The Vatican, October 18, 2008
The Word of God
In the Life and Mission of the Church
Your Holiness,
Synodal Fathers,
It is at once humbling and inspiring to be graciously invited by Your
Holiness to address the XIIth Ordinary General Assembly of this
auspicious Synod of Bishops, an historical meeting of Bishops of the
Roman Catholic Church from throughout the world, gathered in one place
to meditate on “the Word of God” and deliberate on the experience and
expression of this Word “in the Life and Mission of the Church.”
This gracious invitation of Your Holiness to our Modesty is a gesture
full of meaning and significance - we dare say an historic event in
itself. For it is the first time in history that an Ecumenical
Patriarch is offered the opportunity to address a Synod of the Bishops
of the Roman Catholic Church, and thus be part of the life of this
sister Church at such a high level. We regard this as a manifestation
of the work of the Holy Spirit leading our Churches to a closer and
deeper relationship with each other, an important step towards the
restoration of our full communion.
It is well known that the Orthodox Church attaches to the Synodical
system fundamental ecclesiological importance. Together with primacy
synodality constitutes the backbone of the Church’s government and
organisation. As our Joint International Commission on the Theological
Dialogue between our Churches expressed it in the Ravenna document,
this interdependence between synodality and primacy runs through all
the levels of the Church’s life: local, regional and universal.
Therefore, in having today the privilege to address Your Synod our
hopes are raised that the day will come when our two Churches will
fully converge on the role of primacy and synodality in the Church’s
life, to which our common Theological Commission is devoting its study
at the present time.
The theme to which this episcopal synod devotes its work is of crucial
significance not only for the Roman Catholic Church but also for all
those who are called to witness to Christ in our time. Mission and
evangelization remain a permanent duty of the Church at all times and
places; indeed they form part of the Church’s nature, since she is
called “Apostolic” both in the sense of her faithfulness to the
original teaching of the Apostles and in that of proclaiming the Word
of God in every cultural context everytime. The Church needs,
therefore, to rediscover the Word of God in every generation and make
it heard with a renewed vigour and persuation also in our contemporary
world, which deep in its heart thirsts for God’s message of peace, hope
and charity.
This duty of evangelization would have been, of course, greatly
enhanced and strengthened, if all Christians were in a position to
perform it with one voice and as a fully united Church. In his prayer
to the Father little before His passion our Lord has made it clear that
the unity of the Church is unbreakably related with her mission “so
that the world may believe” (John 17, 21). It is, therefore, most
appropriate that this Synod has opened its doors to ecumenical
fraternal delegates so that we may all become aware of our common duty
of evangelization as well as of the difficulties and problems of its
realization in today’s world.
This Synod has undoubtedly been studying the subject of the Word of God
in depth and in all its aspects, theological as well as practical and
pastoral. In our modest address to you we shall limit ourselves to
sharing with you some thoughts on the theme of your meeting, drawing
from the way the Orthodox tradition has approached it throughout the
centuries and in the Greek patristic teaching, in particular. More
concretely we should like to concentrate on three aspects of the
subject, namely: on hearing and speaking the Word of God through the
Holy Scriptures; on seeing God’s Word in nature and above all in the
beauty of the icons; and finally on touching and sharing God’s Word in
the communion of saints and the sacramental life of the Church. For all
these are, we think, crucial in the life and mission of the Church.
In so doing, we seek to draw on a rich Patristic tradition, dating to
the early third century and expounding a doctrine of five spiritual
senses. For listening to God’s Word, beholding God’s Word, and touching
God’s Word are all spiritual ways of perceiving the unique divine
mystery. Based on Proverbs 2.5 about “the divine faculty of perception
(αἴσθησις),” Origen of Alexandria claims:
This sense unfolds as sight for contemplation of immaterial forms,
hearing for discernment of voices, taste for savoring the living bread,
smell for sweet spiritual fragrance, and touch for handling the Word of
God, which is grasped by every faculty of the soul.
The spiritual senses are variously described as “five senses of the
soul,” as “divine” or “inner faculties,” and even as “faculties of the
heart” or “mind.” This doctrine inspired the theology of the
Cappadocians (especially Basil the Great and Gregory of Nyssa) as much
as it did the theology of the Desert Fathers (especially Evagrius of
Pontus and Macarius the Great).
