Entry 0270: Homilies on Easter Sunday by Pope Benedict XVI
On eight occasions during his pontificate, Pope Benedict XVI delivered reflections
during the celebration of Easter Sunday, on 15 April 2006, 7 April 2007, 22
March 2008, 11 April 2009, 12 April 2009, 3 April 2010, 23 April 2011, and 7
April 2012. Here are the texts of the eight homilies delivered on these
occasions.
Vatican Basilica, Holy Saturday, 15 April 2006
Let us pray to the Lord at this time that he may
grant us to experience the joy of his light; let us pray that we ourselves may
become bearers of his light, and that through the Church, Christ’s radiant face
may enter our world (cf. LG 1). Amen!
EASTER VIGIL
HOMILY OF HIS HOLINESS BENEDICT XVI
"You seek Jesus of Nazareth , who was crucified. He has risen, he
is not here" (Mk 16:6). With these words, God’s messenger,
robed in light, spoke to the women who were looking for the body of Jesus in
the tomb. But the Evangelist says the same thing to us on this holy night:
Jesus is not a character from the past. He lives, and he walks before us as one
who is alive, he calls us to follow him, the living one, and in this way to
discover for ourselves too the path of life.
"He has risen, he is not here." When Jesus
spoke for the first time to the disciples about the Cross and the Resurrection,
as they were coming down from the Mount of the Transfiguration, they questioned
what "rising from the dead" meant (Mk 9:10). At Easter we
rejoice because Christ did not remain in the tomb, his body did not see
corruption; he belongs to the world of the living, not to the world of the
dead; we rejoice because he is the Alpha and also the Omega, as we proclaim in
the rite of the Paschal Candle; he lives not only yesterday, but today and for
eternity (cf. Heb 13:8).
But somehow the Resurrection is situated so far beyond our
horizon, so far outside all our experience that, returning to ourselves, we
find ourselves continuing the argument of the disciples: Of what exactly does
this "rising" consist? What does it mean for us, for the whole world
and the whole of history? A German theologian once said ironically that the
miracle of a corpse returning to life - if it really happened, which he did not
actually believe - would be ultimately irrelevant precisely because it would
not concern us. In fact, if it were simply that somebody was once brought back
to life, and no more than that, in what way should this concern us? But the
point is that Christ’s Resurrection is something more, something different. If
we may borrow the language of the theory of evolution, it is the greatest
"mutation", absolutely the most crucial leap into a totally new
dimension that there has ever been in the long history of life and its
development: a leap into a completely new order which does concern us, and concerns
the whole of history.
The discussion, that began with the disciples, would
therefore include the following questions: What happened there? What does it
mean for us, for the whole world and for me personally? Above all: what
happened? Jesus is no longer in the tomb. He is in a totally new life. But how
could this happen? What forces were in operation? The crucial point is that
this man Jesus was not alone, he was not an "I" closed in upon itself.
He was one single reality with the living God, so closely united with him as to
form one person with him. He found himself, so to speak, in an embrace with him
who is life itself, an embrace not just on the emotional level, but one which
included and permeated his being. His own life was not just his own, it was an
existential communion with God, a "being taken up" into God, and
hence it could not in reality be taken away from him. Out of love, he could
allow himself to be killed, but precisely by doing so he broke the
definitiveness of death, because in him the definitiveness of life was present.
He was one single reality with indestructible life, in such a way that it burst
forth anew through death. Let us express the same thing once again from another
angle. His death was an act of love. At the Last Supper he anticipated death
and transformed it into self-giving. His existential communion with God was
concretely an existential communion with God’s love, and this love is the real
power against death, it is stronger than death. The Resurrection was like an
explosion of light, an explosion of love which dissolved the hitherto
indissoluble compenetration of "dying and becoming". It ushered in a
new dimension of being, a new dimension of life in which, in a transformed way,
matter too was integrated and through which a new world emerges.
It is clear that this event is not just some miracle from
the past, the occurrence of which could be ultimately a matter of indifference
to us. It is a qualitative leap in the history of "evolution" and of
life in general towards a new future life, towards a new world which, starting
from Christ, already continuously permeates this world of ours, transforms it
and draws it to itself. But how does this happen? How can this event
effectively reach me and draw my life upwards towards itself? The answer,
perhaps surprising at first but totally real, is: this event comes to me
through faith and Baptism. For this reason Baptism is part of the Easter Vigil,
as we see clearly in our celebration today, when the sacraments of Christian
initiation will be conferred on a group of adults from various countries. Baptism
means precisely this, that we are not dealing with an event in the past, but
that a qualitative leap in world history comes to me, seizing hold of me in
order to draw me on.
Baptism is something quite different from an act of
ecclesial socialization, from a slightly old-fashioned and complicated rite for
receiving people into the Church. It is also more than a simple washing, more
than a kind of purification and beautification of the soul. It is truly death
and resurrection, rebirth, transformation to a new life.
How can we understand this? I think that what happens in
Baptism can be more easily explained for us if we consider the final part of
the short spiritual autobiography that Saint
Paul gave us in his Letter to the Galatians. Its
concluding words contain the heart of this biography: "It is no longer
I who live, but Christ who lives in me" (Gal 2:20). I live, but
I am no longer I. The "I", the essential identity of man - of this
man, Paul - has been changed. He still exists, and he no longer exists. He has
passed through a "not" and he now finds himself continually in this
"not": I, but no longer I.
With these words, Paul is not describing some mystical
experience which could perhaps have been granted him, and could be of interest
to us from a historical point of view, if at all. No, this phrase is an
expression of what happened at Baptism. My "I" is taken away from me
and is incorporated into a new and greater subject. This means that my "I"
is back again, but now transformed, broken up, opened through incorporation
into the other, in whom it acquires its new breadth of existence. Paul explains
the same thing to us once again from another angle when, in Chapter Three of
the Letter to the Galatians, he speaks of the "promise",
saying that it was given to an individual - to one person: to Christ. He alone
carries within himself the whole "promise". But what then happens
with us? Paul answers: You have become one in Christ (cf. Gal 3:28). Not
just one thing, but one, one only, one single new subject. This liberation of
our "I" from its isolation, this finding oneself in a new subject
means finding oneself within the vastness of God and being drawn into a life
which has now moved out of the context of "dying and becoming". The
great explosion of the Resurrection has seized us in Baptism so as to draw us
on. Thus we are associated with a new dimension of life into which, amid the
tribulations of our day, we are already in some way introduced. To live one’s
own life as a continual entry into this open space: this is the meaning of
being baptized, of being Christian. This is the joy of the Easter Vigil. The
Resurrection is not a thing of the past, the Resurrection has reached us and
seized us. We grasp hold of it, we grasp hold of the risen Lord, and we know
that he holds us firmly even when our hands grow weak. We grasp hold of his
hand, and thus we also hold on to one another’s hands, and we become one single
subject, not just one thing. I, but no longer I: this is the formula of
Christian life rooted in Baptism, the formula of the Resurrection within time. I,
but no longer I: if we live in this way, we transform the world. It is a
formula contrary to all ideologies of violence, it is a programme opposed to
corruption and to the desire for power and possession.
"I live and you will live also", says
Jesus in Saint John’s
Gospel (14:19) to his disciples, that is, to us. We will live through our
existential communion with him, through being taken up into him who is life
itself. Eternal life, blessed immortality, we have not by ourselves or in
ourselves, but through a relation - through existential communion with him who
is Truth and Love and is therefore eternal: God himself. Simple
indestructibility of the soul by itself could not give meaning to eternal life,
it could not make it a true life. Life comes to us from being loved by him who
is Life; it comes to us from living-with and loving-with him. I, but no
longer I: this is the way of the Cross, the way that "crosses
over" a life simply closed in on the I, thereby opening up the road
towards true and lasting joy.
