INTRODUCTION
1. When I first wrote "A Church for the 21st
Century" - a document, which has become known as "The
Bishop's Vision", - I felt quite tentative and diffident about it.
It seemed almost impertinent for someone who had only been in the
diocese for a relatively short time, should presume to impose his vision
on a Christian community which had already been growing and thriving for
over a hundred years.
In presenting this revised version of "The
Vision", some seven years later, I have lost my diffidence. I know now
that I belong to the diocese as much as anyone does. I am not an
outsider or a newcomer. I am the Bishop and I am fully aware of the
responsibility that brings, but I am becoming more and more conscious of
the fact that I share faith with everyone in the diocese. Your journey
is my journey; your faith is my faith, and your anxieties, fears and
doubts I share with you. As St Augustine writes, "For you I am a Bishop,
but with you I am a Christian."
The major emphasis of the 1997 document was to
affirm that we are a Communion with a strong sense of Mission and the
history of the last seven years has seen this understanding really begin
to take root in the diocese. We still may not fully understand what it
all means but we are increasingly aware that Christ is calling us to be
disciples and, in particular, is calling us to proclaim and live his
Gospel. Through us, his Word can bring hope and life to our times. He
calls us and graces us into courage, commitment and love to "go out to
the whole world to proclaim the Good News." This is the ultimate call
and this is our vision - no longer just mine - of how we can become a
Church for the 21st century. I share this vision with you and invite you
to work with me to make it real.
2. It is an especially good time to be a
Christian because we find ourselves in the midst of a contemporary
search for something beyond ourselves. For some, this is a search for
God. For others, it is a search for some meaning in life, whether or not
belief in God is part of that. But for all of us it is a search for
meaning and purpose.
3. As Catholic Christians, living in the
Diocese of Portsmouth, we place our hope in the Word of the living God,
in Jesus Christ, "the same yesterday, today and tomorrow" (Heb 13:8).
For us, he stands as a beacon of light in a sea of uncertainty and fear.
4. Many today are searching for freshness and
newness. People are looking for something solid, something life-giving,
something, which is not just novelty or gimmick. This is exactly the
time when we "keep our eyes fixed on Jesus, who leads us in our faith
and brings it to perfection" (Heb 12:2); and we must "proclaim the
message and, welcome or unwelcome, insist upon it." (2 Tim 4:2) We have
something important to say, and this is an ideal opportunity to say it.
5. Christ calls us to be part of the community
that proclaims his message - the community of disciples. Our communion
with him and with each other gives us life and inspires us to mission.
"Communion" and "Mission" are the watchwords that lie at the heart of
this vision for the diocese.
6. In the years since 1997 we have begun to
translate the vision into reality but the principles remain; and it is
in them that we, the community of the Diocese of Portsmouth, find our
strength, our courage and our purpose.
THE VISION
7. Communion and Mission are the two vital
words, which describe and run through all that I, as your Bishop, have
been saying over the last few years. Running through the entire work of
the diocese and its agencies, they define precisely for me what I
understand the Church to be: it has to be COMMUNION and it has to have
MISSION. We must be a people with a sense of evangelical and Christian
purpose. Everything else depends on that. All our pastoral priorities
have to be measured against the demands of Communion and Mission.
Communion: a way of describing the
very life of God
8. This has to be revealed to us and it is
in Christ, the Word of God, that we begin to discover the inner life
of God. Christ teaches us that love is to be found at the heart of
God's life. "You must believe me when I say that I am in the Father
and the Father is in me." (Jn 14:11)
9. The love which unites Father and Son, we
call Spirit. Jesus tells us this in St John's Gospel when he says,
"When the Spirit comes whom I shall send to you from the Father, the
Spirit of truth who issues from the Father, he will be my witness."
(Jn 15:26)
10. The Trinity - Father, Son and Spirit in relationship - defines
what communion means. We are invited to share in that relationship
which is the divine life of God. At the heart of the relationship
are three distinct persons, at the same time perfectly united by the
love, which flows between them.
Communion: how we reflect
the life of God
11. In the same way that the persons of the
Trinity are intimately related to each other, so we too are deeply
and intimately related to each other. Created in the image and
likeness of God, we are brought into that communion of love, which
is God. For our part, what we have to do is to love one another
because "everyone who loves is a child of God and knows God." (1 Jn
4:7)
Communion: the Church
12. This communion is established in the
Word of God and in the Sacraments, which are the wonderful,
mysterious ways in which God communicates with us, his chosen
people.
