VATICAN
CITY, OCT. 9, 2012 - Here is the translation of Pope Benedict XVI's
meditation at the opening of the First General Congregation of the Synod
of Bishops yesterday morning.
Dear Brothers,
My
meditation refers to the word "Evangelium" "euangelisasthai" (cf. Lk
4:18). In this Synod we want to know more about what the Lord tells us
and what we can or must do. It is divided into two parts: the first is a
reflection on the meaning of these words. Then I would like to try to
interpret the hymn of the Third Hour "Nunc, Sancte, nobis Spiritus," on
page 5 of the Prayer Book.
The word "Evangelium"
"euangelisasthai" has a long history. It first appears in Homer and is
the announcement of a victory, therefore an announcement of goodness,
joy, and happiness. It appears, then, in […] Isaiah (see Isaiah 40.9),
as a voice that announces joy from God, as a voice that makes clear that
God has not forgotten his people, that God, Who apparently had almost
retired from history, is there and is present. And God is powerful, God
gives joy, he opens the doors of exile; after the long night of exile,
his light appears and gives the possibility of a return to his people,
he renews the story of good, the story of his love. In this context of
evangelization, especially three words appear: dikaiosyne, eirene,
soteria - justice, peace and salvation. Jesus himself took up the words
of Isaiah in Nazareth, speaking of this "gospel" that now he brings to
the excluded, to those in prison, to the suffering and to the poor.
But
for the meaning of the word "Evangelium" in the New Testament, in
addition to this - the Deutero Isaiah opens the door - it is also
important to use of the word done by the Roman Empire, beginning with
the Emperor Augustus. Here the term "Evangelium" means a word, a message
that comes from the Emperor. The message, then, of the Emperor - as
such - brings good luck: it is a renewal of the world, it is salvation.
Imperial message and therefore, as such, message of strength and power,
it is a message of salvation, renewal and health. The New Testament
accepts this situation. St. Luke explicitly compares the Emperor
Augustus with the Child born in Bethlehem: "Evangelium" - he says - yes,
it is a word of the Emperor, the true Emperor of the world. The true
Emperor of the world made itself felt, he talks to us. And this fact, as
such, is redemption, because the great human suffering - at that time,
as now - is this: behind the silence of the universe, behind the clouds
of history is there a God or not? And, if there is this God, does He
know us, does He have to do with us? Is this God good, and the reality
of good in the world does it have power or not? This question is so
relevant today as it was at that time. Many people wonder: God is a
hypothesis or not? Is it a reality or not? Why does He not make himself
be heard? "Gospel" means: God has broken his silence, God has spoken,
God exists. This fact as such is salvation: God knows us, God loves us,
he has entered into history. Jesus is His Word, God with us, God shows
us that He loves us, who suffers with us until his death and he
resurrects. This is the Gospel itself. God has spoken, is no longer the
great unknown, but He showed himself and this is salvation.
The
question for us is: God has spoken, he has really broken the great
silence, He has shown himself, but how do we get this reality to today‘s
man, so that it may become salvation? In itself, the fact that he
talked is salvation, is redemption. But how can man know? This point
seems to me to be a question, but also an answer, a mandate for us: we
can find the answer meditating the Hymn of the Third Hour "Nunc, Sancte,
nobis Spiritus." The first stanza says: " Dignàre promptus ingeri
nostro refusus, péctori “, that is, let us pray so that the Holy Spirit
may come, may be in us and with us. In other words: we cannot make the
Church, we can only know what He has done. The Church does not begin
with our "doing", but with the "doing" and the "speaking" of God. So the
Apostles did not say, after a few meetings: now we want to create a
Church, and, as a Constituent Assembly, they would have drafted a
constitution. No, they prayed and they waited in prayer, because they
knew that only God himself can create his Church, that God is the first
agent: if God does not act, our things are only ours and are
insufficient; only God can testify that it is he who speaks and has
spoken. Pentecost is the condition of the birth of the Church: only
because God first acted, the Apostles can act with him and with his
presence make present what He does. God has spoken and this "has spoken"
is the ‘perfect’ of faith, but it is always also a ‘present’: the
perfect of God is not only a past, because a past that is true carries
always in itself the present and the future. God has spoken means: "he
speaks." And, as in that time only with God's initiative the Church
could be born, the gospel could be known, the fact that God spoke and
speaks, so also today only God can begin, we can only cooperate, but the
beginning must come from God. Therefore it is not only a mere formality
if we start each day our Meeting with prayer: this corresponds to the
reality itself. Only the fact that God precedes us makes it possible our
own walking, our cooperation, which is always just a cooperation, not
our own simple decision. Therefore, it is always important to know that
the first word, the initiative itself, the true activity comes from God
and only by inserting ourselves in this divine initiative, only begging
this divine initiative, we too can become - with Him and in Him -
evangelizers. God is always the beginning and only He can make
Pentecost, can create the Church, can show the reality of His being with
us. But on the other hand, however, this God, who is always the
beginning, he also wants our involvement, He wants to involve our
activity, so that the activities are ‘theandrich’, so to speak, made by
God, but with our involvement and implying our being, our whole
activity. So when we do the new evangelization it is always in
cooperation with God, it is in being together with God, it is based on
prayer and on his real presence.
