Here is a Vatican translation of the address Benedict XVI gave to
the participants during Italy's Fourth National
Convention of the
Church in Italy, held in Verona's Exhibition Center on Oct. 19.
The Pope on Italy, Politics and the Trials Facing Catholics
"A Profoundly Needy Land"
* * *
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
I am pleased to be with you today, in this beautiful and historical
city of Verona, in order to take an active part in the Fourth National
Convention of the Church in Italy. I offer to all and to each one of
you my cordial greeting in the Lord.
I thank Cardinal Camillo Ruini, President of the Bishops' Conference,
and Dr Giovanna Ghirlanda, representative of the Diocese of Verona, for
the kind words of welcome they addressed to me on behalf of all of you
and for the summary given to me on the Convention's progress.
I thank Cardinal Dionigi Tettamanzi, President of the Preparatory
Committee, and all who have worked for its realization. I
wholeheartedly thank each of you who represent here, in pleasant
harmony, the various components of the Church in Italy: Bishop Flavio
Roberto Carraro of Verona, who is hosting us; the Bishops present, the
priests and deacons, the religious men and women, and you lay faithful,
men and women, who give voice to the many realities of the Catholic
laity in Italy.
This Fourth National Convention is a new step on the path of
implementing the Vatican II directives, which the Italian Church has
undertaken since the years immediately following the great Council.
First of all, it is a path of communion with God the Father and with
his Son Jesus Christ in the Holy Spirit, and therefore of communion
among us in the unity of the one Body of Christ (cf. I Jn 1:3; I Cor
12:12-13). It is a path directed towards evangelization, to keep the
faith alive and strong in the Italian People. It is therefore a
tenacious testimony of love for Italy and of active solicitude for the
good of her children.
This journey of the Church in Italy has run in strict and constant
union with the Successor of Peter: I am happy to recall with you the
Servant of God, Paul VI, who called the First Convention in now distant
1976, and John Paul II, with his fundamental Interventions that we all
remember at the Conventions of Loreto and Palermo, which have
strengthened the confidence of the Italian Church to work so that faith
in Jesus Christ continues to offer, also to the men and women of our
time, the sense and the orientation of [human] existence and so has had
"a leading role and an effective drawing power" in the Nation's journey
towards its future (cf. Discourse at the Meeting with the Italian
Church in Loreto, 11 April 1985; L'Osservatore Romano English edition,
6 May, p. 5)
Risen Lord: Centre of Life
In the same spirit I have come to Verona today to pray to the Lord with
you, to share, even though briefly, in your work of these days, and to
propose my Reflection to you on what appears of the first importance
for the Christian presence in Italy.
You have made a very appropriate choice, putting the Risen Jesus Christ
at the centre of the Convention's attention, and of all the life and
witness of the Church in Italy. The Resurrection of Christ is a fact
that occurred in history, of which the Apostles were witnesses and
certainly not its inventors. At the same time, it was not simply a
return to our earthly life. Instead, it is the greatest "mutation" that
ever occurred, the decisive "jump" towards a profoundly new dimension
of life, the entry into a decidedly different order that regards above
all Jesus of Nazareth, but with him also us, the whole human family,
history and the entire universe.
This is why the Resurrection of Christ is the centre of the preaching
and the Christian witness from the beginning and until the end of time.
Certainly, it is a great mystery, the mystery of our salvation, which
finds its fulfillment in the Resurrection of the Incarnate Word and
both anticipates and guarantees our hope. But the mark of this mystery
is love, and only in the logic of love can it be brought close and
somehow understood: Jesus Christ risen from the dead, because all of
his being is perfectly and intimately united with God who is love,
which is truly stronger than death.
He was one with indestructible Life and therefore he could give his own
life, letting himself be killed, but he could not succumb to death
definitively: at the Last Supper he concretely anticipated and accepted
out of love his own death on the Cross, thus transforming it into the
gift of himself, that gift which gives us life, liberty and salvation.
His Resurrection, therefore, has been like an explosion of light, an
explosion of love that melts the chains of sin and death. It
inaugurated a new dimension of life and reality, from which the new
world comes forth, that continuously penetrates our world, transforming
it and drawing it to himself.
