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APOSTOLIC JOURNEY
OF HIS HOLINESS BENEDICT XVI
TO AUSTRIA
ON THE OCCASION OF THE 850th ANNIVERSARY
OF THE FOUNDATION OF THE SHRINE OF MARIAZELL
EUCHARISTIC CELEBRATION
HOMILY OF HIS HOLINESS BENEDICT XVI
Saint Stephen’s Cathedral, Vienna Sunday, 9 September 2007
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
“Sine dominico non possumus!” Without the gift of the Lord, without the Lord’s day, we cannot live: That was
the answer given in the year 304 by Christians from Abitene in present-day
Tunisia, when they were caught celebrating the forbidden Sunday Eucharist and
brought before the judge. They were asked why they were celebrating the
Christian Sunday Eucharist, even though they knew it was a capital offence. “Sine dominico non possumus”: in the word
dominicum/dominico two meanings are inextricably intertwined, and we must once more learn to
recognize their unity. First of all there is the gift of the Lord – this gift
is the Lord himself: the Risen one, whom the Christians simply need to have
close and accessible to them, if they are to be themselves. Yet this
accessibility is not merely something spiritual, inward and subjective: the
encounter with the Lord is inscribed in time on a specific day. And so it is
inscribed in our everyday, corporal and communal existence, in temporality. It
gives a focus, an inner order to our time and thus to the whole of our lives.
For these Christians, the Sunday Eucharist was not a commandment, but an inner
necessity. Without him who sustains our lives, life itself is empty. To do
without or to betray this focus would deprive life of its very foundation, would
take away its inner dignity and beauty.
Does this attitude of the Christians of that time apply also to us
who are Christians today? Yes, it does, we too need a relationship that
sustains us, that gives direction and content to our lives. We too need access
to the Risen one, who sustains us through and beyond death. We need this
encounter which brings us together, which gives us space for freedom, which lets
us see beyond the bustle of everyday life to God’s creative love, from which we
come and towards which we are travelling.
Of course, if we listen to today’s Gospel, if we listen to what the
Lord is saying to us, it frightens us: “Whoever of you does not renounce all
that he has and all links with his family cannot be my disciple.” We would like
to object: What are you saying, Lord? Isn’t the family just what the world
needs? Doesn’t it need the love of father and mother, the love between parents
and children, between husband and wife? Don’t we need love for life, the joy of
life? And don’t we also need people who invest in the good things of this world
and build up the earth we have received, so that everyone can share in its
gifts? Isn’t the development of the earth and its goods another charge laid
upon us? If we listen to the Lord more closely, and above all if we listen to
him in the context of everything he is saying to us, then we understand that
Jesus does not demand the same from everyone. Each person has a specific task,
to each is assigned a particular way of discipleship. In today’s Gospel, Jesus
is speaking directly of the specific vocation of the Twelve, a vocation not
shared by the many who accompanied Jesus on his journey to Jerusalem. The
Twelve must first of all overcome the scandal of the Cross, and then they must
be prepared truly to leave everything behind; they must be prepared to assume
the seemingly absurd task of travelling to the ends of the earth and, with their
minimal education, proclaiming the Gospel of Jesus Christ to a world filled with
claims to erudition and with real or apparent education – and naturally also to
the poor and the simple. They must themselves be prepared to suffer martyrdom
in the course of their journey into the vast world, and thus to bear witness to
the Gospel of the Crucified and Risen Lord. If Jesus’s words on this journey to
Jerusalem, on which a great crowd accompanies him, are addressed in the first
instance to the Twelve, his call naturally extends beyond the historical moment
into all subsequent centuries. He calls people of all times to count
exclusively on him, to leave everything else behind, so as to be totally
available for him, and hence totally available for others: to create oases of
selfless love in a world where so often only power and wealth seem to count for
anything. Let us thank the Lord for giving us men and women in every century
who have left all else behind for his sake, and have thus become radiant signs
of his love. We need only think of people like Benedict and Scholastica,
Francis and Clare of Assisi, Elizabeth of Hungary and Hedwig of Silesia,
Ignatius of Loyola, Teresa of Avila, and in our own day, Mother Teresa and Padre
Pio. With their whole lives, these people have become a living interpretation
of Jesus’s teaching, which through their lives becomes close and intelligible to
us. Let us ask the Lord to grant to people in our own day the courage to leave
everything behind and so to be available to everyone.
