Pope Extols
the Example of Consecrated Persons
Says Church
Needs Their Testimony of Life
VATICAN CITY, DEC.
12, 2005 - To present God to a world overwhelmed by hedonism, materialism and
individualism, the Church needs the testimony of chastity, poverty and obedience
of consecrated persons, says Benedict XVI.
The
Pope expressed this conviction Saturday when meeting in Paul VI Hall with 8,000
religious and members of secular institutes and societies of apostolic life of
the Rome Diocese.
"The Church has
need of your testimony, she has need of a consecrated life that will address
with courage and creativity the challenges of the present time," the Holy Father
told his listeners, after they were introduced by Cardinal Camillo Ruini, his
vicar for Rome.
"In the face of the
advance of hedonism, you are asked for the courageous testimony of chastity as
expression of a heart that knows the beauty and the price of the love of God,"
Benedict XVI told the men and women present.
"In the face of the
thirst for money, your sober and available life at the service of the neediest
is a reminder that God is the authentic wealth that does not perish," he
continued.
True destiny
Finally, "in the
face of individualism and relativism, which lead persons to become the sole norm
of themselves," the fraternal life of the consecrated allows them to be
coordinated and therefore to obey, said the Bishop of Rome.
Such a life, he
said, "confirms that you place your fulfillment in God."
So, the consecrated
person "lives in time, but his heart is projected beyond time and witnesses to
contemporary man -- often absorbed by the things of this world -- that his true
destiny is God himself."
According to the
Pope, the secret for the life of the consecrated to become a "prophetic sign" of
the Kingdom of heaven, is to love God with one's whole heart, with one's whole
soul, and with one's whole strength, rather than any other person or thing.
"Do not be afraid
to presents yourselves, even visibly, as consecrated persons, and try with all
means to manifest your belonging to Christ, the hidden treasure for which you
left everything," the Pontiff exhorted.
He suggested that
the consecrated take up a motto of St. Benedict: "Prefer nothing, absolutely
nothing to the love of Christ."