APOSTOLIC JOURNEY TO POLAND
LITURGY OF THE WORD
HOMILY OF HIS HOLINESS JOHN PAUL II
Zamosc
12 June 1999
1. Blessed is she who believed that there would be a
fulfilment of what was spoken to her from the Lord (Lk
1:45).
Once again in the course of our pilgrimage across Poland we meet Mary.
It is a special gift of Gods grace that precisely here in Zamosc,
where for generations Mary has been venerated in the Cathedral Shrine
under the title of Mother of Divine Protection, we should celebrate a kind
of second moment of the Solemnity of her Immaculate Heart. In todays
Liturgy we meet Mary of the Visitation. The journey she made after the
Annunciation is well known: from Nazareth to the hill country of Judea,
where her kinswoman Elizabeth lived. Mary goes to help Elizabeth while she
prepares for motherhood. She journeys along the roads of her land carrying
in her womb the supreme mystery.
We read in the Gospel that the revelation of this mystery took place in
an extraordinary way. Blessed are you among women, and blessed is
the fruit of your womb (Lk 1:42); with these words Elizabeth
greets Mary. And why is this granted to me, that the Mother of my
Lord should come to me? (Lk 1:43). Elizabeth already knows
Gods plan and that which, at this moment, is a mystery between Mary
and herself. She knows that her son, John the Baptist, is to prepare the
way of the Lord. He is to become the herald of the Messiah, whom the
Virgin of Nazareth has conceived by the power of the Holy Spirit. The
meeting of the two mothers, Elizabeth and Mary, precedes these future
events and in a sense prepares them. Blessed are you who believed in the
word of God who announces to you the birth of the Redeemer of the world,
says Elizabeth. And Mary replies with the words of the Magnificat:
My soul magnifies the Lord, and my spirit rejoices in God my Saviour
(Lk 1:46-47). Truly the great works of God, the great mysteries of
God come to pass in hiddenness, in the house of Zechariah. The whole
Church will constantly recall them and will repeat with Elizabeth: Blessed
is she who believed, and, together with Mary, the Church will sing
the Magnificat.
The event which took place in the land of Judah is inexpressibly
mysterious. Behold, God came into the world. He became man. By the power
of the Holy Spirit he was conceived in the womb of the Virgin of Nazareth,
and would be born in the stable of Bethlehem. But before all this comes to
pass, Mary carries Jesus, as every mother carries her child in her womb.
She carries not only his human life, but also his entire mystery, the
mystery of the Son of God, the Redeemer of the world. So Marys visit
to the home of Elizabeth is in a sense both something ordinary and at the
same time a unique, extraordinary and unrepeatable event.
With Mary comes the Eternal Word, the Son of God. He comes to be present
in our midst. Just as during those days the time before his birth had
linked him to Nazareth and then to Judea, where Elizabeth lived, and then
once for all to the little town of Bethlehem, where he was to come into
the world, so now too, his every visit always links him to another place
on earth, wherever his presence is celebrated in the Liturgy.
2. Today we read the Gospel of the Visitation in the land of Zamosc. The
mystery of the coming of Mary and her Son becomes, in a way, ours too. How
pleased I am to be able to celebrate this mystery with you in the
community of the Diocese of Zamosc-Labaczów! It is a young Diocese,
but one with a very rich religious and cultural tradition going back to
the sixteenth century. Here, from the beginning, there have been close
contacts with the Apostolic See: a special fruit of these is the
celebrated Academy of Zamosc, the third after those of Kraków and
Wilno, an academic institution in the Republic of Poland founded with the
support of Pope Clement VIII. The Collegiate Church of Zamosc, which I had
the honour to raise to the dignity of a Cathedral, is a silent but
extremely eloquent witness of the heritage of past centuries. It houses
not only magnificent monuments of architecture and religious art, but also
the remains of those who shaped this great tradition. Today, as I visit
this beautiful city and the land of Zamosc, I am happy to be able to
return to this centuries-old treasury of our faith and culture.
I cordially greet all the faithful gathered here and those who are with
us in spirit. I greet the Pastor of this community, Bishop Jan, with his
Auxiliary Bishop Mariusz and all the priests and consecrated men and
women. My greeting also goes to the representatives of the State and local
Authorities. I wish to express my particular gratitude to those who are
accompanying my pilgrimage by their prayers and by the offering of their
suffering. I pray God that they may share in the graces of this visit.
