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APOSTOLIC JOURNEY OF HIS HOLINESS BENEDICT XVI
TO MÜNCHEN, ALTÖTTING AND REGENSBURG
(SEPTEMBER 9-14, 2006)
MARIAN VESPERS WITH THE RELIGIOUS AND SEMINARIANS
OF BAVARIA
HOMILY OF THE HOLY FATHER
Basilica of Saint Anne, Altötting Monday, 11
September 2006
Dear Friends! Here in Altötting, in this grace-filled place, we have gathered
- seminarians preparing for the priesthood, priests, men and women religious
and members of the Society for Spiritual Vocations - gathered in the Basilica of Saint Anne, before the shrine to her daughter,
the Mother of the Lord. We have gathered here to consider our vocation to serve
Jesus Christ and, under the watchful gaze of Saint Anne, in whose home the
greatest vocation in the history of salvation developed, to understand it
better. Mary received her vocation from the lips of an angel. The Angel does
not enter our room visibly, but the Lord has a plan for each of us, he calls
each one of us by name. Our task is to learn how to listen, to perceive his
call, to be courageous and faithful in following him and, when all is said and
done, to be found trustworthy servants who have used well the gifts given us.
We know that the Lord seeks labourers for his harvest. He himself said as much:
"The harvest is plentiful, but the labourers are few; therefore ask the Lord of
the harvest to send out labourers into his harvest" (Mt 9:37-38). That is why we are gathered here: to make this
urgent request to the Lord of the harvest. God's harvest is indeed great, and it needs labourers: in the so-called Third World
- in Latin America, in Africa and in Asia - people are waiting for heralds to bring them the Gospel of peace, the good
news of God who became man. But also in the so-called West, here among us in Germany, and in the vast lands of Russia it is true that a great harvest could be
reaped. But there is a lack of people willing to become labourers for God's harvest. Today it is as then, when the Lord was moved with pity for the
crowds which seemed like sheep without a shepherd - people who probably knew how to do many things, but found it hard to make
sense of their lives. Lord, look upon our troubled times, which need preachers
of the Gospel, witnesses to you, persons who can point the way towards 'life in abundance'! Look upon our world and feel pity once more! Look upon our world and send us
labourers! With this petition we knock on God's door; but with the same petition the Lord is also knocking on the doors of our
own heart. Lord do you want me? Is it not perhaps too big for me? Am I too
small for this? "Do not be afraid", the Angel said to Mary. "Do not fear: I have called you by name", God says through the Prophet Isaiah (43:1) to us
- to each of us.
Where do we go, if we say "yes" to the Lord's call? The briefest description of the priestly mission
- and this is true in its own way for men and women religious too - has been given to us by the Evangelist Mark. In his account of the call
of the Twelve, he says: "Jesus appointed twelve to be with him and to be sent out" (3:14). To be with Jesus and, being sent, to go out to meet people
- these two things belong together and together they are the heart of a
vocation, of the priesthood. To be with him and to be sent out - the two are inseparable. Only one who is
"with him" comes to know him and can truly proclaim him. And anyone who has been
with him cannot keep to himself what he has found; instead, he has to pass it
on. Such was the case with Andrew, who told his brother Simon: "We have found the Messiah"(Jn 1:41). And the Evangelist adds:
"He brought Simon to Jesus" (Jn 1:42). Pope Gregory the Great, in one of his homilies, once
said that God’s angels, however far afield they go on their missions, always
move in God. They remain always with him. And while speaking about the angels,
Saint Gregory thought also of bishops and priests: wherever they go, they should
always "be with him". We know this from experience: whenever priests, because of their many duties,
allot less and less time to being with the Lord, they eventually lose, for all
their often heroic activity, the inner strength that sustains them. Their
activity ends up as an empty activism. To be with Christ - how does this come about? Well, the first and most important thing for
the priest is his daily Mass, always celebrated with deep interior
participation. If we celebrate Mass truly as men of prayer, if we unite our
words and our activities to the Word that precedes us and let them be shaped by
the Eucharistic celebration, if in Communion we let ourselves truly be embraced
by him and receive him - then we are being with him.
The Liturgy of the Hours is another fundamental way of being with Christ: here
we pray as people conscious of our need to speak with God, while lifting up all
those others who have neither the time nor the ability to pray in this way. If
our Eucharistic celebration and the Liturgy of the Hours are to remain
meaningful, we need to devote ourselves constantly anew to the spiritual reading
of sacred Scripture; not only to be able to decipher and explain words from the
distant past, but to discover the word of comfort that the Lord is now speaking
to me, the Lord who challenges me by this word. Only in this way will we be
capable of bringing the inspired Word to the men and women of our time as the
contemporary and living Word of God.
Eucharistic adoration is an essential way of being with the Lord. Thanks to
Bishop Schraml, Altötting now has a new "treasury". Where once the treasures of the past were kept, precious historical and
religious items, there is now a place for the Church's true treasure: the permanent presence of the Lord in his Sacrament. In one
of his parables the Lord speaks of a treasure hidden in the field; whoever finds
it sells all he has in order to buy that field, because the hidden treasure is
more valuable than anything else. The hidden treasure, the good greater than
any other good, is the Kingdom of God - it is Jesus himself, the Kingdom in person. In the sacred Host, he is
present, the true treasure, always waiting for us. Only by adoring this
presence do we learn how to receive him properly - we learn the reality of communion, we learn the Eucharistic celebration
from the inside. Here I would like to quote some fine words of Saint Edith
Stein, Co-Patroness of Europe, who wrote in one of her letters: "The Lord is present in the tabernacle in his divinity and his humanity. He is
not there for himself, but for us: for it is his joy to be with us. He knows
that we, being as we are, need to have him personally near. As a result, anyone
with normal thoughts and feelings will naturally be drawn to spend time with
him, whenever possible and as much as possible" (Gesammelte Werke VII, 136ff.). Let us love being with the Lord!
There we can speak with him about everything. We can offer him our petitions,
our concerns, our troubles. Our joys. Our gratitude, our disappointments, our
needs and our aspirations. There we can also constantly ask him: "Lord send
labourers into your harvest! Help me to be a good worker in your vineyard!"
Here in this Basilica, our thoughts turn to Mary, who lived her life fully
"with Jesus" and consequently was, and continues to be, close to all men and women.
The many votive plaques are a concrete sign of this. Let us think of Mary's holy mother, Saint Anne, and with her let us also think of the importance of
mothers and fathers, of grandmothers and grandfathers, and the importance of the
family as an environment of life and prayer, where we learn to pray and where
vocations are able to develop.
Here in Altötting, we naturally think in a special way of good Brother Conrad.
He renounced a great inheritance because he wanted to follow Jesus Christ
unreservedly and to be completely with him. As the Lord recommended in the
parable, he chose to take the lowest place, that of a humble lay - brother and
porter. In his porter's lodge he was able to achieve exactly what Saint Mark tells us about the
Apostles: "to stay with him", "to be sent" to others. From his cell he could always look at the tabernacle and thus
always "stay with Christ". From this contemplation he learned the boundless goodness with which he
treated the people who would knock at his door at all hours - sometimes mischievously, in order to provoke him, at other times loudly
and impatiently. To all of them, by his sheer goodness and humanity, and
without grand words, he gave a message more valuable than words alone. Let us
pray to Brother Saint Conrad; let us ask him to help us to keep our gaze fixed
on the Lord, in order to bring God's love to the men and women of our time. Amen!
© Copyright 2006 - Libreria
Editrice Vaticana
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