|
MESSAGE OF JOHN PAUL II
TO THE CARMELITE FAMILY

To the Most Reverend Fathers
Joseph Chalmers
Prior General of the Order of Brothers
of the Blessed Virgin Mary of Mount Carmel (O.Carm.)
and
Camilo Maccise
Superior General of the Order of Discalced Brothers
of the Blessed Virgin Mary of Mount Carmel (O.C.D.)
1. The providential event of
grace, which the Jubilee Year has been for the Church, prompts her
to look with trust and hope to the journey we have just begun in the
new millennium. "At the beginning of this new century", I wrote
in the Apostolic Letter Novo millennio ineunte, "our steps must
quicken.... On this journey we are accompanied by the Blessed Virgin
Mary, to whom ... I entrusted the third millennium" (n. 58).
I therefore learned with deep
joy that the two branches of the Order of Carmel, the ancient and
the reformed, intend to express their filial love for their
Patroness by dedicating the year 2001 to her, invoked as the Flower
of Carmel, Mother and Guide on the way of holiness. In this regard,
I cannot fail to stress a happy coincidence: the celebration of
this Marian year for the whole of Carmel is taking place, according
to a venerable tradition of the Order itself, on the 750th
anniversary of the bestowal of the Scapular. This celebration is
therefore a marvellous occasion for the entire Carmelite Family to
deepen not only its Marian spirituality, but to live it more and
more in the light of the place which the Virgin Mother of God and of
mankind holds in the mystery of Christ and the Church, and therefore
to follow her who is the "Star of Evangelization" (cf. Novo
millennio ineunte, n. 58).
2. In their journey towards the
"mountain of God, Christ the Lord" (Roman Missal, Opening
Prayer of the Mass in honour of Our Lady of Mount Carmel, 16 July),
the various generations of Carmel, from the beginning until today,
have sought to model their lives on Mary's example.
In Carmel therefore and in every soul moved by tender affection for
the Blessed Virgin and Mother, there has thrived a contemplation of
her, who from the beginning knew how to open herself to hearing
God's Word and to obeying his will (Lk 2: 19, 51). For Mary, taught
and formed by the Spirit (cf. Lk 2: 44-50), was able by faith to
understand her own history (cf. Lk 1: 46-55) and, docile to the
divine promptings, "advanced in her pilgrimage of faith, and
faithfully persevered in her union with her Son unto the cross,
where she stood, in keeping with the divine plan (cf. Jn 19: 25),
enduring with her Only-begotten Son the intensity of his suffering
and associating herself with his sacrifice in her mother's heart" (Lumen
gentium, n. 58).
3. Contemplation of the Virgin
presents her to us as a loving Mother who sees her Son growing up in
Nazareth (cf. Lk 2: 40, 52), follows him on the roads of Palestine,
helps him at the wedding at Cana (cf. Jn 2: 5) and, at the foot of
the Cross, becomes the Mother associated with his offering and given
to all people when Jesus himself entrusts her to his beloved
disciple (cf. Jn 19: 26). As Mother of the Church, the Blessed
Virgin is one with the disciples in "constant prayer" (Acts 1: 14);
as the new Woman who anticipates in herself what will one day come
to pass for us all in the full enjoyment of Trinitarian life, she is
taken up into heaven from where she spreads the protective mantle of
her mercy over her children on their pilgrimage to the holy mountain
of glory.
Such a contemplative attitude of
mind and heart prompts admiration for the Virgin's experience of
faith and love; she already lives in herself all that every believer
desires and hopes to attain in the mystery of Christ and the Church
(cf. Sacrosanctum Concilium, n. 103; Lumen gentium, n.
53).
Therefore, Carmelites have
chosen Mary as their Patroness and spiritual Mother and always keep
before the eyes of their heart the Most Pure Virgin who guides
everyone to the perfect knowledge and imitation of Christ.
Thus an intimacy of spiritual
relations has blossomed, leading to an ever increasing communion
with Christ and Mary. For the members of the Carmelite Family, Mary,
the Virgin Mother of God and mankind, is not only a model to imitate
but also the sweet presence of a Mother and Sister in whom to
confide. St Teresa of Jesus rightly urged her sisters: "Imitate Our
Lady and consider how great she must be and what a good thing it is
that we have her for our Patroness" (Interior Castle, III, 1,
3).