All of this concretely happens through the life and witness of the
Church; rather, the Church herself constitutes the first fruits of this
transformation, which is God's work and not ours. It comes to us
through faith and the Sacrament of Baptism, which is really death and
resurrection, rebirth, transformation to a new life. It is what St Paul
reveals in the Letter to the Galatians: "It is no longer I who live,
but Christ who lives in me" (2:20). Hence, the essential identity of my
life is changed through Baptism, and I continue to exist only in this
changed state.
My own self is taken away and I am filled with a new and greater
subject, in which my "I" is still there but transformed, purified,
"open" through the insertion into the Other, who acquires new space in
my existence. Thus, we become "one in Christ" (Gal 3:28), a unique new
subject, and our "I" is freed from its isolation.
"I, but no longer I": this is the formula of Christian existence
established in Baptism, the formula of the resurrection in time, the
formula of the Christian "novelty" called to transform the world.
Here lies our Paschal joy. Our vocation and our Christian duty consist
in cooperating so that they reach effective fulfillment in the daily
reality of our life, what the Holy Spirit accomplishes in us with
Baptism. In fact, we are called to become new women and men, to be able
to be true witnesses of the Risen One and thus bearers of Christian joy
and hope in the world, concretely in that community of men and women in
which we live.
Church of Italy's Service
So, from this fundamental message of the Resurrection present in us and
in our daily work, I come to the theme of the Church in Italy's service
to the Nation, to Europe and to the world.
The Italy of today presents itself to us as a profoundly needy Land and
at the same time a very favorable place for such a witness.
It is profoundly needy because it participates in the culture that
predominates in the West and seeks to present itself as universal and
self-sufficient, generating a new custom of life. From this a new wave
of illuminism and laicism is derived, by which only what is
experiential and calculable would be rationally valid, while on the
level of praxis, individual freedom is held as a fundamental value to
which all others must be subject.
Therefore, God remains excluded from culture and from public life, and
faith in him becomes more difficult, also because we live in a world
that almost always appears to be of our making, in which, so to speak,
God no longer appears directly but seems to have become superfluous,
even out of place.
In strict relationship with all of this, a radical reduction of man has
taken place, considered a simple product of nature and as such not
really free, and in himself susceptible to be treated like any other
animal. Thus, an authentic overturning of the point of departure of
this culture has come about, which started as a claim of the centrality
of man and his freedom.
Along the same lines, ethics is brought within the confines of
relativism and utilitarianism with the exclusion of every moral
principle that is valid and in itself binding.
It is not difficult to see how this type of culture represents a
radical and profound break not only with Christianity but more in
general with the religious and moral traditions of humanity. It is
therefore not able to establish a true dialogue with other cultures, in
which the religious dimension is strongly present, besides not being
able to respond to the fundamental questions on the sense and direction
of our life.
Therefore, this culture is marked by a deep privation, but also by a
great and poorly hidden need of hope.
As I mentioned, however, Italy at the same time constitutes a Land
favorable for Christian witness. Here, in fact, the Church is a lively
reality -- and we see it! --, which conserves a capillary presence in
the midst of people of every age and level.
Christian traditions often continue to be rooted and to produce fruit,
while a great effort of evangelization and catechesis is taking place,
addressed particularly to the new generations, but now even more so to
families. Besides, with growing clarity the insufficiency of a
rationality closed in on itself and an over individualistic ethic is
felt: in practice, the grave risk of detaching itself from the
Christian roots of our society is sensed.
This sensation, diffused in the Italian People, is expressly and
strongly formulated by many important cultural figures, also among
those who do not share, or at least who do not practice, our faith.
The Church and Catholic Italians are called, therefore, to welcome this
great opportunity, and above all to be aware of it. Consequently, our
attitude must never be renunciatory or closed in on ourselves. Instead,
we must keep alive, and if possible increase, our dynamism, trustingly
open to new relationships, without wasting any energy that can
contribute to the cultural and moral growth of Italy.
It is up to us, in fact, not with our poor resources but with the
strength that comes from the Holy Spirit, to give positive and
convincing responses to the longings and questions of our people.
If we can do it, the Church in Italy will render a great service not
only to this Nation, but also to Europe and to the world, because the
trap of secularism is present everywhere and the need for a faith lived
in relation to the challenges of our time is likewise universal.