Thus we can sing full of joy, together with the Church, in
the words of the Exsultet: "Sing, choirs of angels . . . rejoice, O
earth!" The Resurrection is a cosmic event, which includes heaven and
earth and links them together. In the words of the Exsultet once again,
we can proclaim: "Christ . . . who came back from the dead and shed his
peaceful light on all mankind, your Son who lives and reigns for ever and
ever". Amen!
EASTER VIGIL
HOMILY OF HIS HOLINESS BENEDICT XVI
Saint Peter's Basilica, Holy Saturday, 7 April 2007
Dear
Brothers and Sisters!
From ancient times the liturgy of Easter day has begun with
the words: Resurrexi et adhuc tecum sum – I arose, and am still with
you; you have set your hand upon me. The liturgy sees these as the first words
spoken by the Son to the Father after his resurrection, after his return from
the night of death into the world of the living. The hand of the Father upheld
him even on that night, and thus he could rise again.
These words are taken from Psalm 138, where originally they
had a different meaning. That Psalm is a song of wonder at God’s omnipotence
and omnipresence, a hymn of trust in the God who never allows us to fall from
his hands. And his hands are good hands. The Psalmist imagines himself
journeying to the farthest reaches of the cosmos – and what happens to him? “If
I ascend to heaven, you are there! If I make my bed in Sheol, you are there! If
I take the wings of the morning and dwell in the uttermost parts of the sea,
even there your hand shall lead me, and your right hand shall hold me. If I
say, ‘Let only darkness cover me’…, even the darkness is not dark to you…; for
darkness is as light with you” (Ps 138[139]:8-12).
On Easter day the Church tells us that Jesus Christ made
that journey to the ends of the universe for our sake. In the Letter to the
Ephesians we read that he descended to the depths of the earth, and that
the one who descended is also the one who has risen far above the heavens, that
he might fill all things (cf. 4:9ff.). The vision of the Psalm thus became
reality. In the impenetrable gloom of death Christ came like light – the night
became as bright as day and the darkness became as light. And so the Church can
rightly consider these words of thanksgiving and trust as words spoken by the
Risen Lord to his Father: “Yes, I have journeyed to the uttermost depths of the
earth, to the abyss of death, and brought them light; now I have risen and I am
upheld for ever by your hands.” But these words of the Risen Christ to the
Father have also become words which the Lord speaks to us: “I arose and now I
am still with you,” he says to each of us. My hand upholds you. Wherever you
may fall, you will always fall into my hands. I am present even at the door of
death. Where no one can accompany you further, and where you can bring nothing,
even there I am waiting for you, and for you I will change darkness into light.
These words of the Psalm, read as a dialogue between the
Risen Christ and ourselves, also explain what takes place at Baptism. Baptism
is more than a bath, a purification. It is more than becoming part of a
community. It is a new birth. A new beginning in life. The passage of the Letter
to the Romans which we have just read says, in words filled with mystery,
that in Baptism we have been “grafted” onto Christ by likeness to his death. In
Baptism we give ourselves over to Christ – he takes us unto himself, so that we
no longer live for ourselves, but through him, with him and in him; so that we
live with him and thus for others. In Baptism we surrender ourselves, we place
our lives in his hands, and so we can say with Saint Paul , “It is no longer I who live, but
Christ who lives in me.” If we offer ourselves in this way, if we accept, as it
were, the death of our very selves, this means that the frontier between death
and life is no longer absolute. On either side of death we are with Christ and
so, from that moment forward, death is no longer a real boundary. Paul tells us
this very clearly in his Letter to the Philippians: “For me to live is
Christ. To be with him (by dying) is gain. Yet if I remain in this life, I can
still labour fruitfully. And so I am hard pressed between these two things. To
depart – by being executed – and to be with Christ; that is far better. But to
remain in this life is more necessary on your account” (cf. 1:21ff.). On both
sides of the frontier of death, Paul is with Christ – there is no longer a real
difference. Yes, it is true: “Behind and before you besiege me, your hand ever
laid upon me” (Ps 138 [139]: 5). To the Romans Paul wrote: “No one …
lives to himself and no one dies to himself… Whether we live or whether we die,
we are the Lord’s” (Rom 14:7ff.).
Dear candidates for Baptism, this is what is new about
Baptism: our life now belongs to Christ, and no longer to ourselves. As a
result we are never alone, even in death, but are always with the One who lives
for ever. In Baptism, in the company of Christ, we have already made that
cosmic journey to the very abyss of death. At his side and, indeed, drawn up in
his love, we are freed from fear. He enfolds us and carries us wherever we may
go – he who is Life itself.
Let us return once more to the night of Holy Saturday. In
the Creed we say about Christ’s journey that he “descended into hell.” What
happened then? Since we have no knowledge of the world of death, we can only
imagine his triumph over death with the help of images which remain very inadequate.
Yet, inadequate as they are, they can help us to understand something of the
mystery. The liturgy applies to Jesus’ descent into the night of death the
words of Psalm 23[24]: “Lift up your heads, O gates; be lifted up, O
ancient doors!” The gates of death are closed, no one can return from there. There
is no key for those iron doors. But Christ has the key. His Cross opens wide
the gates of death, the stern doors. They are barred no longer. His Cross, his
radical love, is the key that opens them. The love of the One who, though God,
became man in order to die – this love has the power to open those doors. This
love is stronger than death. The Easter icons of the Oriental Church
show how Christ enters the world of the dead. He is clothed with light, for God
is light. “The night is bright as the day, the darkness is as light” (cf. Ps
138[139]12). Entering the world of the dead, Jesus bears the stigmata, the
signs of his passion: his wounds, his suffering, have become power: they are
love that conquers death. He meets Adam and all the men and women waiting in
the night of death. As we look at them, we can hear an echo of the prayer of
Jonah: “Out of the belly of Sheol I cried, and you heard my voice” (Jn
2:2). In the incarnation, the Son of God became one with human beings – with
Adam. But only at this moment, when he accomplishes the supreme act of love by
descending into the night of death, does he bring the journey of the
incarnation to its completion. By his death he now clasps the hand of Adam, of
every man and woman who awaits him, and brings them to the light.
But we may ask: what is the meaning of all this imagery?
What was truly new in what happened on account of Christ? The human soul was
created immortal – what exactly did Christ bring that was new? The soul is
indeed immortal, because man in a unique way remains in God’s memory and love,
even after his fall. But his own powers are insufficient to lift him up to God.
We lack the wings needed to carry us to those heights. And yet, nothing else
can satisfy man eternally, except being with God. An eternity without this
union with God would be a punishment. Man cannot attain those heights on his
own, yet he yearns for them. “Out of the depths I cry to you…” Only the Risen
Christ can bring us to complete union with God, to the place where our own
powers are unable to bring us. Truly Christ puts the lost sheep upon his
shoulders and carries it home. Clinging to his Body we have life, and in
communion with his Body we reach the very heart of God. Only thus is death
conquered, we are set free and our life is hope.
This is the joy of the Easter Vigil: we are free. In the
resurrection of Jesus, love has been shown to be stronger than death, stronger
than evil. Love made Christ descend, and love is also the power by which he
ascends. The power by which he brings us with him. In union with his love,
borne aloft on the wings of love, as persons of love, let us descend with him
into the world’s darkness, knowing that in this way we will also rise up with
him. On this night, then, let us pray: Lord, show us that love is stronger than
hatred, that love is stronger than death. Descend into the darkness and the
abyss of our modern age, and take by the hand those who await you. Bring them
to the light! In my own dark nights, be with me to bring me forth! Help me,
help all of us, to descend with you into the darkness of all those people who
are still waiting for you, who out of the depths cry unto you! Help us to bring
them your light! Help us to say the “yes” of love, the love that makes us
descend with you and, in so doing, also to rise with you. Amen!