3. The providential setting of the scene of Marys Visitation
within this exceptionally beautiful city and land reminds me of the
Biblical story of creation, which receives its explanation and its
fulfilment in the mystery of the Incarnation. During the days of creation
God looked at his handiwork and saw that what he had made was good. It
could not be otherwise. The harmony of nature reflected the utter
perfection of the Creator. Finally, God created man. He created him in his
own image and likeness. He entrusted to him the magnificence of the world
so that, by enjoying it and using its goods in a free and rational way, he
would cooperate actively in bringing Gods work to perfection. The
Scripture says that at that time God saw everything that he had
made, and behold, it was very good (Gen 1:31). But after mans
original fall, the world as his particular property came in
a sense to share his lot. Sin not only broke the bond of love between man
and God and destroyed the unity of mankind, but it also disturbed the
harmony of all creation. The shadow of death came down not only on the
human race but also on everything that by Gods will was meant to
exist for man.
But if we speak of the world sharing in the effects of human sin, we
also know that it too could not be deprived of a share in the divine
promise of the Redemption. The time for the fulfilment of this promise for
mankind and for all creation arrived when Mary, by the power of the Holy
Spirit, became the Mother of the Son of God. He is the firstborn of
creation (cf. Col 1:15). Everything created was eternally in him.
In coming to the world, he comes into what is his, as Saint John says (cf.
Jn 1:11). He comes in order to embrace creation anew, to begin the
work of the worlds redemption, to restore to creation its original
holiness and dignity. He comes to make us see, by his very coming, the
particular dignity which belongs to created nature.
As I make my way across Poland, from the Baltic, through Great Poland,
Mazovia, Warmia and Masuria, and then the eastern regions from the
region of Bialystok to that of Zamosc I contemplate the beauty of
this, my native country, and I am reminded of this particular aspect of
the saving mission of the Son of God. Here, the blue of the sky, the green
of the woods and fields, the silver of the lakes and rivers, all seem to
speak with exceptional power. Here the song of the birds sounds so very
familiar, so Polish. And all this testifies to the love of the Creator,
the life-giving power of his Spirit and the redemption accomplished by the
Son for man and for the world. All these creatures bespeak their holiness
and dignity, regained when the One who was the firstborn of all
creation took flesh from the Virgin Mary.
If today I speak of this holiness and dignity, I do so in a spirit of
thankfulness to God, who has done such great things for us; but I do so
likewise in a spirit of concern for the preservation of the goodness and
beauty bestowed by the Creator. For there is a danger that everything that
brings such joy to the eye and such exultation to the spirit can be
destroyed. I know that the Polish Bishops voiced this concern ten years
ago, appealing to all people of good will in a Pastoral Letter on the
protection of the environment. They rightly wrote that all mans
activity, as the activity of a responsible agent, has a moral dimension.
Destruction of the environment harms the good of creation given to man by
God the Creator as something indispensable for his life and his
development. We have a duty to make good use of this gift in a spirit of
gratitude and respect. The realization that this gift is destined for all
men, that it is a common good, also gives rise to a corresponding duty
with regard to others. We therefore need to realize that every action
which ignores Gods rights over his world, as well as the rights of
man bestowed upon him by the Creator, is in conflict with the commandment
of love . . . We need to realize therefore that there can be a grave sin
against the natural environment, one which weighs on our consciences, and
which calls for grave responsibility towards God the Creator (2 May
1989).
In speaking of responsibility before God, we know that it is not just a
matter of what is nowadays called ecology. It is not enough to seek the
cause of the worlds destruction only in excessive industrialization,
uncritical applications in industry and agriculture of scientific and
technological advances, or in an unbridled pursuit of wealth without
concern for the future effects of all these actions. Although it cannot be
denied that these actions do cause great harm, it is easy to see that
their source is deeper: it lies in mans very attitude. It appears
that what is most dangerous for creation and for man is lack of respect
for the laws of nature and the disappearance of a sense of the value of
life.
The law written by God in nature and capable of being read by reason
leads to respect for the Creators plan, a plan which is meant for
the benefit of mankind. This law establishes a certain inner order which
man discovers and which he must preserve. Any activity in conflict with
this order inevitably does damage to man himself.