Showing the "yes" of Faith
Dear brothers and sisters, now we must ask ourselves: how, and on what
foundations, can we accomplish such a task? In this Convention you have
rightly held it indispensable to give concrete, practicable content to
Christian witness, examining how it can be carried out and developed in
each of the great areas of human experience.
We will therefore be helped by not losing sight in our pastoral
activity of the link between faith and daily life, between the Gospel
proposition and the preoccupations and aspirations that most people
have at heart.
Thus, in these days you have reflected on the affective life and on the
family, on work and on holidays, on education and the culture, on
situations of poverty and illness, on the duties and responsibilities
of social and political life.
Above all, I would like to emphasize for my part how, through this
multiform witness, that great "yes" must emerge which God, through
Jesus Christ, has said to man and to his life, to human love, to our
freedom and our intelligence; how, therefore, faith in the God with a
human face brings joy to the world.
Indeed, Christianity is open to all in cultures and society that is
just, true and pure, to that which gladdens, consoles and strengthens
our existence. St Paul in the Letter to the Philippians wrote:
"Whatever is true, whatever is honorable, whatever is just, whatever is
pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is gracious, if there is any
excellence, if there is anything worthy of praise, think about these
things" (4:8).
So, the disciples of Christ recognize and gladly welcome the authentic
values of the culture of our time, such as scientific knowledge and
technological advancement, human rights, religious freedom, democracy.
They do not overlook or undervalue, however, that dangerous fragility
of human nature which is a threat for man's advancement in every
historical context; in particular, they do not neglect the interior
tensions and contradictions of our age.
Therefore, the work of evangelization is never a simple adaptation to
culture, but it is always also a purification, a courageous break that
leads to maturation and healing, an openness that brings to birth that
"new creation" (II Cor 5:17: Gal 6:15) which is the fruit of the Holy
Spirit.
As I wrote in the Encyclical "Deus Caritas Est," at the origin of the
Christian being -- and therefore at the origin of our witness as
believers -- there is no ethical decision or great idea, but the
encounter with the Person of Jesus Christ, "which gives life a new
horizon and a decisive direction" (n. 1).
The fruitfulness of this encounter is also manifest in a peculiar and
creative manner in the actual human and cultural context, above all in
relation to reason which has given life to modern science and to the
related technologies. A fundamental characteristic of the latter is, in
fact, the systematic employment of mathematical instruments to be able
to work with nature to harness its immense energies for our service.
Mathematics, as such, is a creation of our intelligence: the
correspondence between its structures and the real structures of the
universe -- which is the presupposition of all modern scientific and
technological developments, already expressly formulated by Galileo
Galilei with the famous affirmation that the book of nature is written
in mathematical language -- arouses our admiration and raises a big
question.
It implies, in fact, that the universe itself is structured in an
intelligent manner, such that a profound correspondence exists between
our subjective reason and the objective reason in nature.
It then becomes inevitable to ask oneself if there might not be a
single original intelligence that is the common font of them both.
Thus, precisely the reflection on the development of science brings us
towards the creator Logos. The tendency to give irrationality, chance
and necessity the primacy is overturned, also to lead our intelligence
and our freedom back to it. Upon these bases it again becomes possible
to enlarge the area of our rationality, to reopen it to the larger
questions of the truth and the good, to link theology, philosophy and
science between them in full respect for the methods proper to them and
of their reciprocal autonomy, but also in the awareness of the
intrinsic unity that holds them together.
This is the task that is before us, a fascinating adventure that is
worth our effort, to give a new thrust to the culture of our time and
to restore the Christian faith to full citizenship in it.
The "cultural project" of the Church in Italy, with this object in
view, is without doubt a happy intuition and can make a very important
contribution.
The Human Person: Reason, Intelligence, Love
The human person is not, on the other hand, only reason and
intelligence, although they are constitutive elements. He bears within
himself, written in the most profound depths of his being, the need for
love, to be loved and in turn to love. Therefore, he questions himself
and often feels lost before the harshness of life, the evil that exists
in the world and that appears so strong and at the same time radically
devoid of sense.
