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BENEDICT XVI
GENERAL AUDIENCE
Saint Peter's Square Wednesday, 10
October 2007
Saint Hilary of Poitiers
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
Today, I would like to talk about a great Father of the Church
of the West, St Hilary of Poitiers, one of the important Episcopal figures of
the fourth century. In the controversy with the Arians, who considered Jesus the
Son of God to be an excellent human creature but only human, Hilary devoted his
whole life to defending faith in the divinity of Jesus Christ, Son of God and
God as the Father who generated him from eternity.
We have no reliable information on most of Hilary's life.
Ancient sources say that he was born in Poitiers, probably in about the year 310
A.D. From a wealthy family, he received a solid literary education, which is
clearly recognizable in his writings. It does not seem that he grew up in a
Christian environment. He himself tells us of a quest for the truth which led
him little by little to recognize God the Creator and the incarnate God who died
to give us eternal life. Baptized in about 345, he was elected Bishop of his
native city around 353-354. In the years that followed, Hilary wrote his first
work, Commentary on St Matthew's Gospel. It is the oldest extant
commentary in Latin on this Gospel. In 356, Hilary took part as a Bishop in the
Synod of Béziers in the South of France, the "synod of false apostles", as he
himself called it since the assembly was in the control of Philo-Arian Bishops
who denied the divinity of Jesus Christ. "These false apostles" asked the
Emperor Constantius to have the Bishop of Poitiers sentenced to exile. Thus, in
the summer of 356, Hilary was forced to leave Gaul.
Banished to Phrygia in present-day Turkey, Hilary found himself
in contact with a religious context totally dominated by Arianism. Here too, his
concern as a Pastor impelled him to work strenuously to re-establish the unity
of the Church on the basis of right faith as formulated by the Council of Nicea.
To this end he began to draft his own best-known and most important dogmatic
work: De Trinitate (On the Trinity). Hilary explained in it his personal
journey towards knowledge of God and took pains to show that not only in the New
Testament but also in many Old Testament passages, in which Christ's mystery
already appears, Scripture clearly testifies to the divinity of the Son and his
equality with the Father. To the Arians he insisted on the truth of the names of
Father and Son, and developed his entire Trinitarian theology based on the
formula of Baptism given to us by the Lord himself: "In the name of the Father
and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit".
The Father and the Son are of the same nature. And although
several passages in the New Testament might make one think that the Son was
inferior to the Father, Hilary offers precise rules to avoid misleading
interpretations: some Scriptural texts speak of Jesus as God, others highlight
instead his humanity. Some refer to him in his pre-existence with the Father;
others take into consideration his state of emptying of self (kenosis),
his descent to death; others, finally, contemplate him in the glory of the
Resurrection. In the years of his exile, Hilary also wrote the Book of Synods
in which, for his brother Bishops of Gaul, he reproduced confessions of faith
and commented on them and on other documents of synods which met in the East in
about the middle of the fourth century. Ever adamant in opposing the radical
Arians, St Hilary showed a conciliatory spirit to those who agreed to confess
that the Son was essentially similar to the Father, seeking of course to
lead them to the true faith, according to which there is not only a likeness but
a true equality of the Father and of the Son in divinity. This too seems to me
to be characteristic: the spirit of reconciliation that seeks to understand
those who have not yet arrived and helps them with great theological
intelligence to reach full faith in the true divinity of the Lord Jesus Christ.
In 360 or 361, Hilary was finally able to return home from exile
and immediately resumed pastoral activity in his Church, but the influence of
his magisterium extended in fact far beyond its boundaries. A synod celebrated in Paris in 360 or 361 borrows
the language of the Council of Nicea. Several ancient authors believe that this
anti-Arian turning point of the Gaul episcopate was largely due to the fortitude
and docility of the Bishop of Poitiers. This was precisely his gift: to combine
strength in the faith and docility in interpersonal relations. In the last years
of his life he also composed the Treatises on the Psalms, a commentary on
58 Psalms interpreted according to the principle highlighted in the introduction
to the work: "There is no doubt that all the things that are said in the Psalms
should be understood in accordance with Gospel proclamation, so that, whatever
the voice with which the prophetic spirit has spoken, all may be referred
nevertheless to the knowledge of the coming of Our Lord Jesus Christ, the
Incarnation, Passion and Kingdom, and to the power and glory of our
resurrection" (Instructio Psalmorum, 5). He saw in all the Psalms this
transparency of the mystery of Christ and of his Body which is the Church.
