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CHRISM MASS
HOMILY OF HIS HOLINESS BENEDICT XVI
Saint Peter's Basilica
Holy Thursday, 9 April 2009
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
In the Upper Room, on the eve of his Passion, the Lord prayed for his
disciples gathered about him. At the same time he looked ahead to the community
of disciples of all centuries, “those who believe in me through their word” (Jn
17:20). In his prayer for the disciples of all time, he saw us too, and he
prayed for us. Let us listen to what he asks for the Twelve and for us gathered
here: “Sanctify them in the truth; your word is truth. As you sent me into the
world, so I have sent them into the world. And for their sake I consecrate
myself, so that they also may be consecrated in truth” (17:17ff.). The Lord
asks for our sanctification, our consecration in truth. And he sends us forth
to carry on his own mission. But in this prayer there is one word which draws
our attention, and appears difficult to understand. Jesus says: “For their sake
I consecrate myself”. What does this mean? Is Jesus not himself “the Holy One
of God”, as Peter acknowledged at that decisive moment in Capharnaum (cf. Jn
6:69)? How can he now consecrate – sanctify – himself?
To understand this, we need first to clarify what the Bible means by
the words “holy” and “sanctify – consecrate”. “Holy” – this word describes
above all God’s own nature, his completely unique, divine, way of being, one
which is his alone. He alone is the true and authentic Holy One, in the
original sense of the word. All other holiness derives from him, is a
participation in his way of being. He is purest Light, Truth and untainted
Good. To consecrate something or someone means, therefore, to give that thing
or person to God as his property, to take it out of the context of what is ours
and to insert it in his milieu, so that it no longer belongs to our affairs, but
is totally of God. Consecration is thus a taking away from the world and a
giving over to the living God. The thing or person no longer belongs to us, or
even to itself, but is immersed in God. Such a giving up of something in order
to give it over to God, we also call a sacrifice: this thing will no longer be
my property, but his property. In the Old Testament, the giving over of a
person to God, his “sanctification”, is identified with priestly ordination, and
this also defines the essence of the priesthood: it is a transfer of ownership,
a being taken out of the world and given to God. We can now see the two
directions which belong to the process of sanctification-consecration. It is a
departure from the milieux of worldly life – a “being set apart” for God. But
for this very reason it is not a segregation. Rather, being given over to God
means being charged to represent others. The priest is removed from worldly
bonds and given over to God, and precisely in this way, starting with God, he
must be available for others, for everyone. When Jesus says: “I consecrate
myself”, he makes himself both priest and victim. Bultmann was right to
translate the phrase: “I consecrate myself” by “I sacrifice myself”. Do we now
see what happens when Jesus says: “I consecrate myself for them”? This is the
priestly act by which Jesus – the Man Jesus, who is one with the Son of God –
gives himself over to the Father for us. It is the expression of the fact that
he is both priest and victim. I consecrate myself – I sacrifice myself: this
unfathomable word, which gives us a glimpse deep into the heart of Jesus Christ,
should be the object of constantly renewed reflection. It contains the whole
mystery of our redemption. It also contains the origins of the priesthood in
the Church, of our priesthood.
Only now can we fully understand the prayer which the Lord offered the
Father for his disciples – for us. “Sanctify them in the truth”: this is the
inclusion of the Apostles in the priesthood of Jesus Christ, the institution of
his new priesthood for the community of the faithful of all times. “Sanctify
them in truth”: this is the true prayer of consecration for the Apostles. The
Lord prays that God himself draw them towards him, into his holiness. He prays
that God take them away from themselves to make them his own property, so that,
starting from him, they can carry out the priestly ministry for the world. This
prayer of Jesus appears twice in slightly different forms. Both times we need
to listen very carefully, in order to understand, even dimly the sublime reality
that is about to be accomplished. “Sanctify them in the truth”. Jesus adds:
“Your word is truth”. The disciples are thus drawn deep within God by being
immersed in the word of God. The word of God is, so to speak, the bath which
purifies them, the creative power which transforms them into God’s own being.
So then, how do things stand in our own lives? Are we truly pervaded by the
word of God? Is that word truly the nourishment we live by, even more than
bread and the things of this world? Do we really know that word? Do we love
it? Are we deeply engaged with this word to the point that it really leaves a
mark on our lives and shapes our thinking? Or is it rather the case that our
thinking is constantly being shaped by all the things that others say and do?
Aren’t prevailing opinions the criterion by which we all too often measure
ourselves? Do we not perhaps remain, when all is said and done, mired in the
superficiality in which people today are generally caught up? Do we allow
ourselves truly to be deeply purified by the word of God? Nietzsche scoffed at
humility and obedience as the virtues of slaves, a source of repression. He
replaced them with pride and man’s absolute freedom. Of course there exist
caricatures of a misguided humility and a mistaken submissiveness, which we do
not want to imitate. But there also exists a destructive pride and a
presumption which tear every community apart and result in violence. Can we
learn from Christ the correct humility which corresponds to the truth of our
being, and the obedience which submits to truth, to the will of God? “Sanctify
them in the truth; your word is truth”: this word of inclusion in the priesthood
lights up our lives and calls us to become ever anew disciples of that truth
which is revealed in the word of God.
