Entry 0342: Reflections on Palm Sunday
by Pope Benedict XVI
On seven
occasions during his pontificate, Pope Benedict XVI delivered reflections on Palm Sunday, on 9 April 2006, 1 April 2007, 16 March
2008, 5 April 2009, 28 March 2010, 17 April 2011, and 1 April 2012. Here are the texts of seven brief reflections prior to the recitation of the Angelus and seven homilies delivered on
these occasions.
Dear brothers and
sisters, may these days call forth two sentiments in particular: praise, after the
example of those who welcomed Jesus into Jerusalem with their “Hosanna!”, and thanksgiving,
because in this Holy Week the Lord Jesus will renew the greatest gift we could possibly
imagine: he will give us his life, his body and his blood, his love. But we must respond worthily to so great a gift,
that is to say, with the gift of ourselves, our time, our prayer, our entering into
a profound communion of love with Christ who suffered, died and rose for us. The early Church Fathers saw a symbol of all this
in the gesture of the people who followed Jesus on his entry into Jerusalem , the gesture of spreading
out their coats before the Lord. Before Christ
– the Fathers said – we must spread out our lives, ourselves, in an attitude of
gratitude and adoration. As we conclude,
let us listen once again to the words of one of these early Fathers, Saint Andrew,
Bishop of Crete: “So it is ourselves that we must spread under Christ’s feet, not
coats or lifeless branches or shoots of trees, matter which wastes away and delights
the eye only for a few brief hours. But we
have clothed ourselves with Christ’s grace, or with the whole Christ ... so let
us spread ourselves like coats under his feet ... let us offer not palm branches
but the prizes of victory to the conqueror of death. Today let us too give voice with the children
to that sacred chant, as we wave the spiritual branches of our soul: ‘Blessed is
he who comes in the name of the Lord, the King of Israel’” (PG 97, 994). Amen!
CELEBRATION
OF PALM SUNDAY OF THE PASSION OF OUR LORD
ANGELUS
Saint
Peter’s Square, XXI World Youth Day, Sunday, 9 April 2006
Brothers and sisters,
In a short while
a delegation of German youth will consign the World Youth Day Cross to their Australian
peers. It is the Cross that beloved John Paul II entrusted to youth in 1984 so that
they would bring this sign of Christ’s love for humanity into the world.
I greet Cardinal
Joachim Meisner, Archbishop of Cologne, and Cardinal George Pell, Archbishop of
Sydney, who wished to be present during this very significant moment. The passing
on of the Cross after every World Youth Day gathering has become a “tradition” in
the true sense of the word traditio, a highly symbolic consignment to be
lived with great faith, making the effort to fulfill a journey of conversion following
in the footsteps of Jesus.
This faith is taught
to us by Mary Most Holy, who was the first “to believe” and who carried her own
cross together with her Son, experiencing with him the joy of the Resurrection.
This is why the Youth
Day Cross is accompanied by an icon of the Virgin, an image of Mary, Salus Populi
Romani, venerated in the Basilica of St Mary Major, the most ancient Basilica
of the West dedicated to the Blessed Mother.
The Cross and the
Marian Icon of the World Youth Days, after having made stops in some countries of
Africa to manifest Christ’s closeness and that of his Mother to the people of that
Continent, tried by great suffering, will be welcomed in different regions of Oceania beginning this February. It will travel through the
Dioceses of Australia and will finally reach Sydney in July 2008.
It is a spiritual
pilgrimage that involves the entire Christian community, especially young people.
CELEBRATION
OF PALM SUNDAY OF THE PASSION OF OUR LORD
HOMILY OF HIS HOLINESS BENEDICT XVI
Saint
Peter’s Square, XXI World Youth Day, Sunday, 9 April 2006
Dear Brothers
and Sisters,
For 20 years, thanks
to Pope John Paul II, Palm Sunday has become in a special way a day for youth -
the day on which all young people across the world go to meet Christ, eager to accompany
him to their cities and their countries, so that he may be among us and establish
his peace in the world. However, if we want to encounter Jesus and then to walk
with him on his path, we must ask: on what
path does he want to lead us? What do we expect of him? What does he expect of us?
To understand what
happens on Palm Sunday and to know what this means, not only for that hour but for
all time, one detail has proved to be important; it also became the key to understanding
the event for his disciples too, when they looked back after Easter with new eyes
at those tumultuous days.
Jesus entered the
Holy City riding on a donkey, that is, the animal
of the simple, common country people, and moreover, it was an ass that did not belong
to him but one he had asked to borrow for the occasion.
He did not arrive
in an ostentatious royal carriage or on horseback like the great figures of the
world, but on a borrowed donkey. John tells us that at first the disciples did not
understand his action. Only after Easter did they realize that Jesus, by so acting,
was fulfilling what the prophets had foretold:
that his action derived from God’s Word and was bringing it to fulfilment.
It should be remembered,
John said, that in the Book of the Prophet Zechariah we read: “Fear not, daughter of Zion ; behold, your king is coming, sitting on
the colt of an ass” (Jn 12: 15; see Zec 9: 9). To understand the significance of
the prophecy and, consequently, of Jesus’ behavior, we must listen to the whole
of Zechariah’s text, which continues thus:
“He shall banish the chariot from Ephraim, and the horse from Jerusalem ; the warrior’s bow
shall be banished, and he shall proclaim peace to the nations. His dominion will
be from sea to sea, and from the river to the ends of the earth” (see 9: 10).
With that, the Prophet
says three things about the future king. In the first place he says that he will
be a king of the poor, a poor man among the poor and for the poor. In this case
poverty is meant in the sense of the anawim of Israel ,
of those believing and trusting souls that we meet around Jesus - in the perspective
of the first Beatitude of the Sermon on the Mount.
A person can be materially
poor yet his heart can be full of greed for wealth and for the power that derives
from it. The very fact that he lives with envy and covetousness shows that, in his
heart, he is one of the rich. He wants to reverse the division of goods so that
he himself can take over the situation that was previously theirs.
The poverty that
Jesus means - that the prophets mean - presupposes above all inner freedom from
the greed for possession and the mania for power. This is a greater reality than
merely a different distribution of possessions, which would still be in the material
domain and thereby make hearts even harder. It is first and foremost a matter of
purification of heart, through which one recognizes possession as responsibility,
as a duty towards others, placing oneself under God’s gaze and letting oneself be
guided by Christ, who from being rich became poor for our sake (see II Cor 8: 9).
Inner freedom is
the prerequisite for overcoming the corruption and greed that devastate the world
today. This freedom can only be found if God becomes our richness; it can only be
found in the patience of daily sacrifices, in which, as it were, true freedom develops.
It is the King who points out to us the way to this goal: Jesus, whom we acclaim on Palm Sunday, whom we
ask to take us with him on his way.
The second thing
the prophet shows us is that this king will be a king of peace: he will cause chariots of war and war horses to
vanish, he will break bows and proclaim peace.
This is brought about
in Jesus through the sign of the Cross. The Cross is the broken bow, in a certain
way, God’s new, true rainbow which connects the heavens and the earth and bridges
the abysses between the continents. The new weapon that Jesus places in our hands
is the Cross - a sign of reconciliation, of forgiveness, a sign of love that is
stronger than death.
Every time we make
the Sign of the Cross we should remember not to confront injustice with other injustice
or violence with other violence: let us remember
that we can only overcome evil with good and never by paying evil back with evil.
The third affirmation
of the prophet is the preannouncement of universality. Zechariah says that the kingdom
of the king of peace extends “from sea to sea... to the ends of the earth”. The
ancient promise of the earth, made to Abraham and to the Fathers, is replaced here
by a new vision: the domain of the Messianic
King is no longer a specific country that would later necessarily be separated from
other countries and hence, inevitably, would take a stance against them. His country
is the earth, the whole world.
He creates unity
in the multiplicity of cultures, overcoming every boundary. By perceptively penetrating
the clouds of history that separated the Prophet from Jesus, we see in this prophecy,
emerging from the distant horizon of prophecy, the network of Eucharistic communities
that embraces the earth, the whole world - a network of communities that constitutes
Jesus’ “Kingdom of peace”, which extends from sea to sea, to the ends of the earth.
He comes in all cultures
and all parts of the world, everywhere, in wretched huts and in poor rural areas
as well as in the splendor of cathedrals. He is the same everywhere, the One, and
thus all those gathered with him in prayer and communion are also united in one
body. Christ rules by making himself our Bread and giving himself to us. It is in
this way that he builds his Kingdom.
This connection becomes
quite clear in the other words from the Old Testament which characterize and explain
the Palm Sunday liturgy and its special atmosphere. The crowds acclaim Jesus: “Hosanna! Blessed is he who comes in the name
of the Lord” (Mk 11: 9; Ps 118[117]: 25ff.).