13. Through the Scriptures, proclaimed in
the midst of the assembly, God actually speaks to us, and calls us
to respond. (cf. Sacrosanctum Concilium 7, GIRM 29,
55) "Listening to the Word of God should become a life-giving
encounter which draws from the biblical text the living Word which
questions, directs and shapes our lives." (Novo Millennio Ineunte
39)
14. Through our initiation as Christians we are in communion with
Christ - we are parts of his body. This means that we are also in
communion with each other; and we call this communion "the Church".
It is our sharing in the life of God that creates and sustains this
communion.
15. We become members of the Church through
the sacraments of initiation, which draw us into one body. Together
in Baptism we are given a share in the death and resurrection of
Christ, together in Confirmation we are anointed with the Holy
Spirit for service and mission as disciples, and together in the
Eucharist we are nourished by the very life of God.
"Receive
what you are, become what you receive."
– St Augustine, Sermons 272 |
From Communion to Mission
16. At the heart of our communication of
what the Gospel actually means for us – our "mission" – is the
sharing of our experience of God. This sharing is the living
communion between us, and its communication to each other and to
others is at the heart of our mission as a Church.
17. Such a Church is the one described in
the Acts of the Apostles where St Luke writes "The whole group of
believers was united, heart and soul." (Acts 4:32) He stresses
that it was so powerfully attractive to others that they were eager
to join it: "They remained faithful to the teaching of the Apostles,
to the fellowship, to the breaking of bread and to the prayers....
they were looked up to by everyone. Day by day, the Lord added to
their community those who were being saved. (Acts 2: 42-47)
18. Our vision - and hope - is of ourselves
as the gathered community of the disciples of the Lord, united in
Baptism and bonded together by Christ in the Eucharist. Our mission
is so to live out this "communion" in the power of the Spirit that
we proclaim the Gospel by our words and become the Good News by our
way of life.
19. Another way of saying all this is to
quote these thought-provoking words of the Prophet Zechariah:
"In those days, ten men from nations of every language will take
a Jew by the sleeve and say: we want to go with you, since we have
learned that God is with you." (Zech 8:23)
20. Those words speak of a vision of the
Church as a community, which is so compelling and so attractive that
others are irresistibly drawn to it. It speaks of a "communion"
which is inextricably bound up with "mission".
21. What we are talking about here is
nothing less than a renewal of the whole of humanity (cf.
Evangelii Nuntiandi 18). Our mission is to change the world,
recognising that everything that happens in every area of human
life, every level of society, needs the saving and transfiguring
power of the Gospel.
22. Another way of understanding our
missionary vision is to return to the last words which the Lord
spoke to his disciples just before the Ascension: "Go, therefore,
make disciples of all nations; baptise them in the name of the
Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teach them to
observe all the commands I gave you. And look, I am with you always;
yes, to the end of time." (Matt 28: 19-20)
PRINCIPLES OF COMMUNION AND MISSION
23. If we are united in a communion which
enables us to fulfil our mission, then certain principles must dictate
the way in which we work. These are not simply plucked out of the air
but find their origin in the very life of God as Father, Son and Holy
Spirit – the life of the Trinity.
(a) All are called to holiness
24. Holiness is a gift from God which all
of us have been given – God's life in us. Through our baptism we are
called to respond by being attentive to God living and working in us
in our everyday lives. The more attentive we are to God's life in
us, the more we work to bring our life deeper into God's life.
25. When we seek the face of Jesus, we echo
the words of the disciples who asked him to teach them to pray. As
we do so, we discover that "prayer develops that conversation with
Christ which makes us his intimate friends. Abide in me and I will
abide in you." (John 15:4) (Novo Millennio Ineunte 32)
"Prayer is
not so much what we do but what God does in and through us"
(Ruth Burrows) |
(b) All are drawn together in communion
through Christian initiation
26. We are all called to reflect this
bonding through our relationships. We belong to God and our dignity
and calling comes from our baptism and confirmation. The Eucharist
bonds us together in communion with the Lord and with each other.
The sacraments of initiation are common to us all, and our varied
and different ministries flow from them. What is important is that
we are a community of love; this is the sign we give.
