JOHN PAUL II
HOMILY AT MASS
Elk, Tuesday, 8 June 1999
1. Zaccheus, make haste and come down; for I must stay at your
house today (Lk 19:5).
Saint Luke, in the Gospel which we have just heard, recounts the meeting
between Jesus and a man called Zaccheus, a chief tax collector who was
very rich. Since he was short of stature he climbed a tree to be able to
see Christ. He then heard the Masters words: Zaccheus, make
haste and come down; for I must stay at your house today (Lk
19:5). Jesus had taken note of Zaccheus gesture; he understood his
desire and anticipated his invitation. The fact that Jesus would go to the
house of a sinner even caused amazement in some people. Zaccheus,
delighted at the visit, received him joyfully (Lk
19:6), that is, he opened the door of his house and of his heart to the
encounter with the Saviour.
2. Dear brothers and sisters, I cordially greet those present at this
Holy Mass. In a special way I greet Bishop Wojciech, Pastor of the Church
in Elk, his Auxiliary Bishop Edward, and also the clergy present here in
large numbers, the consecrated men and women, and the People of God. I
greet this land and those who live here. It is very dear to me because I
have visited it many times, coming here also for periods of rest. I have
been able to admire the richness of nature in this part of my homeland and
to enjoy the peace of the lakes and the woods. You yourselves are heirs of
the rich past of this land, formed down the centuries by different
traditions and cultures. This is made evident at this celebration by the
presence round the altar of God not only of Polish Bishops, but also of
Bishops from other countries. I thank them for having come to Elk. I greet
also the students of the major seminaries, as well as the pilgrims who
have come from neighbouring Dioceses and from abroad, especially from
Belarus, Russia and Lithuania. I ask you to take my greeting to all those
brothers and sisters of ours who cannot be here with us.
I cordially greet the members of the Lithuanian community living in the
territory of the Diocese of Elk who are present at this Holy Mass, and
also the pilgrims who have come from Lithuania. In a special way I greet
the President of the Republic of Lithuania, Mr Valdas Adamkus, and his
entourage. I greet the Bishops, priests, Religious men and women, and also
the students from the major seminaries. Through you I wish to greet all
those who live in the land of Lithuania. My thoughts and my heart often
turn to the visit that I made to your country in September 1993. All of us
together gave thanks to God and the Mother of Mercy at the Shrine of the
Dawn Gate for the unshakable fidelity to the Gospel shown by your nation
in times of difficulty. During the Mass celebrated near the Hill of
Crosses I thanked you for this great witness given to God and to
mankind . . . given to your history and to all the peoples of Europe and
the whole earth At that time I also said: May this hill be a
witness until the end of the second millennium after Christ, and a message
for the new millennium, the third millennium of the redemption and
salvation which is found nowhere else but in the Cross and Resurrection of
our Redeemer . . . This is the message which I leave all of you from this
mystical place of Lithuanian history. I leave it to all of you. I hope
that it may always be contemplated and lived (7 September 1993, No.
5).
Dear Lithuanian Brothers and Sisters, six years later I would like once
more to remind you of these words and repeat them to you. Today I commend
your nation to the Madonna of the Dawn Gate and to Saint Casimir, Patron
of Lithuania. At his tomb in the Cathedral of Vilnius I prayed fervently
for your whole nation and I thanked God that I had been able to go there
and carry out my pastoral ministry there. I invoke the intercession also
of Queen Saint Hedwig, whose liturgical memorial the Church celebrates
today, and also the intercession of the Blessed Archbishop Jurgis
Matulaitis, tireless and courageous Pastor of the Church in Vilnius. May
faith ever be your nations strength, and may witness to Christs
love produce spiritual fruits. It is on faith that you must build the
future of your country, of your lives, of your identity as Lithuanians and
Christians, for the good of the Church, of Europe and of humanity.
3. Behold, Lord, the half of my goods I give to the poor
(Lk 19:8). I wish to return to the Gospel reading from Saint Luke:
Christ, the light of the world (cf. Jn 8:12), brought
his light to the home of Zaccheus, and in a special way to his heart.
Thanks to the closeness of Jesus, of his words and of his teaching, this
mans heart begins to be transformed. Already on the threshold of his
house Zaccheus declares: Behold, Lord, the half of my goods I give
to the poor; and if I have defrauded anyone of anything, I restore it
fourfold (Lk 19:8). In the example of Zaccheus we see how
Christ dispels the darkness of the human mind. In his light the horizons
of existence become broader: we begin to be aware of other people and
their needs. A bond with others is born, an awareness of mans social
dimension and consequently a sense of justice. The fruit of light is
found in all that is good and right and true, teaches Saint Paul (Eph
5:9). Opening ourselves to our fellow man, to our neighbour, constitutes
one of the principal fruits of sincere conversion. Man breaks out of his
selfish being for himself alone and opens himself to others,
feeling the need to be for others, to be for his brothers and
sisters.
This opening of the heart in the encounter with Christ is a pledge of
salvation, as is shown in the ensuing conversation with Zaccheus: Jesus
said to him, 'Today salvation has come to this house . . . For the Son of
Man came to seek and to save the lost' (Lk 19:9-10).
In our own day too, Lukes description of the event that took place
at Jericho has lost none of its importance. It brings us the exhortation
given by Christ, whom God made our wisdom, our righteousness and
sanctification and redemption (1 Cor 1:30). And just as he
once did with Zaccheus, so at this moment Christ stands before the men and
women of our own age. He seems to say to each person individually: I
must stay at your house today (Lk 19:5).