These words are part
of the rite of the Feast of Tabernacles, during which the faithful move in a circle
around the altar, holding in their hands branches of palm, myrtle and willow.
Now, their palms
in their hands, the people raise this cry before Jesus, in whom they see the One
who comes in the name of the Lord. The phrase:
“He who comes in the name of the Lord”, in fact, had long before become the
designation of the Messiah.
In Jesus, they recognize
the One who truly comes in the name of the Lord and brings God’s presence among
them. In the Church, this cry of hope of Israel ,
this acclamation of Jesus during his entry into Jerusalem , has with good reason become the acclamation
of the One who comes in the Eucharist to meet us in a new way. We greet with the
cry of “Hosanna!” the One who brought God’s glory to the earth in flesh and blood.
We greet the One
who came yet always remains, the One who is to come. We greet the One who, in the
Eucharist, always comes to us again in the name of the Lord, thus joining the ends
of the earth in God’s peace.
This experience of
universality is an essential part of the Eucharist. Since the Lord comes, we emerge
from our exclusive forms of particularism and enter into the great community of
all who are celebrating this holy sacrament. We enter his Kingdom of peace and in
him, in a certain way, we greet all our brothers and sisters to whom he comes, to
become truly a kingdom of peace in the midst of this lacerated world.
All three characteristics
announced by the Prophet - poverty, peace, universality - are summed up in the sign
of the Cross. Therefore, with good reason, the Cross has become the centre of the
World Youth Days.
There was a time
- and it has not yet been completely surmounted - in which Christianity was rejected
precisely because of the Cross. The Cross speaks of sacrifice, it was said, the
Cross is the sign of the denial of life. Instead, we want life in its entirety,
without restrictions and without sacrifices. We want to live, all we want is to
live. Let us not allow ourselves to be limited by precepts and prohibitions; we
want richness and fullness - this is what was said and is still being said.
All this sounds convincing
and seductive; it is the language of the serpent that says to us: “Do not be afraid! Quietly eat the fruit of all
the trees in the garden!”
Palm Sunday, however,
tells us that the great “Yes” is precisely the Cross, that the Cross itself is the
true tree of life. We do not find life by possessing it, but by giving it. Love
is a gift of oneself, and for this reason it is the way of true life symbolized
by the Cross.
Today, the Cross
that was recently the focus of the World Youth Day in Cologne
is being consigned to a special delegation so that it may begin the journey to Sydney , where in 2008 the youth
of the world are planning to meet again around Christ to build with him the Kingdom
of peace.
From Cologne to Sydney
- a journey across continents and cultures, a journey through a world torn and tormented
by violence! Symbolically, it is like the journey the prophet pointed out from sea
to sea, from the river to the ends of the earth. It is the journey of the One who,
in the sign of the Cross, gives us peace and makes us become messengers of reconciliation
and of his peace.
I thank the young
people who will now carry this Cross, in which we can as it were touch the mystery
of Jesus on the highways of the world. Let us pray that at the same time, it will
touch us and open our hearts, so that by following his Cross we will become messengers
of his love and his peace. Amen.
22nd
WORLD YOUTH DAY
GREETINGS OF THE HOLY FATHER BENEDICT XVI
AT THE END OF PALM SUNDAY MASS
ANGELUS
Saint
Peter’s Square, Sunday, 1st April 2007
I welcome the English-speaking
pilgrims and visitors here this Palm Sunday, when we acclaim Jesus, model of humility,
our Messiah and King. In a special way I greet all the young people gathered in
Rome and around
the world to celebrate World Youth Day. May the great events of Holy Week, in which
we see love unfold in its most radical form, inspire you to be courageous “witnesses
of charity” for your friends, your communities and our world. Upon each of you present
and your families, I invoke God’s Blessings of peace and wisdom.
CELEBRATION
OF PALM SUNDAY OF THE PASSION OF OUR LORD
HOMILY OF HIS HOLINESS BENEDICT XVI
Saint
Peter’s Square, 22nd World Youth Day, Sunday, 1st April 2007
Dear Brothers
and Sisters,
In the Palm Sunday
procession we join with the crowd of disciples who in festive joy accompany the
Lord during his entry into Jerusalem .
Like them, we praise the Lord with a loud voice for all the miracles we have seen.
Yes, we too have seen and still see today the wonders of Christ: how he brings men and women to renounce the comforts
of their lives and devote themselves totally to the service of the suffering; how
he gives men and women the courage to oppose violence and deceit, to make room for
truth in the world; how, in secret, he persuades men and women to do good to others,
to bring about reconciliation where there had been hatred and to create peace where
enmity had reigned.
The procession is
first and foremost a joyful witness that we bear to Jesus Christ, in whom the Face
of God became visible to us and thanks to whom the Heart of God is open to us. In
Luke’s Gospel, the account of the beginning of the procession in the vicinity of
Jerusalem is in part modeled literally on the rite of coronation with which, according
to the First Book of Kings, Solomon was invested as heir to David’s kingship (see
I Kgs 1: 33-35).
Thus, the procession
of the Palms is also a procession of Christ the King: we profess the Kingship of Jesus Christ, we recognize
Jesus as the Son of David, the true Solomon, the King of peace and justice. Recognizing
him as King means accepting him as the One who shows us the way, in whom we trust
and whom we follow. It means accepting his Word day after day as a valid criterion
for our life. It means seeing in him the authority to which we submit. We submit
to him because his authority is the authority of the truth.
The procession of
the Palms - as it was at that time for the disciples - is primarily an expression
of joy because we are able to recognize Jesus, because he allows us to be his friends
and because he has given us the key to life. This joy, however, which is at the
beginning, is also an expression of our “yes” to Jesus and our willingness to go
with him wherever he takes us. The exhortation with which our Liturgy today begins,
therefore, correctly interprets the procession as a symbolic representation of what
we call the “following of Christ”: “Let us
ask for the grace to follow him”, we said. The expression “following of Christ”
is a description of the whole of Christian existence. In what does it consist? What
does “to follow Christ” actually mean?
At the outset, with
the first disciples, its meaning was very simple and immediate: it meant that to go with Jesus these people decided
to give up their profession, their affairs, their whole life. It meant undertaking
a new profession: discipleship. The fundamental
content of this profession was accompanying the Teacher and total entrustment to
his guidance. The “following” was therefore something external, but at the same
time very internal. The exterior aspect was walking behind Jesus on his journeys
through Palestine; the interior aspect was the new existential orientation whose
reference points were no longer in events, in work as a source of income or in the
personal will, but consisted in total abandonment to the will of Another. Being
at his disposal, henceforth, became the raison d’être of life. In certain Gospel
scenes we can recognize quite clearly that this means the renouncement of one’s
possessions and detachment from oneself.
But with this it
is also clear what “following” means for us and what its true essence is for us: it is an interior change of life. It requires
me no longer to be withdrawn into myself, considering my own fulfilment the main
reason for my life. It requires me to give myself freely to Another - for truth,
for love, for God who, in Jesus Christ, goes before me and shows me the way. It
is a question of the fundamental decision no longer to consider usefulness and gain,
my career and success as the ultimate goals of my life, but instead to recognize
truth and love as authentic criteria. It is a question of choosing between living
only for myself or giving myself - for what is greater. And let us understand properly
that truth and love are not abstract values; in Jesus Christ they have become a
person. By following him, I enter into the service of truth and love. By losing
myself I find myself.
Let us return to
the liturgy and the procession of the Palms. In it the Liturgy has provided as the
hymn Psalm 24[23]. In Israel
this was also a processional hymn used in the ascent to the hill of the temple.
The Psalm interprets the interior ascent, of which the exterior ascent is an image,
and explains to us once again what it means to ascend with Christ. “Who can ascend
the mountain of the Lord?” the Psalm asks and specifies two essential conditions.
Those who ascend it and truly desire to reach the heights, to arrive at the true
summit, must be people who question themselves about God. They must be people who
scan their surroundings seeking God, seeking his Face.
Dear young friends,
how important precisely this is today: not
merely to let oneself be taken here and there in life; not to be satisfied with
what everyone else thinks and says and does. To probe God and to seek God. Not letting
the question about God dissolve in our souls; desiring what is greater, desiring
to know him - his Face...
The other very concrete
condition for the ascent is this: He “who
has clean hands and a pure heart” can stand in the holy place. Clean hands are hands
that are not used for acts of violence. They are hands that are not soiled with
corruption, with bribery. A pure heart - when is the heart pure? A heart is pure
when it does not pretend and is not stained with lies and hypocrisy: a heart that remains transparent like spring water
because it is alien to duplicity. A heart is pure when it does not estrange itself
with the drunkenness of pleasure, a heart in which love is true and is not only
a momentary passion. Clean hands and a pure heart: if we walk with Jesus, we ascend and find the
purification that truly brings us to that height to which man is destined: friendship with God himself.
