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MESSAGE OF HIS HOLINESS BENEDICT
XVI
TO CARDINAL DIONIGI TETTAMANZI, ARCHBISHOP OF MILAN,
ON THE OCCASION OF THE 400TH ANNIVERSARY
OF THE CANONIZATION OF ST CHARLES BORROMEO
LUMEN CARITATIS
To my Venerable Brother
Cardinal Dionigi Tettamanzi
Archbishop of Milan
Lumen caritatis. The light of charity of St Charles
Borromeo has illumined the whole Church and, by renewing the miracles of the
love of Christ, our Supreme and Eternal Pastor, has brought new life and new
youthfulness to God’s flock, which was going through sorrowful and difficult
times. For this reason I join with all my heart in the joy of the Ambrogian
Archdiocese in commemorating the fourth centenary of the Canonization of this
great Pastor on 1 November 1610.
1. The time in which Charles Borromeo lived was very delicate
for Christianity. In it the Archbishop of Milan gave a splendid example of what
it means to work for the reform of the Church. There were many disorders
to sanction, many errors to correct and many structures to renew; yet St Charles
strove for a profound reform of the Church, starting with his own life. It was
in himself, in fact, that the young Borromeo promoted the first and most radical
work of renewal. His career had begun promisingly in accordance with the canons
of that time: for the younger son of the noble family Borromeo, a future of
prosperity and success lay in store, an ecclesiastical life full of honours but
without any ministerial responsibilities; he also had the possibility of
assuming the direction of the family after the unexpected death of his brother
Federico.
Yet Charles Borromeo, illumined by Grace, was attentive to
the call with which the Lord was attracting him and desiring him to dedicate the
whole of himself to the service of his people. Thus he was capable of making a
clear and heroic detachment from the lifestyle characterised by his worldly
dignity and dedication without reserve to the service of God and of the Church.
In times that were darkened by numerous trials for the Christian community, with
divisions and confusions of doctrine, with the clouding of the purity of the
faith and of morals and with the bad example of various sacred ministries,
Charles Borromeo neither limited himself to deploring or condemning nor merely
to hoping that others would change, but rather set about reforming his own life
which, after he had abandoned wealth and ease, he filled with prayer, penance
and loving dedication to his people. St Charles lived heroically the evangelical
virtues of poverty, humility and chastity, in a continuous process of ascetic
purification and Christian perfection.
He was aware that a serious and credible reform had to begin
precisely with Pastors if it was to have beneficial and lasting effects on the
whole People of God. In this action of reform he was able to draw from the
traditional and ever living sources of the Catholic Church: the centrality of
the Eucharist, in which he recognized and proposed anew the adorable presence of
the Lord Jesus and of his Sacrifice of love for our salvation; the spirituality
of the Cross as a force of renewal, capable of inspiring the daily exercise of
the evangelical virtues; assiduous reception of the Sacraments in which to
accept with faith the action of Christ who saves and purifies his Church; the
word of God, meditated upon, read and interpreted in the channel of Tradition;
love for and devotion to the Supreme Pontiff in prompt and filial obedience to
his instructions as a guarantee of full ecclesial communion.
The extraordinary reform that St Charles carried out in the
structures of the Church in total fidelity to the mandate of the Council of
Trent was also born from his holy life, ever more closely conformed to Christ.
His work in guiding the People of God, as a meticulous legislator and a
brilliant organizer was marvellous. All this, however, found strength and
fruitfulness in his personal commitment to penance and holiness. Indeed this is
the Church's primary and most urgent need in every epoch: that each and every
one of her members should be converted to God. Nor does the ecclesial community
lack trials and suffering in our day and it shows that it stands in need of
purification and reform. May St Charles’ example always spur us to start from a
serious commitment of personal and community conversion to transform hearts,
believing with steadfast certainty in the power of prayer and penance. I
encourage sacred ministers, priests and deacons in particular to make their life
a courageous journey of holiness, not to fear being drunk with that trusting
love for Christ that made Bishop Charles ready to forget himself and to leave
everything. Dear brothers in the ministry, may the Ambrogian Church always find
in you a clear faith and a sober and pure life that can renew the apostolic zeal
which St Ambrose, St Charles and many of your holy Pastors possessed!
2. During St Charles’ episcopate, the whole of his vast
diocese felt infected with a current of holiness that spread to the entire
people. How did this Bishop, so demanding and strict, manage to fascinate and to
win over the Christian people? The answer is easy: St Charles enlightened the
people and enticed them with the ardour of his love. “Deus caritas
est”, and where there is a living experience of love the profound Face of
God who attracts us and makes us his own is revealed.