(c) All are called to mission through
Christian initiation
27. Together we form the gathered body of
the disciples of Christ and, therefore, together we "own" the
Church. If the Church is to be present in the centre of people's
lives, then the first priority must be to involve all the
members in the work of evangelisation and mission of the Church, in
its maintenance, and in its ongoing life. The sign we give as Church
must be unmistakeable: everybody, whether clergy or lay, works
together and works collaboratively – and for the Lord.
28. As a matter of priority, therefore, we
need to continue to develop ways of genuine collaboration in the
diocese if our vision is to become a reality. Not only that, but we
need to work in collaboration with our fellow Christians.
Witnessing to our faith
29. There is a growing realisation that
a faith which is deeply held and publicly proclaimed can become
a powerful force for good and a genuine gift for the whole of
society, however uncomfortable it may sometimes cause that
society to feel. We are all beginning to emerge from a mindset
which sees religion as something essentially private: the world
in which we live can cope with privatised religion because it
presents no threat. It is tolerated but attracts few followers
because it is not rooted in authentic Gospel values.
(d) The Eucharist defines the Church
30. The Mass is the heartbeat of the
Church, and Sunday Mass is the visible expression of the communion
that we share. It also creates and nurtures that communion. "The
Church makes the Eucharist, and the Eucharist makes the Church." It
is for this reason that participating in the Mass is the heart of
Sunday for every baptised Catholic. (Novo Millennio Ineunte
36)
| "You have to
be there because without you we can't do what this church –
that's us – needs to do." (Gabe Huck, "Sunday Worship in the
Absence of a Bishop ... of a Priest ... of Anybody?" Pastoral
Music February-March 1997, p.22) |
31. The Eucharist is "the privileged place
where communion is ceaselessly proclaimed and nurtured. Precisely
through sharing in the Eucharist, the Lord's Day also becomes the
Day of the Church, when she can effectively exercise her role as a
sacrament of unity." (Novo Millennio Ineunte 36 following
Dies Domini 35).
32. In talking about Eucharist, we need to
distinguish between the celebration of the Eucharist with the
gathered community, and the individual reception of Communion
outside the normal pattern of the eucharistic celebration - e.g. at
a service of Word and Communion.
(e) Everyone is gifted by the Holy
Spirit
33. There needs to be an enabling of
persons, coupled with the recognition and welcoming of gifts. We
need to have a deep and genuine respect for the different and the
diverse, recognising and welcoming the dignity of difference and
prizing it as a gift from God. Every member of the Church has a
contribution to make and it is vital that they have the
opportunities to do so. They in turn need to realise that what they
do is part of something larger than themselves: that ministry
demands relationship with others. We can only fulfil a ministry
effectively if we are expressing communion lived out in
relationship. Ministry is not about self but about the body. The
gifts of the Spirit are given for the building up of the unity of
the body.
(f) We are called to be a community
of disciples
34. We need to discover and affirm a
fundamental desire to work together because we are called to be a
community of disciples, not isolated individuals nor, indeed,
isolated parishes or schools. The call to collaborative ministry
arises from our innate dignity as disciples of Christ, called by him
into Mission as parts of his Body.
"It's a way of
expressing in our life together what God asks of us and calls us
to be." "It asks us to reflect what God is like in the ways we
live and work together."
(The Sign we give)
|
(g) We need a shared vision
35. The way in which the Church lives out
her calling in particular situations does change, just as a living
body grows and changes. We should boldly grasp the possibility of
new roles and be ready to discern and enable new ways of being
Church with passion, enthusiasm and commitment.
"The rooting
of the Church in time and space mirrors the movements of the
Incarnation itself"
(Novo Millennio Ineunte 3) |
PUTTING THE PRINCIPLES INTO PRACTICE - THE BISHOP'S REFLECTION
36. This vision is for all of us, and it is
important that it continues to be grasped and owned by all of us. The
experience of the last six years, with all the growth that has occurred,
indicates that we are on the right lines and that the ongoing discovery
of the true meaning of "communion" and of "mission" that flows from it
is the right way forward.
Progress to date
37. Taking together the principles for
communion and mission outlined above, these are some of the ways we can
see them being put into practice during the past few years.
The developing role of Pastoral
Councils
38. At whatever level these councils are
found, they exist to facilitate a sharing of resources, expertise,
insights and initiatives on as broad a level as possible. It ties in
well with my desire, expressed in 1997, to concentrate on enabling
as many people as possible to use the undoubted gifts that they
possess.