EASTER VIGIL
HOMILY OF HIS HOLINESS BENEDICT XVI
Saint Peter's Basilica, Holy Saturday, 22 March 2008
Dear
Brothers and Sisters,
In his farewell discourse, Jesus announced his imminent
death and resurrection to his disciples with these mysterious words: “I go
away, and I will come to you”, he said (Jn 14:28). Dying is a “going
away”. Even if the body of the deceased remains behind, he himself has gone
away into the unknown, and we cannot follow him (cf. Jn 13:36). Yet in Jesus’s case, there is something
utterly new, which changes the world. In
the case of our own death, the “going away” is definitive, there is no return. Jesus, on the other hand, says of his death:
“I go away, and I will come to you.” It is by going away that he comes. His going ushers in a completely new and
greater way of being present. By dying
he enters into the love of the Father. His dying is an act of love. Love,
however, is immortal. Therefore, his going away is transformed into a new
coming, into a form of presence which reaches deeper and does not come to an
end. During his earthly life, Jesus, like all of us, was tied to the external
conditions of bodily existence: to a determined place and a determined time. Bodiliness places limits on our existence. We cannot be simultaneously in two different
places. Our time is destined to come to an end. And between the “I” and the
“you” there is a wall of otherness. To
be sure, through love we can somehow enter the other’s existence. Nevertheless,
the insurmountable barrier of being different remains in place. Yet Jesus, who
is now totally transformed through the act of love, is free from such barriers
and limits. He is able not only to pass through closed doors in the outside
world, as the Gospels recount (cf. Jn 20:19). He can pass through the
interior door separating the “I” from the “you”, the closed door between
yesterday and today, between the past and the future. On the day of his solemn
entry into Jerusalem ,
when some Greeks asked to see him, Jesus replied with the parable of the grain
of wheat which has to pass through death in order to bear much fruit. In this way he foretold his own destiny: these
words were not addressed simply to one or two Greeks in the space of a few
minutes. Through his Cross, through his going away, through his dying like the
grain of wheat, he would truly arrive among the Greeks, in such a way that they
could see him and touch him through faith. His going away is transformed into a coming,
in the Risen Lord’s universal manner of presence, yesterday, today and for ever.
He also comes today, and he embraces all times and all places. Now he can even
surmount the wall of otherness that separates the “I” from the “you”. This
happened with Paul, who describes the process of his conversion and his Baptism
in these words: “it is no longer I who live, but Christ who lives in me” (Gal
2:20). Through the coming of the Risen One, Paul obtained a new identity. His closed “I” was opened. Now he lives in communion with Jesus Christ,
in the great “I” of believers who have become – as he puts it – “one in Christ”
(Gal 3:28).
So, dear friends, it is clear that, through Baptism, the
mysterious words spoken by Jesus at the Last Supper become present for you once
more. In Baptism, the Lord enters your life through the door of your heart. We
no longer stand alongside or in opposition to one another. He passes through
all these doors. This is the reality of Baptism: he, the Risen One, comes; he
comes to you and joins his life with yours, drawing you into the open fire of
his love. You become one, one with him, and thus one among yourselves. At first
this can sound rather abstract and unrealistic. But the more you live the life
of the baptized, the more you can experience the truth of these words. Believers
– the baptized – are never truly cut off from one another. Continents,
cultures, social structures or even historical distances may separate us. But
when we meet, we know one another on the basis of the same Lord, the same
faith, the same hope, the same love, which form us. Then we experience that the
foundation of our lives is the same. We experience that in our inmost depths we
are anchored in the same identity, on the basis of which all our outward
differences, however great they may be, become secondary. Believers are never
totally cut off from one another. We are
in communion because of our deepest identity: Christ within us. Thus faith is a
force for peace and reconciliation in the world: distances between people are
overcome, in the Lord we have become close (cf. Eph 2:13).
The Church expresses the inner reality of Baptism as the
gift of a new identity through the tangible elements used in the administration
of the sacrament. The fundamental element in Baptism is water; next, in second
place, is light, which is used to great effect in the Liturgy of the Easter
Vigil. Let us take a brief look at these two elements. In the final chapter of the Letter to the
Hebrews, there is a statement about Christ which does not speak directly of
water, but the Old Testament allusions nevertheless point clearly to the
mystery of water and its symbolic meaning. Here we read: “The God of peace …
brought again from the dead our Lord Jesus, the great shepherd of the sheep, by
the blood of the eternal covenant” (13:20). In this sentence, there is an echo
of the prophecy of Isaiah, in which Moses is described as the shepherd whom the
Lord brought up from the water, from the sea (cf. 63:11). And Jesus now appears
as the new, definitive Shepherd who brings to fulfilment what Moses had done: he
leads us out of the deadly waters of the sea, out of the waters of death. In this context we may recall that Moses’
mother placed him in a basket in the Nile . Then, through God’s providence, he was taken
out of the water, carried from death to life, and thus – having himself been
saved from the waters of death – he was able to lead others through the sea of
death. Jesus descended for us into the
dark waters of death. But through his blood, so the Letter to the Hebrews tells
us, he was brought back from death: his love united itself to the Father’s
love, and thus from the abyss of death he was able to rise to life. Now he
raises us from the waters of death to true life. This is exactly what happens
in Baptism: he draws us towards himself, he draws us into true life. He leads
us through the often murky sea of history, where we are frequently in danger of
sinking amid all the confusion and perils. In Baptism he takes us, as it were,
by the hand, he leads us along the path that passes through the Red Sea of this life and introduces us to everlasting
life, the true and upright life. Let us grasp his hand firmly! Whatever may
happen, whatever may befall us, let us not lose hold of his hand! Let us walk
along the path that leads to life.
In the second place, there is the symbol of light and fire.
Gregory of Tours (4th century) recounts a practice that in some
places was preserved for a long time, of lighting the new fire for the
celebration of the Easter Vigil directly from the sun, using a crystal.Light
and fire, so to speak, were received anew from heaven, so that all the lights
and fires of the year could be kindled from them. This is a symbol of what we are celebrating in
the Easter Vigil. Through his radical love for us, in which the heart of God
and the heart of man touched, Jesus Christ truly took light from heaven and
brought it to the earth – the light of truth and the fire of love that
transform man’s being. He brought the
light, and now we know who God is and what God is like. Thus we also know what
our human situation is: what we are, and for what purpose we exist. When we are baptized, the fire of this light
is brought down deep within ourselves. Thus, in the early Church, Baptism was
also called the Sacrament of Illumination: God’s light enters into us; thus we
ourselves become children of light. We
must not allow this light of truth, that shows us the path, to be extinguished.
We must protect it from all the forces that seek to eliminate it so as to cast
us back into darkness regarding God and ourselves. Darkness, at times, can seem
comfortable. I can hide, and spend my life asleep. Yet we are not called to
darkness, but to light. In our baptismal
promises, we rekindle this light, so to speak, year by year. Yes, I believe
that the world and my life are not the product of chance, but of eternal Reason
and eternal Love, they are created by Almighty God. Yes, I believe that in
Jesus Christ, in his incarnation, in his Cross and resurrection, the face of
God has been revealed; that in him, God is present in our midst, he unites us
and leads us towards our goal, towards eternal Love. Yes, I believe that the Holy Spirit gives us
the word of truth and enlightens our hearts; I believe that in the communion of
the Church we all become one Body with the Lord, and thus we encounter his
resurrection and eternal life. The Lord has granted us the light of truth. This
light is also fire, a powerful force coming from God, a force that does not
destroy, but seeks to transform our hearts, so that we truly become men of God,
and so that his peace can become active in this world.