Psalm 24[23], which
speaks of the ascent, ends with an entrance liturgy in front of the temple gate: “Lift up your heads, O gates! and be lifted up,
O ancient doors! That the King of glory may come in.” In the old liturgy for Palm
Sunday, the priest, arriving in front of the church, would knock loudly with the
shaft of the processional cross on the door that was still closed; thereupon, it
would be opened. This was a beautiful image of the mystery of Jesus Christ himself
who, with the wood of his Cross, with the power of his love that is given, knocked
from the side of the world at God’s door; on the side of a world that was not able
to find access to God. With his Cross, Jesus opened God’s door, the door between
God and men. Now it is open. But the Lord also knocks with his Cross from the other
side: he knocks at the door of the world,
at the doors of our hearts, so many of which are so frequently closed to God. And
he says to us something like this: if the
proof that God gives you of his existence in creation does not succeed in opening
you to him, if the words of Scripture and the Church’s message leave you indifferent,
then look at me - the God who let himself suffer for you, who personally suffers
with you - and open yourself to me, your Lord and your God.
It is this appeal
that we allow to penetrate our hearts at this moment. May the Lord help us to open
the door of our hearts, the door of the world, so that he, the living God, may arrive
in his Son in our time, and reach our life. Amen.
23rd
WORLD YOUTH DAY
BENEDICT
XVI
ANGELUS
St.
Peter’s Square, Palm Sunday, 16 March 2008
At the end of this
solemn Celebration in which we have meditated on Christ’s Passion, I wish to recall
the late Archbishop of Mossul for Chaldeans, Archbishop Paulos Faraj Rahho, who
tragically passed away a few days ago. His beautiful witness of fidelity to Christ,
to the Church and to his people, who he did not want to abandon notwithstanding
numerous threats, urges me to raise a strong and heart-rending cry: stop the murders, stop the violence, stop the
hate in Iraq !
And at the same time I raise an appeal to the Iraqi People, who for five years now
are marked with the sign of war that has provoked the disruption of its civil and
social life: beloved Iraqi People, lift up
your head and be yourself, in the first place, builders of your national life! May
there be reconciliation, forgiveness, justice and respect for civil coexistence
among tribes, ethnic and religious groups, the jointly responsible way to peace
in the Name of God!
I welcome the English-speaking
pilgrims and visitors here this Palm Sunday, when we acclaim Jesus, model of humility,
our Messiah and King. In a special way I greet all the young people gathered in
Rome . I am looking
forward to seeing many of you, together with thousands of others from across the
globe, at World Youth Day in Sydney .
Today, I wish to recognize the preparatory work being undertaken by the Australian
Bishops’ Conference together with Cardinal Pell, Archbishop of Sydney, and the organizing
staff. Similarly, I wish to acknowledge the spirit of generous cooperation shown
by the Federal and the New South Wales Governments, as well as the residents and
business people of Sydney .
Let us all pray for
our young people, that World Youth Day will be a time of deep and lasting spiritual
renewal. May the great events of Holy Week, in which we see love unfold in its most
radical form, inspire you all to be courageous ‘witnesses of charity’ to your friends,
your communities and our world. Upon each of you present and your families, I invoke
God’s blessings of peace and wisdom.
We now address the
Virgin Mary in prayer, so that she help us to live Holy Week in spiritual union
with Christ the Lord.
CELEBRATION
OF PALM SUNDAY OF THE PASSION OF OUR LORD
HOMILY OF HIS HOLINESS BENEDICT XVI
Saint
Peter’s Square, 23rd World Youth Day, Sunday, 16 March 2008
Dear Brothers
and Sisters,
Year after year the
Gospel passage for Palm Sunday recounts Jesus’ entry into Jerusalem . Together with his disciples and an
increasing multitude of pilgrims he went up from the plain of Galilee to the Holy City .
The Evangelists have handed down to us three proclamations of Jesus concerning his
Passion, like steps on his ascent, thereby mentioning at the same time the inner
ascent that he was making on this pilgrimage. Jesus was going toward the temple
- toward the place where God, as Deuteronomy says, had chosen to “make his name
dwell” (see 12: 11; 14: 23). God who created heaven and earth gave himself a name,
made himself invocable; indeed, he made himself almost tangible to human beings.
No place can contain him, yet for this very reason he gave himself a place and a
name so that he, the true God, might be personally venerated as God in our midst.
We know from the account of the 12-year-old Jesus that he loved the temple as his
Father’s house, as his paternal home. He now visits this temple once again but his
journey extends beyond it: the final destination of his climb is the Cross. It is
the ascent described in the Letter to the Hebrews as the ascent
towards the tent not pitched by human hands but by the Lord, which leads to God’s
presence. The final climb to the sight of God passes through the Cross. It is the
ascent toward “love to the end” (see Jn 13: 1), which is God’s true mountain, the
definitive place of contact between God and man.
During his entry
into Jerusalem ,
the people paid homage to Jesus as the Son of David with the words of the pilgrims
of Psalm 118[117]: “Hosanna to the Son of David! Blessed is he who comes in the
name of the Lord! Hosanna in the highest!” (Mt 21: 9). He then arrived at the temple.
There, however, in the place that should have been taken up by the encounter between
God and man, he found livestock merchants and money-changers who occupied this place
of prayer with their commerce. Certainly, the animals on sale were destined to be
burned as sacrifices in the temple, and since in the temple it was impossible to
use coins that bore the likeness of the Roman emperors, who were in opposition to
the true God, they had to be exchanged for coins that did not show the idolatrous
image. All this, however, could have taken place elsewhere: the place where this
was now occurring should have been, in accordance with its destined purpose, the
atrium of pagans. Indeed, the God of Israel was precisely the one God of all peoples.
And although pagans did not enter, so to speak, into the Revelation, they could
however, in the atrium of faith, join in the prayer to the one God. The God of Israel,
the God of all people, had always been awaiting their prayers too, their seeking,
their invocations. Instead, commerce was prevailing - dealings legalized by the
competent authority which, in its turn, profited from the merchants’ earnings. The
merchants acted correctly, complying with the law in force, but the law itself was
corrupt. “Covetousness... is idolatry”, the Letter to the Colossians says
(3: 5). This was the idolatry Jesus came up against in the face of which he cites
Isaiah: “My house shall be called a house of prayer” (Mt 21: 13; see Is 56: 7),
and Jeremiah: “But you make it a den of robbers” (Mt 21: 13; see Jer 7: 11). Against
the wrongly interpreted order, Jesus with his prophetic gesture defends the true
order which is found in the Law and the Prophets.
Today, all this must
give us, as Christians, food for thought. Is our faith sufficiently pure and open
so that starting from it “pagans”, the people today who are seeking and who have
their questions, can intuit the light of the one God, associate themselves in the
atriums of faith with our prayers and, with their questions, perhaps also become
worshippers? Does the awareness that greed is idolatry enter our heart too and the
praxis of our life? Do we not perhaps in various ways let idols enter even the world
of our faith? Are we disposed to let ourselves be ceaselessly purified by the Lord,
letting him expel from us and the Church all that is contrary to him?
In the temple’s purification,
however, it was a matter of more than fighting abuses. A new time in history was
foretold. What Jesus had announced to the Samaritan woman concerning her question
about true worship is now beginning: “The hour is coming, and now is, when true
worshippers will worship the Father in spirit and truth, for such the Father seeks
to worship him” (Jn 4: 23). The time when animals were sacrificed to God was over.
Animal sacrifices were only a substitute, a nostalgic gesture for the true way to
worship God. The Letter to the Hebrews on the life and work of Jesus uses
a sentence from Psalm 40[39]: “Sacrifices and offerings you have not desired, but
a body have you prepared for me” (Heb 10: 5). Christ’s body, Christ himself, enters
to take the place of bloody sacrifices and food offerings. Only “love to the end”,
only love for human beings given totally to God is true worship, true sacrifice.
Worshipping in spirit and truth means adoring in communion with the One who is Truth;
adoring in communion with his Body, in which the Holy Spirit reunites us.