1.Hearing and Speaking the Word through Scripture
At each celebration of the Divine Liturgy of St. John Chrysostom, the
presiding celebrant at the Eucharist entreats “that we may be made
worthy to hear the Holy Gospel.” For “hearing, beholding and handling
the Word of life” (1 Jn 1.1) are not first and foremost our entitlement
or birthright as human beings; they are our privilege and gift as
children of the living God. The Christian Church is, above all, a
scriptural Church. Although methods of interpretation may have varied
from Church Father to Church Father, from “school” to “school,” and
from East to West, nevertheless, Scripture was always received as a
living reality and not a dead book.
In the context of a living faith, then, Scripture is the living
testimony of a lived history about the relationship of a living God
with a living people. The Spirit, “who spoke through the prophets”
(Nicene-Constantinopolitan Creed), spoke in order to be heard and take
effect. It is primarily an oral and direct communication intended for
human beneficiaries. The scriptural text is, therefore, derivative and
secondary; the scriptural text always serves the spoken word. It is not
conveyed mechanically, but communicated from generation to generation
as a living word. Through the Prophet Isaiah, the Lord vows:
As rain and snow descend from heaven, watering the earth … so shall my
word go from mouth to mouth, accomplishing that which I purpose.
(55.10-11)
Moreover, as St. John Chrysostom explains, the divine Word demonstrates
profound considerateness (συγκατάβασις) for the personal diversity and
cultural contexts of those hearing and receiving. Adaptation of the
divine Word to the specific personal readiness and the particular
cultural context defines the missionary dimension of the Church, which
is called to transform the world through the Word. In silence as in
declaration, in prayer as in action, the divine Word addresses the
whole world, “preaching to all nations” (Mt 28.19) without either
privilege or prejudice to race, culture, gender and class. When we
carry out that divine commission, we are assured: “Behold, I am with
you always.” (Mt 28.20) We are called to speak the divine Word in all
languages, “becoming all things to all people, that [we] might by all
means save some.” (1 Cor. 9.22)
As disciples of God’s Word, then, it is today more imperative than ever
that we provide a unique perspective – beyond the social, political, or
economic – on the need to eradicate poverty, to provide balance in a
global world, to combat fundamentalism or racism, and to develop
religious tolerance in a world of conflict. In responding to the needs
of the world’s poor, vulnerable and marginalized, the Church can prove
a defining marker of the space and character of the global community.
While the theological language of religion and spirituality differs
from the technical vocabulary of economics and politics, the barriers
that at first glance appear to separate religious concerns (such as
sin, salvation, and spirituality) from pragmatic interests (such as
commerce, trade, and politics) are not impenetrable, crumbling before
the manifold challenges of social justice and globalization.
Whether dealing with environment or peace, poverty or hunger, education
or healthcare, there is today a heightened sense of common concern and
common responsibility, which is felt with particular acuteness by
people of faith as well as by those whose outlook is expressly secular.
Our engagement with such issues does not of course in any way undermine
or abolish differences between various disciplines or disagreements
with those who look at the world in different ways. Yet the growing
signs of a common commitment for the well-being of humanity and the
life of the world are encouraging. It is an encounter of individuals
and institutions that bodes well for our world. And it is an
involvement that highlights the supreme vocation and mission of the
disciples and adherents of God’s Word to transcend political or
religious differences in order to transform the entire visible world
for the glory of the invisible God.
2.Seeing the Word of God – The Beauty of Icons and Nature
Nowhere is the invisible rendered more visible than in the beauty of
iconography and the wonder of creation. In the words of the champion of
sacred images, St. John of Damascus: “As maker of heaven and earth, God
the Word was Himself the first to paint and portray icons.” Every
stroke of an iconographer’s paintbrush – like every word of a
theological definition, every musical note chanted in psalmody, and
every carved stone of a tiny chapel or magnificent cathedral –
articulates the divine Word in creation, which praises God in every
living being and every living thing. (cf. Ps. 150.6)
In affirming sacred images, the Seventh Ecumenical Council of Nicaea
was not concerned with religious art; it was the continuation and
confirmation of earlier definitions about the fullness of the humanity
of God’s Word. Icons are a visible reminder of our heavenly vocation;
they are invitations to rise beyond our trivial concerns and menial
reductions of the world. They encourage us to seek the extraordinary in
the very ordinary, to be filled with the same wonder that characterized
the divine marvel in Genesis: “God saw everything that He made; and,
indeed, it was very good.” (Gn. 1.30-31) The Greek (Septuagint) word
for “goodness” is ά, which implies – etymologically and
symbolically – a sense of “calling.” Icons underline the Church’s
fundamental mission to recognize that all people and all things are
created and called to be “good” and “beautiful.”