In the early Church there was a custom whereby the Bishop
or the priest, after the homily, would cry out to the faithful: “Conversi ad
Dominum” – turn now towards the Lord. This meant in the first place that
they would turn towards the East, towards the rising sun, the sign of Christ
returning, whom we go to meet when we celebrate the Eucharist. Where this was
not possible, for some reason, they would at least turn towards the image of
Christ in the apse, or towards the Cross, so as to orient themselves inwardly
towards the Lord. Fundamentally, this involved an interior event; conversion,
the turning of our soul towards Jesus Christ and thus towards the living God,
towards the true light. Linked with
this, then, was the other exclamation that still today, before the Eucharistic
Prayer, is addressed to the community of the faithful: “Sursum corda” –
“Lift up your hearts”, high above all our misguided concerns, desires,
anxieties and thoughtlessness – “Lift up your hearts, your inner
selves!” In both exclamations we are summoned, as it were, to a renewal of
our Baptism: Conversi ad Dominum – we must always turn away from false
paths, onto which we stray so often in our thoughts and actions. We must turn
ever anew towards him who is the Way, the Truth and the Life. We must be
converted ever anew, turning with our whole life towards the Lord. And ever
anew we must withdraw our hearts from the force of gravity, which pulls them
down, and inwardly we must raise them high: in truth and love. At this hour,
let us thank the Lord, because through the power of his word and of the holy
Sacraments, he points us in the right direction and draws our heart upwards. Let
us pray to him in these words: Yes, Lord, make us Easter people, men and women
of light, filled with the fire of your love. Amen.
EASTER VIGIL
HOMILY OF HIS HOLINESS BENEDICT XVI
Saint Peter's Basilica, Holy Saturday, 11 April 2009
Dear
Brothers and Sisters,
Saint Mark tells us in his Gospel that as the disciples
came down from the Mount of the Transfiguration, they were discussing among
themselves what “rising from the dead” could mean (cf. Mk 9:10). A
little earlier, the Lord had foretold his passion and his resurrection after
three days. Peter had protested against this prediction of death. But now, they
were wondering what could be meant by the word “resurrection”. Could it be that
we find ourselves in a similar situation? Christmas, the birth of the divine
Infant, we can somehow immediately comprehend. We can love the child, we can
imagine that night in Bethlehem , Mary’s joy, the
joy of Saint Joseph
and the shepherds, the exultation of the angels. But what is resurrection? It
does not form part of our experience, and so the message often remains to some
degree beyond our understanding, a thing of the past. The Church tries to help
us understand it, by expressing this mysterious event in the language of
symbols in which we can somehow contemplate this astonishing event. During the
Easter Vigil, the Church points out the significance of this day principally
through three symbols: light, water, and the new song – the Alleluia.
First of all, there is light. God’s creation – which has
just been proclaimed to us in the Biblical narrative – begins with the command:
“Let there be light!” (Gen 1:3). Where there is light, life is born,
chaos can be transformed into cosmos. In the Biblical message, light is the
most immediate image of God: He is total Radiance, Life, Truth, Light. During
the Easter Vigil, the Church reads the account of creation as a prophecy. In
the resurrection, we see the most sublime fulfilment of what this text
describes as the beginning of all things. God says once again: “Let there be
light!” The resurrection of Jesus is an eruption of light. Death is conquered,
the tomb is thrown open. The Risen One himself is Light, the Light of the
world. With the resurrection, the Lord’s day enters the nights of history.
Beginning with the resurrection, God’s light spreads throughout the world and
throughout history. Day dawns. This Light alone – Jesus Christ – is the true
light, something more than the physical phenomenon of light. He is pure Light:
God himself, who causes a new creation to be born in the midst of the old,
transforming chaos into cosmos.
Let us try to understand this a little better. Why is
Christ Light? In the Old Testament, the Torah was considered to be like the
light coming from God for the world and for humanity. The Torah separates light
from darkness within creation, that is to say, good from evil. It points out to
humanity the right path to true life. It points out the good, it demonstrates
the truth and it leads us towards love, which is the deepest meaning contained
in the Torah. It is a “lamp” for our steps and a “light” for our path (cf. Ps
119:105). Christians, then, knew that in Christ, the Torah is present, the Word
of God is present in him as Person. The Word of God is the true light that
humanity needs. This Word is present in him, in the Son. Psalm 19 had compared
the Torah to the sun which manifests God’s glory as it rises, for all the world
to see. Christians understand: yes indeed, in the resurrection, the Son of God
has emerged as the Light of the world. Christ is the great Light from which all
life originates. He enables us to recognize the glory of God from one end of
the earth to the other. He points out our path. He is the Lord’s day which, as
it grows, is gradually spreading throughout the earth. Now, living with him and
for him, we can live in the light.
At the Easter Vigil, the Church represents the mystery of
the light of Christ in the sign of the Paschal candle, whose flame is both
light and heat. The symbolism of light is connected with that of fire: radiance
and heat, radiance and the transforming energy contained in the fire – truth
and love go together. The Paschal candle burns, and is thereby consumed: Cross
and resurrection are inseparable. From the Cross, from the Son’s self-giving,
light is born, true radiance comes into the world. From the Paschal candle we
all light our own candles, especially the newly baptized, for whom the light of
Christ enters deeply into their hearts in this Sacrament. The early Church
described Baptism as fotismos, as the Sacrament of illumination, as a
communication of light, and linked it inseparably with the resurrection of
Christ. In Baptism, God says to the candidate: “Let there be light!” The
candidate is brought into the light of Christ. Christ now divides the light
from the darkness. In him we recognize what is true and what is false, what is
radiance and what is darkness. With him, there wells up within us the light of
truth, and we begin to understand. On one occasion when Christ looked upon the
people who had come to listen to him, seeking some guidance from him, he felt
compassion for them, because they were like sheep without a shepherd (cf. Mk
6:34). Amid the contradictory messages of that time, they did not know which
way to turn. What great compassion he must feel in our own time too – on
account of all the endless talk that people hide behind, while in reality they
are totally confused. Where must we go? What are the values by which we can
order our lives? The values by which we can educate our young, without giving
them norms they may be unable to resist, or demanding of them things that
perhaps should not be imposed upon them? He is the Light. The baptismal candle
is the symbol of enlightenment that is given to us in Baptism. Thus at this
hour, Saint Paul
speaks to us with great immediacy. In the Letter to the Philippians, he says
that, in the midst of a crooked and perverse generation, Christians should
shine as lights in the world (cf. Phil 2:15). Let us pray to the Lord
that the fragile flame of the candle he has lit in us, the delicate light of
his word and his love amid the confusions of this age, will not be extinguished
in us, but will become ever stronger and brighter, so that we, with him, can be
people of the day, bright stars lighting up our time.
The second symbol of the Easter Vigil – the night of
Baptism – is water. It appears in Sacred Scripture, and hence also in the inner
structure of the Sacrament of Baptism, with two opposed meanings. On the one
hand there is the sea, which appears as a force antagonistic to life on earth,
continually threatening it; yet God has placed a limit upon it. Hence the book
of Revelation says that in God’s new world, the sea will be no more (cf. 21:1).
It is the element of death. And so it becomes the symbolic representation of
Jesus’ death on the Cross: Christ descended into the sea, into the waters of
death, as Israel did into
the Red Sea . Having risen from death, he gives
us life. This means that Baptism is not only a cleansing, but a new birth: with
Christ we, as it were, descend into the sea of death, so as to rise up again as
new creatures.