The Evangelists tell
us that in Jesus’ trial false witnesses were produced who asserted that Jesus had
said: “I am able to destroy the temple
of God , and to rebuild it
in three days” (Mt 26: 61). In front of Christ hanging on the Cross some people,
taunting him, referred to these same words: “You who would destroy the temple and
build it in three days, save yourself!” (Mt 27: 40). The correct version of these
words as Jesus spoke them has been passed on to us by John in his account of the
purification of the temple. In response to the request for a sign by which Jesus
could justify himself for such an action, the Lord replied: “Destroy this temple,
and in three days I will raise it up” (Jn 2: 18ff.). John adds that, thinking back
to this event of the Resurrection, the disciples realized that Jesus had been referring
to the Temple of
his Body (see 2: 21ff.). It is not Jesus who destroys the temple; it is left to
destruction by the attitude of those who transformed it from being a place for the
encounter of all peoples with God into a “den of robbers”, a haven for their dealings.
But as always, beginning with Adam’s fall, human failure becomes the opportunity
for us to be even more committed to love of God. The time of the temple built of
stone, the time of animal sacrifices, is now passed: the fact that the Lord now
expels the merchants does not only prevent an abuse but points to God’s new way
of acting. The new Temple
is formed: Jesus Christ himself, in whom God’s love descends upon human beings.
He, by his life, is the new and living Temple .
He who passed through the Cross and was raised is the living space of spirit and
life in which the correct form of worship is made. Thus, the purification of the
temple, as the culmination of Jesus’ solemn entry into Jerusalem, is at the same
time the sign of the impending ruin of the edifice and the promise of the new Temple;
a promise of the kingdom of reconciliation and love which, in communion with Christ,
is established beyond any boundary.
St Matthew, whose
Gospel we are hearing this year, mentions at the end of the account of Palm Sunday,
after the purification of the temple, two further, small events that once again
have a prophetic character and once again make clear to us Jesus’ true will. Immediately
after Jesus’ words on the house of prayer for all the people, the Evangelist continues:
“And the blind and the lame came to him in the temple, and he healed them”. In addition,
Matthew tells us that children cried out in the temple the acclamation of the pilgrims
at the city gates: “Hosanna to the Son of David” (Mt 21: 14ff.). Jesus counters
the animal trade and fiscal affairs with his healing goodness. This is the temple’s
true purification. He does not come as a destroyer; he does not come with the revolutionary’s
sword. He comes with the gift of healing. He dedicates himself to those who, because
of their ailments, were driven to the end of their life and to the margins of society.
Jesus shows God as
the One who loves and his power as the power of love. Thus, he tells us what will
always be part of the correct worship of God: healing, serving and the goodness
that cures.
And then there are
children who pay homage to Jesus as the Son of David and acclaim him the Hosanna.
Jesus had said to his disciples that to enter the Kingdom of God
it was essential to become once again like children. He himself, who embraces the
whole world, made himself little in order to come to our aid, to draw us to God.
In order to recognize God, we must give up the pride that dazzles us, that wants
to drive us away from God as though God were our rival. To encounter God it is necessary
to be able to see with the heart. We must learn to see with a child’s heart, with
a youthful heart not hampered by prejudices or blinded by interests. Thus, it is
in the lowly who have such free and open hearts and recognize Jesus, that the Church
sees her own image, the image of believers of all ages.
Dear friends, let
us join at this moment the procession of the young people of that time - a procession
that winds through the whole of history. Together with young people across the world
let us go forth to meet Jesus. Let us allow ourselves to be guided toward God by
him, to learn from God himself the right way to be human beings. Let us thank God
with him because with Jesus, Son of David, he has given us a space of peace and
reconciliation that embraces the world with the Holy Eucharist. Let us pray to him
that we too may become, with him and starting from him, messengers of his peace,
adorers in spirit and truth, so that his Kingdom may increase in us and around us.
Amen.
BENEDICT
XVI
ANGELUS
Saint
Peter’s Square, Palm Sunday, 5 April 2009
Yesterday, 4 April,
was the Fourth Day for Mine Awareness established by the United Nations. Ten years
after the Convention banning these weapons came into force and after the recent
opening of the protocol for the signing of the Convention prohibiting cluster bombs,
I wish to encourage the countries who have not yet done so to sign without delay
these important instruments of international humanitarian law, to which the Holy
See has always given its support. I likewise express my encouragement of any measure
intended to guarantee the necessary assistance to the victims of these devastating
weapons.
I also wish to remember,
with great sorrow, our African brothers and sisters who died in the Mediterranean
Sea a few days ago while attempting to reach Europe .
We cannot resign ourselves to these tragedies, which have unfortunately been occurring
for some time! The dimensions of this phenomenon render ever more urgent the need
for coordinated strategies between the European Union and the African States ,
as well as for the adoption of appropriate humanitarian measures so as to prevent
these migrants from turning to unscrupulous traffickers. As I pray for the victims
that the Lord may welcome them into his peace, I would like to point out that this
problem, recently aggravated by the global crisis, will only find a solution when
the African peoples, with the aid of the international community, can free themselves
from poverty and war.
I now address a special
greeting to the 150 delegates Bishops, priests and lay people who have participated
in the past few days in the international meeting on World Youth Day, organized
by the Pontifical Council for the Laity. Thus the preparatory journey has begun
towards the next world meeting of youth in August 2011 in Madrid
and for which I have already indicated the theme: “Rooted and built up in Jesus
Christ, firm in the faith” (see Col
2: 7). Complying with tradition, the young Australians will soon be handing over
to the young Spaniards the World Youth Day Cross, the “pilgrim cross” that brings
Christ’s message of love to the world’s youth. This “passing on of witness” acquires
a highly symbolic value, with which we express immense gratitude to God for the
gifts received at the great meeting in Sydney and
for those he will deign to grant us during the event in Madrid . The Cross, accompanied by the Icon of
Our Lady, will depart tomorrow for the capital of Spain and will be there in time for
the great procession on Good Friday. It will then set out on a long pilgrimage through
the Spanish Dioceses which will return it to Madrid in the summer of 2011. May this Cross
and this Icon of Mary be for everyone a sign of the invincible love of Christ and
of his and our Mother!
I greet all the English-speaking
pilgrims and visitors here this Palm Sunday, when we recall the humble entry into
Jerusalem of Jesus, our King and Messiah. With vivid memories of my visit to Sydney
for World Youth Day, I greet Cardinal George Pell, Archbishop of Sydney, and Bishops
Anthony Fisher and Julian Porteous, Auxiliary Bishops of Sydney, who are here together
with a large group of young Australians to consign to their counterparts from Madrid
the World Youth Day Cross and Icon of Our Lady. May the great events of Holy Week
strengthen your faith and inspire you to be humble witnesses of charity. Upon each
of you present and your families, I invoke God’s blessings of peace and wisdom.
Lastly, I greet with
affection the young Italian pilgrims, and in particular the youth groups. I hope
that you will all prepare yourselves for the coming Easter at the school of the
Apostle Paul, fully accepting Christ’s grace. And let us now accompany the consignment
of the Cross with our prayers. The Cross is handed over. And let us now pray confidently
to the Virgin Mary that she may always watch over the progress of young people and
help us all to live Holy Week fully.
CELEBRATION
OF PALM SUNDAY OF THE PASSION OF OUR LORD
HOMILY OF HIS HOLINESS BENEDICT XVI
Saint
Peter’s Square, 24th World Youth Day, Sunday, 5 April 2009
Dear Brothers
and Sisters,
Dear Young People,
Together with a growing
multitude of pilgrims, Jesus had gone up to Jerusalem for the Passover. In the final stage
of the journey, near Jericho ,
he had healed blind Bartimaeus, who called upon him as Son of David, pleading for
mercy. Now – having received his sight – he had gratefully joined the group of pilgrims.
At the gates of Jerusalem ,
when Jesus sat upon a donkey, an animal symbolizing the Davidic kingship, there
spontaneously arose among the pilgrims the joyful conviction: It is He, the Son
of David! Accordingly, they greet Jesus with the messianic acclamation: “Blessed
is he who comes in the name of the Lord”, and they add: “Blessed is the kingdom
of our father David that is coming! Hosanna in the highest!” (Mk 11:9f.).
We do not know exactly what the enthusiastic pilgrims imagined the coming kingdom of David would be like. But what about us, have
we truly understood the message of Jesus, the Son of David? Have we grasped what
is meant by the Kingdom of which He speaks during his interrogation with Pilate?
Do we understand what it means to say that this Kingdom is not of this world? Or
would we actually prefer that it were of this world?
In Saint John’s Gospel, after the account of the entry into Jerusalem , there follows a
series of sayings in which Jesus explains the essential content of this new kind
of Kingdom. On a first reading of these texts, we can distinguish three different
images of the Kingdom in which the same mystery is reflected in a number of different
ways. John recounts, first of all, that during the feast there were some Greeks
among the pilgrims who “wanted to adore God” (see 12:20). Let us note the fact that
the true intention of these pilgrims was to adore God. This corresponds perfectly
to what Jesus says on the occasion of the cleansing of the Temple : “My house shall be called a house of prayer
for all the nations” (Mk 11:17). The true purpose of the pilgrimage must
be that of encountering God; adoring him, and thus rightly ordering the fundamental
relationship of our life. The Greeks are searching for God, their lives are a journey
towards God. Now, through the two Greek-speaking Apostles, Philip and Andrew, they
convey this request to the Lord: “We wish to see Jesus” (Jn 12:21). These
are stirring words. Dear friends, we have gathered here for the same reason: we
wish to see Jesus. With this end in view, thousands of young people traveled to
Sydney last year.
