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PASTORAL VISIT TO THE ROMAN PARISH OF
ST. JOHN BAPTIST DE LA SALLE AT TORRINO
HOMILY OF HIS
HOLINESS BENEDICT XVI
Sunday, 4 March 2012
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Dear Brothers and Sisters of the Parish of St John
Baptist de La Salle,
First of all I would like to say a heartfelt thank
you for this most cordial and warm welcome. I am
grateful to the good Parish Priest for his beautiful
words, and for the spirit of familiarity that I am
encountering. We really are a family of God and the fact
that you also see the Pope as a father is something very
lovely that encourages me! However we must now remember
that the Pope is not the highest authority to appeal to.
The highest is the Lord and let us look to the Lord in
order to perceive, to understand — as far as we can —
something of the message of this Second Sunday of Lent.
Today’s liturgy prepares us both for the mystery of
the Passion — as we heard in the First Reading — and for
the joy of the Resurrection.
The First Reading refers us to the episode in which
God puts Abraham to the test (cf. Gen 22:1-18). He had
an only son, Isaac, who was born to him in his old age.
He was the son of the promise, the son who would also
bring salvation to the peoples. Nevertheless one day
Abraham received from God the order to sacrifice him as
an offering.
The elderly patriarch found himself facing the
prospect of a sacrifice which for him, as a father, was
without any doubt the greatest imaginable. Yet not even
for a moment did he hesitate and having made the
necessary preparations, he set out with Isaac for the
arranged place.
And we can imagine this journey toward the
mountaintop, and what happened in his own heart and in
his son’s. He builds an altar, lays the wood upon it and
having bound the boy, grasps the knife, ready to
sacrifice him. Abraham trusts totally in God, to the
point of being ready even to sacrifice his own son and,
with his son the future, for without a child the
promised land was as nothing, ends in nothing. And in
sacrificing his son he is sacrificing himself, his whole
future, the whole of the promise. It really is the most
radical act of faith. At that very moment he is
restrained by an order from on high: God does not want
death, but life, the true sacrifice does not bring death
but life, and Abraham’s obedience became the source of
an immense blessing to this day. Let us end here now,
but we can meditate upon this mystery.
In the Second Reading, St Paul says that God himself
has made a sacrifice: he has given us his own Son, he
gave him on the Cross to triumph over sin and death, to
triumph over the Evil One and to overcome all the evil
that exists in the world. And God’s extraordinary mercy
inspires the Apostle’s admiration and profound trust in
the power of God’s love for us; indeed, St Paul says:
“He [God] who did not spare his own Son but gave him up
for us all, will he not also give us all things with
him?” (Rom 8:32).
If God gives himself in the Son, he gives us
everything. And Paul insists on the power of Christ’s
redeeming sacrifice against every other force that can
threaten our life.
He wonders: “Who shall bring any charge against God’s
elect? It is God who justifies; who is to condemn? Is it
Christ Jesus, who died, yes, who was raised from the
dead, who is at the right hand of God, who indeed
intercedes for us?” (vv. 33-34).
We are in God’s heart, this is our great trust. This
creates love and in love we go towards God. If God has
given his own Son for all of us, no one can accuse us,
no one can condemn us, no one can separate us from his
immense love. Precisely the supreme sacrifice of love on
the Cross, which the Son of God accepted and chose
willingly, becomes the source of our justification, of
our salvation. Just think that this act of the Lord’s
endures in the Blessed Eucharist, and in his heart, for
eternity, and this act of love attracts us, unites us
with him.
Lastly, the Gospel speaks to us of the episode of the
Transfiguration (cf. Mk 9:2-10): Jesus manifests himself
in his glory before the sacrifice of the Cross and God
the Father proclaims his beloved Son, the one he loves,
and commands the disciples to listen to him. Jesus goes
up a high mountain and takes three Apostles with him —
Peter, James and John — who will be particularly close
to him in his extreme agony, on another mountain, the
Mount of Olives.
A little earlier the Lord had announced his Passion
and Peter had been unable to understand why the Lord,
the Son of God, should speak of suffering, rejection,
death, a Cross, indeed he had opposed the prospect of
all this with determination.
Jesus now takes the three disciples with him to help
them to understand that the path to attaining glory, the
path of luminous love that overcomes darkness, passes
through the total gift of self, passes through the folly
of the Cross. And the Lord must take us with him too
ever anew, at least if we are to begin to understand
that this is the route to take.
The Transfiguration is a moment of light in advance,
which also helps us see Christ’s Passion with a gaze of
faith. Indeed, it is a mystery of suffering but it is
also the “blessed Passion” because — in essence — it is
a mystery of God’s extraordinary love; it is the
definitive exodus that opens for us the door to the
freedom and newness of the Resurrection, of salvation
from evil. We need it on our daily journey, so often
also marked by the darkness of evil.
Dear brothers and sisters, as I have said, I am very
happy to be with you today to celebrate the Lord’s Day.