The other way in which we encounter water is in the form of
the fresh spring that gives life, or the great river from which life comes
forth. According to the earliest practice of the Church, Baptism had to be
administered with water from a fresh spring. Without water there is no life. It
is striking how much importance is attached to wells in Sacred Scripture. They
are places from which life rises forth. Beside Jacob’s well, Christ spoke to
the Samaritan woman of the new well, the water of true life. He reveals himself
to her as the new, definitive Jacob, who opens up for humanity the well that is
awaited: the inexhaustible source of life-giving water (cf. Jn 4:5-15).
Saint John tells us that a soldier with a lance struck the side of Jesus, and
from his open side – from his pierced heart – there came out blood and water
(cf. Jn 19:34). The early Church saw in this a symbol of Baptism and
Eucharist flowing from the pierced heart of Jesus. In his death, Jesus himself
became the spring. The prophet Ezekiel saw a vision of the new Temple from which a spring issues forth that
becomes a great life-giving river (cf. Ezek 47:1-12). In a land which
constantly suffered from drought and water shortage, this was a great vision of
hope. Nascent Christianity understood: in Christ, this vision was fulfilled. He
is the true, living Temple
of God . He is the spring
of living water. From him, the great river pours forth, which in Baptism renews
the world and makes it fruitful; the great river of living water, his Gospel
which makes the earth fertile. Jesus, however, prophesied something still
greater. He said: “Whoever believes in me … out of his heart shall flow rivers
of living water” (Jn 7:38). In Baptism, the Lord makes us not only
persons of light, but also sources from which living water bursts forth. We all
know people like that, who leave us somehow refreshed and renewed; people who
are like a fountain of fresh spring water. We do not necessarily have to think
of great saints like Augustine, Francis of Assisi, Teresa of Avila, Mother
Teresa of Calcutta and so on, people through whom rivers of living water truly
entered into human history. Thanks be to God, we find them constantly even in
our daily lives: people who are like a spring. Certainly, we also know the
opposite: people who spread around themselves an atmosphere like a stagnant
pool of stale, or even poisoned water. Let us ask the Lord, who has given us
the grace of Baptism, for the gift always to be sources of pure, fresh water,
bubbling up from the fountain of his truth and his love!
The third great symbol of the Easter Vigil is something
rather different; it has to do with man himself. It is the singing of the new
song – the alleluia. When a person experiences great joy, he cannot keep it to
himself. He has to express it, to pass it on. But what happens when a person is
touched by the light of the resurrection, and thus comes into contact with Life
itself, with Truth and Love? He cannot merely speak about it. Speech is no
longer adequate. He has to sing. The first reference to singing in the Bible
comes after the crossing of the Red Sea . Israel has
risen out of slavery. It has climbed up from the threatening depths of the sea.
It is as it were reborn. It lives and it is free. The Bible describes the
people’s reaction to this great event of salvation with the verse: “The people
… believed in the Lord and in Moses his servant” (Ex 14:31). Then comes
the second reaction which, with a kind of inner necessity, follows from the
first one: “Then Moses and the Israelites sang this song to the Lord …” At the
Easter Vigil, year after year, we Christians intone this song after the third
reading, we sing it as our song, because we too, through God’s power, have been
drawn forth from the water and liberated for true life.
There is a surprising parallel to the story of Moses’ song
after Israel ’s liberation
from Egypt upon emerging
from the Red Sea , namely in the Book of
Revelation of Saint John. Before the beginning of the seven last plagues
imposed upon the earth, the seer has a vision of something “like a sea of glass
mingled with fire; and those who had conquered the beast and its image and the
number of its name, standing beside the sea of glass with harps of God in their
hands. And they sing the song of Moses, the servant of God, and the song of the
Lamb …” (Rev 15:2f.). This image describes the situation of the
disciples of Jesus Christ in every age, the situation of the Church in the
history of this world. Humanly speaking, it is self-contradictory. On the one
hand, the community is located at the Exodus, in the midst of the Red Sea , in a sea which is paradoxically ice and fire at
the same time. And must not the Church, so to speak, always walk on the sea,
through the fire and the cold? Humanly speaking, she ought to sink. But while
she is still walking in the midst of this Red Sea ,
she sings – she intones the song of praise of the just: the song of Moses and
of the Lamb, in which the Old and New Covenants blend into harmony. While,
strictly speaking, she ought to be sinking, the Church sings the song of
thanksgiving of the saved. She is standing on history’s waters of death and yet
she has already risen. Singing, she grasps at the Lord’s hand, which holds her
above the waters. And she knows that she is thereby raised outside the force of
gravity of death and evil – a force from which otherwise there would be no way
of escape – raised and drawn into the new gravitational force of God, of truth
and of love. At present, the Church and all of us are still between the two
gravitational fields. But once Christ is risen, the gravitational pull of love
is stronger than that of hatred; the force of gravity of life is stronger than
that of death. Perhaps this is actually the situation of the Church in every
age, perhaps it is our situation? It always seems as if she ought to be
sinking, and yet she is always already saved. Saint Paul illustrated this situation with
the words: “We are as dying, and behold we live” (2 Cor 6:9). The Lord’s
saving hand holds us up, and thus we can already sing the song of the saved,
the new song of the risen ones: alleluia!
Amen.
MASS OF THE DAY
HOMILY OF HIS HOLINESS POPE BENEDICT XVI
Saint Peter's Square, Easter Sunday, 12 April 2009
Dear
Brothers and Sisters,
“Christ, our Paschal lamb, has been sacrificed!” (1 Cor
5:7). On this day, Saint Paul ’s
triumphant words ring forth, words that we have just heard in the second
reading, taken from his First Letter to the Corinthians. It is a text which
originated barely twenty years after the death and resurrection of Jesus, and
yet – like many Pauline passages – it already contains, in an impressive
synthesis, a full awareness of the newness of life in Christ. The central
symbol of salvation history – the Paschal lamb – is here identified with Jesus,
who is called “our Paschal lamb”. The Hebrew Passover, commemorating the
liberation from slavery in Egypt ,
provided for the ritual sacrifice of a lamb every year, one for each family, as
prescribed by the Mosaic Law. In his passion and death, Jesus reveals himself
as the Lamb of God, “sacrificed” on the Cross, to take away the sins of the
world. He was killed at the very hour when it was customary to sacrifice the
lambs in the Temple
of Jerusalem . The meaning
of his sacrifice he himself had anticipated during the Last Supper,
substituting himself – under the signs of bread and wine – for the ritual food
of the Hebrew Passover meal. Thus we can truly say that Jesus brought to
fulfilment the tradition of the ancient Passover, and transformed it into his
Passover.
On the basis of this new meaning of the Paschal feast, we
can also understand Saint Paul ’s
interpretation of the “leaven”. The Apostle is referring to an ancient Hebrew
usage: according to which, on the occasion of the Passover, it was necessary to
remove from the household every tiny scrap of leavened bread. On the one hand,
this served to recall what had happened to their forefathers at the time of the
flight from Egypt :
leaving the country in haste, they had brought with them only unleavened bread.
At the same time, though, the “unleavened bread” was a symbol of purification:
removing the old to make space for the new. Now, Saint Paul explains, this ancient tradition
likewise acquires a new meaning, once more derived from the new “Exodus”, which
is Jesus’ passage from death to eternal life. And since Christ, as the true
Lamb, sacrificed himself for us, we too, his disciples – thanks to him and
through him – can and must be the “new dough”, the “unleavened bread”,
liberated from every residual element of the old yeast of sin: no more evil and
wickedness in our heart.