No doubt they will have had many different expectations in making this pilgrimage.
But the essential objective was this: we wish to see Jesus.
Concerning this request,
what did Jesus say and do at the time? It does not emerge clearly from the Gospel
whether any meeting took place between those Greeks and Jesus. Jesus takes a much
longer view. The essence of his response to those people’s request is this: “Unless
a grain of wheat falls into the earth and dies, it remains alone; but if it dies,
it bears much fruit” (Jn 12:24). In other words: what matters here is not
a brief conversation with one or two people who then return home. I will come, like
a grain of wheat that has died and is risen, in a manner that is totally new and
beyond the limits of the moment, to encounter the world of the Greeks. Through the
resurrection, Jesus surpasses the limits of space and time. As the Risen One, he
is journeying towards the vast horizon of the world and of history. Yes indeed,
as the Risen One he goes to the Greeks and speaks with them, he shows himself to
them in such a way that they who are far away become near, and it is in their language,
in their culture, that his word is carried forward in a new way and understood in
a new way – his Kingdom comes. Thus we can recognize two essential characteristics
of this Kingdom. The first is that it comes by way of the cross. Since Jesus gives
himself completely, then as the Risen One he can belong to all and become present
to all. In the holy Eucharist, we receive the fruit of the grain of wheat that died,
the multiplication of the loaves that continues to the end of the world and throughout
all time. The second characteristic is this: his Kingdom is universal. The ancient
hope of Israel
is fulfilled: this Davidic kingship no longer has boundaries. It extends “from sea
to sea” – as the prophet Zechariah says (9:10) – in other words, it embraces the
whole world. Yet this is possible only because it is not a kingship of political
power, but is based solely on the free adherence of love – a love which, for its
part, is a response to the love of Jesus Christ who gave himself for all. I think
that above all we must learn these two things over and over again – universality
and catholicity. This means that no-one can propose himself, his culture, his generation
and his world as an absolute. It means that we all have to accept one another, renouncing
something of ourselves. Universality includes the mystery of the cross – going beyond
ourselves, obeying the communal word of Jesus Christ in the communal Church. Universality
is always a transcending of ourselves, a renunciation of something that is ours.
Universality and the cross go together. Only thus is peace created.
The saying about
the grain of wheat that dies is still located within Jesus’ response to the Greeks,
in fact it is his response. Then, however, he goes on to formulate once again the
fundamental law of human existence: “He who loves his life loses it, and he who
hates his life in this world will keep it for eternal life” (Jn 12:25). In
other words, the one who wants to have his life for himself, living only for himself,
keeping everything to himself and exploiting all its possibilities – is actually
the one who loses his life. Life becomes boring and empty. Only by self-abandonment,
only by the disinterested gift of the “I” in favor of the “you”, only in the “yes”
to the greater life, the life of God, does our life also become broad and great.
Thus this fundamental principle established by the Lord is ultimately identical
to the principle of love. Love, in fact, means letting go of oneself, giving oneself,
not wanting to possess oneself, but becoming free from oneself: not retiring into
oneself – (what will become of me?) – but looking ahead, towards the other – towards
God and towards the men that he sends to me. And once again, this principle of love,
which defines man’s path, is identical to the mystery of the cross, to the mystery
of death and resurrection that we encounter in Christ. Dear friends, perhaps it
is relatively easy to accept this as the fundamental great vision of life. In practice,
however, it is not a question of simply recognizing a principle, but of living according
to the truth that it contains, the truth of the cross and resurrection. Hence, once
again, a single great decision is not enough. It is certainly important, it is essential
to dare to take the great fundamental decision once, to dare to utter the great
“yes” that the Lord asks of us at a certain moment of our lives. But the great “yes”
of the decisive moment in our life – the “yes” to the truth that the Lord puts before
us – must then be won afresh every day in the situations of daily life when we have
to abandon our “I” over and over again, placing ourselves at the Lord’s disposal
when deep down we would prefer to cling to our “I”. An upright life always involves
sacrifice, renunciation. To hold out the promise of a life without this constant
re-giving of self, is to mislead. There is no such thing as a successful life without
sacrifice. If I cast a glance back over my whole life, I have to say that it was
precisely the moments when I said “yes” to renunciation that were the great and
important moments of my life.
At the end of the
passage, Saint John uses a modified form of Jesus’
prayer in the Garden
of Olives in his redaction
of our Lord’s “Palm Sunday” sayings. First comes the statement: “my soul is troubled”
(12:27). Here we see Jesus’ fear, amply illustrated by the other three evangelists
– his fear before the power of death, before the whole abyss of evil that he sees
and into which he must descend. The Lord suffers our fears together with us, he
accompanies us through the final anguish into the light. Then, in John’s narrative,
Jesus makes two petitions. The first, expressed only conditionally, is this: “What
shall I say – Father, save me from this hour?” (12:27). As a human being, even Jesus
feels impelled to ask that he be spared the terror of the passion. We too can pray
in this way. We too can grumble before the Lord, like Job, we can present him with
all the pleas that arise within us when we are faced with the injustice of the world
and the difficulty of our own “I”. When we come before him, we must not take refuge
in pious phrases, in a world of make-believe. Praying always also means struggling
with God, and like Jacob, we can say to him: “I will not let you go, unless you
bless me!” (Gen 32:26). But then comes Jesus’ second petition: “Glorify your
name!” (Jn 12:28). In the Synoptics, it is expressed in another way: “Not
my will, but yours be done!” (Lk 22:42). In the end, God’s glory, his lordship,
his will, is always more important and more true than my thought and my will. And
this is the essential point in our prayer and in our life: learning this right order
of reality, accepting it intimately; trusting in God and believing that he is doing
what is right; that his will is truth and love; that my life becomes good if I learn
to adhere to this right order. The life, death and resurrection of Jesus are for
us the guarantee that we can truly trust God. It is in this way that his Kingdom
is realized.
Dear Friends! At
the end of this liturgy, the young people of Australia
will hand over the World Youth Day Cross to their counterparts from Spain .
The Cross is on a journey from one side of the world to the other, from sea to sea.
And we are accompanying it. With the Cross, we move forward along its path and thus
we find our own path. When we touch the Cross, or rather, when we carry it, we touch
the mystery of God, the mystery of Jesus Christ. The mystery that God so loved the
world – us – that he gave his only-begotten Son for us (see Jn 3:16). We
touch the marvelous mystery of God’s love, the only genuinely redemptive truth.
But we also touch the fundamental law, the constitutive norm of our lives, namely
the fact that without this “yes” to the Cross, without walking in communion with
Christ day by day, life cannot succeed. The more we can make some sacrifice, out
of love for the great truth and the great love, out of love for the truth and for
God’s love, the greater and richer life becomes. Anyone who wants to keep his life
for himself loses it. Anyone who gives his life – day by day in small acts, which
form part of the great decision – that person finds it. This is the challenging,
but also profoundly beautiful and liberating truth that we wish to enter into, step
by step, as the Cross makes its journey across the continents. May the Lord bless
this journey. Amen.
25th
WORLD YOUTH DAY
BENEDICT
XVI
ANGELUS
St
Peter’s Square, Palm Sunday, 28 March 2010
As we come to the
end of this celebration we cannot but think of Palm Sunday 25 years ago. It was
the year 1985, which the United Nations had proclaimed “International Youth Year”.
Venerable and beloved John Paul II took that moment to commemorate Christ’s entry
into Jerusalem to
the acclaim of his youthful disciples, founded the annual World Youth Day. Since
then, Palm Sunday has acquired this characteristic: every two or three years it
takes place with great global meetings, following Jesus in a sort of youth pilgrimage
across the whole planet. Twenty-five years ago my beloved Predecessor invited young
people to profess their faith in Christ who “takes upon himself the cause of man”
(Homily, 31 March 1985, nos. 5, 7; L’Osservatore Romano English edition
9 April 1985, p. 2). Today I renew this call to the new generation, to bear witness
with the gentle and luminous power of truth so that the men and women of the third
millennium may not lack the most authentic model: Jesus Christ. I entrust this mandate
in particular to the 300 delegates of the International Youth Forum, who have come
from all over the world, convoked by the Pontifical Council for the Laity.