Particularly in our age, notwithstanding all the progress made, evil
has certainly not been overcome. Indeed, its power seems reinforced and
all the attempts to hide it are quickly unveiled, as both daily
experience and great historical events demonstrate.
The recurring questions therefore return: can there be a safe space in
our life for authentic love, and in the final analysis, whether the
world is truly the work of God's wisdom. Here, much more than any human
reason, the upsetting novelty of Biblical revelation comes to our aid:
the Creator of Heaven and earth, the one God who is the source of every
being, the sole Creator Logos, this creative reason knows how to love
man personally, or rather, loves him passionately and wants to be loved
in his turn. This creative reason, who at the same time loves,
therefore gives life to a history of love with Israel, his people, and
in this affair, in the face of the betrayal of the people, his love
shows itself rich in inexhaustible fidelity and mercy. It is a love
that forgives beyond all limits.
In Jesus Christ such an attitude reaches an extreme, unheard-of and
dramatic level: in him, in fact, God makes himself one of us, our
brother in humanity, and what is more, sacrifices his life for us.
Through death on the Cross, apparently the greatest evil in history, is
brought about "that turning of God against himself in which he gives
himself in order to raise man up and save him. This is love in its most
radical form" ("Deus Caritas Est," n. 12), in which is made manifest
what "God is love" means (I Jn 4:8), and one also understands how
authentic love must be defined (cf. ibid., nn. 9-10, 12).
Precisely because he truly loves us, God respects and saves our
freedom. He does not counter the power of evil and sin with a greater
power, but -- as our beloved Pope John Paul II told us in the
Encyclical "Dives in Misericordia," and later in the book "Memory and
Identity," his true spiritual testament -- he prefers to put a limit on
his patience and his mercy, that limit which is, in fact, the suffering
of God's Son. In this way our suffering is also transformed from
within, appears in the dimension of love and contains a promise of
salvation.
Dear brothers and sisters, all this John Paul II not only thought, and
even not only believed with an abstract faith: he understood it and
lived it with a faith matured in suffering. Upon this road, as Church,
we are called to follow him, in the way and in the measure that God
sets for each one of us.
Rightly, the Cross causes us fear, as it provoked fear and anguish in
Jesus Christ (cf. Mk 14:33-36); but it is not a negation of life, of
which in order to be happy it is necessary to rid oneself.
It is rather the extreme "yes" of God to man, the supreme _expression
of his love and the source of full and perfect life. It therefore
contains the most convincing invitation to follow Christ on the way of
gift of self.
Here, I would like to address a special affectionate thought to the
suffering members of the Body of the Lord. In Italy, as in every part
of the world, they complete what is lacking in the sufferings of Christ
in their own flesh (cf. Col 1:24), and so they contribute in the most
effective manner to everyone's salvation. They are the most convincing
witnesses of the joy that comes from God and that gives strength to
accept the cross in love and in perseverance.
We know well that this choice of faith and of following Christ is never
easy. Instead, it is always opposed and controversial. The Church
remains, therefore, a "sign of contradiction" in the footsteps of her
Master (cf. Lk 2:34), even in our time.
But we do not lose heart because of this. On the contrary, we must
always be ready to give a response ("apo-logia") to whoever asks us the
reason ("logos") for our hope, as the First Letter of St Peter (3:15)
invites us, which you have chosen very opportunely as a biblical guide
for the itinerary of this Convention. We must answer "with gentleness
and reverence", with a "clear conscience" (3:15-16), with that gentle
power that comes from union with Christ.
We must do it full time, on the level of thought and action, of
personal behavior and public witness. The strong unity that was present
in the Church of the first centuries between a faith that befriends
intelligence and a life praxis characterized by reciprocal love and
caring attention to the poor and suffering, made the great missionary
expansion of Christianity in the Hellenistic-Roman world possible. So
it also happened later, in the different cultural contexts and
historical situations.
This continues to be the high road for evangelization. May the Lord
guide us to live this unity between truth and love in the conditions
proper to our time, for the evangelization of Italy and of the world
today. And so I come to an important and fundamental point: education.
