HOLY
FATHER'S HOMILY ON HIS BIRTHDAY
Vatican
City, 17 April 2012 (VIS) - Yesterday morning in the Pauline Chapel of the
Vatican Apostolic Palace, a Mass of thanksgiving was celebrated to mark two
anniversaries the Pope is celebrating this week: his eighty-fifth birthday on
16 April, and the seventh anniversary of his election on 19 April. The Mass was
attended by members of the College of Cardinals and by a group of bishops from the
Pope's native region of Bavaria.
In
his homily the Pope recalled how on the day he was born and baptised the
liturgy "erected three signposts showing me where the road led and helping
me find it": the feast of St. Bernardette of Lourdes, the feast of St.
Benedict Joseph Labre, and Easter Saturday which in the year of the Pope's
birth fell on 16 April.
St.
Bernardette grew up in "a poverty we find difficult to imagine", he
said. But "she could see with a pure and genuine heart, and Mary showed
her a source ... of pure, living uncontaminated water, water which is life,
water which gives purity and health. ... I believe we can see this water as an
image of the truth which comes to us in the faith; unsimulated and
uncontaminated truth. ... This little saint has always been a sign for me,
showing me where the living water we need comes from, the water which purifies
and gives life. She has been a sign showing me how we should be. With all our
knowledge and abilities, which are of course necessary, we must not lose ...
the simple gaze of the heart, which is capable of discerning the essential. And
we must always pray to the Lord to help us retain the humility which allows the
heart ... to see the simple and essential beauty and goodness of God, and to
find the source from which the life-giving purifying water comes".
The
Pope then turned his attention to St. Benedict Joseph Labre, who lived in the
eighteenth century. "He was a rather particular saint who wandered as a
mendicant from one shrine to another, wishing to do nothing but pray and so
bear witness to what is important in this life: God. ... He shows us that, ...
over and above what may exist in this world, over and above our needs and
abilities, ... what is essential is to know God. He alone is enough". The
life of the saint, who travelled to shrines all over Europe, "shows that
the person who opens himself to God is not a stranger to the world of men,
rather he finds brothers. ... Only God can eliminate frontiers, because thanks
to Him we are all brothers".
"Finally
there is the Paschal Mystery. On the day I was born, thanks to my parents, I
was also reborn with the water of the Spirit. ... Biological life is in itself
a gift, yet it begs an important question. It becomes a true gift only if,
together with that life, we are given a promise stronger than any misfortune
that may threaten us, if life is immersed in a power which guarantees that it
is a good thing to be a man, and that the person is a benefit whatever the
future may bring. In this way rebirth is associated with birth, the certainty
that it is good to exist because the promise is greater than the threat. This
is what it means to be reborn from water and from the Spirit. ... This rebirth
is given to us in Baptism, but we must continually grow therein, we must ever
and anew allow God to immerse us in His promise, in order to be truly reborn
into the great new family of the Lord, which is stronger than all our
weaknesses and all the negative powers that threaten us. That is why today is a
day of thanksgiving.
"The
day I was baptised ... was Easter Saturday. At the time it was still customary
to hold the Easter vigil in the morning, followed by the darkness of Easter
Saturday without a Hallelujah. This singular paradox, this anticipation of
light in a day of darkness, can almost be seen as an image of the history of
our own times. On the one hand there is the silence of God and His absence, yet
the resurrection of Christ contains an anticipation of God's 'yes'. We live in
this anticipation, through the silence of God we hear His words, and through
the darkness of His absence we glimpse His light. The anticipation of the
resurrection in the midst of evolving history indicates the path we must follow
and helps us to continue the journey".
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