CELEBRATION
OF PALM SUNDAY OF THE PASSION OF OUR LORD
HOMILY OF HIS HOLINESS BENEDICT XVI
St
Peter’s Square, 25th World Youth Day, Sunday, 28 March 2010
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
Dear Young People,
The Gospel of the blessing of the palms
that we have heard gathered here in St Peter’s Square, begins with the sentence:
“[Jesus] went on ahead, going up to Jerusalem” (Lk 19: 28). At the very beginning
of today’s Liturgy, the Church anticipates her response to the Gospel saying: “Let
us follow the Lord”. This clearly expresses the theme of Palm Sunday. It is the
sequela. Being Christian means considering the way of Jesus Christ as the right
way for being human as that way which leads to our destination, to a completely
fulfilled and authentic humanity. In a special way I would like to repeat to all
young people on this 25th World Youth Day that being Christian is a path or, better,
a pilgrimage; it is to travel with Jesus Christ, to journey in the direction he
has pointed out and is pointing out to us.
But what direction is this? How do we
find it? Our Gospel passage offers two clues in this regard. In the first place
it says that it is an ascent. This has first of all a very concrete meaning. Jericho , where the last part of Jesus’ pilgrimage began, is
250 metres below sea-level, whereas Jerusalem
the destination is located at 740 to 780 metres above sea level: a climb of almost
1,000 metres. But this external route is above all an image of the internal movement
of existence that occurs in the following of Christ: it is an ascent to the true
heights of being human. Man can choose an easy path and avoid every effort. He can
also sink to the low and the vulgar. He can flounder in the swamps of falsehood
and dishonesty. Jesus walks before us and towards the heights. He leads us to what
is great, pure. He leads us to that healthy air of the heights: to life in accordance
with the truth; to courage that does not let itself be intimidated by the gossip
of prevalent opinions; to patience that bears with and sustains the other. He guides
people to be open towards the suffering, to those who are neglected. He leads us
to stand loyally by the other, even when the situation becomes difficult. He leads
us to the readiness to give help; to the goodness that does not let itself be disarmed,
even by ingratitude. He leads us to love he leads us to God.
Jesus “went on ahead, going up to Jerusalem ”. If we interpret
these words of the Gospel in the context of the way Jesus took in all its aspects
a journey which, precisely, continues to the end of time in the destination, “Jerusalem ”, we can discover
various levels indicated. Of course, first of all, it must be understood that this
simply means the place, “Jerusalem ”: it is the city
in which God’s Temple
stood, whose uniqueness must allude to the oneness of God himself. This place, therefore,
proclaims two things: on the one hand it says that there is only one God in all
the world, who exceeds by far all our places and times; he is that God to which
the entire creation belongs. He is the God whom all men and women seek in their
own depths, and of whom, in a certain way, they all have some knowledge. But this
God gave himself a Name. He made himself known to us, he initiated a history with
human beings; he chose a man Abraham as the starting point of this history. The
infinite God is at the same time the close God. He, who cannot be confined to any
building, nevertheless wants to dwell among us, to be totally with us.
If Jesus, with the pilgrim Israel , goes up to Jerusalem ,
he goes there to celebrate with Israel
the Passover: the memorial of Israel ’s
liberation a memorial which, at the same time, is always a hope of definitive freedom,
which God will give. And Jesus approaches this feast in the awareness that he himself
is the Lamb in which will be accomplished what the Book of Exodus says in
this regard: a lamb without blemish, a male, who at sunset, before the eyes of the
children of Israel, is sacrificed “as an ordinance for ever” (see Ex 12: 5-6, 14).
And lastly, Jesus knows that his way goes further: the Cross will not be his end.
He knows that his journey will rend the veil between this world and God’s world;
that he will ascend to the throne of God and reconcile God and man in his Body He
knows that his Risen Body will be the new sacrifice and the new Temple; that around
him, from the hosts of Angels and Saints the new Jerusalem will be formed, that
is in Heaven and yet also on the earth, because by his Passion he was to open the
frontier between Heaven and earth. His way leads beyond the summit of the Mountain
of the Temple to
the heights of God himself: this is the great ascent to which he calls us all. He
always remains with us on earth and he has always already arrived with God. He guides
us on earth and beyond the earth.
Thus, the dimensions of our sequela become
visible in the ascent of Jesus the goal to which he wants to lead us: to the heights
of God, to communion with God, to being-with-God. This is the true destination and
communion with him is the way to it. Communion with Christ is being on the way,
a permanent ascent toward the true heights of our call. Journeying on together with
Jesus is at the same time also a journeying on in the “we” of those who want to
follow him. It introduces us into this community. Since the way to true life, to
being people in conformity with the model of the Son of God Jesus Christ, surpasses
our own strength, this journey always means being carried. We find ourselves, so
to speak, roped to Jesus Christ together with him on the ascent towards God’s heights.
He pulls and supports us. It is part of following Christ that we allow ourselves
to be roped together; that we acknowledge we cannot do it alone. This act of humility,
entering into the “we” of the Church is part of it; holding tight to the rope, the
responsibility of communion not breaking the rope through stubbornness or self-importance.
Humbly believing, with the Church, like being a roped-party on the ascent towards
God, is an essential condition for the following of Christ. This being roped together
also entails not behaving as masters of the Word of God, not running after a mistaken
idea of emancipation. The humility of “being with” is essential for the ascent.
The fact that in the Sacraments we always let the Lord once again take us by the
hand is also part of it; that we let ourselves be purified and strengthened by him;
that we accept the discipline of the ascent, even when we are weary.
Lastly, we must say again: the Cross
is also part of the ascent towards the heights of Jesus Christ, of the ascent to
the heights of God. Just as in the affairs of this world it is impossible to achieve
great results without self-sacrifice and hard work; just as joy in a great discovery
of knowledge or in a true operational skill is linked to discipline, indeed, to
the effort of learning, so the way toward life itself, to the realization of one’s
own humanity, is linked to communion with the One who ascended to God’s heights
through the Cross. In the final analysis, the Cross is an expression of what love
means: only those who lose themselves find themselves.
Let us sum up: the following of Christ
requires, as a first step, a reawakening of the desire to be authentic human beings
and thus the reawakening of oneself for God. It then requires us to join the climbing
party, in the communion of the Church. In the “we” of the Church we enter into communion
with the “you” of Jesus Christ and thus reach the path to God. We are also asked
to listen to the Word of Jesus Christ and to live it: in faith, hope and love. Thus
we are on the way toward the definitive Jerusalem
and, from this moment, in a certain way, we already find ourselves there, in the
communion of all God’s Saints.
Our pilgrimage following Christ is not
therefore bound for an earthly city, but for the new City of God that develops in the midst of
this world. Yet the pilgrimage to the earthly Jerusalem can also be useful to us Christians
for that more important journey. I myself linked three meanings to my pilgrimage
in the Holy Land last year. First of all I thought
that what St John says at the beginning of his First Letter can happen to
us on such an occasion: that what we have heard, we can in a certain manner see
and touch with our hands (see 1 Jn 1: 1). Faith in Jesus Christ is not a legendary
invention. It is based on a true story. This history we can, so to speak, contemplate
and touch. It is moving to find oneself in Nazareth in the place where the Angel appeared
to Mary and intimated to her the duty to become the Mother of the Redeemer. It is
moving to be in Bethlehem
on the spot where the Word, made flesh, came to dwell among us; to walk on the holy
ground in which God chose to become a man and a child. It is moving to climb the
steps to Calvary , to the place where Jesus died
for us on the Cross. And lastly, to stand before the empty sepulchre; to pray where
his holy body rested and where, on the third day, the Resurrection occurred. Following
the exterior ways taken by Jesus must help us walk more joyfully and with new certainty
on the interior way that he pointed out to us, that is he himself.
When we go to the Holy Land as pilgrims
we also go, however and this is the second aspect as messengers of peace, with the
prayer for peace; with the strong invitation to all to do our utmost in that place,
which includes in its name the word “peace”, to make it truly become a place of
peace. Thus this pilgrimage is at the same time as a third aspect an encouragement
to Christians to stay in their country of origin and to work hard in it for peace.