Education
Basically, in order for the experience of Christian faith and love to
be welcomed and lived and transmitted from one generation to the next,
there is the fundamental and decisive question of the education of the
person. The formation of his mind must be a concern, without neglecting
his freedom and capacity to love. This is why recourse to the help of
Grace is necessary.
Only in this way can that risk for the fate of the human family be
effectively opposed, which is represented by the imbalance between the
very rapid growth of our technological power and the more laborious
growth of our moral resources.
A true education must awaken the courage to make definitive decisions,
which today are considered a mortifying bind to our freedom. In
reality, they are indispensable for growth and in order to achieve
something great in life, in particular, to cause love to mature in all
its beauty: therefore, to give consistency and meaning to freedom
itself.
From this solicitude for the human person and his formation comes our
"no" to weak and deviant forms of love and to the counterfeiting of
freedom, seen also in the reduction of reason to only what is
calculable or manipulatable. In truth, these "nos" are rather "yeses"
to authentic love, to the reality of man as he has been created by God.
I want to express here my wholehearted appreciation for the great
formative and educative work that the single Churches never tire of
carrying out in Italy by their pastoral attention to the new
generations and to families; thank you for this attention!
Among the multiple forms of this commitment, I cannot but think of
Catholic schools in particular, because in their regard there still
exists, in some measure, antiquated prejudices which cause damaging
delays, and are no longer justifiable, in recognizing their function
and in permitting their concrete work.
Witnesses of Charity
Jesus told us that whatever we would have done to the least of the
brethren we would have done it to him (cf. Mt 25:40). Therefore, the
authenticity of our adherence to Christ is verified especially in the
concrete love and solicitude for the weakest and poorest, those most
threatened and in serious difficulty.
The Church in Italy has a great tradition of closeness, help and
solidarity towards the needy, the sick, the marginalized, which finds
its highest _expression in a wonderful succession of "Saints of
charity". This tradition still continues today, and it deals with the
many new forms of moral and material poverty through Caritas, volunteer
organizations, the often hidden works of many parishes, religious
communities, associations and groups, individual people moved by love
of Christ and neighbor.
What is more, the Church in Italy shows extraordinary solidarity
towards the immense multitudes of poor on the earth. Therefore, it is
very important that all these witnesses of charity always keep their
specific profile aloft and alight, nourishing itself on humility and
trust in the Lord, keeping itself free from ideological suggestions and
party sympathies, and above all measuring its own vision on the vision
of Christ. The practical work is important, therefore, but the personal
sharing with the needy and with the suffering of one's neighbor counts
even more.
Thus, dear brothers and sisters, the Church's charity makes visible
God's love in the world and so makes our faith in the Incarnate,
Crucified and Risen God convincing.
Civil and Political Responsibility of Catholics
Your Convention has rightly considered the theme of citizenship, that
is, the question of the civil and political responsibility of
Catholics. Christ has come to save the real, concrete man who lives in
history and in the community, and so Christianity and the Church have
had a public dimension and value from the beginning.
As I wrote in the Encyclical "Deus Caritas Est" (cf. nn. 28-29) on the
relationship between religion and politics, Jesus Christ brought a
substantial novelty, opening the way towards a more human, freer world
through the reciprocal distinction and autonomy of the State and the
Church, that is, between what belongs to Caesar and what belongs to God
(cf. Mt 22:21).
The very religious freedom that we hold as a universal value,
particularly necessary in the world today, has its historical roots
here. The Church, therefore, is not and does not intend to be a
political agent. At the same time she has a profound interest in the
good of the political community, whose soul is justice, and offers it
her specific contribution at a double level.
Indeed, Christian faith purifies reason and helps it to be better: as a
result, with its social doctrine whose argument begins from what is
conformed to the nature of every human being, the Church's contribution
is to enable whatever is just to be effectively recognized and then
also accomplished. To this end, moral and spiritual energies are
clearly indispensable as they ensure that the demands of justice are
put before personal interests, a social category or even a State. For
the Church, here again, there is ample space to root these energies in
the conscience, to nourish them and fortify them.
The immediate duty to act in the political sphere to build a just order
in society is not the Church's task as such, but that of the lay
faithful, who work as citizens under their own responsibility. This is
a duty of great importance to which Italian lay Christians are called
to dedicate themselves with generosity and courage, illuminated by
faith and by the Magisterium of the Church and animated by the charity
of Christ.
