The Bishop of Shrewsbury has issued an appeal for Catholics
to be brave in professing their faith as the Year of Faith draws to a close.
In a pastoral letter which was read out in churches on
Sunday to parishioners in the Diocese of Shrewsbury, Bishop Mark Davies called on Catholics to profess their faith with “courage and constancy”.
My dear brothers and sisters,
St Luke tells us in the Gospel: “The people stayed before
the cross watching Jesus” (Lk 23:35 ).
St Luke is careful to describe for us the reaction of people around the Cross
on the first Good Friday: leaders jeer, soldiers mock, a dying man derides Our
Lord. We notice in the Gospel that this is something more than ignorance or
doubt; there is a real antagonism: “He saved others,” they say “let him save
himself” (Lk 23:35 ). This was the
scene on Calvary two thousand years ago and it is a
drama which continues today wherever the claims of Christ are now rejected and
derided. It is the hour for our faith to be proved amid the continuing uproar
around the Cross of the Lord.
I write to you at the end of the Year of Faith called by Pope
Benedict and continued by our Holy Father, Pope Francis. During this Year we
have had several reminders of how Christians in many parts of the world face
increasing threats of violence and intimidation in order to stand by Christ’s
Cross (‘Persecuted & Forgotten’ www.acnuk.org/persecution).
We are aware that during these same months, Christians have
suffered violent deaths rather than renounce the name and the love of Christ.
All this gives to our celebration of the Year of Faith a new perspective. It also
gives perspective to the antagonism we can experience to the claims of Christ
and to the witness of Christians in the life of our own society. This situation
may at times tempt us to avoid speaking the name of Christ if it makes our
contemporaries uneasy, to remove His Cross from view or to understate His claim
of Kingship.
On Calvary , there was one voice which
made a profession of faith. St Luke tells us of a dying criminal who cut
through all the fear and intimidation around him to say: “Jesus, remember me
when you come into your kingdom” (Lk 23:41 ).
This man receives the promise: “Today you will be with me in paradise” (Lk 23:42 ). This is the faith which leads to the
eternal promise St Paul describes in the Mass today: “(The Father) has taken us
out of the power of darkness and created a place for us in the kingdom of the
Son that he loves, and in him, we gain our freedom, the forgiveness of our
sins” (Col 1:13). The celebration of this Year of Faith has surely invited us
all to raise our own voices calmly and clearly in a renewed profession of our
faith.
The first message of Pope Francis was that we can work as
much as we want and construct many things, “but if we do not confess Jesus
Christ, things go wrong”. Pope Francis insists: “We may become a charitable
Non-Governmental Organisation but not the Church, the Bride of the Lord … When
we do not confess Jesus Christ, we confess the worldliness of the devil, a
demonic worldliness” (Pro Ecclesia Mass, 14th March 2013 ). You might have noticed a few words inscribed
beneath the coat of arms of our Diocese. Every Bishop is asked to choose three
or four words from Sacred Scripture to sum-up his hope and purpose. My motto
for the years I will serve as bishop is simply this: “Nihil sine Christo” –
“nothing without Christ”. This is a three-word summary of the words of Our Lord
found in St John’s Gospel where He tells us: “Without me, you can do nothing”
(Jn 15: 5). It is surely the lesson we must constantly re-learn in our own
lives. It is the lesson which leads us back to the means of grace entrusted to
the Church, above all to Christ Himself truly present in the Holy Eucharist.
I have no doubt that the future of our Diocese will be
decided by the courage and constancy of such faith. In my first letter to the
Diocese three years ago I echoed the prayer of the first apostles who said to
the Lord: “Increase our faith!” (Lk17:5). At the end of this Year of Faith I
ask you to renew with me this same prayer in the Mass today where “the
sacrifice of Christ offered once for all on the cross remains ever present”
(CCC 1364). Before Christ our Lord, truly present in the Blessed Sacrament of
the Eucharist, let us say: “Lord, increase our faith!” Increase our faith so
that we may go from Mass every Sunday to give our own courageous and constant
witness to Christ the King.
Wishing you the joy of the approaching Season of Advent and
a truly blessed celebration of Christmas,
+ Mark
Bishop of Shrewsbury
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