39. As bishop, I pledged myself to strive
to widen the collaborative basis of my work and the emergence of the
Diocesan Pastoral Council has been evidence of that beginning to
happen. It is as representative as is possible at the moment, though
connections with Deanery and Parish Pastoral Councils still need to
be established or strengthened. The gradual emergence of genuine
pastoral councils at parish and deanery level is beginning to ensure
that pastoral planning and development in the diocese is no longer
an exclusively clerical preserve.
The developing role of lay people
40. In a collaborative Church, the gifts
and talents of all are understood to be priceless and need to be
readily offered and accepted. The parish and diocese belong to all
of us. Lay people are called not simply "to help Father", but to be
in partnership with him and with each other in the community's work
for the Kingdom.
41. Lay people play a vital role in
partnership with clergy in the work of catechesis, sacramental
preparation, counselling and support of all kinds, education and
school governance, and many other areas. Many skilled and competent
lay people are using their gifts and experience at the service of
parishes, deaneries and the diocese.
42. An excellent example of a lay
initiative was our diocesan Gathering in Farnborough Hill to
celebrate the Millennium Jubilee. Quite apart from the fact that the
event brought together nearly 6000 people, clergy and lay, from all
over the diocese, what pleased me most was that this event was
initiated, organised and achieved by a group of dedicated laypeople
who were determined that the Jubilee of the birth of Jesus Christ
should be celebrated publicly and joyously by the whole diocesan
community. This event was a deeply genuine expression of what it
means to be caught up in a vision of the Church, which is a
communion with a deep sense of evangelical mission.
43. But lest this should all sound too
inward looking and "churchy", the diocese depends on the laity to
continue their participation in public life at all levels. They find
themselves in the front line of the Church's mission and in places
where clergy seldom venture. They are "that countless number of men
and women, busy at work in their daily life and activity, oftentimes
far from view and quite unacclaimed by the world, unknown to the
world's great personages but nonetheless looked upon in love by the
Father, untiring labourers who work in the Lord's vineyard.
Confident and steadfast through the power of God's grace, these are
the humble yet great builders of the Kingdom of God in history." (Christifideles
Laici 17)
The developing role of the clergy
44. God promises his people shepherds after
his own heart (Jer 3:15) and this promise is continuously fulfilled
in the calling of our priests and deacons. Their fidelity to this
call is absolutely crucial for the development of communion and
mission as the foundation of our understanding of diocese. The
increased involvement of laypeople takes nothing from the leadership
of the clergy in their sacramental and pastoral ministry, which is
indispensable.
45. But it is not just their ministry that
is important. Their whole-hearted and deeply personal response to
the Lord's call involves them in a life of dedication and sacrifice
- a continuing sign of the presence of the Good Shepherd among us.
46. Life for the clergy is constantly
changing and the demands made on their generosity of spirit and time
are ever increasing. As life becomes more complex and fast moving,
it is increasingly important for the clergy to articulate their
needs for ministry in this changing Church. In this respect, the
"Called by Christ" gathering for the clergy, which took place in
Bournemouth in 1998, was a very important moment for us. It marked a
real openness to the need for on-going formation and it has enabled
us to begin the task of addressing our needs for pastoral and
spiritual skills in today's world. It also meant – very importantly
– that we began to rediscover our need to be able to turn to one
another more and more for encouragement, strength and support.
The developing role of the Religious
of the Diocese
47. There is a particular group of men and
women in the diocese who are often forgotten or, at best, taken for
granted. They are those who have consecrated themselves to God and
the Church in religious life. Much of their work remains unseen but
it is of vital importance to us all. The contemplatives support us
by their hidden life of prayer and sacrifice, by their hospitality
and by their sharing of the facilities of their houses. The
apostolic (or active) religious are conspicuous by their work in
parishes, counselling, catechesis, education, chaplaincy and
commitment to the well being of the wider communities in which they
live. Their contribution to both communion and mission is vital. We
have to encourage and support them if they are to continue to
flourish in the service of the Church. At the same time, as a
diocese we must consider very seriously the place of the newer
congregations and movements which are clearly catching the
imagination and the commitment of younger laypeople today.
The developing role of schools
48. Our schools also contribute in a unique
and indispensable way to the life and mission of the Church. They
too are called to be examples of communion and mission as they form
and educate our young people in an environment founded upon faith in
Jesus Christ, the traditions of our church, and the lived daily
experiences they offer of Christian values and service. They
proclaim the Christian vision of "fullness of life" to which we are
all called, and together with clergy and parents nurture and prepare
our young people for Christian life.