Indeed, icons remind us of another way of seeing things, another way of
experiencing realities, another way of resolving conflicts. We are
asked to assume what the hymnology of Easter Sunday calls “another way
of living.” For we have behaved arrogantly and dismissively toward the
natural creation. We have refused to behold God’s Word in the oceans of
our planet, in the trees of our continents, and in the animals of our
earth. We have denied our very own nature, which calls us to stoop low
enough to hear God’s Word in creation if we wish to “become
participants of divine nature.” (2 Pet 1.4) How could we ignore the
wider implications of the divine Word assuming flesh? Why do we fail to
perceive created nature as the extended Body of Christ?
Eastern Christian theologians always emphasized the cosmic proportions
of divine incarnation. The incarnate Word is intrinsic to creation,
which came to be through divine utterance. St. Maximus the Confessor
insists on the presence of God’s Word in all things (cf. Col. 3.11);
the divine Logos stands at the center of the world, mysteriously
revealing its original principle and ultimate purpose (cf. 1 Pet 1.20).
This mystery is described by St. Athanasius of Alexandria:
As the Logos [he writes], he is not contained by anything and yet
contains everything; He is in everything and yet outside of everything
… the first-born of the whole world in its every aspect.
The entire world is a prologue to the Gospel of John. And when the
Church fails to recognize the broader, cosmic dimensions of God’s Word,
narrowing its concerns to purely spiritual matters, then it neglects
its mission to implore God for the transformation – always and
everywhere, “in all places of His dominion” – of the whole polluted
cosmos. It is no wonder that on Easter Sunday, as the Paschal
celebration reaches its climax, Orthodox Christians sing:
Now everything is filled with divine light: heaven and earth, and all things beneath the earth. So let all creation rejoice.
All genuine “deep ecology” is, therefore, inextricably linked with deep theology:
“Even a stone,” writes Basil the Great, “bears the mark of God’s Word.
This is true of an ant, a bee and a mosquito, the smallest of
creatures. For He spread the wide heavens and laid the immense seas;
and He created the tiny hollow shaft of the bee’s sting.”
Recalling our minuteness in God’s wide and wonderful creation only
underlines our central role in God’s plan for the salvation of the
whole world.
3.Touching and Sharing the Word of God – The Communion of Saints and the Sacraments of Life
The Word of God persistently “moves outside of Himself in ecstasy”
(Dionysius the Areopagite), passionately seeking to “dwell in us” (Jn
1.14), that the world may have life in abundance. (Jn 10.10) God’s
compassionate mercy is poured and shared “so as to multiply the objects
of His beneficence.” (Gregory the Theologian) God assumes all that is
ours, “in every respect being tested as we are, yet without sin” (Heb.
4.15), in order to offer us all that is God’s and render us gods by
grace. “Though rich, He becomes poor that we might become rich,” writes
the great Apostle Paul (2 Cor. 8.9), to whom this year is so aptly
dedicated. This is the Word of God; gratitude and glory are due to Him.
The word of God receives His full embodiment in creation, above all in
the Sacrament of the Holy Eucharist. It is there that the Word becomes
flesh and allows us not simply to hear or see Him but to touch Him with
our own hands, as St. John declares (I John 1,1) and make Him part of
our own body and blood (σύσσωμοι καί σύναιμοι) in the words of St. John
Chrysostom.
In the Holy Eucharist the Word heard is at the same time seen and
shared (κοινωνία). It is not accidental that in the early eucharistic
documents, such as the book of Revelation and the Didache, the
Eucharist was associated with prophesy, and the presiding bishops were
regarded as successors of the prophets (e.g. Martyrion Polycarpi). The
Eucharist was already by St. Paul (I Cor. 11) described as
“proclamation” of Christ’s death and Second Coming. As the purpose of
Scripture is essentially the proclamation of the Kingdom and the
announcement of eschatological realities, the Eucharist is a foretaste
of the Kingdom, and in this sense the proclamation of the Word par
excellence. In the Eucharist Word and Sacrament become one reality. The
Word ceases to be “words” and becomes a Person, embodying in Himself
all human beings and all creation.
Within the life of the Church, the unfathomable self-emptying (κένωσις)
and generous sharing(κοινωνία) of the divine Logos is reflected in the
lives of the saints as the tangible experience and human expression of
God’s Word in our community. In this way, the Word of God becomes the
Body of Christ, crucified and glorified at the same time. As a result,
the saint has an organic relationship with heaven and earth, with God
and all of creation. In ascetic struggle, the saint reconciles the Word
and the world. Through repentance and purification, the saint is filled
– as Abba Isaac the Syrian insists – with compassion for all creatures,
which is the ultimate humility and perfection.