Dear Brothers and Sisters, this today is important. It is a
kind of summons. In life there are certain matters that are so important
or so urgent that they cannot be put off or left for another day. They
must be dealt with now, today. The Psalmist exclaims: O that today
you would harken to his voice! Harden not your hearts (Ps
95:7-8). The cry of the poor (Job 34:28) of all the
world rises endlessly from the earth and reaches God. It is the cry of
children, women, the elderly, refugees, those who have been wronged, the
victims of war, the unemployed. The poor too are in our midst: the
homeless, beggars, the hungry, the despised, those who have been forgotten
by their own families and by society, the degraded and humiliated, the
victims of various vices. Many of these people even try to hide their
human misery, but we must know how to recognize them. There are also
people suffering in hospitals, children left without parents, or young
people experiencing the difficulties and problems of their age.
Still today we see immense areas in which the work of Christians
must bring to bear the charity of God . . . There are situations of
persistent misery which cannot but impinge upon the conscience of
Christians, reminding them of their duty to address these situations both
as individuals and as a community, as I wrote in my last Message for
Lent (15 October 1998, 3 and 4). The today of Christ should
therefore echo loudly in every heart, making it mindful of the works of
mercy. The lament and the cry of the poor require us to give a
concrete and generous response. It requires us to be willing to serve our
neighbour. The invitation is made by Christ. We are constantly being
called. Each of us in a different way. In various places, in fact, people
are suffering and calling out to others. They need the presence of others,
their help. How very important is this presence of the human heart and of
human solidarity!
Let us not harden our hearts when we hear the cry of the poor.
Let us strive to listen to this cry. Let us strive to act and to live in
such a way that in our country no one will be without a roof over their
head or bread on the table; that no one will feel alone, left without
anyone to care for them. I make this appeal to my fellow countrymen. I
know how much is being done in Poland to halt the spread of poverty and
indigence. Here I would like to emphasize the work being done by the
Churchs different Caritas agencies, at both the diocesan and
parochial levels. These groups are involved in various initiatives, for
example during the Advent and Lenten seasons, and provide assistance to
individuals and entire social groups. They are also involved in training
and educational activities. The assistance which they provide often goes
beyond the borders of Poland. How numerous are the social assistance
centres, the hospices, soup kitchens, charitable centres, homes for single
mothers, child-care and after-school care centres, protection stations and
centres for the disabled that have recently appeared. These are but a few
examples of this immense Good Samaritan undertaking. I wish
also to emphasize the efforts being made by the State and by private
institutions and individuals, and by the volunteers who work in them.
Mention should also be made here of the initiatives aimed at providing
solutions to the troubling situation of growing poverty in different
sectors and regions. These are concrete, real and visible contributions to
the development of a civilization of love on Polish soil.
We must always recall that the countrys economic development must
take into consideration the greatness, dignity, and vocation of man, who was
made in the image and likeness of God (cf. Gen 1:26).
Development and economic progress must never be at the expense of men and
women, hindering the meeting of their fundamental needs. The human person
must be the subject of development, that is, its most important point of
reference. Development and economic progress cannot be pursued at whatever
cost! That would not be worthy of man (cf. Sollecitudo Rei Socialis,
27). The Church of today proclaims and seeks to exercise a preferential
option for the poor. This is not just a passing feeling or immediate
action, but a real and persevering will to work for the good of those who
are in need and who often have no hope of a better future.
5. Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the Kingdom
of heaven (Mt 5:3).
At the very beginning of his messianic activity, speaking at the
synagogue in Nazareth, Jesus said: The spirit of the Lord is upon
me, because he has anointed me to preach good news to the poor (Lk
4:18). He considered the poor the most privileged heirs of the Kingdom.
This means that only the poor in spirit are able to receive
the Kingdom with all their hearts. Zaccheus meeting with Jesus shows
that a rich man too can become a sharer in Christs beatitude for the
poor in spirit.
The poor in spirit are those who are willing to use their wealth
generously for the needy. In such cases, we see that these people are not
attached to their wealth. We see that they understand its real purpose.
Material goods in fact are meant to help others, especially the needy. The
Church allows private ownership of these goods, if they are used for this
purpose.
Today we remember Queen Saint Hedwig. Her generosity to the poor is well
known. Although she was rich, she did not forget the poor. For us she is a
model of how to live and put into practice Christs teaching about
love and mercy, about how we must make ourselves like him who, as Saint
Paul says, though he was rich, yet for our sake he became poor that
by his poverty we might become rich (2 Cor 8:9).
Blessed are the poor in spirit. This is Christs
declaration that every Christian, every believer today should hear. There
is a great need for people who are poor in spirit, that is, people who are
open to the truth and to grace, open to the great things of God; there is
a need for big-hearted people who do not let themselves be deceived by the
splendour of the riches of this world, and who do not allow these riches
to dominate their hearts. Such people are truly strong, because they are
filled with the riches of Gods grace. They live in the awareness
that they are receiving from God all the time and without end.
I have no silver and gold, but I give you what I have; in the name
of Jesus Christ of Nazareth, walk (Acts 3:6). With these
words the Apostles Peter and John answer the cripples plea. They
gave him the greatest gift that he could have desired. From poor men, this
poor man receives the greatest wealth: in the name of Christ they restore
his health. Thus they proclaimed the truth which, from generation to
generation, has been the heritage of those who proclaim Christ.
These are the poor in spirit. Though they possess neither silver nor
gold themselves, thanks to Christ they have greater power than those who
can give all the riches of the world.
Truly such people are happy and blessed, for to them belongs the Kingdom
of heaven. Amen.
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