Hilary met St Martin on various occasions: the future Bishop of Tours founded a
monastery right by Poitiers, which still exists today. Hilary died in 367. His
liturgical Memorial is celebrated on 13 January. In 1851 Blessed Pius IX
proclaimed him a Doctor of the universal Church.
To sum up the essentials of his doctrine, I would like to say
that Hilary found the starting point for his theological reflection in baptismal
faith. In De Trinitate, Hilary writes: Jesus "has commanded us to
baptize in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit
(cf. Mt 28: 19), that is, in the confession of the Author, of the
Only-Begotten One and of the Gift. The Author of all things is one alone, for
one alone is God the Father, from whom all things proceed. And one alone
is Our Lord Jesus Christ, through whom all things exist (cf. I Cor
8: 6), and one alone is the Spirit (cf. Eph 4: 4), a gift in all.... In
nothing can be found to be lacking so great a fullness, in which the immensity
in the Eternal One, the revelation in the Image, joy in the Gift, converge in
the Father, in the Son and in the Holy Spirit" (De Trinitate 2, 1). God
the Father, being wholly love, is able to communicate his divinity to his Son in
its fullness. I find particularly beautiful the following formula of St Hilary:
"God knows not how to be anything other than love, he knows not how to be anyone
other than the Father. Those who love are not envious and the one who is the
Father is so in his totality. This name admits no compromise, as if God were
father in some aspects and not in others" (ibid., 9, 61).
For this reason the Son is fully God without any gaps or
diminishment. "The One who comes from the perfect is perfect because he has all,
he has given all" (ibid., 2, 8). Humanity finds salvation in Christ
alone, Son of God and Son of man. In assuming our human nature, he has united
himself with every man, "he has become the flesh of us all" (Tractatus super
Psalmos 54, 9); "he took on himself the nature of all flesh and through it
became true life, he has in himself the root of every vine shoot" (ibid.,
51, 16). For this very reason the way to Christ is open to all - because he has
drawn all into his being as a man -, even if personal conversion is always
required: "Through the relationship with his flesh, access to Christ is open to
all, on condition that they divest themselves of their former self (cf. Eph
4: 22), nailing it to the Cross (cf. Col 2: 14); provided we give up our
former way of life and convert in order to be buried with him in his baptism, in
view of life (cf. Col 1: 12; Rom 6: 4)" (ibid., 91, 9).
Fidelity to God is a gift of his grace. Therefore, St Hilary
asks, at the end of his Treatise on the Trinity, to be able to remain ever
faithful to the baptismal faith. It is a feature of this book: reflection is
transformed into prayer and prayer returns to reflection. The whole book is a
dialogue with God.
I would like to end today's Catechesis with one of these prayers, which thus
becomes our prayer:
"Obtain, O Lord", St Hilary recites with inspiration, "that I may keep ever
faithful to what I have professed in the symbol of my regeneration, when I was
baptized in the Father, in the Son and in the Holy Spirit. That I may worship
you, our Father, and with you, your Son; that I may deserve your Holy Spirit,
who proceeds from you through your Only Begotten Son... Amen" (De Trinitate
12, 57).
* * *
I welcome all the English-speaking visitors present today,
including members of the Congregation of Holy Cross, participants in the Nato
Defense College Senior Course, and the student groups from Scotland and Denmark.
May your time in Rome be one of spiritual renewal. Upon all of you I invoke
God's abundant Blessings of joy and peace.
Lastly, I greet the young people, the sick and the newly-weds.
Tomorrow will be the liturgical Memorial of Bl. John XXIII. May his
unforgettable Gospel testimony sustain you, dear young people, in your
commitment of daily fidelity to Christ; may it encourage you, dear sick
people, especially you, dear little friends of the Institute for the
treatment of tumours in Milan, to follow Jesus patiently on the journey of
trials and suffering; may it help you, dear newly-weds, to make your
family the place of constant encounter with the Love of God and of the brethren.
APPEAL
The 20th Plenary Meeting of the Joint International
Commission for Theological Dialogue between the Catholic Church and the Orthodox
Church (as a whole) is taking place in Ravenna in these days. It is
addressing a theological theme of special ecumenical interest: "Ecclesiological
and canonical consequences of the sacramental nature of the Church - Ecclesial
Communion, conciliarity and authority". I ask you to join in my prayers that
this important meeting may help the progress towards full communion between
Catholics and Orthodox, and that it will soon be possible to share the same Cup
of the Lord.
© Copyright 2007 - Libreria
Editrice Vaticana
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