The love of St Charles Borromeo was first and foremost the
love of the Good Shepherd who is ready to give his whole life for the flock
entrusted to his care, putting the demands and duties of his ministry before any
form of personal interest, amenity or advantage. Thus the Archbishop of Milan,
faithful to the Tridentine directives, visited several times his immense Diocese
even the most remote localities, and took care of his people, nourishing them
ceaselessly with the Sacraments and with the word of God through his rich and
effective preaching; he was never afraid to face adversities and dangers to
defend the faith of the simple and the rights of the poor.
St Charles, moreover, was recognized as a true and loving
father of the poor. Love impelled him to empty his home and to give away his
possessions in order to provide for the needy, to support the hungry, to clothe
and relieve the sick. He set up institutions that aimed to provide social
assistance and to rescue people in need; but his charity for the poor and the
suffering shone out in an extraordinary way during the plague of 1576 when the
holy Archbishop chose to stay in the midst of his people to encourage them,
serve them and defend them with the weapons of prayer, penance and love.
Furthermore it was charity that spurred Borromeo to become an
authentic and enterprising educator: for his people with schools of Christian
doctrine; for the clergy with the establishment of seminaries; for children and
young people with special initiatives for them and by encouraging the foundation
of religious congregations and confraternities dedicated to the formation of
children and young people.
Charity was always the deep motive of the severity with which
St Charles practiced fasting, penance and mortification. For the holy Bishop it
was not only a matter of ascetic practices aiming for his own spiritual
perfection but rather of a true ministerial means for expiating sins, for
invoking the conversion of sinners and for interceding for his children’s needs.
Throughout his life, therefore, we may contemplate the light
of evangelical charity, of forbearing, patient and strong love that “bears all
things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things” (1 Cor 13:7).
I thank God that the Church of Milan has always had a wealth of vocations
especially dedicated to charity; I praise the Lord for the splendid fruits of
love for the poor, of service to the suffering and of attention to youth of
which it can be proud. May St Charles’ example of prayer obtain that you may be
faithful to this heritage, so that every baptized person can live out in
contemporary society that fascinating prophecy which, in every epoch, is the
love of Christ alive in us.
3. However it is impossible to understand the charity of St
Charles Borromeo without knowing his relationship of passionate love with the
Lord Jesus. He contemplated this love in the holy mysteries of the Eucharist
and of the Cross, venerated in very close union with the mystery of the Church.
The Eucharist and the Crucified One immersed St Charles in Christ’s love and
this transfigured and kindled fervour in his entire life, filled his nights
spent in prayer, motivated his every action, inspired the solemn Liturgies he
celebrated with the people and touched his heart so deeply that he was often
moved to tears.
His contemplative gaze at the holy Mystery of the Altar and
at the Crucified one stirred within him feelings of compassion for the miseries
of humankind and kindled in his heart the apostolic yearning to proclaim the
Gospel to all. On the other hand we know well that there is no mission in the
Church which does not stem from “abiding” in the love of the Lord Jesus, made
present within us in the Eucharistic Sacrifice. Let us learn from this great
Mystery! Let us make the Eucharist the true centre of our communities and allow
ourselves to be educated and moulded by this abyss of love! Every apostolic and
charitable deed will draw strength and fruitfulness from this source!
4. The splendid figure of St Charles suggests to me a final
reflection which I address to young people in particular. The history of this
great Bishop was in fact totally determined by some courageous “yeses”,
spoken when he was still very young. When he was only 24 years old he
decided to give up being head of the family to respond generously to the Lord’s
call; the following year he accepted priestly and episcopal Ordination. At the
age of 27 he took possession of the Ambrogian Diocese and gave himself entirely
to pastoral ministry. In the years of his youth St Charles realized that
holiness was possible and that the conversion of his life could overcome every
bad habit. Thus he made his whole youth a gift of love to Christ and to the
Church, becoming an all-time giant of holiness.
Dear young people, let yourselves be renewed by this appeal
that I have very much at heart: God wants you to be holy, for he knows you in
your depths and loves you with a love that exceeds all human understanding. God
knows what is in your hearts and is waiting to see the marvellous gift he has
planted within you blossom and bear fruit. Like St Charles, you too can make
your youth an offering to Christ and to your brethren. Like him you can decide,
in this season of life, “to put your stakes” on God and on the Gospel. Dear
young people, you are not only the hope of the Church; you are already part of
her present! And if you dare to believe in holiness you will be the greatest
treasure of your Ambrogian Church which is founded on Saints.
Venerable Brother, I joyfully entrust these reflections to
you and as I invoke the heavenly intercession of St Charles Borromeo and the
constant protection of Mary Most Holy, I warmly impart to you and to the entire
Archdiocese a special Apostolic Blessing.
From the Vatican, 1 November 2010, the fourth centenary of
the canonization of St Charles Borromeo.
BENEDICT XVI
© Copyright 2010 - Libreria
Editrice Vaticana
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