Cardinal Parolin invokes God’s wisdom on the US bishops

Baltimore, Md., Nov 12, 2017 / 07:38 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- Speaking to the US bishops gathered for the opening Mass of their plenary assembly on Sunday, the Vatican Secretary of State encouraged them to continue their prophetic witness in the face of the challenges facing the country.

Recalling the first reading from the Book of Wisdom, Cardinal Pietro Parolin said this “divine wisdom is a gift of the Holy Spirit,” which “enables us to serve God by doing his will.”

“May the fire of God’s love inspire you as a body to make wise decisions free of all partisan spirit,” he added.

The US bishops were gathered for Mass Nov. 12 at the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary in Baltimore for their fall assembly. This year’s assembly marks the centenary of the US Conference of Catholic Bishops, which was founded in 1917 as the National Catholic War Council.

The conference “originated in a Spirit-filled and wise response to the human suffering and displacement of the First World War,” Cardinal Parolin noted.

The bishops’ conference began as America’s bishops cared for those who were “forced from their homes and came to the new world in search of security and a new life.”

The cardinal invoked this past “as the Church in your country seeks to provide healing, comfort, and hope to new waves of migrants and refugees.”

Turning to the Gospel reading of the wise and foolish virgins, Cardinal Parolin urged the bishops to a prophetic witness and “to be a source of wisdom and strength,” saying that “the oil with which the Lord asks us to fill our lamps is above all purity and an authentic personal conversion.”

As olives had to be pressed to produce the olive oil for the virgins’ lamps in Christ’s parable, so must we stamp out whatever “stands in the way of our growth in Christ: our worldliness, our desire for human respect.”

He applauded the charitable institutions of the Church in the US, and encouraged the bishops to always bring people to relationship with Christ, “which alone brings true joy and satisfies the desires of the human heart.”

The Vatican Secretary of State looked forward to the series of “Encuentros” which are being held to assess and improve Hispanic ministry in the US.

“In this way you are seeking to foster that heightened sense of missionary discipleship which Pope Francis considers the heart of the new evangelization.”

“In the century prior to the founding of your conference, the challenge facing the Church in this country was to foster communion in an immigrant Church to integrate the diversity of peoples, languages, and cultures in the one faith, and to inculcate a sense of responsible citizenship and concern for the common good.”

“At the same time the Catholic community is called under your guidance to work for  a more just and inclusive society by dispelling the shadows of polarization, divisiveness, and societal breakdown by the pure light of the gospel ” he said. He praised the bishops particularly for “defending the right to life of the unborn” and for their concern for ensuring access to health care.

“I cannot fail to mention the contribution made by the USCCB to the discussion of important social issues and political debates, above all, when this involved the defense of moral values and the rights of the poor, the elderly, the vulnerable, and those who have no voice.”

He also discussed the importance of pastoral care, saying that “in this process of accompaniment may you continue to exercise your prophetic office.”

He gave thanks for the Spirit’s gift of wisdom shown in the bishops’ conference, and concluding, prayed that “you make keep the lamp of faith burning brightly.”

The bishops’ fall assembly meetings begin Monday, and will continue through Wednesday.

 


If you value the news and views Catholic World Report provides, please consider donating to support our efforts. Your contribution will help us continue to make CWR available to all readers worldwide for free, without a subscription. Thank you for your generosity!

Click here for more information on donating to CWR. Click here to sign up for our newsletter.


2 Comments

  1. “May the fire of God’s love inspire you as a body to make wise decisions free of all partisan spirit,” he added.

    One truly wise decision which the U.S. bishops can make at their plenary assembly is the election of Archbishop Joseph Naumann (the Archbishop of Kansas City (Kansas)) as the head of the USCCB Office of Pro-Life Activities, and NOT Cardinal Blase Cupich (the Archbishop of Chicago), who does not hold a wick, much less a candle, to the first head of the USCCB pro-life office back in the 1970s (namely, Cardinal John Patrick Cody, the then-Archbishop of Chicago).

    Another wise decision which the U.S. bishops can come to in their plenary assembly is to make NO revisions or alterations in the current English translation of the Ordinary Form of the Mass – the one which we have been blessed with for almost 6 years, and counting – or in the rubrics. Sometimes, doing nothing is better than doing something which is harmful; this is one of those times. It isn’t broken; don’t “fix” it.

    (However, it would be a quite wise decision to order that the Lectionaries be revised, suppressing the execrable, stilted, wildly inaccurate, laden-with-inclusive-language New American Bible (2006 revised edition) translation and replacing it with either the Ronald Knox translation of the Bible (which would be quite in keeping with the language of the ordinary and the propers of the current Mass translation) or the Navarre Bible translation. But I’m not holding my breath…..)

    Yet another wise decision which the U.S. bishops can come to in their plenary assembly is a clear and unequivocal statement that “Amoris Laetitia” must be interpreted in continuity with the long line of Magisterial teachings of the Catholic Church, including “Humanae Vitae,” “Familiaris Consortio,” the Theology of the Body, and “Veritatis Splendor.” (I know, I know: I’m not holding my breath, waiting for that one, either…..)

    And it would be quite wise for the USCCB to, as a group, denounce the false teachings spread by a certain Jesuit priest who shall remain nameless here – and by his friends, supporters, sycophants, bootlickers, fellow-travelers, and “useful idiots.”

    One hopes that Cardinal Parolin will also remind the U.S. bishops of their duty, without exception, to preach, teach, and defend the eternal and unchanging truths of the Catholic faith, particularly those U.S. bishops (we know who they are, and so do they) who obstinately and obdurately refuse to do so, and instead pervert and falsify the Catholic faith.

  2. First let me say there are many bishops within the USCCB that are aware of the division over AL, its misleading premises, and some with the moral conviction to openly address these issues and some even critical of the Pontiff. Nonetheless the Conference is tightly managed in subservience to this Pontiff the response to Fr Weinandy a prime example. It’s easy to criticize persons in authority and having had experience in management things do look different from top down. Though I learned while all ethical issues cannot should be addressed [in a Govt setting] the important ones must. This is where the Conference has failed. The USCCB remains focused on social issues the primarily the enduring legacy of Saul Alinsky. They highlight Prejudice, Immigration, Family last. Nothing referencing the personal moral breakdown of the practice of Catholicism in America. Evangelization is not appealing to most non Catholics simply because we’ve become strikingly secular humanist following the Pontiff’s agenda and before him Alinsky and his close assoc Bernadine. The Church itself requires evangelization. If the “Fire of God’s Love” mentioned by Parolin were to inflame the Hierarchy they would be converted. What a wonderful thing that would be.

1 Trackback / Pingback

  1. Cardinal Parolin invokes God’s wisdom on the US bishops -

Leave a Reply to Fr Peter Morello Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published.

All comments posted at Catholic World Report are moderated. While vigorous debate is welcome and encouraged, please note that in the interest of maintaining a civilized and helpful level of discussion, comments containing obscene language or personal attacks—or those that are deemed by the editors to be needlessly combative or inflammatory—will not be published. Thank you.


*