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APOSTOLIC JOURNEY
TO THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA AND CANADA
MASS AND CELEBRATION OF THE SACRAMENT
OF THE ANOINTING OF THE SICK
HOMILY OF HIS HOLINESS JOHN PAUL II
Campus of the
Arizona State University, Phoenix Monday, 14 September 1987
“The Son of Man must be lifted up” (Io. 3, 14).
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
1. On this day when I have the joy of celebrating the Eucharist with you here in
Phoenix, let our first thoughts be directed to the victorious Cross of
our Saviour, to the Son of Man who is lifted up! Let us adore and praise Christ,
our Crucified and Risen Lord. To him, and to the Father and the Holy Spirit, be
glory and thanksgiving now and forever!
How good it is to join our voices in praise of God on this feast of the
Triumph of the Cross. And how appropriate to celebrate the feast here in the
city of Phoenix, which bears the name of an ancient symbol often depicted
in Christian art to represent the meaning of the victorious Cross. The phoenix
was a legendary bird that, after dying, rose again from its own ashes. Thus, it
came to be a symbol of Christ who, after dying on the Cross, rose again in
triumph over sin and death.
We can rightly say that, by divine providence, the Church in Phoenix has been
called in a particular way to live the mystery of the victory of the Cross.
Certainly, the Cross of Christ has marked the progress of evangelization in this
area since its beginning: from the day, three hundred years ago, when Father
Eusebio Kino first brought the Gospel to Arizona. The Good News of salvation
has brought forth great fruit here in Phoenix, in Tucson and throughout this
whole area. The Cross is indeed the Tree of Life.
2. “The Son of Man must be lifted up” (Io. 3, 14).
Today the Church makes special reference to these words of Christ as she
celebrates the feast of the Triumph of the Cross. Beyond the particular
historical circumstances that contributed to the introduction of this feast in
the liturgical calendar, there remain these words that Christ spoke to
Nicodemus during that conversation which took place at night: "The Son of
Man must be lifted up".
Nicodemus, as we know, was a man who loved God’s word and who studied the word
with great attention. Prompted by his hunger for the truth, by his eagerness to
understand, Nicodemus came to Jesus at night to find answers to his questions
and doubts. It is precisely to him, to Nicodemus, that Jesus speaks these words
which still echo in a mysterious way: "The Son of Man must be lifted up, that
all who believe may have eternal life in him" (Ibid. 3, 14-15).
Nicodemus could not have known at this point that these words contain, in a
certain sense, the summary of the whole Paschal Mystery which would crown the
messianic mission of Jesus of Nazareth. When Jesus spoke of being "lifted up"
he was thinking of the Cross on Calvary: being lifted up on the Cross, being
lifted up by means of the Cross. Nicodemus could not have guessed this at
the time. And so Christ referred to an event from the history of the Old
Testament which he knew about, namely, Moses lifting up the serpent in the
desert.
3. It was an unusual event that took place during Israel’s journey from Egypt
to the Promised Land. This journey that lasted forty years was full of tests:
the people "tested” God with their infidelity and lack of trust; in turn
this provoked many tests from the Lord in order to purify Israel’s faith
and deepen it. Near Mount Hor a particular test took place, which was that of
the poisonous serpents. These serpents "bit the people" with the result
that many of them died (Nu. 21, 6). Then Moses, ordered by the Lord, “made a
bronze serpent and mounted it on a pole, and whenever anyone who had been
bitten by a serpent looked at the bronze serpent, he recovered” (Ibid.
21, 9).
We might ask: why such a test? The Lord had chosen Israel to be his own;
he had chosen this people, in order to initiate them gradually into his plan of
salvation.
