In
a pastoral letter marking the first Sunday of Advent, Bishop Mark Davies of Shrewsbury dedicated 2019
as the diocesan YEAR OF HOLINESS,
calling attention to the Second Vatican Council's emphasis on the universal
call to holiness.
“It is this
universal call to holiness which I wish all of us, clergy and people, to focus
upon anew. It is striking that, amid all the crises of the 20th Century, the
central message of the Second Vatican Council was that every one of us, in
every state of life, is called to the fullness of the Christian life and the
perfection of love: that is, called to
become nothing less than a saint,” Bishop Davies wrote.
“Advent is a
time of renewed hope leading us to the light of Christmas,” he said. “It is a
journey we make in the darkest days of our year. Such days evoke the dark
shadows in the world around us, and those failures in the lives and witness of
Christians which have at times cast dark shadows over the face of the Church,
obscuring for many, the clear light of Christ shining from her.”
He said that
“our renewal in holiness” is “the only renewal of the Church which will ever
matter … It is why only saints
resolved the crises the Church has faced throughout history and why they have
proved to be the great evangelisers.”
“It is also
why, today, amid the dark shadows of scandal and the challenge of a new
evangelisation of western societies, it is urgent to recall this one goal of
every Christian life for it is in the saints that the true face of the Church
shines out. For, though they can have their place, no pastoral programme; no
discussions amongst us; no re-organisation or re-structuring can ever
accomplish this; only our striving for holiness to become the saints we have
been called by God to be.”
Both “our
Christian calling and the ultimate goal of every human life” is “to become, in
the end, a saint,” said Bishop Davies, recalling that Christ told us “that this
is the one thing which alone matters.”
The bishop
noted that Pope Francis wrote in a recent letter that “the only great tragedy
in life, is not to become a saint.”
Andrea di Bonaiuto |
“A saint is someone who reaches the complete and everlasting happiness of Heaven. We might say that holiness is happiness … it is only by being holy that we can be truly happy.”
Bishop Davies
said: “The Holy Father writes, 'Do not be afraid to set your sights higher, to
allow yourself to be loved and liberated by God'. For holiness, he writes, is
'the extent that, by the power of the Holy Spirit, we model our life on
Christ’s'. We can never reach this goal by our own unaided efforts. By the
grace of God we can!”
He encouraged
everyone in the Diocese of Shrewbury to recall in the coming year that there is
found in the Church, holy though composed of sinners, everything needed to grow
in holiness.
“In daily
prayer, frequent Confession and, above all, in the Holy Eucharist, we are given
the Divine means, the grace to reach this goal,” wrote Bishop Davies.
“This is our
purpose as we enter anew into Advent,” the bishop concluded. “Let us ask Our
Lady, she who is 'full of grace', to accompany us along the path to the
holiness, the true happiness to which we are called. In the beautiful words of
the Second Vatican Council, we know that in the most Blessed Virgin Mary the
Church has already reached perfection and in our struggle she shines out for us
as a sign of certain hope and consolation until the day of the Lord shall come
in splendor.”
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