Special attention and extraordinary commitment are demanded today by
those great challenges that endanger vast portions of the human family:
war and terrorism, hunger and thirst, some terrible epidemics. But it
is also necessary to face, with equal determination and clear policies
the risks of political and legislative choices that contradict
fundamental values and anthropological principles and ethics rooted in
the nature of the human being, in particular, regarding the
guardianship of human life in all its stages, from conception to
natural death, and to the promotion of the family founded on marriage,
avoiding the introduction in the public order of other forms of union
that would contribute to destablizing it, obscuring its particular
character and its irreplaceable role in society.
The open and courageous testimony that the Church and Italian Catholics
have given and are giving in this regard is a precious service to
Italy, useful and stimulating also for many other nations. This
commitment and this witness are certainly part of that great "yes" that
as believers in Christ we say to man loved by God.
To Be United to Christ
Dear brothers and sisters, the duties and the responsibilities that
this Ecclesial Convention is highlighting are certainly great and
multiple. We are encouraged to keep ever in mind that we are not alone
in carrying the burden. In fact, we support one another, and the Lord
himself above all guides and sustains the fragile boat of the Church.
Hence, we return to the point of departure: our being united in him is
decisive, and therefore among ourselves, to be with him to be able to
go out in his Name (cf. Mk 3:13-15).
Thus, our true strength is to nourish ourselves on his Word and his
Body, to unite ourselves to his offering for us, as we will do in the
[Eucharistic] celebration this afternoon, adore him present in the
Eucharist: in fact, adoration must precede our every activity and
program, that it may render us truly free and that we may be given the
criteria for our action.
May the Virgin Mary, so loved and venerated in every part of Italy,
precede and guide us in our union with Christ. In her we meet, pure and
undeformed, the true essence of the Church, and so through her, we
learn to know and love the mystery of the Church that lives in history,
we deeply feel a part of it, and in our turn we become "ecclesial
souls", we learn to resist that "internal secularization" that
threatens the Church of our time, a consequence of the secularization
process that has profoundly marked European civilization.
Dear brothers and sisters, together we raise our humble but confident
prayer to the Lord, that the Italian Catholic community, inserted in
vital communion with the Church of every place and time and closely
united to its own Bishops, may bring with renewed impetus to this
beloved Nation, and to every corner of the earth, the joyful witness of
the Risen Jesus, hope of Italy and of the world.
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Pope's Oct. 19 Homily in Verona
"Be Yourselves the First to Witness to a Converted Life"
VATICAN CITY, OCT. 30, 2006 (Zenit.org).- Here is a Vatican translation
of the homily Benedict XVI delivered Oct. 19 in Verona during his
pastoral visit on the occasion of the national congress of the Church
in Italy.
The Mass in the Bentegodi soccer stadium was attended by 42,000
pilgrims. An additional 60,000 faithful followed the Mass on large
screens set up in various parts of the city.
* * *
Venerable Brothers in the Episcopate and in the Priesthood,
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
Today, in this Eucharistic celebration we live the key moment of the
Fourth National Convention of the Church in Italy, which is gathered
around the Successor of Peter. The heart of every ecclesial event is
the Eucharist, in which Christ the Lord draws us together, speaks to
us, nourishes and sends us.
The Verona stadium, the place chosen for this solemn liturgy, is
significant: it is a place where non-religious rites are usually
celebrated, sports events attracting millions of fans.
Today, this space is host to the Risen Jesus, truly present in his
Word, in the assembly of the People of God with its Pastors and, in an
eminent way, in the Sacrament of his Body and his Blood.
Christ comes today in this modern Areopagus to pour forth his Spirit on
the Church in Italy, so that, renewed by his breath in a new Pentecost,
she can "communicate the Gospel in a changing world", as proposed by
the pastoral directives of the Italian Bishops' Conference for the
years 2000-2010.
And you, dear Brother Bishops, with the Presbyters and Deacons, to you,
dear delegates of the Dioceses and of lay groups, to you men and women
religious and committed laity, I address my most cordial greeting that
I extend to those joining us by radio and television.