4. Jesus of Nazareth explains the salvific designs of the God of the Covenant.
The bronze serpent in the desert was the symbolic figure of the
Crucified One. Is someone who had been bitten looked upon the serpent "lifted
up" by Moses on a high pole, that person was saved. He remained alive, not
because he had looked upon the serpent, but because he had believed in the
power of God and his saving love. Thus when the Son of Man is lifted up on
the Cross of Calvary, "all who believe will have eternal life in him"
(Cfr. Io. 3, 15).
There exists then a profound analogy between that figure and this reality,
between that sign of salvation and this reality of salvation contained in the
Cross of Christ. The analogy becomes even more striking if we keep in mind that
the salvation from physical death, caused by the poison of the serpents in the
desert, came about through a serpent. Salvation from spiritual death - the
death that is sin and that was caused by man - came about through a Man, through
the Son of Man "lifted up" on the Cross.
In this nighttime conversation, Jesus of Nazareth helps Nicodemus to discover
the true sense of God’s designs. While Jesus is speaking, the fulfilment of
these divine designs belongs to the future, but at this point the future is
not far away Nicodemus himself will be a witness to this fulfilment. He will be
a witness to the paschal events in Jerusalem. He will be a witness to the
Cross, upon which the one who speaks with him this night - the Son of Man - will be
lifted up.
5. Jesus goes on even further. The conversation becomes even deeper: Why the
Cross? Why must the Son of Man be "lifted up" on the wood of the Cross?
Because "God so loved the world that he gave his only Son that whoever
believes in him may not die but may have eternal life" (Io. 3, 16). Yes, eternal life. This
is the type of salvation that Jesus is speaking about: eternal life in God.
And then Jesus adds: "God did not send the Son into the world to
condemn the world, but that the world might be saved through him" (Ibid.
3, 17). Many
thought that the Messiah would be first of all a severe judge who would
punish, "separating the wheat from the chaff" (Cfr. Matth. 3,
12). If at one moment he will have to
come as judge - at the end of the world - now "in the fullness of time"
(Cfr. Gal. 4, 4) he comes
to be judged himself by the sins of the world, and therefore because of the
sins of the world. And thus, Christ lifted up on the Cross becomes the Redeemer
of the human race, the Redeemer of the world.
Jesus of Nazareth prepares Nicodemus, the eager student of the Scriptures, so
that in time he will understand the saving mystery contained in the Cross of
Christ. And we know that, in time, Nicodemus did understand, but not during
that night.
6. What, then, does this "being lifted up" mean?
In the second reading of today’s liturgy, taken from Saint Paul’s Letter to the
Philippians, "being lifted up" means first of all "being brought low".
The Apostle writes about Christ, saying: “Though he was in the form of God, he
did not deem equality with God something to be grasped at. Rather, he emptied
himself and took the form of a slave, being born in the
likeness of men” (Phil. 2, 6-7). The Godman! God becoming man. God taking on our humanity:
this is the first dimension of " being brought low ", and at the same time it is
a "lifting up". God is brought low, so that man may be lifted up. Why?
Because "God so loved the world". Because he is love!
Then the Apostle writes: "(Christ) was known to be of human estate, and it was
thus that he humbled himself, obediently accepting death, death on a Cross"
(Ibid. 2, 7-8).
This is the second and the definitive dimension of being brought low. It
is the dimension of being emptied which confirms in the strongest way the truth
of those words: "God so loved the world that he gave his only Son". He gave.
This emptying is itself the gift. It is the greatest gift of the Father.
It surpasses all other gifts. It is the source of every gift. In this absolute
lowering, in this emptying, is the beginning and source of every "lifting up",
the source of the lifting up of humanity.
7. The Cross was " lifted up " on Golgotha. And Jesus was nailed to the Cross,
and was therefore lifted up with it. To the human eye, this was the
culmination of humiliation and disgrace. But in the eyes of God it
was different. It was different in the eternal designs of God.
The Apostle continues: “Because of this, God highly exalted him and bestowed on
him the name above every other name, so that at Jesus’ name every knee must bend
in the heavens, on the earth, and under the earth, and every tongue proclaim to
the glory of God the Father: Jesus Christ is Lord” (Ibid. 2,
9-11).