Now, this acting of ours, which
follows from the initiative of God, we find it described in the second
stanza of this hymn: "Os, lingua, mens, sensus, vigor, confessionem
personent, flammescat igne caritas, accendat ardor proximos." Here we
have, in two lines, two fundamental nouns: "confession" in the first
lines, and "caritas" in the second two lines. "Confessio" and "caritas,"
as the two ways in which God involves us, makes us act with Him, in Him
and for mankind, for his creature: "confessio" and "caritas." And the
verbs are added: in the first case "personent" and in the second
"caritas" interpreted with the word fire, ardor, to light, to flame. Let
us see the first: "confessionem Personent." Faith has a content: God
communicates himself, but this ‘I’ of God really wholly appears in the
figure of Jesus and is interpreted in the "confession" that speaks of
his virginal conception, of the Nativity, of the Passion, of the Cross,
of the Resurrection. This manifesting himself of God is wholly a Person:
Jesus as the Word, with a very specific content that is expressed in
the "confessio." So, the first point is that we must enter into this
"confession", let us be penetrated, so that "personent" - as the hymn
says - in us and through us. Here it is important to also observe a
small philological thing:"confessio" in the pre-Christian Latin would be
expressed not with "confessio" but with "professio" (profiteri): this
is to present positively a reality. Instead, the word "confessio" is
referred to the situation in a court, in a trial where one opens his
mind and confesses. In other words, this word "confession", which in the
Christian Latin has replaced the word "profession", bears in itself the
martyrological element, the element of testifying in situations hostile
to faith, to witness even in situations of passion and danger of death.
The willingness to suffer belongs essentially to the Christian
confession: this seems to me very important. Always in the essence of
the "confessio" of our creed, is also involved the availability to the
passion, to suffering, indeed, to the gift of life. And this ensures the
credibility: the "confessio" is not something that you could also
eliminate; the "confessio" implies the availability to give my life, to
accept the passion. This is precisely also the verification of the
"confessio". We see that for us the "confession" is not a word, it is
more than the pain, it is more than death. For the "confessio" it is
really worth to suffer, it is worth to suffer until death. Who makes
this "confession" really shows that what he confesses is more than life
itself, the treasure, the precious and infinite pearl. Just in the
martyrological dimension of the word "confessio" appears the truth: it
happens only for one reality for which it is worth to suffer, which is
stronger even than death, and demonstrates that it is a truth which I
hold in my hand, that I am safer, that I “carry” my life because I find
life in this confession.
Now let's see where it should
penetrate this "confession", " Os, lingua, mens, sensus, vigor." From
St. Paul, Letter to the Romans 10, we know that the location of the
"confession" is in the heart and in the mouth: it must stay in the deep
of my heart, but it must also be public, the faith carried in the heart
must be announced: it is never only a reality of the heart, but tends to
be communicated, to be confessed really before the eyes of the world.
So we have to learn, on the one hand, to be really - let's say -
penetrated in the heart by the "confession", so our heart is formed, and
from the heart will also find, along with the great history of the
Church, the word and the courage of the word, and the word that
indicates our present, this "confession" which is always, however, one.
"Mens”: the" confession "is not only something of the heart and mouth,
but also of the intelligence; it must be thought and so, as thought and
intelligently conceived, touches the other and it presupposes always
that my thought may be really placed in the "confession". "Sensus": it
is not a purely abstract and intellectual thing, the "confession" must
also penetrate the senses of our life. St. Bernard of Clairvaux told us
that God, in his revelation, in the history of salvation, has given to
our senses the possibility to see, to touch, to taste the revelation.
God is not anymore only a spiritual thing: he entered the world of
senses and our senses must be filled of this taste, of this beauty of
God's Word, which is real. "Vigor": it is the life force of our being
and also the legal force of a reality. With all our strength and
vitality, we must be penetrated by the "confession", which must really
"personare”; the melody of God must tune our being in its entirety.
"Confessio"
is the first pillar - so to speak - of evangelization and the second is
"caritas." The "confessio" is not an abstract thing, it is "caritas,"
love. Only in this way it is really the reflection of divine truth, that
as truth is inseparably also love. The text describes, with very strong
words, this love: it is ardor, flame, it fires up others. There's a
passion of ours that must grow from faith, which must be transformed
into the fire of charity. Jesus said: I came to cast fire on the earth,
and how I wish it were already kindled. Origen has conveyed us a word of
the Lord: "Whoever is near me is near the fire." The Christian must not
be lukewarm. The Book of Revelation tells us that this is the greatest
danger for a Christian: not that he may say no, but that he may say a
very lukewarm yes. This being lukewarm is what discredits Christianity.
Faith must become in us flame of love, flame that really fires up my
being, becomes the great passion of my being, and so it fires also my
neighbor. This is the way of evangelization: "Accéndat ardor proximos,"
that truth may become in me charity and charity may lit up also the
other. Only in this lighting up the other through the flame of our
charity, evangelization really grows, the presence of the Gospel, which
is no longer just word, but a lived reality.
St. Luke tells us
that at Pentecost, in this foundation of the Church of God, the Holy
Spirit was the fire that has transformed the world, but fire in the form
of tongues, that is, fire which is however reasonable, that is spirit,
which is also understanding , fire that is joined to the thought, to
the "mens." And this intelligent fire, this "sobria ebrietas," is
characteristic of Christianity. We know that fire is at the beginning of
human culture, fire is light, heat, power to transform. Human culture
begins when man has the power to create fire: with fire it can destroy,
but with fire it can transform and renew. The fire of God is
transforming fire, the fire of passion - certainly - that destroys also
so much in us, that leads to God, but fire especially that transforms,
renews and creates a novelty in man, which becomes light in God.
So,
at the end, we can only pray the Lord that the "confessio" may be
deeply founded in us and may become fire that kindles other; so the fire
of his presence, the novelty of his being with us, becomes really
visible and strength of the present and of the future.
[Translation by Pietro Gennarini]
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