I greet and spiritually embrace the entire Italian Church, the living
Body of Christ. I want to express in a special way my appreciation to
those who have worked hard to prepare and organize this Convention: the
President of the Italian Bishops' Conference, Cardinal Camillo Ruini;
the Secretary General, Mons. Giuseppe Betori, with the collaborators of
the various offices; Cardinal Dionigi Tettamanzi and the other members
of the preparatory committee; Bishop Flavio Roberto Carraro of Verona,
to whom I am grateful for the kind words he addressed to me at the
beginning of the celebration also in the name of this beloved community
of Verona that welcomes us. Our esteem also goes to Mister President of
the Council of Ministers and the other distinguished Authorities
present. Lastly, a cordial thank you to the communications team
following the work of this important session of the Church in Italy.
The Bible Reading proclaimed a short time ago illuminates the theme of
the Convention: "Witnesses of the Risen Jesus, Hope of the World". The
Word of God highlights Christ's Resurrection, an event that has
regenerated believers to a lively hope, as the Apostle Peter states at
the beginning of his First Letter. This text constitutes the axis
underpinning the itinerary of preparations for this great national
meeting. As his Successor, I too exclaim with joy: "Blessed be the God
and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ" (I Pt 1:3), because through the
Resurrection of his Son he has regenerated us and has given us by faith
the invincible hope of eternal life, so that we live in the present
always directed towards the goal, which is the final meeting with our
Lord and Savior.
Strengthened by this hope, we are not afraid of trials, which, however
painful and heavy, can never impair the profound joy that comes from
being loved by God. In his merciful providence, he has given his Son
for us and we, even without seeing him, believe in him and love him
(cf. I Pt 1:3-9). His love is sufficient for us.
Strengthened by this love, firm in faith in the Resurrection of Jesus
that builds hope, our Christian witness is born and constantly renewed.
It is there that our "Creed" is rooted, the symbol of faith from which
the initial preaching was drawn and that continues unaltered to nourish
the People of God.
The content of the "kerygma", the proclamation, which constitutes the
substance of the entire Gospel message, is Christ, the Son of God made
Man, who died and rose for us. His Resurrection is the qualifying
mystery of Christianity, the superabundant fulfillment of all salvific
promises, also those we have heard in the First Reading taken from the
end of the Book of the prophet Isaiah.
From the Risen Christ, the first fruits of the new humanity,
regenerated and regenerating, the "poor" people are truly born, as the
prophet foretold, who have opened their hearts to the Gospel and have
become and always become new "oaks of righteousness", "the planting of
the Lord, that he may be glorified", rebuilders of ruins, restorers of
deserted cities, considered by all as the blessed offshoot of the Lord
(cf. Is 61:3-4,9).
The mystery of the Resurrection of the Son of God, who, by rising to
Heaven is next to the Father, has effused upon us the Holy Spirit and
allows us to embrace with a single glance Christ and the Church: the
Risen One and the resurrected, the first fruits and the field of God,
the cornerstone and the living stones, to use another image from the
First Letter of Peter (cf. 2:4-8).
So it happened at the beginning with the first apostolic community, and
thus it must be even now.
From the day of Pentecost, in fact, the light of the Risen Lord has
transfigured the life of the Apostles. They already had the clear
perception of not being simply disciples of a new and interesting
doctrine, but witnesses chosen and responsible for a revelation linked
to the salvation of their contemporaries and all future generations.
The Paschal faith filled their hearts with ardor and extraordinary
zeal, which made them able to face every difficulty and even death, and
impressed their words with an irresistible power of persuasion. Hence,
a group of people, lacking human resources and strong by their faith
alone, fearlessly faced difficult persecution and martyrdom.
The Apostle John writes: "This is the victory that overcomes the world,
our faith" (I Jn 5:4b). The truth of this affirmation is documented
also in Italy by two millennia of Christian history, with the countless
testimonies of martyrs, saints and blesseds who have left an indelible
mark on every corner of the beautiful Peninsula in which we live. Some
of them were recalled at the beginning of the Convention and their
faces accompany our work.
Today, we are the heirs of those victorious witnesses! But precisely
from this observation the question arises: what is our faith? To what
extent are we able to communicate it today?