Yet if we now turn once more to the Gospel, we realize that the Lord
is not speaking merely of a few individuals and their specific task; the
essence of what he says applies to everyone. The heart of the matter he
expresses elsewhere in these words: “For whoever would save his life will lose
it; and whoever loses his life for my sake, he will save it. For what does it
profit a man if he gains the whole world and loses or forfeits himself?” (Lk 9:24f.). Whoever wants to keep his life just for himself will lose it.
Only by giving ourselves do we receive our life. In other words: only the one
who loves discovers life. And love always demands going out of oneself, it
always demands leaving oneself. Anyone who looks just to himself, who wants the
other only for himself, will lose both himself and the other. Without this
profound losing of oneself, there is no life. The restless craving for life, so
widespread among people today, leads to the barrenness of a lost life. “Whoever
loses his life for my sake … ”, says the Lord: a radical letting-go of our self
is only possible if in the process we end up, not by falling into the void, but
into the hands of Love eternal. Only the love of God, who loses himself for us
and gives himself to us, makes it possible for us also to become free, to let
go, and so truly to find life. This is the heart of what the Lord wants to say
to us in the seemingly hard words of this Sunday’s Gospel. With his teaching he
gives us the certainty that we can build on his love, the love of the incarnate
God. Recognition of this is the wisdom of which today’s reading speaks to us.
Once again, we find that all the world’s learning profits us nothing unless we
learn to live, unless we discover what truly matters in life.
“Sine dominico non possumus!” Without the Lord and without the day that belongs to him, life does not
flourish. Sunday has been transformed in our Western societies into the
week-end, into leisure time. Leisure time is something good and necessary,
especially amid the mad rush of the modern world; each of us knows this. Yet if
leisure time lacks an inner focus, an overall sense of direction, then
ultimately it becomes wasted time that neither strengthens nor builds us up.
Leisure time requires a focus – the encounter with him who is our origin and
goal. My great predecessor in the see of Munich and Freising, Cardinal
Faulhaber, once put it like this: Give the soul its Sunday, give Sunday its
soul.
Because Sunday is ultimately about encountering the risen Christ in
word and sacrament, its span extends through the whole of reality. The early
Christians celebrated the first day of the week as the Lord’s day, because it
was the day of the resurrection. Yet very soon, the Church also came to realize
that the first day of the week is the day of the dawning of creation, the day on
which God said: “Let there be light” (Gen 1:3). Therefore Sunday is also the Church’s weekly feast of creation –
the feast of thanksgiving and joy over God’s creation. At a time when creation
seems to be endangered in so many ways through human activity, we should
consciously advert to this dimension of Sunday too. Then, for the early Church,
the first day increasingly assimilated the traditional meaning of the seventh
day, the Sabbath. We participate in God’s rest, which embraces all of
humanity. Thus we sense on this day something of the freedom and equality of
all God’s creatures.
In this Sunday’s Opening Prayer we call to mind firstly that through
his Son God has redeemed us and made us his beloved children. Then we ask him
to look down with loving-kindness upon all who believe in Christ and to give us
true freedom and eternal life. We ask God to look down with loving-kindness.
We ourselves need this look of loving-kindness not only on Sunday but beyond,
reaching into our everyday lives. As we ask, we know that this loving gaze has
already been granted to us. What is more, we know that God has adopted us as
his children, he has truly welcomed us into communion with himself. To be
someone’s child means, as the early Church knew, to be a free person, not a
slave but a member of the family. And it means being an heir. If we belong to
God, who is the power above all powers, then we are fearless and free. And then
we are heirs. The inheritance he has bequeathed to us is himself, his love.
Yes, Lord, may this inheritance enter deep within our souls so that we come to
know the joy of being redeemed. Amen.
© Copyright 2007 - Libreria
Editrice Vaticana
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