Let us return once again to the Palm
Sunday Liturgy. In the prayer with which the palms are blessed, we pray that in
communion with Christ we may bear fruit with good works. Subsequent to an erroneous
interpretation of St Paul, the opinion that good works are not part of being Christian
or in any case are insignificant for the human being’s salvation has emerged time
and again in the course of history and also today. But if Paul says that works cannot
justify man, with this he did not oppose the importance of right action and, if
he speaks of the end of the Law, he does not say that the Ten Commandments are obsolete
and irrelevant. There is no need now to reflect on the full breadth of the issue
that concerned the Apostle. What is important is to point out that with the term
“Law” he does not mean the Ten Commandments but rather the complex way of life Israel
had adopted to protect itself against the temptations of paganism. Now, however,
Christ has brought God to the pagans. This form of distinction was not imposed upon
them. They were given as the Law Christ alone. However, this means love of God and
of neighbour and of everything that this entails. The Commandments, interpreted
in a new and deeper way starting from Christ, are part of this love, those Commandments
are none other than the fundamental rules of true love: first of all, and as a fundamental
principle, the worship of God, the primacy of God, which the first three Commandments
express. They say: “without God nothing succeeds correctly. Who this God is and
how he is we know from the person of Jesus Christ. Next come the holiness of the
family (4th Commandment), the holiness of life (5th Commandment), the order of marriage
(6th Commandment), the social order (7th Commandment), and lastly the inviolability
of the truth (8th Commandment). Today all this is of the greatest timeliness and
precisely also in St Paul ’s
meaning if we read all his Letters. “Bear fruit with good works”: at the beginning
of Holy Week let us pray the Lord to grant us this fruit in ever greater abundance.
At the end of the Gospel for the blessing
of the palms, we hear the acclamation with which the pilgrims greet Jesus at the
Gates of Jerusalem. It takes up the words of Psalm 118 (117), which priests
originally proclaimed to pilgrims from the Holy City but which, in the meantime
had become an expression of messianic hope: “Blessed is he who enters in the Name
of the Lord” (Ps 118[117]: 26; see Lk 19: 38). Pilgrims see in Jesus the One who
is to come in the Name of the Lord. Indeed, according to St Luke’s Gospel they insert
one more word: “Blessed is the King who comes in the Name of the Lord”. And they
continue with an acclamation that recalls the message of the Angels at Christmas,
but change it in a manner that prompts reflection. The Angels spoke of the glory
of God in the highest and of peace on earth among men with whom he was pleased.
The pilgrims at the entrance to the Holy
City say: “Peace on earth
and glory be to God in the highest!” They know only too well that there is no peace
on earth. And they know that the place of peace is Heaven they know that it is an
essential part of Heaven to be a haven of peace. This acclamation is therefore an
expression of profound suffering and, at the same time, a prayer of hope; may the
One who comes in the Name of the Lord bring to the earth what there is in Heaven.
May his kingship become the kingship of God, the presence of Heaven on earth. The
Church, before the Eucharistic consecration, sings the words of the Psalm
with which Jesus was greeted before his entry into the Holy City :
She greets Jesus as the King who, coming from God, comes among us in the Name of
God. Today too, this joyous greeting is always a supplication and hope. Let us pray
the Lord that he bring to us Heaven, the glory of God and peace among men. Let us
understand this greeting in the spirit of the request in the Our Father: “Thy will
be done on earth as it is in Heaven”. We know that Heaven is Heaven, a place of
glory and peace because the will of God totally prevails there. And we know that
the earth will not be Heaven as long as God’s will is not done on it. Let us therefore
greet Jesus who comes down from Heaven and pray him to help us to recognize and
to do God’s will. May God’s kingship enter the world and thus be filled with
the splendor of peace. Amen.
26th
WORLD YOUTH DAY
BENEDICT
XVI
ANGELUS
St
Peter’s Square, Palm Sunday, 17 April 2011
I welcome all the
English-speaking pilgrims and visitors here in Rome this Palm Sunday, as the whole Church sings “Hosanna” to the Son of
David, commemorating Our Lord’s solemn entry into Jerusalem in the days leading
up to his Passion and death. In a special way I greet all the young people present
and I look forward to celebrating World Youth Day in Madrid this summer with many thousands of others
from around the world.
In Italian the
Pope said:
Lastly, I greet with
affection the Italian-speaking pilgrims, especially the young people whom I invite
to Madrid , for
the World Youth Day this coming August.
And now let us turn
in prayer to Mary, so that she may help us live Holy Week with intense faith. Mary
too exulted in spirit when Jesus made his royal entry into Jerusalem , fulfilling the prophecies; but her
heart, like that of her Son, was prepared for the Sacrifice. Let us learn from her,
the faithful Virgin, to follow the Lord even when his path leads to the Cross.
CELEBRATION
OF PALM SUNDAY OF THE PASSION OF OUR LORD
HOMILY OF HIS HOLINESS BENEDICT XVI
St
Peter’s Square, 26th World Youth Day, Sunday, 17 April 2011
Dear Brothers
and Sisters,
Dear young people!
It is a moving experience
each year on Palm Sunday as we go up the mountain with Jesus, towards the Temple , accompanying him on
his ascent. On this day, throughout the world and across the centuries, young people
and people of every age acclaim him, crying out: “Hosanna to the Son of David! Blessed
is he who comes in the name of the Lord!”
But what are we really
doing when we join this procession as part of the throng which went up with Jesus
to Jerusalem and
hailed him as King of Israel? Is this anything more than a ritual, a quaint custom?
Does it have anything to do with the reality of our life and our world? To answer
this, we must first be clear about what Jesus himself wished to do and actually
did. After Peter’s confession of faith in Caesarea Philippi, in the northernmost
part of the Holy Land, Jesus set out as a pilgrim towards Jerusalem for the feast of Passover. He was journeying
towards the Temple in the Holy
City , towards that place which for Israel
ensured in a particular way God’s closeness to his people. He was making his way
towards the common feast of Passover, the memorial of Israel ’s liberation from Egypt and the sign of its hope of definitive
liberation. He knew that what awaited him was a new Passover and that he himself
would take the place of the sacrificial lambs by offering himself on the cross.
He knew that in the mysterious gifts of bread and wine he would give himself for
ever to his own, and that he would open to them the door to a new path of liberation,
to fellowship with the living God. He was making his way to the heights of the Cross,
to the moment of self-giving love. The ultimate goal of his pilgrimage was the heights
of God himself; to those heights he wanted to lift every human being.
Our procession today
is meant, then, to be an image of something deeper, to reflect the fact that, together
with Jesus, we are setting out on pilgrimage along the high road that leads to the
living God. This is the ascent that matters. This is the journey which Jesus invites
us to make. But how can we keep pace with this ascent? Isn’t it beyond our ability?
Certainly, it is beyond our own possibilities. From the beginning men and women
have been filled – and this is as true today as ever – with a desire to “be like
God”, to attain the heights of God by their own powers. All the inventions of the
human spirit are ultimately an effort to gain wings so as to rise to the heights
of Being and to become independent, completely free, as God is free. Mankind has
managed to accomplish so many things: we can fly! We can see, hear and speak to
one another from the farthest ends of the earth. And yet the force of gravity which
draws us down is powerful. With the increase of our abilities there has been an
increase not only of good. Our possibilities for evil have increased and appear
like menacing storms above history. Our limitations have also remained: we need
but think of the disasters which have caused so much suffering for humanity in recent
months.
The Fathers of the
Church maintained that human beings stand at the point of intersection between two
gravitational fields. First, there is the force of gravity which pulls us down –
towards selfishness, falsehood and evil; the gravity which diminishes us and distances
us from the heights of God. On the other hand there is the gravitational force of
God’s love: the fact that we are loved by God and respond in love attracts us upwards.
Man finds himself betwixt this twofold gravitational force; everything depends on
our escaping the gravitational field of evil and becoming free to be attracted completely
by the gravitational force of God, which makes us authentic, elevates us and grants
us true freedom.
Following the Liturgy
of the Word, at the beginning of the Eucharistic Prayer where the Lord comes into
our midst, the Church invites us to lift up our hearts: “Sursum corda!” In
the language of the Bible and the thinking of the Fathers, the heart is the centre
of man, where understanding, will and feeling, body and soul, all come together.
The centre where spirit becomes body and body becomes spirit, where will, feeling
and understanding become one in the knowledge and love of God. This is the “heart”
which must be lifted up. But to repeat: of ourselves, we are too weak to lift up
our hearts to the heights of God. We cannot do it. The very pride of thinking that
we are able to do it on our own drags us down and estranges us from God. God himself
must draw us up, and this is what Christ began to do on the cross. He descended
to the depths of our human existence in order to draw us up to himself, to the living
God. He humbled himself, as today’s second reading says. Only in this way could
our pride be vanquished: God’s humility is the extreme form of his love, and this
humble love draws us upwards.
Psalm 24, which the
Church proposes as the “song of ascent” to accompany our procession in today’s liturgy,
indicates some concrete elements which are part of our ascent and without which
we cannot be lifted upwards: clean hands, a pure heart, the rejection of falsehood,
the quest for God’s face. The great achievements of technology are liberating and
contribute to the progress of mankind only if they are joined to these attitudes
– if our hands become clean and our hearts pure, if we seek truth, if we seek God
and let ourselves be touched and challenged by his love. All these means of “ascent”
are effective only if we humbly acknowledge that we need to be lifted up; if we
abandon the pride of wanting to become God. We need God: he draws us upwards; letting
ourselves be upheld by his hands – by faith, in other words – sets us aright and
gives us the inner strength that raises us on high. We need the humility of a faith
which seeks the face of God and trusts in the truth of his love.
