Dear Brothers and Sisters,
1. "Blessed are you, O Lord, the God of our fathers.... For we have
sinned and transgressed by departing from you, and we have done
every kind of evil. Your commandments we have not heeded or
observed" (Dn 3: 26, 29-30). This is how the Jews prayed after the
Exile (cf. also Bar 2: 11-13), accepting responsibility for the sins
committed by their fathers. The Church imitates their example and
also asks forgiveness for the historical sins of her children.
In our century, in fact, the Second Vatican Council gave an
important impetus to the Church's renewal, so that as a community of
the saved she might become an ever more vivid image of Jesus'
message to the world. Faithful to the teaching of the most recent
Council, the Church is more and more aware that she can offer the
world a consistent witness to the Lord only through the continual
purification of her members. Therefore, "at once holy and always in
need of purification, [she] follows constantly the path of penance
and renewal" (Lumen gentium, n. 8).
2. Recognition of the community implications of sin spurs the Church
to ask forgiveness for the "historical" sins of her children. She is
prompted to do this by the valuable opportunity offered by the Great
Jubilee of the Year 2000 which, following the teaching of the Second
Vatican Council, intends to turn a new page of history by overcoming
the obstacles that still divide human beings and Christians in
particular.
In my Apostolic Letter Tertio millennio adveniente, I therefore
asked that at the end of this second millennium "the Church should
become more fully conscious of the sinfulness of her children,
recalling all those times in history when they departed from the
spirit of Christ and his Gospel and, instead of offering to the
world the witness of a life inspired by the values of faith,
indulged in ways of thinking and acting which were truly forms of
counter-witness and scandal" (Tertio millennio adveniente, n. 33).
3. The recognition of historical sins presupposes taking a stand in
relation to events as they really happened and which only a serene
and complete historical reconstruction can reveal. On the other
hand, the judging of historical events cannot prescind from a
realistic study of the conditioning caused by individual cultural
contexts, before attributing specific moral responsibilities to
individuals.
The Church is certainly not afraid of the truth that emerges from
history and is ready to acknowledge mistakes wherever they have been
identified, especially when they involve the respect that is owed to
individuals and communities. She is inclined to mistrust
generalizations that excuse or condemn various historical periods.
She entrusts the investigation of the past to patient, honest,
scholarly reconstruction, free from confessional or ideological
prejudices, regarding both the accusations brought against her and
the wrongs she has suffered.
When they have been established by serious historical research, the
Church feels it her duty to acknowledge the sins of her members and
to ask God and her brethren to forgive them. This request for pardon
must not be understoood as an expression of false humility or as a
denial of her 2,000-year history, which is certainly richly
deserving in the areas of charity, culture and holiness. Instead she
responds to a necessary requirement of the truth, which, in addition
to the positive aspects, recognizes the human limitations and
weaknesses of the various generations of Christ's disciples.
4. The approach of the Jubilee calls attention to certain types of
sin, past and present, for which we particularly need to ask the
Father's mercy.
I am thinking first of all of the painful reality of the division
among Christians. The wounds of the past, certainly not without sins
on both sides, continue to scandalize the world. A second act of
repentance concerns the acquiescence given to intolerance and even
the use of violence in the service of truth (cf. Tertio millennio
adveniente, n. 35). Although many acted here in good faith, it was
certainly not evangelical to think that the truth should be imposed
by force. Then there is the lack of discernment by many Christians
in situations where basic human rights were violated. The request
for forgiveness applies to whatever should have been done or was
passed over in silence because of weakness or bad judgement, to what
was done or said hesitantly or inappropriately.
On this and other points "the consideration of mitigating factors
does not exonerate the Church from the obligation to express
profound regret for the weaknesses of so many of her sons and
daughters who sullied her face, preventing her from fully mirroring
the image of her crucified Lord, the supreme witness of patient love
and of humble meekness" (ibid.).
Thus the penitent attitude of the Church in our time, on the
threshold of the third millennium, is not intended as a convenient
historical revisionism, which at any rate would be as suspect as it
is useless. Instead, it turns our gaze to the past and to the
recognition of sins, so that they will serve as a lesson for a
future of ever clearer witness.
I warmly welcome the English-speaking pilgrims and visitors present
at today's Audience, especially those from Scotland, Indonesia and
the United States of America. Wishing you a pleasant visit to
Christian Rome, I invoke upon you the grace and peace of our Lord
Jesus Christ.