This is why the saint loves with warmth and spaciousness that are both
unconditional and irresistible. In the saints, we know God’s very Word,
since – as St. Gregory Palamas claims – “God and His saints share the
same glory and splendor.” In the gentle presence of a saint, we learn
how theology and action coincide. In the compassionate love of the
saint, we experience God as “our father” and God’s mercy as
“steadfastly enduring.” (Ps. 135, LXX) The saint is consumed with the
fire of God’s love. This is why the saint imparts grace and cannot
tolerate the slightest manipulation or exploitation in society or in
nature. The saint simply does what is “proper and right” (Divine
Liturgy of St. John Chrysostom), always dignifying humanity and
honoring creation. “His words have the force of actions and his silence
the power of speech.” (St. Ignatius of Antioch)
And within the communion of saints, each of us is called to “become
like fire” (Sayings of the Desert Fathers), to touch the world with the
mystical force of God’s Word, so that – as the extended Body of Christ
– the world, too, might say: “Someone touched me!” (cf. Mt 9.20) Evil
is only eradicated by holiness, not by harshness. And holiness
introduces into society a seed that heals and transforms. Imbued with
the life of the sacraments and the purity of prayer, we are able to
enter the innermost mystery of God’s Word. It is like the tectonic
plates of the earth’s crust: the deepest layers need only shift a few
millimeters to shatter the world’s surface. Yet for this spiritual
revolution to occur, we must experience radical metanoia – a conversion
of attitudes, habits and practices – for ways that we have misused or
abused God’s Word, God’s gifts and God’s creation.
Such a conversion is, of course, impossible without divine grace; it is
not achieved simply through greater effort or human willpower. “For
mortals, it is impossible; but for God all things are possible.” (Mt
19.26) Spiritual change occurs when our bodies and souls are grafted
onto the living Word of God, when our cells contain the life-giving
blood-flow of the sacraments, when we are open to sharing all things
with all people. As St. John Chrysostom reminds us, the sacrament of
“our neighbor” cannot be isolated from the sacrament of “the altar.”
Sadly, we have ignored the vocation and obligation to share. Social
injustice and inequality, global poverty and war, ecological pollution
and degradation result from our inability or unwillingness to share. If
we claim to retain the sacrament of the altar, we cannot forgo or
forget the sacrament of the neighbor – a fundamental condition for
realizing God’s Word in the world within the life and mission of the
Church.
Beloved Brothers in Christ,
We have explored the patristic teaching of the spiritual senses,
discerning the power of hearing and speaking God’s Word in Scripture,
of seeing God’s Word in icons and nature, as well as of touching and
sharing God’s Word in the saints and sacraments. Yet, in order to
remain true to the life and mission of the Church, we must personally
be changed by this Word. The Church must resemble the mother, who is
both sustained by and nourishes through the food she eats. Anything
that does not feed and nourish everyone cannot sustain us either. When
the world does not share the joy of Christ’s Resurrection, this is an
indictment of our own integrity and commitment to the living Word of
God. Prior to the celebration of each Divine Liturgy, Orthodox
Christians pray that this Word will be “broken and consumed,
distributed and shared” in communion. And “we know that we have passed
from death to life when we love our brothers” and sisters (1 Jn 3.14).
The challenge before us is the discernment of God’s Word in the face of
evil, the transfiguration of every last detail and speck of this world
in the light of Resurrection. The victory is already present in the
depths of the Church, whenever we experience the grace of
reconciliation and communion. As we struggle – in ourselves and in our
world – to recognize the power of the Cross, we begin to appreciate how
every act of justice, every spark of beauty, every word of truth can
gradually wear away the crust of evil. However, beyond our own frail
efforts, we have the assurance of the Spirit, who “helps us in our
weakness” (Rom. 8.26) and stands beside us as advocate and “comforter”
(Jn 14-6), penetrating all things and “transforming us – as St. Symeon
the New Theologian says – into everything that the Word of God says
about the heavenly kingdom: pearl, grain of mustard seed, leaven,
water, fire, bread, life and mystical wedding chamber.” Such is the
power and grace of the Holy Spirit, whom we invoke as we conclude our
address, extending to Your Holiness our gratitude and to each of you
our blessings:
Heavenly King, Comforter, Spirit of Truth
present everywhere and filling all things;
treasury of goodness and giver of life:
Come, and abide in us.
And cleanse us from every impurity;
and save our souls.
For you are good and love humankind.
Amen!

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