‘Faith as a living force’
The Address by Pope Benedict XVI to the Roman Curiaon
December 22, 2011:

Pope Benedict XVI
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Dear Cardinals, Brother Bishops and Priests, dear Brothers and
Sisters,The occasion that brings us together today is always
particularly moving. The holy feast of Christmas is almost upon us and
it prompts the great family of the Roman Curia to come together for a
gracious exchange of greetings, as we wish one another a joyful and
spiritually fruitful celebration of this feast of the God who became
flesh and established his dwelling in our midst (cf. Jn 1:14).
For me, this is an occasion not only to offer you my personal good
wishes, but also to express my gratitude and that of the Church to each
one of you for your generous service; I ask you to convey this to all
the co-workers of our extended family.
I offer particular thanks to the Dean of the College, Cardinal Angelo
Sodano, who has given voice to the sentiments of all present and of all
who work in the various offices of the Curia and the Governorate,
including those whose apostolate is carried out in the Pontifical
Representations throughout the world.
Spreading
All of us are committed to spreading throughout the world the
resounding message that the angels proclaimed that night in Bethlehem,
“Glory to God in the highest and on earth peace to people of good will”
(Lk 2:14), so as to bring joy and hope to our world.As this year draws
to a close, Europe is undergoing an economic and financial crisis, which
is ultimately based on the ethical crisis looming over the Old
Continent.
Even if such values as solidarity, commitment to one’s neighbour and
responsibility towards the poor and suffering are largely
uncontroversial, still the motivation is often lacking for individuals
and large sectors of society to practise renunciation and make
sacrifices.
Perception and will do not necessarily go hand in hand. In defending
personal interests, the will obscures perception, and perception thus
weakened is unable to stiffen the will. In this sense, some quite
fundamental questions emerge from this crisis: where is the light that
is capable of illuminating our perception not merely with general ideas,
but with concrete imperatives? Where is the force that draws the will
upwards? These are questions that must be answered by our proclamation
of the Gospel, by the new evangelization, so that message may become
event, so that proclamation may lead to life.The key theme of this year,
and of the years ahead, is this: how do we proclaim the Gospel today?
How can faith as a living force become a reality today? The ecclesial
events of the outgoing year were all ultimately related to this theme.
There were the journeys to Croatia, to the World Youth Day in Spain,
to my home country of Germany, and finally to Africa – Benin – for the
consignment of the Post-Synodal document on justice, peace and
reconciliation, which should now lead to concrete results in the various
local churches.
Equally memorable were the journeys to Venice, to San Marino, to the
Eucharistic Congress in Ancona, and to Calabria. And finally there was
the important day of encounter in Assisi for religions and for people
who in whatever way are searching for truth and peace, representing a
new step forward in the pilgrimage towards truth and peace. The
establishment of the Pontifical Council for the New Evangelization is at
the same time a pointer towards next year’s Synod on the same theme.
The Year of Faith, commemorating the beginning of the Council fifty
years ago, also belongs in this context. Each of these events had its
own particular characteristics. In Germany, where the Reformation began,
the ecumenical question, with all its trials and hopes, naturally
assumed particular importance.
Intimately linked to this, at the focal point of the debate, the
question that arises repeatedly is this: what is reform of the Church?
How does it take place? What are its paths and its goals? Not only
faithful believers but also outside observers are noticing with concern
that regular churchgoers are growing older all the time and that their
number is constantly diminishing; that recruitment of priests is
stagnating; that scepticism and unbelief are growing.
What, then, are we to do? There are endless debates over what must be
done in order to reverse the trend. There is no doubt that a variety of
things need to be done. But action alone fails to resolve the matter.
The essence of the crisis of the Church in Europe – as I argued in
Freiburg – is the crisis of faith. If we find no answer to this, if
faith does not take on new life, deep conviction and real strength from
the encounter with Jesus Christ, then all other reforms will remain
ineffective.On this point, the encounter with Africa’s joyful passion
for faith brought great encouragement.
Sufferings
None of the faith fatigue that is so prevalent here, none of the
oft-encountered sense of having had enough of Christianity was
detectable there. Amid all the problems, sufferings and trials that
Africa clearly experiences, one could still sense the people’s joy in
being Christian, buoyed up by inner happiness at knowing Christ and
belonging to his Church. From this joy comes also the strength to serve
Christ in hard-pressed situations of human suffering, the strength to
put oneself at his disposal, without looking round for one’s own
advantage.
Encountering this faith that is so ready to sacrifice and so full of
happiness is a powerful remedy against fatigue with Christianity such as
we are experiencing in Europe today.
We speak different languages, we have different ways of life and
different cultural backgrounds, yet we are immediately united as one
great family. Outward separation and difference is relativized. We are
all moved by the one Lord Jesus Christ, in whom true humanity and at the
same time the face of God himself is revealed to us. We pray in the same
way. The same inner encounter with Jesus Christ has stamped us deep
within with the same structure of intellect, will and heart.
And finally, our common liturgy speaks to our hearts and unites us in
a vast family. In this setting, to say that all humanity are brothers
and sisters is not merely an idea: it becomes a real shared experience,
generating joy. And so we have also understood quite concretely: despite
all trials and times of darkness, it is a wonderful thing to belong to
the worldwide Church that the Lord has given to us.From this derives a
new way of living our humanity, our Christianity.
For me, one of the most important experiences of those days was the
meeting with the World Youth Day volunteers: about 20,000 young people,
all of whom devoted weeks or months of their lives to working on the
technical, organizational and material preparations for World Youth Day,
and who thus made it possible for the whole event to run smoothly. Those
who give their time always give a part of their lives.
