Monday, November 22, 2021

Francis's beatitudes for bishops

 At America, Gerard O'Connell reports that Francis has given the Italian bishops cards with eight beatitudes for bishops.  O'Connell reports that Francis has "borrowed" them from Domenico Battaglia, the archbishop of Naples. In the same spirit, I hope O'Connell and America don't mind if I paste them here, after the break.

Full text of “The Beatitudes of the Bishop”

1. Blessed is the bishop who makes poverty and sharing his lifestyle because with his witness he is building the kingdom of heaven.

2. Blessed is the bishop who does not fear to water his face with tears, so that in them can be mirrored the sorrows of the people, the labors [fatigue] of the priests, [and] who finds in the embrace of the one who suffers the consolation of God.

3. Blessed is the bishop who considers his ministry a service and not a power, making meekness his strength, giving to all the right of citizenship in his own heart, so as to inhabit the land promised to the meek.

4. Blessed is the bishop who does not close himself in the palaces of government, who does not become a bureaucrat more attentive to statistics than to faces, to procedures than to [people’s] stories, who seeks to fight at the side of people for the dream of the justice of God because the Lord, encountered in the silence of daily prayer, will be his nourishment.

5. Blessed is the bishop who has a heart for the misery of the world, who does not fear dirtying his hands with the mud of the human soul in order to find there the gold of God, who is not scandalized by the sin and fragility of the other because he is conscious of his own misery, because the look of the Risen Crucified One will be for him the seal of infinite pardon.

6. Blessed is the bishop who wards off duplicity of heart, who avoids every ambiguous dynamic, who dreams good even in the midst of evil, because he will be able to enjoy the face of God, tracking it down in every puddle of the city of people.

7. Blessed is the bishop that works for peace, who accompanies the paths of reconciliation, who sows in the heart of the presbyterate the seed of communion, who accompanies a divided society on the pathway of reconciliation, who takes by hand every man and every woman of good will in order to build fraternity: God will recognize him as his son.

8. Blessed is the bishop who for the Gospel does not fear to go against the tide, making his face “hard” like that of Christ heading to Jerusalem, without letting himself be held back by misunderstandings and by obstacles because he knows that the Kingdom of God advances in contradiction to the world.


4 comments:

  1. That is beautiful. And there is a lot to think about there even if one is not a bishoo.

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    1. Katherine, I thought so, too! Francis is so thought-provoking and challenging. He really does bring a different spirituality to the papacy.

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  2. I can see why Francis likes this because it is a very challenging ideal for bishops.

    On the other hand, had Francis written it it would likely have been more critical with the addition of some woes like "Woe to those who are airport bishops"

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    1. They're a little wordy for beatitudes. But I agree that Francis is passionate about challenging (and criticizing!) bishops. Perhaps that's akin to shooting fish in a barrel...

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