“Let us celebrate the feast … with the unleavened bread of
sincerity and truth”. This exhortation from Saint Paul , which concludes the short reading
that was proclaimed a few moments ago, resounds even more powerfully in the
context of the Pauline Year. Dear brothers and sisters, let us accept the
Apostle’s invitation; let us open our spirit to Christ, who has died and is
risen in order to renew us, in order to remove from our hearts the poison of
sin and death, and to pour in the life-blood of the Holy Spirit: divine and
eternal life. In the Easter Sequence, in what seems almost like a response to
the Apostle’s words, we sang: “Scimus Christum surrexisse a mortuis vere”
– we know that Christ has truly risen from the dead. Yes, indeed! This is the
fundamental core of our profession of faith; this is the cry of victory that
unites us all today. And if Jesus is risen, and is therefore alive, who will
ever be able to separate us from him? Who will ever be able to deprive us of
the love of him who has conquered hatred and overcome death?
The Easter proclamation spreads throughout the world with
the joyful song of the Alleluia. Let us sing it with our lips, and let
us sing it above all with our hearts and our lives, with a manner of life that
is “unleavened”, that is to say, simple, humble, and fruitful in good works. “Surrexit
Christus spes mea: praecedet vos in Galileam” – Christ my hope is risen,
and he goes before you into Galilee . The Risen
One goes before us and he accompanies us along the paths of the world. He is
our hope, He is the true peace of the world. Amen!
EASTER VIGIL
HOMILY OF HIS HOLINESS BENEDICT XVI
Saint Peter's Basilica, Holy Saturday, 3 April 2010
Dear
Brothers and Sisters,
An ancient Jewish legend from the apocryphal book “The life
of Adam and Eve” recounts that, in his final illness, Adam sent his son Seth
together with Eve into the region of Paradise
to fetch the oil of mercy, so that he could be anointed with it and healed. The
two of them went in search of the tree of life, and after much praying and
weeping on their part, the Archangel Michael appeared to them, and told them
they would not obtain the oil of the tree of mercy and that Adam would have to
die. Later, Christian readers added a word of consolation to the Archangel ’s message, to the effect that after 5,500 years
the loving King, Christ, would come, the Son of God who would anoint all those
who believe in him with the oil of his mercy. “The oil of mercy from eternity
to eternity will be given to those who are reborn of water and the Holy Spirit.
Then the Son of God, Christ, abounding in love, will descend into the depths of
the earth and will lead your father into Paradise ,
to the tree of mercy.” This legend lays bare the whole of humanity’s anguish at
the destiny of illness, pain and death that has been imposed upon us. Man’s resistance
to death becomes evident: somewhere – people have constantly thought – there
must be some cure for death. Sooner or later it should be possible to find the
remedy not only for this or that illness, but for our ultimate destiny – for
death itself. Surely the medicine of immortality must exist. Today too, the
search for a source of healing continues. Modern medical science strives, if
not exactly to exclude death, at least to eliminate as many as possible of its
causes, to postpone it further and further, to prolong life more and more. But
let us reflect for a moment: what would it really be like if we were to
succeed, perhaps not in excluding death totally, but in postponing it
indefinitely, in reaching an age of several hundred years? Would that be a good
thing? Humanity would become extraordinarily old, there would be no more room
for youth. Capacity for innovation would die, and endless life would be no
paradise, if anything a condemnation. The true cure for death must be
different. It cannot lead simply to an indefinite prolongation of this current
life. It would have to transform our lives from within. It would need to create
a new life within us, truly fit for eternity: it would need to transform us in
such a way as not to come to an end with death, but only then to begin in
fullness. What is new and exciting in the Christian message, in the Gospel of
Jesus Christ, was and is that we are told: yes indeed, this cure for death,
this true medicine of immortality, does exist. It has been found. It is within
our reach. In baptism, this medicine is given to us. A new life begins in us, a
life that matures in faith and is not extinguished by the death of the old
life, but is only then fully revealed.
To this some, perhaps many, will respond: I certainly hear
the message, but I lack faith. And even those who want to believe will ask: but
is it really so? How are we to picture it to ourselves? How does this
transformation of the old life come about, so as to give birth to the new life
that knows no death? Once again, an ancient Jewish text can help us form an
idea of the mysterious process that begins in us at baptism. There it is
recounted how the patriarch Enoch was taken up to the throne of God. But he was
filled with fear in the presence of the glorious angelic powers, and in his
human weakness he could not contemplate the face of God. “Then God said to
Michael,” to quote from the book of Enoch, “‘Take Enoch and remove his earthly
clothing. Anoint him with sweet oil and vest him in the robes of glory!’ And
Michael took off my garments, anointed me with sweet oil, and this oil was more
than a radiant light … its splendour was like the rays of the sun. When I
looked at myself, I saw that I was like one of the glorious beings” (Ph. Rech,
Inbild des Kosmos, II 524).
Precisely this – being reclothed in the new garment of God
– is what happens in baptism, so the Christian faith tells us. To be sure, this
changing of garments is something that continues for the whole of life. What
happens in baptism is the beginning of a process that embraces the whole of our
life – it makes us fit for eternity, in such a way that, robed in the garment
of light of Jesus Christ, we can appear before the face of God and live with
him for ever.
In the rite of baptism there are two elements in which this
event is expressed and made visible in a way that demands commitment for the
rest of our lives. There is first of all the rite of renunciation and the
promises. In the early Church, the one to be baptized turned towards the west,
the symbol of darkness, sunset, death and hence the dominion of sin. The one to
be baptized turned in that direction and pronounced a threefold “no”: to the
devil, to his pomp and to sin. The strange word “pomp”, that is to say the
devil’s glamour, referred to the splendour of the ancient cult of the gods and
of the ancient theatre, in which it was considered entertaining to watch people
being torn limb from limb by wild beasts. What was being renounced by this “no”
was a type of culture that ensnared man in the adoration of power, in the world
of greed, in lies, in cruelty. It was an act of liberation from the imposition
of a form of life that was presented as pleasure and yet hastened the
destruction of all that was best in man. This renunciation – albeit in less
dramatic form – remains an essential part of baptism today. We remove the “old
garments”, which we cannot wear in God’s presence. Or better put: we begin to
remove them. This renunciation is actually a promise in which we hold out our
hand to Christ, so that he may guide us and reclothe us. What these “garments”
are that we take off, what the promise is that we make, becomes clear when we
see in the fifth chapter of the Letter to the Galatians what Paul calls “works
of the flesh” – a term that refers precisely to the old garments that we
remove. Paul designates them thus: “fornication, impurity, licentiousness,
idolatry, sorcery, enmity, strife, jealousy, anger, selfishness, dissension,
party spirit, envy, drunkenness, carousing and the like” (Gal 5:19ff.).
These are the garments that we remove: the garments of death.
Then, in the practice of the early Church, the one to be
baptized turned towards the east – the symbol of light, the symbol of the newly
rising sun of history, the symbol of Christ. The candidate for baptism
determines the new direction of his life: faith in the Trinitarian God to whom
he entrusts himself. Thus it is God who clothes us in the garment of light, the
garment of life. Paul calls these new “garments” “fruits of the spirit”, and he
describes them as follows: “love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness,
faithfulness, gentleness, self-control” (Gal 5:22).
In the early Church, the candidate for baptism was then
truly stripped of his garments. He descended into the baptismal font and was
immersed three times – a symbol of death that expresses all the radicality of
this removal and change of garments. His former death-bound life the candidate
consigns to death with Christ, and he lets himself be drawn up by and with
Christ into the new life that transforms him for eternity. Then, emerging from
the waters of baptism the neophytes were clothed in the white garment, the
garment of God’s light, and they received the lighted candle as a sign of the
new life in the light that God himself had lit within them. They knew that they
had received the medicine of immortality, which was fully realized at the
moment of receiving holy communion. In this sacrament we receive the body of
the risen Lord and we ourselves are drawn into this body, firmly held by the
One who has conquered death and who carries us through death.
In the course of the centuries, the symbols were
simplified, but the essential content of baptism has remained the same. It is
no mere cleansing, still less is it a somewhat complicated initiation into a
new association. It is death and resurrection, rebirth to new life.
