Delivered
to the Seminarians of Albano, Italy
on their Entrance into The Society of Saint Pius X
on the Feast
of the Immaculate Conception, 1979
In these
times when fidelity actually seems to be a fault, ... nothing
is more useful to the Church and the salvation of souls than
to remain faithful... to hand down faithfully the testament
which Our Lord has left us . . . "Restore all things in
Christ. " This is the message handed down to us
by Pope Saint Pius X and with these examples before you—the
Blessed Virgin Mary and Pope Saint Pius X—you, too, will be
faithful.
In the name
of the Father, and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost. Amen.
My dear
brethren:
I would
like first of all to say a few words to you on the occasion
of your entrance into the Society of Saint Pius X; to try and
give you some kind of definition of this Society.
I refer
to St. Matthew's Gospel, where the master, in the parable of
the talents, says these words, so full of significance: "Euge,
serve bone et fidelis, quia super pauca fuisti fidelis, super
multa te constituam; intra in gaudium domini tui."
"Well done, thou good and faithful servant; because thou
hast been faithful over a few things, I will make thee ruler
over many: enter thou into the joy of thy lord."
If the Society
has one feature it is precisely that of fidelity and I think
that the Society can be defined as that which will help you
to remain faithful for your personal sanctity and for the sanctification
of souls. This faithfulness in the Church, faithfulness in the
entire history of redemption fulfilled by Our Lord Jesus Christ,
is perhaps the most essential and necessary quality. How can
we define faithfulness? I think it could be said to be consistency
and precision in the transmission of a message—the faithful
and exact handing down of a treasure, of a testimony, and of
a spiritual testimony, in particular. To be faithful, therefore,
is to hand down in a precise manner that which has been put
at our disposal to be handed down to future generations. And
I think that this is the principal role of our Society. In these
times when fidelity actually seems to be a fault, there seems
to be a break in the transmission of this message: nothing is
more useful to the Church and the salvation of souls than to
remain faithful; in other words, to hand down faithfully the
testament that Our Lord has left us.
As the Old
Testament also insisted on the handing down of a message which
was the coming of the Messiah, so they awaited this Messiah.
Since that time it is no longer a promise which we have to transmit—it
is Our Lord Jesus Christ Himself and we have to hand down this
admirable treasure—a treasure so extraordinary that it transcends
our capabilities. It is our duty to hand down this message faithfully,
in imitation of the Blessed Virgin Mary and of St. Pius X, our
patrons. If there is anyone who has handed down Our Lord Jesus
Christ faithfully in this world, it is the Blessed Virgin Mary.
She received Him by the grace of the Holy Ghost; she who was
immaculate in her conception, which great privilege we celebrate
today. Our Lord Jesus Christ was truly handed down to humanity
by the Blessed Virgin Mary, until His last breath on the Cross,
when she too was present; she fulfilled her role perfectly.
And that is why she can truly be called Virgo Fidelis—Virgin
most faithful. She was faithful to all the details of her duties
as mother, of her duty to hand down Jesus to us for our Redemption.
In the midst of the upheavals of history, in the midst of the
errors which appeared right at the beginning of this century
and which had their roots in the century which came before,
a Pope also arose; God gave us an admirable Pope in the person
of St. Pius X, the last Pope to be canonized. St. Pius, too,
was faithful; he, too, wanted to transmit the message which
Our Lord entrusted to him. And he expressed it in a wonderful
manner in these words, "Instaurare omnia in Christo"—"Restore
all things in Christ." This is the message handed down
to us by Pope Saint Pius X, and with these examples before you—the
Blessed' Virgin and Pope St. Pius X—you, too, will be faithful.
THROUGHOUT
YOUR YEARS at seminary, during your entire priestly formation,
you will receive Our Lord Jesus Christ in your minds, your hearts,
your very souls. You will learn to know Him, to deepen your
knowledge of Jesus, the knowledge of the great mystery of the
Christ, of which St. Paul speaks; and you, in turn, will have
to pass on this knowledge, faithfully. This is what the faithful
ask of us; the souls who are seeking you are seeking Our Lord
Jesus Christ, they are seeking in you a genuine transmission
of the Faith.
Nowadays
we see transmitters on the hills, everywhere, which relay messages
and pictures throughout the entire world, and which transmit
them faithfully. By these transmitters, men try to relay pictures
and messages as clearly as possible. We, too, are transmitters,
intelligent transmitters, who tune in to the message on the
wave lengths, who receive it in our minds, and who have to relay
it in as faithful a manner as possible. This is what people
expect from you. Let us, therefore, be like these transmitters—receiving
the message with love and devotion and endeavoring to pass it
on as exactly and perfectly as possible.
How will
you transmit this message faithfully? First of all, in preparing
yourselves in the silence, the recollection, the prayer, the
studies of the seminary; this is how you will record the message
given to you as perfectly as possible. And then, you will pass
it on to the faithful by preaching the Gospel as your predecessors
have done; all the priests, missionaries, bishops, and godly
Popes. You will also bear witness by your example and by your
attitude. The message is in a way imprinted on you so that those
faithful whom you meet realize that you are bringing Our Lord
Jesus Christ to them. In you, they expect and want to see the
image of Jesus Christ. In each of you they want to see an alter
Christus—another Christ: this is what you are, this is what
you will be for many, and this is proven by the experiences
of those already ordained. Your predecessors in the ministry
are much loved, and how many times in the past few weeks, no
matter where I go—Berlin, Hamburg, Vienna, Brussels—everywhere
people ask me to send them our priests. Certainly, they also
love the priests who have remained faithful to the teaching
of Jesus Christ, faithful to their vocation, but it seems to
them that this renewal which the young priests of Ecône bring,
gives them confidence, a profound confidence; a feeling of security
that the message continues to be passed on. Young men are continuing
the transmission of this traditional message, and this is what
encourages the faithful, this is what gives them confidence
that the Church cannot disappear, that the Church has to continue
for the salvation of souls.
These, then,
are the dispositions in which I would like you, my dear seminarians,
to make your entrance, in a way which will bear fruit for yourselves
and will profit your future apostolate amongst the souls of
the faithful.
In the name
of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost. Amen.