This happens when the sense of the value of life as such, and of human
life in particular, disappears. How can nature be effectively defended if
justification is claimed for acts which strike at the very heart of
creation, which is human life? Is it really possible to oppose the
destruction of the environment while allowing, in the name of comfort and
convenience, the slaughter of the unborn and the procured death of the
elderly and the infirm, and the carrying out, in the name of progress, of
unacceptable interventions and forms of experimentation at the very
beginning of human life? When the good of science or economic interests
prevail over the good of the person, and ultimately of whole societies,
environmental destruction is a sign of a real contempt for man. All who
have at heart the good of man in this world need to bear constant witness
to the fact that respect for life, and above all for the dignity of
the human person, is the ultimate guiding norm for any sound economic,
industrial or scientific progress (Message for the 1990 World
Day of Peace, No. 7)
4. All things were created through him and for him. He is before
all things, and in him all things hold together . . . For in him all the
fullness of God was pleased to dwell, and through him to reconcile to
himself all things, whether on earth or heaven, making peace by the blood
of his Cross (Col 1:16-17,19-20). These words of Saint Paul
seem to describe the Christian way to defend that good which is the whole
created world. It is the way of reconciliation in Christ. Through the
blood of his Cross and through his Resurrection, Christ has restored to
creation its original order. Henceforth the whole world, with man at its
centre, has been snatched from the slavery of death and corruption (cf.
Rom 8:21) and in a certain sense has been created anew (cf. Rev
21:5); it now exists no longer for death but for life, for new life in
Christ. Thanks to his union with Christ, man rediscovers his proper place
in the world. In Christ he experiences anew that original harmony which
existed between Creator, creation and man before man succumbed to the
effects of sin. In Christ man re-reads his original call to subdue the
earth, which is the continuation of Gods work of creation rather
than the unbridled exploitation of creation.
The beauty of this land leads me to appeal its preservation for future
generations. If you love our native land, do not let this appeal go
unanswered! In a special way I call upon those who have been entrusted
with responsibility for this country and its development, and I urge them
not to neglect their duty of protecting it against environmental
destruction. Let them devise programmes for the protection of the
environment and ensure that they are properly put into effect! Above all,
let them train people to show respect for the common good, for the laws of
nature and of life! May the be supported by organizations which work for
the protection of natural resources! In the family and in the schools
there must be training in respect for life, goodness and beauty. All
people of good will should cooperate in this great task. All followers of
Christ ought to examine their own life-style, to ensure that the
legitimate pursuit of prosperity does not suppress the voice of conscience
which judges what is right and what is truly good.
5. In speaking of respect for the land, I cannot forget those who are
most closely linked to it and know its value and dignity. I think of the
farm-workers who, not only here in Zamosc but throughout Poland, perform
the hard work in the fields, making them yield the products essential for
the life of those living in the cities and villages. Only those who till
the land can really testify that the barren earth does not produce fruit,
but when cared for lovingly it is a generous provider. With gratitude and
respect I bow before those who for centuries have made this land fruitful
by the sweat of their brow, and who when it was necessary to defend
it did not spare even their blood. With the same gratitude and
respect I also speak to all who today are engaged in the hard work of
tilling the land. May God bless the work of your hands!
I know that at a time of social and economic changes there are many
problems which often painfully affect the Polish countryside. The process
of reform needs to recognize the problems of farm-workers and resolve them
in the spirit of social justice.
I speak of this in the land of Zamosc, where the rural question has been
discussed for centuries. We need only recall the works of Szymon
Szymonowic, or the work of the Rural Society founded in Hrubieszów
two hundred years ago. Cardinal Stefan Wyszynski, as Bishop of this area
and later Primate of Poland, often mentioned the importance of farming for
the Nation and the State, and the need for all social groups to show
solidarity with the rural communities. Today I cannot fail to take up this
tradition. I do so by repeating with the Prophet these words filled with
hope: As the earth brings forth its shoots, and as a garden causes
what is sown in it to spring up, so the Lord God will cause righteousness
and praise to spring up before all the nations (Is 61:11).
6. Let us look to Mary and invoke her in the words of Elizabeth: Blessed
is she who believed that there would be a fulfilment of what was spoken to
her from the Lord (Lk 1:45).
Blessed are you, Mary, Mother of the Redeemer. Today we entrust to you
the destiny of the land of Zamosc, of the Polish countryside and of all
who live and work there, carrying out the Creators command to subdue
it. Guide us with your faith in this new era which is opening up before
us. Be with us together with your Son, Jesus Christ, who wishes to be for
us the Way, and the Truth, and the Life.
© Copyright 1999 - Libreria Editrice
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