The developing role of the Curia
49. Of all the diocesan structures, the
body known as the Curia has undergone the greatest change. Starting
from a pattern of commissions and councils, which were doing
important work, but often without a marked degree of collaboration
or cohesion, we now have a structure of departments and committees
that work closely and collaboratively together.
50. The Curia enables my work as a bishop.
Those who work in the Curia serve the diocese and me in a variety of
important ways: catechesis, evangelisation, liturgical formation,
collaborative ministry, further education for clergy and laypeople,
schools, finance and property. The Curia is an indispensable part of
the infrastructure of the diocese. Its purpose is to listen, to
support, to encourage and to work with the rest of the community. It
is there to initiate and to stimulate reflections and actions which
challenge us to grow so that we can all truly continue to be
effective in the work that the Lord calls us to do in the part of
his vineyard that is the Diocese of Portsmouth.
51. In addition, there are other diocesan
agencies, not part of the Curia, who also work on behalf of the
diocese, for example in the fields of Child
Protection, the diocesan
marriage tribunal, Christian unity, communications, etc.
52. It should not be forgotten - and this
is to be severely practical - that these things cost money. Ultimate
financial responsibility for the entire life of the diocese rests
with the Diocesan Trustees, but absolutely nothing could be achieved
without the financial giving that comes from our parish
congregations through the levy that is collected from every parish.
Ours is not a rich diocese with limitless resources. We depend on
the generosity of the lay faithful to sustain the wellbeing of our
communion and for the enabling of our mission.
THE WAY FORWARD
53. We have worked hard together over the last
15 years in seeking to become more adequately the community of the
disciples of Christ. That searching and development must continue. We
need a map or a chart for the way ahead - a strategy that will enable us
as a diocese better to seek the face of Christ and follow the call to
holiness and witness that he puts before us.
I cannot impose this strategy from on high. It has to come from a
prayerful reflection that we make together. A process of consultation
and discernment is about to start. I look forward to celebrating the
development of a pastoral strategy for the diocese when we meet in
Reading for our Pastoral Assembly in 2005. That will be a defining
moment for the Diocese of Portsmouth when, in all our different and
varied pastoral circumstances - because our diocese is so varied in its
make-up - we can move forward together with a renewed sense of
missionary purpose and communion.
It is at local level that the specific features of a detailed pastoral
plan have to be identified. As a diocese, we need to discern the goals,
methods and resources that will lead to formation and enrichment of our
people. In this way, under the guidance of the Spirit, we will be
enabled to preach the Good News of Jesus Christ, mould communities and
have a deep and incisive influence in bringing Gospel values to bear in
society and culture. (cf. Novo Millennio Ineunte 29)
54. We are embarked on a venture that will take
us into deep waters and we are involved in a process of ongoing renewal
and change. We cannot get anywhere without the Lord, for without him "in
vain do the builders labour."
We have to remember, therefore, that we are in God's time and in his
hands, which is why prayer and being a people of prayer is such an
important part of this process. We must never forget that because we are
baptised we are his people - "once you were no people, now you are God's
people." (1Pt 2:10)
It is God himself who calls us into communion and it is the same God who
sends us out in mission. We do not go alone or without resources. We are
a gifted and graced people and we are empowered by the words of Jesus
when he says, "I am with you always; yes, till the end of time." (Matt
28:20)
If we can but trust in such a promise, we have nothing to fear and
everything to gain.
References:
(Note: Clicking on the links below will take you out of this site
directly to the documents on the Vatican Web site)
1. Christifideles Laici – Post-synodal
Apostolic Exhortation of His Holiness John Paul II on the Vocation and
the Mission of the Lay Faithful in the Church and in the World
Link to Christifideles Laici
2. Evangelii Nuntiandi – Apostolic exhortation of his Holiness
Pope Paul VI to the Episcopate, to the Clergy and to all the Faithful of
the entire world
Link to Evangelii Nuntiandi
3. Novo Millennio Ineunte The Apostolic Letter is available in
English on the Vatican Web site:
Link
to the Apostolic Letter Novo Millennio Ineunte
4. Sacrosanctum Concilium – Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy
Link to Sacrosanctum Concilium
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