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The Gift of "Communion"
"It Makes Us Come Out of Our Solitudes"

VATICAN CITY , MARCH 29, 2006 ( Zenit.org ).-
Here is a translation of Benedict XVI's address at today's general audience.
The Pope reflected on "The Gift of 'Communion'" in the context of
his ongoing catechesis on the mystery of the relationship between Jesus and
the Church.
* * *
Dear Brothers and Sisters:
Through the apostolic ministry, the Church, community assembled by the Son
of God made flesh, will live throughout time, building and nourishing communion
in Christ and in the Spirit, to which all are called and in which they can
experience the salvation given by the Father. The Twelve Apostles -- as the
third successor of Peter, Pope Clement, said at the end of the first century
-- took care to provide their successors (cf. 1 Clement 42, 4) so that the
mission entrusted to them would continue after their death. Throughout the
centuries, the Church, structured under the leadership of legitimate pastors,
has continued to live in the world as mystery of communion, in which in a certain
sense, the Trinitarian communion itself is reflected, the mystery of God himself.
The Apostle Paul already mentions this supreme Trinitarian source when he
wishes his Christians: "The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ and the love of God
and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit be with you all" (2 Corinthians
13:13 ). These words, probably an echo of the worship of the nascent Church,
highlights how the free gift of the Father's love in Jesus Christ is realized
and expressed in the communion wrought by the Holy Spirit.
This interpretation, based on the immediate relationship established in the
text between the three genitives ("the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ,
the love of God and the communion of the Holy Spirit"), presents "communion" as
specific gift of the Spirit, fruit of the love given by God the Father and
of the grace offered by the Lord Jesus.
Moreover, the context, characterized by the emphasis on fraternal communion,
leads us to see in the "koinonia" of the Holy Spirit not only "participation" in
divine life in an almost individual way, as if each one was on his own, but
also logically "communion" among believers, which the Spirit himself
infuses as its author and principal agent (cf. Philippians 2:1).
It might be affirmed that grace, love and communion, referred respectively
to Christ, to the Father and to the Spirit, are different aspects of the one
divine action for our salvation, action that creates the Church and that makes
of the Church -- as St. Cyprian said in the third century -- "a throng
gathered together by the unity of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy
Spirit" ("De Oratione Dominica," 23: PL 4, 536, quoted in "Lumen
Gentium," 4).
The idea of communion as participation in the Trinitarian life is illuminated
with particular intensity in John's Gospel, where the communion of love that
unites the Son with the Father and with men is at the same time the model and
source of fraternal union, which must unite disciples among themselves: "love
one another as I have loved you" (John 15:12; cf. 13:34). "That they
also may be in us" (John 17:21 ,22), hence, communion of people with the
Trinitarian God and communion of people among themselves. During the time of
the earthly pilgrimage, through communion with the Son, the disciple can already
participate in his divine life and in that of the Father: "our fellowship
is with the Father and with his Son Jesus Christ" (1 John 1:3).
This life of communion with God and among ourselves is the very end of the
object of the proclamation of the Gospel, the object of conversion to Christianity: "that
which we have seen and heard we proclaim also to you, so that you may have
fellowship with us" (1 John 1:3). Therefore, this double communion with
God and among ourselves is inseparable.
Wherever communion with God is destroyed, which is communion with the Father,
the Son and the Holy Spirit, the root and source of communion among ourselves
is also destroyed. And wherever communion among ourselves is not lived, communion
with the Trinitarian God cannot be alive and true, as we have heard.
Let us now take a further step. Communion -- fruit of the Holy Spirit -- is
nourished by the Eucharistic bread (cf. 1 Corinthians 10:16 -17) and is expressed
in fraternal relations, in a sort of anticipation of the future world. In the
Eucharist, Jesus nourishes us, unites us to himself, with the Father and with
the Holy Spirit and among ourselves, and this network of unity that embraces
the world is an anticipation of the future world in our time.
Given that it is anticipation of the future, communion is a gift which also
has very real consequences; it makes us come out of our solitudes, of our own
narrow-mindedness, and allows us to participate in the love that unites us
to God and among ourselves. To understand the grandeur of this gift, suffice
it to think of the divisions and conflicts that afflict relations between individuals,
groups and entire nations. And if the gift of unity in the Holy Spirit is lacking,
humanity's division is inevitable.
"Communion" is truly good news, the remedy the Lord has given us against
the loneliness that threatens all today, the precious gift that makes us feel
accepted and loved in God, in the unity of his People, gathered together in the
name of the Trinity; it is the light that makes the Church shine as a sign raised
among the nations: "If we say we have fellowship with him while we walk
in darkness, we lie and do not live according to the truth; but if we walk in
the light, as he is in the light, we have fellowship with one another" (1
John 1:6-7).
The Church thus presents herself, despite all the human frailties that are
part of her historical features, as a wondrous creation of love, constituted
to make Christ close to every man and woman who truly wishes to encounter him,
until the end of times. And in the Church the Lord continues to be our contemporary.
Scripture is not something of the past. The Lord does not speak in the past,
but speaks in the present, he speaks to us today, gives us light, shows us
the way of life, gives us fellowship and in this way prepares us and opens
us to the light.
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