D
Don_Ruggero
Guest
I want my final message to the forum sum up what I have lived across the many years of my priesthood, which I sought to bring to this forum in the spirit of the Dominican maxim to contemplate and to share the fruits of contemplation. Contemplare et contemplata aliis tradere.
First, I pay tribute to the Successor of St. Peter…the Bishop of Rome…the Head of the College of Bishops…the rock upon which the Church is built…the Vicar of Christ…The Supreme and Sovereign Pontiff.
I have had the great joy of seeing the canonizations of Pope Saint John XXIII, Pope Saint Paul VI, and Pope Saint John Paul II. Each evoked great joy and happiness. In their personal holiness, I was privileged to see in each of them a truly extraordinary gift to the Church – and each of its members.
Their teachings were, each, exceptional. Their living the gift – and cooperating with the grace and action of the Holy Spirit – in putting into reality the inspired work of the Second Vatican Council can scarce be put into words. In the complete reform and renewal of the Church’s liturgical life, which itself was the fruit of the liturgical movement that was itself the gift of the Spirit. The renewal of moral theology. The renewal of spirituality. The renewal of the study of Church history using new and more appropriate paradigms. The renewal of clerical life, of Religious Life. New forms of Consecrated Life, received as gifts from the Holy Spirit. Receiving the divine imperative, articulated at the Council, of the ecumenical movement and working for Christian unity. All these are the things I look back on with deep gratitude to God.
Today, I have the joy and pleasure of living my priesthood under Pope Francis. I wish him a very long life indeed. The Church is richly blessed that the Lord chose him as our Pope for this moment of the Church’s history and I consider it a privilege and grace to live under his pontificate and to continue my life’s journey guided by his thought, his teachings, his example, and his manner of living his life. His embrace of simplicity will hopefully forever transform the papacy…just as it is a progression and growth from the simplifications begun under Pope Saint Paul VI and continued by Pontiffs after him in all facets of the institutional Church.
First, I pay tribute to the Successor of St. Peter…the Bishop of Rome…the Head of the College of Bishops…the rock upon which the Church is built…the Vicar of Christ…The Supreme and Sovereign Pontiff.
I have had the great joy of seeing the canonizations of Pope Saint John XXIII, Pope Saint Paul VI, and Pope Saint John Paul II. Each evoked great joy and happiness. In their personal holiness, I was privileged to see in each of them a truly extraordinary gift to the Church – and each of its members.
Their teachings were, each, exceptional. Their living the gift – and cooperating with the grace and action of the Holy Spirit – in putting into reality the inspired work of the Second Vatican Council can scarce be put into words. In the complete reform and renewal of the Church’s liturgical life, which itself was the fruit of the liturgical movement that was itself the gift of the Spirit. The renewal of moral theology. The renewal of spirituality. The renewal of the study of Church history using new and more appropriate paradigms. The renewal of clerical life, of Religious Life. New forms of Consecrated Life, received as gifts from the Holy Spirit. Receiving the divine imperative, articulated at the Council, of the ecumenical movement and working for Christian unity. All these are the things I look back on with deep gratitude to God.
Today, I have the joy and pleasure of living my priesthood under Pope Francis. I wish him a very long life indeed. The Church is richly blessed that the Lord chose him as our Pope for this moment of the Church’s history and I consider it a privilege and grace to live under his pontificate and to continue my life’s journey guided by his thought, his teachings, his example, and his manner of living his life. His embrace of simplicity will hopefully forever transform the papacy…just as it is a progression and growth from the simplifications begun under Pope Saint Paul VI and continued by Pontiffs after him in all facets of the institutional Church.
Last edited: