Blessed are the merciful, for they shall obtain mercy
(Mt 5:7)
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
1. I stop to reflect on the words of this beatitude of Christ as I
continue my pilgrim journey among you, faithful people of Warsaw. I warmly
greet all gathered here, the priests, men and women religious and lay
faithful. I extend fraternal greetings to the Bishops, especially to the
Cardinal Primate and the auxiliary Bishops of the Archdiocese of Warsaw. I
greet the President of the Republic, the Prime Minister, the President of
the Senate and the President of the Diet, the representatives of State and
local Authorities and invited guests.
I give thinks to Divine Providence that I am able to be present here
again, where twenty years ago, at the memorable Pentecost Vigil, we
experienced in a special way the mystery of the Upper Room. Together with
the Primate of the Millennium, Cardinal Stefan Wyszynski, with the Bishops
and the People of God of the capital present in great numbers, we made an
ardent invocation on that occasion for the gift of the Holy Spirit. In
those difficult times, we asked that his power might be poured into the
hearts of men and women, and that hope might be stirred in them. It was a
cry which arose from the faith that God is active and that, with the power
of the Holy Spirit, he renews and sanctifies all things. It was a
supplication for a renewal of the face of the earth, of this land. How can
we fail to thank the Triune God today for all that in the course of the
last twenty years we see as his response to that cry! Is not all that
happened at that time in Europe and the world, beginning with our own
homeland, Gods response? Before our eyes, changes of political,
social and economic systems have taken place, enabling individuals and
nations to see anew the splendour of their own dignity. Truth and justice
are recovering their proper value, becoming a challenge for all those who
are able to appreciate the gift of freedom. For this we give thanks to
God, looking towards the future with confidence.
We especially give glory to him for what has happened in the life of the
Church during these twenty years. In thanksgiving, therefore, we join with
the Churches of the Western and Eastern tradition, with our neighbouring
peoples who have emerged from the catacombs and are openly carrying out
their mission. Their vitality is a magnificent witness to the power of
Christs grace which enables weak men to become capable of heroism,
frequently to the point of martyrdom. Is this not the fruit of the
activity of the Holy Spirit? Is it not thanks to this breath of the Spirit
in our most recent history that today we have the unique opportunity to
experience the universality of the Church and our responsibility to bear
witness to Christ and to proclaim his Gospel to the ends of the
earth?
In the light of the Holy Spirit the Church in Poland rereads the signs
of the times and takes up her duties free from the external limitations
and pressures which were experienced up to a short time ago. How can we
not give thanks to God today for the fact that the Church is now able to
engage in a creative dialogue with the world of culture and knowledge in a
spirit of mutual respect and love! How can we not give thanks for the fact
that the faithful can approach the sacraments unhindered and can listen to
the word of God in order to be able to bear witness openly to their faith!
How can we not give glory to God for the many churches recently built in
our country! How can we not give thanks that children and young people can
come to know Christ in the tranquility of school, where the presence of a
priest, a nun or a catechist is seen as a precious help in the work of
educating the younger generation! How can we not give praise to God, who
with his Spirit enlivens church communities, associations and movements,
inspiring ever wider groups of laity to embark on the mission of
evangelization!
During my first pilgrimage to our homeland, when I was in this place, I
became intensely mindful of the prayer of the Psalmist:
O Lord, remember me out of the love you have for your people.
Come to me, Lord, with your help
that I may see the joy of your chosen ones
and may rejoice in the gladness of your nation
and share the glory of your people (106:4-5).
Today, as I look back over the last twenty years of this century, I am
reminded of the exhortation of the same Psalm:
O give thanks to the Lord for he is good;
for his love endures for ever.
Who can tell the Lords mighty deeds?
Who can recount all his praises?
Blessed be the Lord . . .
For ever, from age to age (106:1-2, 48).
2. Blessed are the merciful, for they shall obtain mercy (Mt
5:7). This Sundays liturgy gives our thanksgiving a particular
aspect. It enables us to see all that is going on in the history of this
generation from the perspective of Gods eternal mercy, which was
revealed more fully in the saving work of Christ. Christ was put to
death for our trespasses and raised for our justification (Rom
4:25). The Paschal mystery of the Death and Resurrection of the Son of God
has given a new direction to human history. Though we see in this history
the painful signs of the action of evil, we are certain that in the end
evil will not prevail over the fate of man and the world. This certainty
arises from faith in the mercy of the Father who has so loved the
world that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should not
perish but have eternal life (Jn 3:16). Hence today, as
Saint Paul points to the faith of Abraham: No distrust made him
waver concerning the promise of God, but he grew strong in his faith as he
gave glory to God (Rom 4:20), we are able to discern the
source of this strength, thanks to which not even the most difficult
trials were able to separate us from the love of God.
Faith in divine mercy made it possible for hope to endure in us. This
hope did not concern social rebirth alone, or merely the restoration of
dignity to man in the different world contexts. Our hope penetrates far
deeper: it is directed in fact to the divine promises which go far beyond
temporal realities. Its definitive object is the sharing in the fruits of
the saving work of Christ. This can be reckoned to us as justice, if we believe
in him that raised from the dead Jesus our Lord (Rom 4:24).
Only the hope which comes from faith in the Resurrection can inspire us to
give a worthy response in our daily lives to Gods infinite love.
Only with such hope can we go out to the sick (Mt
9:12) and be apostles of Gods healing love. Twenty years ago I said
that Poland has become in our time a land of particularly
responsible witness (Homily in Victory Square, 2 June 1979).
Today, it must be added that this should be a witness of active mercy
built on faith in the Resurrection. Only this kind of witness is a sign of
hope for contemporary man, especially for the younger generations; and if
for some it is also a sign of contradiction, this
contradiction never distracts us from fidelity to the Crucified and Risen
Christ.
3. Omnipotens aeterne Deus, qui per glorificationem Sanctorum
novissima dilectionis tuae nobis argumenta largiris, concede propitius,
ut, ad Unigenitum tuum fideliter imitandum, et ipsorum intercessione
commendemur, et incitemur exemplo. This is the Churchs
prayer as she remembers the Saints in the Eucharist: Ever-living
God, the signs of your love are manifest in the honour you give your
Saints. May their prayers and their example encourage us to follow your
Son more faithfully (Common of Holy Men and Women, Opening
Prayer). We raise this invocation also today, as we admire the
testimony given by the Blessed who have just been raised to the glory of
the altars. The living faith, unshakeable hope and generous love are
reckoned to them as justice, because they were profoundly rooted in the
Paschal mystery of Christ. Rightly, then, we ask to follow Christ
faithfully, according to their example.
Blessed Regina Protmann, Foundress of the Congregation of the Sisters of
Saint Catherine, a native of Braniewo, dedicated herself with all her
heart to the work of renewal of the Church at the end of the sixteenth and
beginning of the seventeenth centuries. She engaged in this activity,
which arose from her love for Christ above all things, after the Council
of Trent. She took an active part in the post-conciliar reform of the
Church, carrying out a humble work of mercy with great generosity. She
founded a Congregation, which united contemplation of the mysteries of God
with the care of the sick in their homes and the instruction of young
children and older girls. She gave particular attention to the pastoral
care of women. With no thought of herself, Blessed Regina looked to the
needs of the people and the Church, meeting them with foresight. The words
As God wills became the motto of her life. Ardent love urged
her to fulfil the Heavenly Fathers will, following the example of
the Son of God. She did not shrink from the cross of daily service in
giving witness to the Risen Christ.
The apostolate of mercy also filled the life of Blessed Edmund
Bojanowski. Despite delicate health, this landowner from Wielkopolska,
endowed with many talents and a particular depth of religious life by God,
undertook and inspired a vast activity on behalf of the rural population,
with perseverance, prudence and generosity of heart. Guided by a
discernment that was very sensitive to peoples needs, he launched
numerous educational, charitable, cultural and religious works aimed at
the material and moral support of the rural family. He remained in the lay
state and founded the Congregation of the Handmaids of the Holy and
Immaculate Virgin, which is well-known in Poland. He was inspired in every
initiative by the desire that everyone should have a share in the
Redemption. He is remembered as a good man with a big heart, who for love
of God and neighbour was able to bring different sectors together,
effectively rallying them around a common good. In his many-faceted
activity, he anticipated much of what the Second Vatican Council said
about the apostolate of the laity. His was an exceptional example of
generous and industrious work for man, the homeland and the Church. The
work of Blessed Edmund Bojanowski is continued by the Handmaids, whom I
warmly greet and thank for their silent service, filled with the spirit of
sacrifice on behalf of their neighbour and the Church.
4. Munire digneris me, Domine Iesu Christe . . ., signo
sacratissimae Crucis tuae: ac concedere digneris mihi . . . ut, sicut hanc
Crucem, Sanctorum tuorum reliquiis refertam, ante pectus meum teneo, sic
semper mente retineam et memoriam passionis, et sanctorum victorias
Martyrum: this is the prayer recited by the Bishop as he puts on the
pectoral cross. Today I make of this invocation the prayer of the entire
Church in Poland which, bearing for a thousand years the marks of the
Passion of Christ, is constantly regenerated by the seed of the blood of
the martyrs and draws life from the memory of their victory on earth.
Today we are celebrating the victory of those who, in our time, gave
their lives for Christ, in order to possess life forever in his glory.
This victory has a special character, since it was shared by clergy and
laity alike, by young people and old, by people from different classes and
states. Among them are Archbishop Antoni Julian Nowowiejski, Pastor of the
Diocese of Plock, tortured to death at Dzialdowo; Bishop Wladyslaw Goral
of Lublin, tortured with particular hatred simply because he was a
Catholic Bishop. There are diocesan and religious priests who died because
they chose not to abandon their ministry and because they continued to
serve their fellow prisoners who were sick with typhus; some were tortured
to death because they defended Jews. In the group of Blessed there are
religious brothers and sisters who persevered in the service of charity
and in offering their torments for their neighbour. Among the blessed
martyrs there are also lay people. There are five young people formed in
the Salesian oratory; a zealous activist of Catholic Action, a lay
catechist tortured to death for his service and an heroic woman, who give
up her own life in exchange for that of her daughter-in-law who was with
child. These blessed martyrs are today inscribed in the history of
holiness of the People of God on pilgrimage for over a thousand years in
the land of Poland.
If we rejoice today for the beatification of one hundred and eight
martyrs, clergy and lay people, we do so above all because they bear
witness to the victory of Christ, the gift which restores hope. As we
carry out this solemn act, there is in a way rekindled in us the certainty
that, independently of the circumstances, we can achieve complete victory
in all things through the One who has loved us (cf. Rom 8:37). The
blessed martyrs cry to our hearts: Believe in God who is love! Believe in
him in good times and bad! Awaken hope! May it produce in you the fruit of
fidelity to God in every trial!
5. Rejoice, Poland, for the new Blessed: Regina Protmann, Edmund
Bojanowski and the 108 Martyrs. It pleased God to show the
immeasurable riches of his grace in kindness towards your sons and
daughters in Jesus Christ (cf. Eph 2:7). This is the
richness of his grace, this is the foundation of our unshakeable
confidence in the saving presence of God along the paths of man in the
Third Millennium! To him be the glory for ever and ever.
Amen!
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