4. This intense Marian life,
which is expressed in trusting prayer, enthusiastic praise and
diligent imitation, enables us to understand how the most genuine
form of devotion to the Blessed Virgin, expressed by the humble sign
of the Scapular, is consecration to her Immaculate Heart (cf. Pius
XII, Letter Neminem profecto latet [11 February 1950: AAS
42, 1950, pp. 390-391]; Dogmatic Constitution on the Church Lumen
gentium, n. 67). In this way, the heart grows in communion and
familiarity with the Blessed Virgin, "as a new way of living for God
and of continuing here on earth the love of Jesus the Son for his
Mother Mary" (cf. Angelus Address, in Insegnamenti
XI/3, 1988, p. 173). Thus, as the blessed Carmelite martyr Titus
Brandsma expressed it, we are put in profound harmony with Mary the
Theotokos and become, like her, transmitters of divine life:
"The Lord also sends his angel to us ... we too must accept God in
our hearts, carry him in our hearts, nourish him and make him grow
in us so that he is born of us and lives with us as the God-with-us,
Emmanuel" (From the report of Bl. Titus Brandsma to the
Mariological Congress of Tongerloo, August 1936).
Over time this rich Marian
heritage of Carmel has become, through the spread of the Holy
Scapular devotion, a treasure for the whole Church. By its
simplicity, its anthropological value and its relationship to Mary's
role in regard to the Church and humanity, this devotion was so
deeply and widely accepted by the People of God that it came to be
expressed in the memorial of 16 July on the liturgical calendar of
the universal Church.
5. The sign of the Scapular
points to an effective synthesis of Marian spirituality, which
nourishes the devotion of believers and makes them sensitive to the
Virgin Mother's loving presence in their lives. The Scapular is
essentially a "habit". Those who receive it are associated more or
less closely with the Order of Carmel and dedicate themselves to the
service of Our Lady for the good of the whole Church (cf. "Formula
of Enrolment in the Scapular", in the Rite of Blessing of and
Enrolment in the Scapular, approved by the Congregation for
Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments, 5 January
1996). Those who wear the Scapular are thus brought into the land of
Carmel, so that they may "eat its fruits and its good things" (cf.
Jer 2: 7), and experience the loving and motherly presence of Mary
in their daily commitment to be clothed in Jesus Christ and to
manifest him in their life for the good of the Church and the whole
of humanity (cf. "Formula of Enrolment in the Scapular", cit.).
Therefore two truths are evoked
by the sign of the Scapular: on the one hand, the constant
protection of the Blessed Virgin, not only on life's journey, but
also at the moment of passing into the fullness of eternal glory; on
the other, the awareness that devotion to her cannot be limited to
prayers and tributes in her honour on certain occasions, but must
become a "habit", that is, a permanent orientation of one's own
Christian conduct, woven of prayer and interior life, through
frequent reception of the sacraments and the concrete practice of
the spiritual and corporal works of mercy. In this way the Scapular
becomes a sign of the "covenant" and reciprocal communion between
Mary and the faithful: indeed, it concretely translates the gift of
his Mother, which Jesus gave on the Cross to John and, through him,
to all of us, and the entrustment of the beloved Apostle and of us
to her, who became our spiritual Mother.
6. A splendid example of this
Marian spirituality, which inwardly moulds individuals and conforms
them to Christ, the firstborn of many brethren, is the witness to
holiness and wisdom given by so many Carmelite saints, all of whom
grew up in the shadow and under the protection of their Mother.
I too have worn the Scapular of
Carmel over my heart for a long time! Out of my love for our common
heavenly Mother, whose protection I constantly experience, I hope
that this Marian year will help all the men and women religious of
Carmel and the devout faithful who venerate her with filial
affection to grow in her love and to radiate to the world the
presence of this Woman of silence and prayer, invoked as Mother of
Mercy, Mother of Hope and Grace.
With these wishes, I gladly
impart my Apostolic Blessing to all the friars, nuns, sisters and
lay people of the Carmelite Family, who work so hard to spread among
the people of God true devotion to Mary, Star of the Sea and Flower
of Carmel!
From the Vatican, 25 March 2001.
Joannes Paulus II
|