned into its very antithesis: an apparent step 
backwards with regard to all the steps of 
reconciliation between Christians and Jews taken 
since the Council – steps which my own work as a 
theologian had sought from the beginning to take part in and support.

That this overlapping of two opposed processes 
took place and momentarily upset peace between 
Christians and Jews, as well as peace within the 
Church, is something which I can only deeply 
deplore. I have been told that consulting the 
information available on the internet would have 
made it possible to perceive the problem early 
on. I have learned the lesson that in the future 
in the Holy See we will have to pay greater 
attention to that source of news. I was saddened 
by the fact that even Catholics who, after all, 
might have had a better knowledge of the 
situation, thought they had to attack me with 
open hostility. Precisely for this reason I thank 
all the more our Jewish friends, who quickly 
helped to clear up the misunderstanding and to 
restore the atmosphere of friendship and trust 
which – as in the days of Pope John Paul II – has 
also existed throughout my pontificate and, thank God, continues to exist.

Another mistake, which I deeply regret, is the 
fact that the extent and limits of the provision 
of 21 January 2009 were not clearly and 
adequately explained at the moment of its publication.

The excommunication affects individuals, not 
institutions. An episcopal ordination lacking a 
pontifical mandate raises the danger of a schism, 
since it jeopardizes the unity of the College of 
Bishops with the Pope. Consequently the Church 
must react by employing her most severe 
punishment – excommunication – with the aim of 
calling those thus punished to repent and to 
return to unity. Twenty years after the 
ordinations, this goal has sadly not yet been attained.

The remission of the excommunication has the same 
aim as that of the punishment: namely, to invite 
the four Bishops once more to return. This 
gesture was possible once the interested parties 
had expressed their recognition in principle of 
the Pope and his authority as Pastor, albeit with 
some reservations in the area of obedience to his 
doctrinal authority and to the authority of the Council.

Here I return to the distinction between 
individuals and institutions. The remission of 
the excommunication was a measure taken in the 
field of ecclesiastical discipline: the 
individuals were freed from the burden of 
conscience constituted by the most serious of 
ecclesiastical penalties. This disciplinary level 
needs to be distinguished from the doctrinal 
level. The fact that the Society of Saint Pius X 
does not possess a canonical status in the Church 
is not, in the end, based on disciplinary but on 
doctrinal reasons. As long as the Society does 
not have a canonical status in the Church, its 
ministers do not exercise legitimate ministries 
in the Church. There needs to be a distinction, 
then, between the disciplinary level, which deals 
with individuals as such, and the doctrinal 
level, at which ministry and institution are 
involved. In order to make this clear once again: 
until the doctrinal questions are clarified, the 
Society has no canonical status in the Church, 
and its ministers – even though they have been 
freed of the ecclesiastical penalty – do not 
legitimately exercise any ministry in the Church.

In light of this situation, it is my intention 
henceforth to join the Pontifical Commission 
"Ecclesia Dei" – the body which has been 
competent since 1988 for those communities and 
persons who, coming from the Society of Saint 
Pius X or from similar groups, wish to return to 
full communion with the Pope – to the 
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. This 
will make it clear that the problems now to be 
addressed are essentially doctrinal in nature and 
concern primarily the acceptance of the Second 
Vatican Council and the post-conciliar 
magisterium of the Popes. The collegial bodies 
with which the Congregation studies questions 
which arise (especially the ordinary Wednesday 
meeting of Cardinals and the annual or biennial 
Plenary Session) ensure the involvement of the 
Prefects of the different Roman Congregations and 
representatives from the world’s Bishops in the process of decision-making.

The Church’s teaching authority cannot be frozen 
in the year 1962 – this must be quite clear to 
the Society. But some of those who put themselves 
forward as great defenders of the Council also 
need to be reminded that Vatican II embraces the 
entire doctrinal history of the Church. Anyone 
who wishes to be obedient to the Council has to 
accept the faith professed over the centuries, 
and cannot sever the roots from which the tree draws its life.

I hope, dear Brothers, that this serves to 
clarify the positive significance and also the 
limits of the provision of 21 January 2009. But 
the question still remains: Was this measure 
needed? Was it really a priority? Aren’t other things perhaps more important?

Of course there are more important and urgent 
matters. I believe that I set forth clearly the 
priorities of my pontificate in the addresses 
which I gave at its beginning. Everything that I 
said then continues unchanged as my plan of 
action. The first priority for the Successor of 
Peter was laid down by the Lord in the Upper Room 
in the clearest of terms: "You… strengthen your 
brothers" (Lk 22:32). Peter himself formulated 
this priority anew in his first Letter: "Always 
be prepared to make a defence to anyone who calls 
you to account for the hope that is in you" (1 Pet 3:15).

In our days, when in vast areas of the world the 
faith is in danger of dying out like a flame 
which no longer has fuel, the overriding priority 
is to make God present in this world and to show 
men and women the way to God. Not just any god, 
but the God who spoke on Sinai; to that God whose 
face we recognize in a love which presses "to the 
end" (cf. Jn 13:1) – in Jesus Christ, crucified 
and risen. The real problem at this moment of our 
history is that God is disappearing from the 
human horizon, and, with the dimming of the light 
which comes from God, humanity is losing its 
bearings, with increasingly evident destructive effects.

Leading men and women to God, to the God who 
speaks in the Bible: this is the supreme and 
fundamental priority of the Church and of the 
Successor of Peter at the present time. A logical 
consequence of this is that we must have at heart the unity of all believers.