Indeed, the cure for death does exist. Christ is the tree
of life, once more within our reach. If we remain close to him, then we have
life. Hence, during this night of resurrection, with all our hearts we shall
sing the alleluia, the song of joy that has no need of words. Hence, Paul can
say to the Philippians: “Rejoice in the Lord always, again I will say,
rejoice!” (Phil 4:4). Joy cannot be commanded. It can only be given. The risen
Lord gives us joy: true life. We are already held for ever in the love of the
One to whom all power in heaven and on earth has been given (cf. Mt 28:18). In
this way, confident of being heard, we make our own the Church’s Prayer over the
Gifts from the liturgy of this night: Accept the prayers and offerings of your
people. With your help may this Easter mystery of our redemption bring to
perfection the saving work you have begun in us. Amen.
EASTER VIGIL
HOMILY OF HIS HOLINESS BENEDICT XVI
Saint Peter's Basilica, Holy Saturday, 23 April 2011
Dear
Brothers and Sisters,
The liturgical celebration of the Easter Vigil makes use of
two eloquent signs. First there is the fire that becomes light. As the
procession makes its way through the church, shrouded in the darkness of the
night, the light of the Paschal Candle becomes a wave of lights, and it speaks
to us of Christ as the true morning star that never sets – the Risen Lord in
whom light has conquered darkness. The second sign is water. On the one hand,
it recalls the waters of the Red Sea , decline
and death, the mystery of the Cross. But now it is presented to us as spring
water, a life-giving element amid the dryness. Thus it becomes the image of the
sacrament of baptism, through which we become sharers in the death and
resurrection of Jesus Christ.
Yet these great signs of creation, light and water, are not
the only constituent elements of the liturgy of the Easter Vigil. Another
essential feature is the ample encounter with the words of sacred Scripture
that it provides. Before the liturgical reform there were twelve Old Testament
readings and two from the New Testament. The New Testament readings have been
retained. The number of Old Testament readings has been fixed at seven, but
depending upon the local situation, they may be reduced to three. The Church
wishes to offer us a panoramic view of whole trajectory of salvation history,
starting with creation, passing through the election and the liberation of Israel to the
testimony of the prophets by which this entire history is directed ever more
clearly towards Jesus Christ. In the liturgical tradition all these readings
were called prophecies. Even when they are not directly foretelling future
events, they have a prophetic character, they show us the inner foundation and
orientation of history. They cause creation and history to become transparent
to what is essential. In this way they take us by the hand and lead us towards
Christ, they show us the true Light.
At the Easter Vigil, the journey along the paths of sacred
Scripture begins with the account of creation. This is the liturgy’s way of
telling us that the creation story is itself a prophecy. It is not information
about the external processes by which the cosmos and man himself came into
being. The Fathers of the Church were well aware of this. They did not
interpret the story as an account of the process of the origins of things, but
rather as a pointer towards the essential, towards the true beginning and end
of our being. Now, one might ask: is it really important to speak also of
creation during the Easter Vigil? Could we not begin with the events in which
God calls man, forms a people for himself and creates his history with men upon
the earth? The answer has to be: no. To omit the creation would be to
misunderstand the very history of God with men, to diminish it, to lose sight
of its true order of greatness. The sweep of history established by God reaches
back to the origins, back to creation. Our profession of faith begins with the
words: “We believe in God, the Father Almighty, Creator of heaven and earth”.
If we omit the beginning of the Credo, the whole history of salvation
becomes too limited and too small. The Church is not some kind of association
that concerns itself with man’s religious needs but is limited to that
objective. No, she brings man into contact with God and thus with the source of
all things. Therefore we relate to God as Creator, and so we have a
responsibility for creation. Our responsibility extends as far as creation
because it comes from the Creator. Only because God created everything can he
give us life and direct our lives. Life in the Church’s faith involves more
than a set of feelings and sentiments and perhaps moral obligations. It embraces
man in his entirety, from his origins to his eternal destiny. Only because
creation belongs to God can we place ourselves completely in his hands. And
only because he is the Creator can he give us life for ever. Joy over creation,
thanksgiving for creation and responsibility for it all belong together.
The central message of the creation account can be defined
more precisely still. In the opening words of his Gospel, Saint John sums up the essential meaning of
that account in this single statement: “In the beginning was the Word”. In
effect, the creation account that we listened to earlier is characterized by
the regularly recurring phrase: “And God said ...” The world is a product of
the Word, of the Logos, as Saint John expresses it, using a key term from
the Greek language. “Logos” means “reason”, “sense”, “word”. It is not
reason pure and simple, but creative Reason, that speaks and communicates
itself. It is Reason that both is and creates sense. The creation account tells
us, then, that the world is a product of creative Reason. Hence it tells us
that, far from there being an absence of reason and freedom at the origin of
all things, the source of everything is creative Reason, love, and freedom.
Here we are faced with the ultimate alternative that is at stake in the dispute
between faith and unbelief: are irrationality, lack of freedom and pure chance
the origin of everything, or are reason, freedom and love at the origin of
being? Does the primacy belong to unreason or to reason? This is what everything
hinges upon in the final analysis. As believers we answer, with the creation
account and with Saint John ,
that in the beginning is reason. In the beginning is freedom. Hence it is good
to be a human person. It is not the case that in the expanding universe, at a
late stage, in some tiny corner of the cosmos, there evolved randomly some
species of living being capable of reasoning and of trying to find rationality
within creation, or to bring rationality into it. If man were merely a random
product of evolution in some place on the margins of the universe, then his
life would make no sense or might even be a chance of nature. But no, Reason is
there at the beginning: creative, divine Reason. And because it is Reason, it
also created freedom; and because freedom can be abused, there also exist
forces harmful to creation. Hence a thick black line, so to speak, has been
drawn across the structure of the universe and across the nature of man. But
despite this contradiction, creation itself remains good, life remains good,
because at the beginning is good Reason, God’s creative love. Hence the world
can be saved. Hence we can and must place ourselves on the side of reason,
freedom and love – on the side of God who loves us so much that he suffered for
us, that from his death there might emerge a new, definitive and healed life.
The Old Testament account of creation that we listened to
clearly indicates this order of realities. But it leads us a further step
forward. It has structured the process of creation within the framework of a
week leading up to the Sabbath, in which it finds its completion. For Israel , the
Sabbath was the day on which all could participate in God’s rest, in which man
and animal, master and slave, great and small were united in God’s freedom.
Thus the Sabbath was an expression of the Covenant between God and man and
creation. In this way, communion between God and man does not appear as
something extra, something added later to a world already fully created. The
Covenant, communion between God and man, is inbuilt at the deepest level of
creation. Yes, the Covenant is the inner ground of creation, just as creation
is the external presupposition of the Covenant. God made the world so that
there could be a space where he might communicate his love, and from which the
response of love might come back to him. From God’s perspective, the heart of
the man who responds to him is greater and more important than the whole
immense material cosmos, for all that the latter allows us to glimpse something
of God’s grandeur.
Easter and the paschal experience of Christians, however,
now require us to take a further step. The Sabbath is the seventh day of the
week. After six days in which man in some sense participates in God’s work of
creation, the Sabbath is the day of rest. But something quite unprecedented
happened in the nascent Church: the place of the Sabbath, the seventh day, was
taken by the first day. As the day of the liturgical assembly, it is the day
for encounter with God through Jesus Christ who as the Risen Lord encountered
his followers on the first day, Sunday, after they had found the tomb empty.