I cordially greet the Cardinal Vicar, the Auxiliary
Bishop of the Sector, Fr Giampaolo Perugini, your parish
priest, whom I thank once again for his kind words on
behalf of you all and also for the pleasing gifts you
have offered me.
I greet the Parochial Vicars. And I greet the
Franciscan Missionary Sisters of the Immaculate Heart of
Mary who have been here for so many years. They deserve
praise for having fostered the life of this parish,
because their house immediately offered generous
hospitality to it, during the first three years of its
life.
I then extend my greeting to the Brothers of the
Christian Schools, who are naturally attached to this
parish church dedicated to their Founder. I greet in
addition all those who are active in the parish context.
I am referring to the catechists, the members of the
associations and movements, as well as the various
parish groups. Lastly I would like to embrace in spirit
all the inhabitants of the district, and especially the
elderly, the sick, and people who are lonely or in
difficulty.
In coming to you today I noticed the special position
of this church, set at the highest point in the district
and endowed with a slender spire, as if it were a finger or
an arrow pointing towards heaven. It seems to me that
this is an important indication: like the three Apostles
of the Gospel, we also need to climb the mountain of the
Transfiguration to receive God’s light, so that his Face
may illuminate our face. And it is in personal and
community prayer that we encounter the Lord, not as an
idea or a moral proposal but, rather, as a Person who
wishes to enter into a relationship with us, who wants
to be a friend and to renew our life to make it like
his.
This encounter is not solely a personal event; your
church, set at the highest point in the neighbourhood,
reminds you that the Gospel must be communicated and
proclaimed to all. We do not expect others to bring
different messages, that do not lead to true life. Make
yourselves missionaries of Christ to your brothers and
sisters wherever they live, work, study or just spend
their leisure time.
I know about the many important evangelization
projects that you undertake, in particular through the
after-school prayer and recreation centre called
“Pole-star” — I am also glad to wear this shirt (the
centre’s shirt) — where, thanks to the volunteer work of
competent and generous people and the involvement of
families, the gathering of young people through sports
is encouraged, without however neglecting their cultural
formation, through art and music. Above all the
relationship with God, the Christian values and an
increasingly aware participation in the Sunday
Eucharistic celebration, are inculcated in them here.
I rejoice that the sense of belonging to the parish
community has continued to develop and been consolidated
down the years. Faith must be lived together and the
parish is a place in which we learn to live our own
faith in the “we” of the Church. And I would like to
encourage you to promote pastoral co-responsibility too,
in a perspective of authentic communion among all the
realities present, which are called to walk together, to
live complementarity in diversity, to witness to the “we”
of the Church, of God’s family.
I know how committed you are in preparing the
children and young people for the sacraments of
Christian life. May the upcoming “Year of Faith” be a
favourable opportunity also for this parish to increase
and to reinforce the experience of catechesis on the
great truths of the Christian faith, so as to enable the
whole neighbourhood to know and to deepen its knowledge
of the Church’s Creed, and to surmount that “religious
illiteracy” which is one of the greatest difficulties of
our day.
Dear friend, yours is a young community — it is made
up of young families and, thanks be to God, of the
numerous children and youth who live in it. In this
regard, I would like to recall the task of the family
and of the entire Christian community to educate in
faith, assisted in this by the theme of the current
Pastoral Year, by the Pastoral Guidelines proposed by
the Italian Episcopal Conference and without forgetting
the profound and ever up to date teaching of St John
Baptist de La Salle.
You in particular, dear families, are the environment
in which the first steps of faith are taken; may you be
communities in which one learns to know and love the
Lord more and more, communities in which each enriches
the other in order to live a truly adult faith.
Lastly, I would like to remind all of you of the
importance and centrality of the Eucharist in personal
and community life. May the heart of your Sunday be Holy
Mass which should be rediscovered and lived as a day of
God and of the community, a day on which to praise and
celebrate the One who died and was raised for our
salvation, a day on which to live together the joy of an
open community, ready to receive every person who is
lonely or in difficulty.
Indeed, gathered around the Eucharist in fact, we
more easily realize that the mission of every Christian
community is to bring the message of God’s love to
everyone. This is why it is important that the Eucharist
always be at the heart of the faithful’s life, just as
it is today.
Dear brothers and sisters, from Mount Tabor, the
mountain of the Transfiguration, the Lenten journey
takes us to Golgotha, the hill of the supreme sacrifice
of love of the one Priest of the new and eternal
Covenant. That sacrifice contains the greatest power of
transformation of both the human being and of history.
Taking upon himself every consequence of evil and sin,
Jesus rose the third day as the conqueror of death and
of the Evil One. Lent prepares us to take part
personally in this great mystery of faith which we shall
celebrate in the Triduum of the Passion, death and
Resurrection of Christ.
Let us entrust our Lenten journey and likewise that of the whole Church to the
Virgin Mary. May she, who followed her Son Jesus to the Cross, help us to be
faithful disciples of Christ, mature Christians, to be able to share with her in
the fullness of Easter joy. Amen!
© Copyright 2012 - Libreria Editrice Vaticana
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