At the end of the day, these young people were visibly and tangibly
filled with a great sense of happiness: their time had meaning; in
giving of their time and labour, they had found time, they had found
life. And here something fundamental became clear to me: these young
people had given a part of their lives in faith, not because it was
asked of them, not in order to attain Heaven, nor in order to escape the
danger of Hell.
They did not do it in order to find fulfilment. They were not looking
round for themselves. There came into my mind the image of Lot’s wife,
who by looking round was turned into a pillar of salt. How often the
life of Christians is determined by the fact that first and foremost
they look out for themselves, they do good, so to speak, for themselves.
And how great is the temptation of all people to be concerned
primarily for themselves; to look round for themselves and in the
process to become inwardly empty, to become “pillars of salt”.
But here it was not a matter of seeking fulfilment or wanting to live
one’s life for oneself. These young people did good, even at a cost,
even if it demanded sacrifice, simply because it is a wonderful thing to
do good, to be there for others.
All it needs is the courage to make the leap. Prior to all of this is
the encounter with Jesus Christ, inflaming us with love for God and for
others, and freeing us from seeking our own ego. In the words of a
prayer attributed to Saint Francis Xavier: I do good, not that I may
come to Heaven thereby and not because otherwise you could cast me into
Hell.
I do it because of you, my King and my Lord. I came across this same
attitude in Africa too, for example among the Sisters of Mother Teresa,
who devote themselves to abandoned, sick, poor and suffering children,
without asking anything for themselves, thus becoming inwardly rich and
free.
Attitude
This is the genuinely Christian attitude. Equally unforgettable for
me was the encounter with handicapped young people in the Saint Joseph
Centre in Madrid, where I encountered the same readiness to put oneself
at the disposal of others – a readiness that is ultimately derived from
encounter with Christ, who gave himself for us.
A third element, that has an increasingly natural and central place
in World Youth Days and in the spirituality that arises from them, is
adoration. I still look back to that unforgettable moment during my
visit to the United Kingdom, when tens of thousands of predominantly
young people in Hyde Park responded in eloquent silence to the Lord’s
sacramental presence, in adoration. The same thing happened again on a
smaller scale in Zagreb and then again in Madrid, after the thunderstorm
which almost ruined the whole night vigil through the failure of the
microphones. God is indeed ever-present. But again, the physical
presence of the risen Christ is something different, something new.
The risen Lord enters into our midst. And then we can do no other
than say, with Saint Thomas: my Lord and my God! Adoration is primarily
an act of faith – the act of faith as such. God is not just some
possible or impossible hypothesis concerning the origin of all things.
He is present.
And if he is present, then I bow down before him. Then my intellect
and will and heart open up towards him and from him. In the risen
Christ, the incarnate God is present, who suffered for us because he
loves us. We enter this certainty of God’s tangible love for us with
love in our own hearts. This is adoration, and this then determines my
life. Only thus can I celebrate the Eucharist correctly and receive the
body of the Lord rightly.
A further important element of the World Youth Days is the sacrament
of Confession, which is increasingly coming to be seen as an integral
part of the experience. Here we recognize that we need forgiveness over
and over again, and that forgiveness brings responsibility. Openness to
love is present in man, implanted in him by the Creator, together with
the capacity to respond to God in faith.
History
But also present, in consequence of man’s sinful history (Church
teaching speaks of original sin) is the tendency that is opposed to love
– the tendency towards selfishness, towards becoming closed in on
oneself, in fact towards evil. Again and again my soul is tarnished by
this downward gravitational pull that is present within me.
Therefore we need the humility that constantly asks God for
forgiveness, that seeks purification and awakens in us the counterforce,
the positive force of the Creator, to draw us upwards.Finally, I would
like to speak of one last feature, not to be overlooked, of the
spirituality of World Youth Days, namely joy.
Where does it come from? How is it to be explained? Certainly, there
are many factors at work here. But in my view, the crucial one is this
certainty, based on faith: I am wanted; I have a task; I am accepted, I
am loved. Joseph Pieper, in his book on love, has shown that man can
only accept himself if he is accepted by another.
He needs the other’s presence, saying to him, with more than words:
it is good that you exist. Only from the You can the I come into itself.
Only if it is accepted, can it accept itself. Those who are unloved
cannot even love themselves. This sense of being accepted comes in the
first instance from other human beings. But all human acceptance is
fragile. Ultimately we need a sense of being accepted unconditionally.
Only if God accepts me, and I become convinced of this, do I know
definitively: it is good that I exist. It is good to be a human being.
If ever man’s sense of being accepted and loved by God is lost, then
there is no longer any answer to the question whether to be a human
being is good at all. Doubt concerning human existence becomes more and
more insurmountable.
Where doubt over God becomes prevalent, then doubt over humanity
follows inevitably. We see today how widely this doubt is spreading. We
see it in the joylessness, in the inner sadness, that can be read on so
many human faces today. Only faith gives me the conviction: it is good
that I exist. It is good to be a human being, even in hard times.
Faith makes one happy from deep within. That is one of the wonderful
experiences of World Youth Days.It would take too long now to go into
detail concerning the encounter in Assisi, as the significance of the
event would warrant. Let us simply thank God, that as representatives of
the world’s religions and as representatives of thinking in search of
truth, we were able to meet that day in a climate of friendship and
mutual respect, in love for the truth and in shared responsibility for
peace. So let us hope that, from this encounter, a new willingness to
serve peace, reconciliation and justice has emerged.As I conclude, I
would like to thank all of you from my heart for shouldering the common
mission that the Lord has given us as witnesses to his truth, and I wish
all of you the joy that God wanted to bestow upon us through the
incarnation of his Son. A blessed Christmas to you all! Posted by Esther
G. Posted 4:48 PM Labels: Pope Benedict XVI Messages |