Christ is the Lord! This will be confirmed in the Resurrection, but it is
already contained in the Crucifixion. Precisely in the Crucifixion.
To be crucified, humanly speaking, is to be disgraced and humiliated. But from
God’s point of view it means being lifted up, indeed, to be lifted up by means
of the Cross. Christ is the Lord, and he becomes Lord of everything and everyone
in this elevation by means of the Cross. It is in this way that we look upon the
Cross, with the eyes of faith, instructed by the word of God, guided by
the power of God.
Here then is the mystery of the Triumph of the Cross.
8. This mystery reaches us in a particular way and with a special power when the
Church celebrates the Sacrament of the Anointing of the Sick, as she does
this evening. By means of this sacrament, and through all her pastoral service,
the Church continues to care for the sick and dying as Jesus did during
his earthly ministry. Through the laying on of hands by the priest, the
anointing with oil and the prayers, our brothers and sisters are strengthened
with the grace of the Holy Spirit. They are enabled to bear their sufferings
with courage and thus to embrace the Cross and follow after Christ with stronger
faith and hope.
This holy anointing does not prevent physical death, nor does it promise a
miraculous healing of the human body. But it does bring special grace and
consolation to those who are dying, preparing them to meet our loving
Saviour with lively faith and love, and with firm hope for eternal life. It also
brings comfort and strength to those who are not dying but who are
suffering from serious illness or advanced age. For these the Church seeks
healing of both body and soul, praying that the whole person may be renewed by
the power of the holy Spirit.
Every time that the Church celebrates this sacrament, she is proclaiming her
belief in the victory of the Cross. It is as if she were repeating the words
of Saint Paul: “I am certain that neither death nor life, neither angels
nor principalities, neither the present nor the future, nor powers, neither
height nor depth nor any other creature, will be able to separate us from the
love of God that comes to us in Christ Jesus, our Lord” (Rom. 8,
38-39).
From the very early days until now, Phoenix has been a city to which people have
come for health care, for relief of suffering, for new beginnings and fresh
starts. Today as in the past, the Church welcomes such people, offering them
love and understanding. She is grateful to the sick and elderly for the special
mission which they fulfill in the Kingdom of our Saviour. Your hospitality,
which I myself have also received, reflects the beautiful saying in Spanish: "mi
casa, su casa". I pray that you will always remain faithful to this tradition
of Christian community and generous service.
By such fidelity to your Christian heritage, through the Sacrament of the
Anointing of the Sick, and in the celebration of the Holy Eucharist, you express
your deep conviction that suffering and death are not the last words of life.
The last word is the Word made flesh, the Crucified and Risen Christ.
9. The responsorial psalm of today’s liturgy exhorts us:
"Hearken, my people, to my teaching; Incline your ears to the words
of my mouth . . . I will utter mysteries from of old" (Ps. 78
(77), 1-2).
It was exactly in this way that Christ revealed the mystery of salvation to
Nicodemus, and to us. And to all people.
The words which follow, in that same psalm, also refer to us:
"But they flattered him with their mouths and lied to him with
their tongues, Though their hearts were not steadfast towards him,
nor were they faithful to his covenant” (Ibid. 36-37).
And nevertheless:
"While he slew them they sought him and inquired after God again;
Remembering that God was their rock and the Most High God, their
Redeemer" (Ibid. 34-35).
And this is how God continues among us, from one generation to the next, as our
Rock, our Redeemer. This is the mystery of the Triumph of the Cross, the rock
of our salvation.
Let us fix our gaze upon the Cross! Let us be reborn from it! Let us
return to God!
May the humiliation of Christ - his being brought low by means of the Cross - serve
once again to lift up humanity towards God. Sursum corda! Lift up your
hearts! Amen.
©
Copyright 1987 - Libreria Editrice Vaticana
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