Their disunity, their disagreement among 
themselves, calls into question the credibility 
of their talk of God. Hence the effort to promote 
a common witness by Christians to their faith – 
ecumenism – is part of the supreme priority. 
Added to this is the need for all those who 
believe in God to join in seeking peace, to 
attempt to draw closer to one another, and to 
journey together, even with their differing 
images of God, towards the source of Light – this 
is interreligious dialogue. Whoever proclaims 
that God is Love "to the end" has to bear witness 
to love: in loving devotion to the suffering, in 
the rejection of hatred and enmity – this is the 
social dimension of the Christian faith, of which 
I spoke in the encyclical "Deus caritas est".

So if the arduous task of working for faith, hope 
and love in the world is presently (and, in 
various ways, always) the Church’s real priority, 
then part of this is also made up of acts of 
reconciliation, small and not so small. That the 
quiet gesture of extending a hand gave rise to a 
huge uproar, and thus became exactly the opposite 
of a gesture of reconciliation, is a fact which we must accept.

But I ask now: Was it, and is it, truly wrong in 
this case to meet half-way the brother who "has 
something against you" (cf. Mt 5:23ff.) and to 
seek reconciliation? Should not civil society 
also try to forestall forms of extremism and to 
incorporate their eventual adherents – to the 
extent possible – in the great currents shaping 
social life, and thus avoid their being 
segregated, with all its consequences? Can it be 
completely mistaken to work to break down 
obstinacy and narrowness, and to make space for 
what is positive and retrievable for the whole?

I myself saw, in the years after 1988, how the 
return of communities which had been separated 
from Rome changed their interior attitudes; I saw 
how returning to the bigger and broader Church 
enabled them to move beyond one-sided positions 
and broke down rigidity so that positive energies 
could emerge for the whole. Can we be totally 
indifferent about a community which has 491 
priests, 215 seminarians, 6 seminaries, 88 
schools, 2 university-level institutes, 117 
religious brothers, 164 religious sisters and 
thousands of lay faithful? Should we casually let 
them drift farther from the Church? I think for 
example of the 491 priests. We cannot know how 
mixed their motives may be. All the same, I do 
not think that they would have chosen the 
priesthood if, alongside various distorted and 
unhealthy elements, they did not have a love for 
Christ and a desire to proclaim him and, with 
him, the living God. Can we simply exclude them, 
as representatives of a radical fringe, from our 
pursuit of reconciliation and unity? What would then become of them?

Certainly, for some time now, and once again on 
this specific occasion, we have heard from some 
representatives of that community many unpleasant 
things – arrogance and presumptuousness, an 
obsession with one-sided positions, etc. Yet to 
tell the truth, I must add that I have also 
received a number of touching testimonials of 
gratitude which clearly showed an openness of 
heart. But should not the great Church also allow 
herself to be generous in the knowledge of her 
great breadth, in the knowledge of the promise 
made to her? Should not we, as good educators, 
also be capable of overlooking various faults and 
making every effort to open up broader vistas?

And should we not admit that some unpleasant 
things have also emerged in Church circles? At 
times one gets the impression that our society 
needs to have at least one group to which no 
tolerance may be shown; which one can easily 
attack and hate. And should someone dare to 
approach them – in this case the Pope – he too 
loses any right to tolerance; he too can be 
treated hatefully, without misgiving or restraint.

Dear Brothers, during the days when I first had 
the idea of writing this letter, by chance, 
during a visit to the Roman Seminary, I had to 
interpret and comment on Galatians 5:13-15. I was 
surprised at the directness with which that 
passage speaks to us about the present moment: 
"Do not use your freedom as an opportunity for 
the flesh, but through love be servants of one 
another. For the whole law is fulfilled in one 
word: ‘You shall love your neighbour as 
yourself’. But if you bite and devour one 
another, take heed that you are not consumed by one another."

I am always tempted to see these words as another 
of the rhetorical excesses which we occasionally 
find in Saint Paul. To some extent that may also 
be the case. But sad to say, this "biting and 
devouring" also exists in the Church today, as 
expression of a poorly understood freedom. Should 
we be surprised that we too are no better than 
the Galatians? That at the very least we are 
threatened by the same temptations? That we must 
always learn anew the proper use of freedom? And 
that we must always learn anew the supreme priority, which is love?

The day I spoke about this at the Major Seminary, 
the feast of Our Lady of Trust was being 
celebrated in Rome. And so it is: Mary teaches us 
trust. She leads us to her Son, in whom all of us 
can put our trust. He will be our guide – even in 
turbulent times. And so I would like to offer 
heartfelt thanks to all the many Bishops who have 
lately offered me touching tokens of trust and 
affection, and above all assured me of their prayers.

My thanks also go to all the faithful who in 
these days have given me testimony of their 
constant fidelity to the Successor of Saint 
Peter. May the Lord protect all of us and guide 
our steps along the way of peace. This is the 
prayer that rises up instinctively from my heart 
at the beginning of this Lent, a liturgical 
season particularly suited to interior 
purification, one which invites all of us to look 
with renewed hope to the light which awaits us at Easter.

With a special Apostolic Blessing, I remain

Yours in the Lord,

BENEDICTUS PP. XVI

 From the Vatican, 10 March 2009

__________


The meditation – cited in the letter – given by 
Benedict XVI at the major seminary in Rome on 
February 20, 2009, on "biting and devouring" in the Church:

<http://www.vatican.va/holy_father/benedict_xvi/speeches/2009/february/documents/hf_ben-xvi_spe_20090220_seminario-maggiore_en.html>>
 
"It is always a great joy for me..."

__________


For the background to the letter, see on www.chiesa:

<http://chiesa.espresso.repubblica.it/articolo/1337148?eng=y>> 
Double Disaster at the Vatican: Of Governance, and of Communication (4.2.2009)

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