3.1. A Wounded Fraternity
The first part of the base document (nos. 12-21) urges us to become aware of the dramatic condition in which humanity walks, in all times and spaces, due to the separation from the Creator’s design who envisioned us from the beginning as His children and brothers among ourselves. The question: “Where is your brother?” (Gen 4:9), posed by God to Cain after the murder of his brother Abel, continues to challenge us today in the hostilities that divide us in countless ways.
This section is marked by three emphases. First, The Creator’s Design: Children and Brothers: Since we have come into the world by another’s will, we must refer to the one who has the design of creation to grasp its meaning. Listening to biblical revelation, we can know that there is a source of life, an author, and that human beings are “children of the same Father,” thus bound to each other and to all creation.
The second emphasis, Sin: Rupture of the Divine Paternal Bond, reminds us that the foundational and original relationships—filial with God, fraternal with humanity, harmonious with creation—have been broken.
The consequence is now a reversed situation, namely, Distorted Fraternity: From Brothers to Enemies. This third emphasis highlights the inversion of the order of things in which we struggle, experienced even within the Church, which is also “a wounded people,” not exempt from hostility and crimes (nos. 18-19).
However, God does not remain silent but continues to proclaim that we are “called to reconciliation.” In dark moments of the history of nations, the Spirit has inspired lights, gestures, and people capable of showing the way, according to the original divine thought. Thus, the first part ends by recalling the testimony of Saint Óscar Arnulfo Romero (†1980), who confirmed with his blood the call to obey the divine law of fraternity, proclaimed during the Sunday Eucharist: “Brothers, they are our own people, killing their own peasant brothers, and, before an order to kill given by a man, the Law of God which says: ‘Do not kill’ must prevail. No soldier is obliged to obey an order against the Law of God” (no. 20).
3.2. “Fraternity Realized in Christ”
The second part (nos. 22-39) is biblically sealed by the psalmic exclamation: “Behold, how good and pleasant it is when brothers dwell in unity” (Ps 133:1), which aptly translates the celebratory experience of the holy mysteries in the Eucharistic assembly of the Church.
In light of the reconciling work of the Son of God made man, through whose “wounds we are healed” (Isa 53:5), the exposition focuses on some peculiar dimensions of the Eucharistic celebration. Indeed, the healing spring that flowed from the wounded Heart of Christ on the Cross reaches us inexhaustibly through the Eucharistic celebration: hearing the Lord’s word, communing with His Body and Blood means recognizing ourselves in Christ as children of the same Father and brothers among each other.
The theme of the Congress is thus read “Eucharistically” according to three emphases. The first, The Eucharist, Recapitulation of History, recalls the salvific mystery of Christ who accomplished the Passover for the whole world. His filial attitude towards the heavenly Father heals ancient disobedience, restoring to the children of Adam and Eve the dignity to address God as Father: “Abba! Fraternal cry of the children in the Son” (no. 24). Baptized in Christ, we grow as members of His mystical body through participation in the divine mysteries, the real presence of the Lord Jesus—in the Word we hear and in the consecrated bread and wine with which we commune—among us and for us. Indeed, the Eucharist is the source and summit of fraternity.
The celebration of the mystery—the table of the Word and the table of the Bread—gathers us all in Christ! This is remembered in the second emphasis: The Eucharist, Fraternity Realized, highlighting the communal dimension of the liturgical action, that is, acting and speaking as a community and not privately as individuals. Since liturgy does not encompass all spiritual life (cf. SC 12), fraternity in Christ is extended and deepened by the believing people also through Eucharistic worship outside of Mass: the Eucharistic adoration, local Eucharistic devotions, and the expressive richness of popular piety are recalled (no. 34).
The third emphasis falls on the ever-living awareness that Fraternity Without the Last is Not Fraternity (nos. 35-39). The example of life given to us by Jesus and the teaching imparted by the Gospel leave no doubt about the vocation to include everyone, not to exclude anyone, as Christ identifies with the hungry, the thirsty, the persecuted, the sick, the last, the wounded, the abandoned (cf. Mt 25:31-45). The Church learns from the Eucharist to be “a tent for all.”
Recalling that the preferential option for the poor and marginalized has characterized the theological reflection and pastoral action of the Latin American Church, the text echoes the prophetic cry launched in favor of the indigenous people by Dominican Antonio de Montesinos during Mass back in 1551: his call and sharp questions about human fraternity still challenge our Christian consciences, personal and collective (nos. 38-39).
3.3. Fraternity to Heal the World
Finally, the third part (nos. 40-53) challenges us to translate into our lives the mystery celebrated at the altar: communicating the Body of Christ means becoming witnesses of the healing He provides in the wounds of the world in which we live. The practical commitment concerns everyone, without justification or delegation, as the chosen Gospel quote to guide the message reminds us, consisting of Jesus’ words to the disciples: “You give them something to eat” (Lk 9:13).
Three more emphases mark the development of the third part. First, attention is drawn to Reconciliation and Violence, aware that we live in situations of hostility that contradict and hinder fraternity. The Christian key that opens concrete paths of fraternity, far from imitating the executioner or the resentful victim, is that of forgiveness practiced and taught by Jesus, the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world (cf. no. 42). Fraternity demands listening to the voice of the victims and leads to building together following the logic of gratuitousness rather than rivalry.
The second emphasis is on Creation and Universal Fraternity. Jesus did not come to solve our dramatic human problems with a magic wand but to give us an example of how to face them, so that we can learn from Him the secrets that make the impossible possible. Among them, the evangelical virtues of humility and tenderness. Universal fraternity is not a chimera but becomes possible as we allow ourselves to be “Eucharistically” shaped in life by the force of the holy mysteries we celebrate. The Eucharist makes us artisans of that fraternity that embraces everyone and everything, taking small but real steps in the right direction, also caring for the preservation of the “wounded” planet Earth.
In this line, the entire Church is challenged, being all called—reminds the third emphasis—to bear witness to the healing of the world. The healing power of the Eucharist is played out in the behavior of men and women who, having become “Eucharistic,” according to their vocation, are leaven of healing in the mass of the world. The Mass, indeed, does not end with the “Go in peace.” The celebration makes Christ present in the sacred signs so that, communicating Himself to us, He finds a credible expression in the lives of those who have participated. In reality, what should our Christian life be if not “a prolonged Mass”? (cf. no. 50).
The testimony we give outside the church makes credible the Eucharist we celebrate within it. This is reminded by the example of life narrated at the end of the third part of the base document, offered by the Christian community of Riobamba, under the leadership of Mons. Leonidas Proaño Villalba, marked by fraternal communion nourished by the Eucharist (no. 52).
Conclusion
Reading the base document will help to discern, between the lines, the liturgical meaning of the International Eucharistic Congress and, at the same time, the inseparable link between the mystery believed, celebrated, and lived in the present time. The richness of popular piety, so cherished by Latin American communities, also contributes to imprinting the mystery in the everyday life of the people of God, mixed with joys and sorrows, expectations and hopes.
The Marian significance of faith in Christ also emerges in the Quito 2024 programmatic document. The importance of Marian shrines and the venerated images of the Virgin, living testimonies of the people’s attachment to the Virgin Mary, is well known. By mentioning her discreetly, the base document recalls that the Eucharist directly invokes the Mother of the Lord and of the Church.
Finally, since the Eucharistic celebration opens us to communion with the living Church in the city of heaven, the base document remembers Saint Marianita de Jesús and Blessed Emilio Moscoso, exemplary children of Ecuador, who spread the Eucharistic fragrance of the new heavens and the new earth, where every wound will be healed and every tear wiped away.