The certainty that Christ is risen assures us that no opposition can
ever destroy the Church. We are heartened also by the awareness that
only Christ can fully satisfy the profound longings of every human
heart and respond to the most disturbing questions on pain, injustice
and evil, on death and the afterlife.
Therefore, our faith is stable, but it is necessary that this faith
come alive in each one of us. There is then a vast and capillary effort
to be made so that each Christian is transformed into a "witness" ready
and able to assume the duty to give a reason to everyone, and always of
the hope that is in one (cf. I Pt 3:15).
To do this, we must return to proclaiming powerfully and joyfully the
event of Christ's death and Resurrection, heart of Christianity,
principal fulcrum of our faith, powerful lever of our certainty,
impetuous wind that sweeps away every fear and indecision, every doubt
and human calculation.
This decisive change in the world can only come from God. Only starting
from the Resurrection can the true nature of the Church and her witness
be understood, which is not something detached from the Paschal Mystery
but rather is a fruit of it, manifested and accomplished by those who,
receiving the Holy Spirit, are sent by Christ to take up his very same
mission (cf. Jn 20:21-23).
"Witnesses of the Risen Jesus": this definition of the Christian comes
directly from the Gospel passage of Luke proclaimed today, but also
from the Acts of the Apostles (cf. 1:8,22). Witnesses of the Risen
Jesus. That "of" must be well understood! It means that the witness is
"of" the Risen Jesus, that is, belonging to him, and exactly as such
can render a valid witness to him, can speak about him, make him known,
lead to him, transmit his presence.
It is exactly the contrary of what happens with the other _expression:
"hope of the world". Here the preposition "of" does not at all mean
belonging to, because Christ is not of the world, as also Christians
must not be of the world.
The hope, which is Christ, is in the world, is for the world, but it is
precisely because Christ is God, is "the Holy One" (in Hebrew,
"Qadosh"). Christ is hope for the world because he is risen, and he is
risen because he is God.
Christians too can bring hope to the world, because they are of Christ
and of God in the measure in which they die with him to sin and rise
with him to the new life of love, of forgiveness, of service, of
non-violence.
As St Augustine said: "You have believed, you have been baptized: the
old life is dead, it was killed on the Cross, buried in Baptism. The
old life is buried in which you lived ill at east: may the new life
arise" (cf. "Sermone Guelf. IX," in M. Pellegrino, "Vox Patrum," 177).
Only if, like Christ, they are not of the world, can Christians be hope
in the world and for the world.
Dear brothers and sisters, my wish, which surely you share, is that the
Church in Italy can begin again from this Convention as urged on by the
words of the Risen Lord, who repeats to each and every one of you: be
witnesses in the world today of my passion and my Resurrection (cf. Lk
24:48).
In a changing world, the Gospel does not alter. The Good News always
remains the same: Christ has died and is risen for our salvation! In
his Name take the message of conversion and forgiveness for sins to
everyone, but be yourselves the first to witness to a converted and
forgiven life.
We know well that this is not possible without being "clothed with
power from on high" (Lk 24:49), without the interior strength of the
Spirit of the Risen One. To receive it, as Jesus told his disciples,
one must not leave Jerusalem but must remain in the "city" where the
mystery of salvation is consummated, the supreme act of love of God for
humanity. One must remain in prayer with Mary, the Mother given to us
by Christ from the Cross.
For Christians, citizens of the world, to remain in Jerusalem means
none other than to remain in the Church, the "city of God", where one
can receive the "unction" [anointing] of the Holy Spirit.
In these days of the National Ecclesial Convention, the Church in
Italy, obeying the command of the Risen Lord, is gathered and has
relived the original experience of the Upper Room, to receive anew the
gift from on High.
Now, consecrated by this "unction", go! Take the happy news to the
poor, bandage the wounds of broken hearts, proclaim freedom to the
enslaved, liberty to captives, proclaim a year of mercy of the Lord
(cf. Is 61:1-2).
Rebuild the ancient ruins, raise up former devastations, repair the
deserted cities (cf. Is 61:4). There are many difficult situations that
await a resolute intervention! Bring into the world the hope of God,
who is Christ the Lord, he who is risen from the dead and lives and
reigns for ever and ever.
Amen.
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