The structure of the week is overturned. No longer does it point towards the
seventh day, as the time to participate in God’s rest. It sets out from the
first day as the day of encounter with the Risen Lord. This encounter happens
afresh at every celebration of the Eucharist, when the Lord enters anew into
the midst of his disciples and gives himself to them, allows himself, so to
speak, to be touched by them, sits down at table with them. This change is
utterly extraordinary, considering that the Sabbath, the seventh day seen as
the day of encounter with God, is so profoundly rooted in the Old Testament. If
we also bear in mind how much the movement from work towards the rest-day
corresponds to a natural rhythm, the dramatic nature of this change is even
more striking. This revolutionary development that occurred at the very the
beginning of the Church’s history can be explained only by the fact that something
utterly new happened that day. The first day of the week was the third day
after Jesus’ death. It was the day when he showed himself to his disciples as
the Risen Lord. In truth, this encounter had something unsettling about it. The
world had changed. This man who had died was now living with a life that was no
longer threatened by any death. A new form of life had been inaugurated, a new
dimension of creation. The first day, according to the Genesis account, is the
day on which creation begins. Now it was the day of creation in a new way, it
had become the day of the new creation. We celebrate the first day. And in so
doing we celebrate God the Creator and his creation. Yes, we believe in God,
the Creator of heaven and earth. And we celebrate the God who was made man, who
suffered, died, was buried and rose again. We celebrate the definitive victory
of the Creator and of his creation. We celebrate this day as the origin and the
goal of our existence. We celebrate it because now, thanks to the risen Lord,
it is definitively established that reason is stronger than unreason, truth
stronger than lies, love stronger than death. We celebrate the first day
because we know that the black line drawn across creation does not last for
ever. We celebrate it because we know that those words from the end of the
creation account have now been definitively fulfilled: “God saw everything that
he had made, and behold, it was very good” (Gen 1:31). Amen.
EASTER VIGIL
HOMILY OF HIS HOLINESS BENEDICT XVI
Saint Peter's Basilica, Holy Saturday, 7 April 2012
Dear
Brothers and Sisters,
Easter is the feast of the new creation. Jesus is risen and
dies no more. He has opened the door to a new life, one that no longer knows
illness and death. He has taken mankind up into God himself. “Flesh and blood
cannot inherit the kingdom of God ”, as Saint
Paul says in the First Letter to the Corinthians
(15:50). On the subject of Christ’s resurrection and our resurrection, the
Church writer Tertullian in the third century was bold enough to write: “Rest
assured, flesh and blood, through Christ you have gained your place in heaven
and in the Kingdom
of God ” (CCL II,
994). A new dimension has opened up for mankind. Creation has become greater
and broader. Easter Day ushers in a new creation, but that is precisely why the
Church starts the liturgy on this day with the old creation, so that we can
learn to understand the new one aright. At the beginning of the Liturgy of the
Word on Easter night, then, comes the account of the creation of the world. Two
things are particularly important here in connection with this liturgy. On the
one hand, creation is presented as a whole that includes the phenomenon of
time. The seven days are an image of completeness, unfolding in time. They are
ordered towards the seventh day, the day of the freedom of all creatures for
God and for one another. Creation is therefore directed towards the coming
together of God and his creatures; it exists so as to open up a space for the
response to God’s great glory, an encounter between love and freedom. On the
other hand, what the Church hears on Easter night is above all the first
element of the creation account: “God said, ‘let there be light!’” (Gen 1:3).
The creation account begins symbolically with the creation of light. The sun
and the moon are created only on the fourth day. The creation account calls
them lights, set by God in the firmament of heaven. In this way he deliberately
takes away the divine character that the great religions had assigned to them.
No, they are not gods. They are shining bodies created by the one God. But they
are preceded by the light through which God’s glory is reflected in the essence
of the created being.
What is the creation account saying here? Light makes life
possible. It makes encounter possible. It makes communication possible. It
makes knowledge, access to reality and to truth, possible. And insofar as it
makes knowledge possible, it makes freedom and progress possible. Evil hides.
Light, then, is also an expression of the good that both is and creates
brightness. It is daylight, which makes it possible for us to act. To say that
God created light means that God created the world as a space for knowledge and
truth, as a space for encounter and freedom, as a space for good and for love.
Matter is fundamentally good, being itself is good. And evil does not come from
God-made being, rather, it comes into existence only through denial. It is a
“no”.
At Easter, on the morning of the first day of the week, God
said once again: “Let there be light”. The night on the Mount
of Olives , the solar eclipse of Jesus’ passion and death, the
night of the grave had all passed. Now it is the first day once again –
creation is beginning anew. “Let there be light”, says God, “and there was
light”: Jesus rises from the grave. Life is stronger than death. Good is
stronger than evil. Love is stronger than hate. Truth is stronger than lies.
The darkness of the previous days is driven away the moment Jesus rises from
the grave and himself becomes God’s pure light. But this applies not only to
him, not only to the darkness of those days. With the resurrection of Jesus,
light itself is created anew. He draws all of us after him into the new light
of the resurrection and he conquers all darkness. He is God’s new day, new for
all of us.
But how is this to come about? How does all this affect us
so that instead of remaining word it becomes a reality that draws us in?
Through the sacrament of baptism and the profession of faith, the Lord has
built a bridge across to us, through which the new day reaches us. The Lord
says to the newly-baptized: Fiat lux – let there be light. God’s new
day – the day of indestructible life, comes also to us. Christ takes you by the
hand. From now on you are held by him and walk with him into the light, into
real life. For this reason the early Church called baptism photismos –
illumination.
Why was this? The darkness that poses a real threat to
mankind, after all, is the fact that he can see and investigate tangible
material things, but cannot see where the world is going or whence it comes,
where our own life is going, what is good and what is evil. The darkness
enshrouding God and obscuring values is the real threat to our existence and to
the world in general. If God and moral values, the difference between good and
evil, remain in darkness, then all other “lights”, that put such incredible
technical feats within our reach, are not only progress but also dangers that
put us and the world at risk. Today we can illuminate our cities so brightly
that the stars of the sky are no longer visible. Is this not an image of the
problems caused by our version of enlightenment? With regard to material
things, our knowledge and our technical accomplishments are legion, but what
reaches beyond, the things of God and the question of good, we can no longer
identify. Faith, then, which reveals God’s light to us, is the true
enlightenment, enabling God’s light to break into our world, opening our eyes
to the true light.
Dear friends, as I conclude, I would like to add one more
thought about light and illumination. On Easter night, the night of the new
creation, the Church presents the mystery of light using a unique and very
humble symbol: the Paschal candle. This is a light that lives from sacrifice.
The candle shines inasmuch as it is burnt up. It gives light, inasmuch as it
gives itself. Thus the Church presents most beautifully the paschal mystery of
Christ, who gives himself and so bestows the great light. Secondly, we should
remember that the light of the candle is a fire. Fire is the power that shapes
the world, the force of transformation. And fire gives warmth. Here too the
mystery of Christ is made newly visible. Christ, the light, is fire, flame,
burning up evil and so reshaping both the world and ourselves. “Whoever is
close to me is close to the fire,” as Jesus is reported by Origen to have said.
And this fire is both heat and light: not a cold light, but one through which
God’s warmth and goodness reach down to us.
The great hymn of the Exsultet, which the deacon sings at
the beginning of the Easter liturgy, points us quite gently towards a further
aspect. It reminds us that this object, the candle, has its origin in the work
of bees. So the whole of creation plays its part. In the candle, creation
becomes a bearer of light. But in the mind of the Fathers, the candle also in
some sense contains a silent reference to the Church,. The cooperation of the
living community of believers in the Church in some way resembles the activity
of bees. It builds up the community of light. So the candle serves as a summons
to us to become involved in the community of the Church, whose raison
d’être is to let the light of Christ shine upon the world.
© Copyright 2013 - Libreria Editrice Vaticana
Book by Orestes J. González