The question of how
man can attain the heights, becoming completely himself and completely like God,
has always engaged mankind. It was passionately disputed by the Platonic philosophers
of the third and fourth centuries. For them, the central issue was finding the means
of purification which could free man from the heavy load weighing him down and thus
enable him to ascend to the heights of his true being, to the heights of divinity.
Saint Augustine ,
in his search for the right path, long sought guidance from those philosophies.
But in the end he had to acknowledge that their answers were insufficient, their
methods would not truly lead him to God. To those philosophers he said: recognize
that human power and all these purifications are not enough to bring man in truth
to the heights of the divine, to his own heights. And he added that he should have
despaired of himself and human existence had he not found the One who accomplishes
what we of ourselves cannot accomplish; the One who raises us up to the heights
of God in spite of our wretchedness: Jesus Christ who from God came down to us and,
in his crucified love, takes us by the hand and lifts us on high.
We are on pilgrimage
with the Lord to the heights. We are striving for pure hearts and clean hands, we
are seeking truth, we are seeking the face of God. Let us show the Lord that we
desire to be righteous, and let us ask him: Draw us upwards! Make us pure! Grant
that the words which we sang in the processional psalm may also hold true for us;
grant that we may be part of the generation which seeks God, “which seeks your face,
O God of Jacob” (see Ps 24:6). Amen.
27th WORLD YOUTH DAY
BENEDICT
XVI
ANGELUS
St
Peter’s Square, Palm Sunday, 1st April 2012
Dear Brothers
and Sisters,
At the end of this
celebration, I would like to cordially greet everyone here: Cardinals, brother Bishops,
Priests, men and women religious and all the faithful. I address a special greeting
to the organizing committees of World Youth Day in Madrid and of the upcoming one
in Rio de Janeiro, as well as the delegates to the International Meeting on World
Youth Days, organized by the Pontifical Council for Laity, represented here by the
President, Cardinal Ryłko, and Secretary, Bishop Clemens.
CELEBRATION
OF PALM SUNDAY OF THE PASSION OF OUR LORD
HOMILY OF HIS HOLINESS BENEDICT XVI
St
Peter’s Square, 27th World Youth Day, Sunday, 1st April 2012
Dear Brothers
and Sisters,
Palm Sunday is the
great doorway leading into Holy Week, the week when the Lord Jesus makes his way
towards the culmination of his earthly existence. He goes up to Jerusalem in order to fulfill the
Scriptures and to be nailed to the wood of the Cross, the throne from which he will
reign for ever, drawing to himself humanity of every age and offering to all the
gift of redemption. We know from the Gospels
that Jesus had set out towards Jerusalem
in company with the Twelve, and that little by little a growing crowd of pilgrims
had joined them. Saint Mark tells us that
as they were leaving Jericho ,
there was a “great multitude” following Jesus (see 10:46).
On the final stage
of the journey, a particular event stands out, one which heightens the sense of
expectation of what is about to unfold and focuses attention even more sharply upon
Jesus. Along the way, as they were leaving
Jericho , a blind
man was sitting begging, Bartimaeus by name.
As soon as he heard that Jesus of Nazareth was passing, he began to cry out:
“Jesus, Son of David, have mercy on me!” (Mk 10:47). People tried to silence him, but to no avail;
until Jesus had them call him over and invited him to approach. “What do you want me to do for you?” he asked. And the reply: “Master, let me receive my sight”
(v. 51). Jesus said: “Go your way, your faith
has made you well.” Bartimaeus regained his
sight and began to follow Jesus along the way (see v. 52). And so it was that, after this miraculous sign,
accompanied by the cry “Son of David”, a tremor of Messianic hope spread through
the crowd, causing many of them to ask: this Jesus, going ahead of us towards Jerusalem , could he be the
Messiah, the new David? And as he was about
to enter the Holy
City , had the moment come
when God would finally restore the Davidic kingdom?
The preparations
made by Jesus, with the help of his disciples, serve to increase this hope. As we heard in today’s Gospel (see Mk
11:1-10), Jesus arrives in Jerusalem from Bethphage
and the Mount of Olives , that is, the route by
which the Messiah was supposed to come. From
there, he sent two disciples ahead of him, telling them to bring him a young donkey
that they would find along the way. They
did indeed find the donkey, they untied it and brought it to Jesus. At this point, the spirits of the disciples and
of the other pilgrims were swept up with excitement: they took their coats and placed
them on the colt; others spread them out on the street in Jesus’ path as he approached,
riding on the donkey. Then they cut branches
from the trees and began to shout phrases from Psalm 118, ancient pilgrim blessings,
which in that setting took on the character of messianic proclamation: “Hosanna!
Blessed is he who comes in the name of the Lord! Blessed is the kingdom of our father David that
is coming! Hosanna in the highest!” (v. 9-10). This festive acclamation, reported by all four
evangelists, is a cry of blessing, a hymn of exultation: it expresses the unanimous
conviction that, in Jesus, God has visited his people and the longed-for Messiah
has finally come. And everyone is there,
growing in expectation of the work that Christ will accomplish once he has entered
the city.
But what is the content,
the inner resonance of this cry of jubilation?
The answer is found throughout the Scripture, which reminds us that the Messiah
fulfils the promise of God’s blessing, God’s original promise to Abraham, father
of all believers: “I will make of you a great nation and I will bless you ... and
by you all the families of the earth shall bless themselves” (Gen 12:2-3). It is the promise that Israel had always kept alive in prayer,
especially the prayer of the Psalms. Hence
he whom the crowd acclaims as the blessed one is also he in whom the whole of humanity
will be blessed. Thus, in the light of Christ,
humanity sees itself profoundly united and, as it were, enfolded within the cloak
of divine blessing, a blessing that permeates, sustains, redeems and sanctifies
all things.
Here we find the
first great message that today’s feast brings us: the invitation to adopt a proper
outlook upon all humanity, on the peoples who make up the world, on its different
cultures and civilizations. The look that
the believer receives from Christ is a look of blessing: a wise and loving look,
capable of grasping the world’s beauty and having compassion on its fragility. Shining through this look is God’s own look upon
those he loves and upon Creation, the work of his hands. We read in the Book of Wisdom: “But thou
art merciful to all, for thou canst do all things, and thou dost overlook men’s
sins, that they may repent. For thou lovest
all things that exist and hast loathing for none of the things which thou hast made
... thou sparest all things, for they are thine, O Lord who lovest the living” (11:23-24,
26).
Let us return to
today’s Gospel passage and ask ourselves: what is really happening in the hearts
of those who acclaim Christ as King of Israel?
Clearly, they had their own idea of the Messiah, an idea of how the long-awaited
King promised by the prophets should act.
Not by chance, a few days later, instead of acclaiming Jesus, the Jerusalem crowd will cry out
to Pilate: “Crucify him!” while the disciples, together with others who had seen
him and listened to him, will be struck dumb and will disperse. The majority, in fact, was disappointed by the
way Jesus chose to present himself as Messiah and King of Israel. This is the heart of today’s feast, for us too. Who is Jesus of Nazareth for us? What idea do we have of the Messiah, what idea
do we have of God? It is a crucial question,
one we cannot avoid, not least because during this very week we are called to follow
our King who chooses the Cross as his throne.
We are called to follow a Messiah who promises us, not a facile earthly happiness,
but the happiness of heaven, divine beatitude.
So we must ask ourselves: what are our true expectations? What are our deepest desires, with which we have
come here today to celebrate Palm Sunday and to begin our celebration of Holy Week?
Dear young people,
present here today, this, in a particular way, is your Day, wherever the Church
is present throughout the world. So I greet
you with great affection! May Palm Sunday
be a day of decision for you, the decision to say yes to the Lord and to follow
him all the way, the decision to make his Passover, his death and resurrection,
the very focus of your Christian lives. It
is the decision that leads to true joy, as I reminded you in this year’s World Youth
Day Message – “Rejoice in the Lord always” (Phil 4:4). So it was for Saint Clare of Assisi when, on Palm
Sunday 800 years ago, inspired by the example of Saint Francis and his first companions,
she left her father’s house to consecrate herself totally to the Lord. She was eighteen years old and she had the courage
of faith and love to decide for Christ, finding in him true joy and peace.
© Copyright 2014 - Libreria Editrice Vaticana
Book by Orestes J. González