We can advance another step in the interpretation of these words. Did
not Christ say of himself: “I am the truth” (cf. Jn 14:6)? Is he not
himself the living Word of God, to which every other word refers? Sanctify them
in the truth – this means, then, in the deepest sense: make them one with me,
Christ. Bind them to me. Draw them into me. Indeed, when all is said and
done, there is only one priest of the New Covenant, Jesus Christ
himself. Consequently, the priesthood of the disciples can only be a
participation in the priesthood of Jesus. Our being priests is simply a new and
radical way of being united to Christ. In its substance, it has been bestowed
on us for ever in the sacrament. But this new seal imprinted upon our being can
become for us a condemnation, if our lives do not develop by entering into the
truth of the Sacrament. The promises we renew today state in this regard that
our will must be directed along this path: “Domino Iesu arctius coniungi et
conformari, vobismetipsis abrenuntiantes”. Being united to Christ calls for
renunciation. It means not wanting to impose our own way and our own will, not
desiring to become someone else, but abandoning ourselves to him, however and
wherever he wants to use us. As Saint Paul said: “It is no longer I who live,
but Christ who lives in me” (Gal 2:20). In the words “I do”, spoken at
our priestly ordination, we made this fundamental renunciation of our desire to
be independent, “self-made”. But day by day this great “yes” has to be lived
out in the many little “yeses” and small sacrifices. This “yes” made up of tiny
steps which together make up the great “yes”, can be lived out without
bitterness and self-pity only if Christ is truly the center of our lives. If we
enter into true closeness to him. Then indeed we experience, amid sacrifices
which can at first be painful, the growing joy of friendship with him, and all
the small and sometimes great signs of his love, which he is constantly showing
us. “The one who loses himself, finds himself”. When we dare to lose ourselves
for the Lord, we come to experience the truth of these words.
To be immersed in the Truth, in Christ – part of this process is
prayer, in which we exercise our friendship with him and also come to know him:
his way of being, of thinking, of acting. Praying is a journey in personal
communion with Christ, setting before him our daily life, our successes and
failures, our struggles and our joys – in a word, it is to stand in front of
him. But if this is not to become a form of self-contemplation, it is important
that we constantly learn to pray by praying with the Church. Celebrating the
Eucharist means praying. We celebrate the Eucharist rightly if with our
thoughts and our being we enter into the words which the Church sets before us.
There we find the prayer of all generations, which accompany us along the way
towards the Lord. As priests, in the Eucharistic celebration we are those who
by their prayer blaze a trail for the prayer of today’s Christians. If we are
inwardly united to the words of prayer, if we let ourselves be guided and
transformed by them, then the faithful will also enter into those words. And
then all of us will become truly “one body, one spirit” in Christ.
To be immersed in God’s truth and thus in his holiness – for us this
also means to acknowledge that the truth makes demands, to stand up, in matters
great and small, to the lie which in so many different ways is present in the
world; accepting the struggles associated with the truth, because its inmost joy
is present within us. Nor, when we talk about being sanctified in the truth,
should we forget that in Jesus Christ truth and love are one. Being immersed in
him means being immersed in his goodness, in true love. True love does not come
cheap, it can also prove quite costly. It resists evil in order to bring men
true good. If we become one with Christ, we learn to recognize him precisely in
the suffering, in the poor, in the little ones of this world; then we become
people who serve, who recognize our brothers and sisters in him, and in them, we
encounter him.
“Sanctify them in truth” – this is the first part of what Jesus says.
But then he adds: “I consecrate myself, so that they also may be consecrated in
truth” – that is, truly consecrated (Jn 17:19). I think that this second
part has a special meaning of its own. In the world’s religions there are many
different ritual means of “sanctification”, of the consecration of a human
person. Yet all these rites can remain something merely formal. Christ asks
for his disciples the true sanctification which transforms their being, their
very selves; he asks that it not remain a ritual formality, but that it make
them truly the “property” of God himself. We could even say that Christ prayed
on behalf of us for that sacrament which touches us in the depths of our being.
But he also prayed that this interior transformation might be translated day by
day in our lives; that in our everyday routine and our concrete daily lives we
might be truly pervaded by the light of God.
On the eve of my priestly ordination, fifty-eight years ago, I opened
the Sacred Scripture, because I wanted to receive once more a word from the Lord
for that day and for my future journey as a priest. My gaze fell on this
passage: “Sanctify them in the truth; your word is truth”. Then I realized: the
Lord is speaking about me, and he is speaking to me. This very same thing will
be accomplished tomorrow in me. When all is said and done, we are not
consecrated by rites, even though rites are necessary. The bath in which the
Lord immerses us is himself – the Truth in person. Priestly ordination means:
being immersed in him, immersed in the Truth. I belong in a new way to him and
thus to others, “that his Kingdom may come”. Dear friends, in this hour of the
renewal of promises, we want to pray to the Lord to make us men of truth, men of
love, men of God. Let us implore him to draw us ever anew into himself, so that
we may become truly priests of the New Covenant.
Amen.
© Copyright 2009 - Libreria
Editrice Vaticana
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