Dear Brothers in the Priestly Ministry,
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
The
Year for Priests which we have celebrated on the one
hundred and fiftieth anniversary of the death of the holy
Curè of Ars, the model of priestly ministry in our
world, is now coming to an end. We have let
the Curé of Ars guide us to a renewed appreciation
of the grandeur and beauty of the priestly ministry. The
priest is not a mere office-holder, like those which every
society needs in order to carry out certain functions. Instead,
he does something which no human being can do of
his own power: in Christ’s name he speaks the words
which absolve us of our sins and in this way
he changes, starting with God, our entire life. Over the
offerings of bread and wine he speaks Christ’s words of
thanksgiving, which are words of transubstantiation – words which make
Christ himself present, the Risen One, his Body and Blood
– words which thus transform the elements of the world,
which open the world to God and unite it to
him. The priesthood, then, is not simply “office” but sacrament:
God makes use of us poor men in order to
be, through us, present to all men and women, and
to act on their behalf. This audacity of God who
entrusts himself to human beings – who, conscious of our
weaknesses, nonetheless considers men capable of acting and being present
in his stead – this audacity of God is the
true grandeur concealed in the word “priesthood”. That God thinks
that we are capable of this; that in this way
he calls men to his service and thus from within
binds himself to them: this is what we wanted to
reflect upon and appreciate anew over the course of the
past year. We wanted to reawaken our joy at how
close God is to us, and our gratitude for the
fact that he entrusts himself to our infirmities; that he
guides and sustains us daily. In this way we also
wanted to demonstrate once again to young people that this
vocation, this fellowship of service for God and with God,
does exist – and that God is indeed waiting for
us to say “yes”. Together with the whole Church we
wanted to make clear once again that we have to
ask God for this vocation. We have to beg for
workers for God’s harvest, and this petition to God is,
at the same time, his own way of knocking on
the hearts of young people who consider themselves able to
do what God considers them able to do. It was
to be expected that this new radiance of the priesthood
would not be pleasing to the “enemy”; he would have
rather preferred to see it disappear, so that God would
ultimately be driven out of the world. And so it
happened that, in this very year of joy for the
sacrament of the priesthood, the sins of priests came to
light – particularly the abuse of the little ones, in
which the priesthood, whose task is to manifest God’s concern
for our good, turns into its very opposite. We too
insistently beg forgiveness from God and from the persons involved,
while promising to do everything possible to ensure that such
abuse will never occur again; and that in admitting men
to priestly ministry and in their formation we will do
everything we can to weigh the authenticity of their vocation
and make every effort to accompany priests along their journey,
so that the Lord will protect them and watch over
them in troubled situations and amid life’s dangers. Had the
Year for Priests been a glorification of our individual human
performance, it would have been ruined by these events. But
for us what happened was precisely the opposite: we grew
in gratitude for God’s gift, a gift concealed in “earthen
vessels” which ever anew, even amid human weakness, makes his
love concretely present in this world. So let us look
upon all that happened as a summons to purification, as
a task which we bring to the future and which
makes us acknowledge and love all the more the great
gift we have received from God. In this way, his
gift becomes a commitment to respond to God’s courage and
humility by our own courage and our own humility. The
word of God, which we have sung in the Entrance
Antiphon of the liturgy, can speak to us, at this
hour, of what it means to become and to be
priests: “Take my yoke upon you, and learn from me;
for I am gentle and humble of heart” (Mt 11:29).
We
are celebrating the feast of the Sacred Heart of Jesus,
and in the liturgy we peer, as it were, into
the heart of Jesus opened in death by the spear
of the Roman soldier. Jesus’ heart was indeed opened for
us and before us – and thus God’s own heart
was opened. The liturgy interprets for us the language of
Jesus’ heart, which tells us above all that God is
the shepherd of mankind, and so it reveals to us
Jesus’ priesthood, which is rooted deep within his heart; so
too it shows us the perennial foundation and the effective
criterion of all priestly ministry, which must always be anchored
in the heart of Jesus and lived out from that
starting-point. Today I would like to meditate especially on those
texts with which the Church in prayer responds to the
word of God presented in the readings. In those chants,
word (Wort) and response (Antwort) interpenetrate. On the one hand,
the chants are themselves drawn from the word of God,
yet on the other, they are already our human response
to that word, a response in which the word itself
is communicated and enters into our lives. The most important
of those texts in today’s liturgy is Psalm 23(22) –
“The Lord is my shepherd” – in which Israel at
prayer received God’s self-revelation as shepherd, and made this the
guide of its own life. “The Lord is my shepherd,
I shall not want”: this first verse expresses joy and
gratitude for the fact that God is present to and
concerned for us. The reading from the Book of Ezechiel
begins with the same theme: “I myself will look after
and tend my sheep” (Ez 34:11). God personally looks after
me, after us, after all mankind. I am not abandoned,
adrift in the universe and in a society which leaves
me ever more lost and bewildered. God looks after me.
He is not a distant God, for whom my life
is worthless. The world’s religions, as far as we can
see, have always known that in the end there is
only one God. But this God was distant. Evidently he
had abandoned the world to other powers and forces, to
other divinities. It was with these that one had to
deal. The one God was good, yet aloof. He was
not dangerous, nor was he very helpful. Consequently one didn’t
need to worry about him. He did not lord it
over us. Oddly, this kind of thinking re-emerged during the
Enlightenment. There was still a recognition that the world presupposes
a Creator. Yet this God, after making the world, had
evidently withdrawn from it. The world itself had a certain
set of laws by which it ran, and God did
not, could not, intervene in them. God was only a
remote cause. Many perhaps did not even want God to
look after them. They did not want God to get
in the way. But wherever God’s loving concern is perceived
as getting in the way, human beings go awry. It
is fine and consoling to know that there is someone
who loves me and looks after me. But it is
far more important that there is a God who knows
me, loves me and is concerned about me. “I know
my own and my own know me” (Jn 10:14), the
Church says before the Gospel with the Lord’s words. God
knows me, he is concerned about me. This thought should
make us truly joyful. Let us allow it to penetrate
the depths of our being. Then let us also realize
what it means: God wants us, as priests, in one
tiny moment of history, to share his concern about people.
As priests, we want to be persons who share his
concern for men and women, who take care of them
and provide them with a concrete experience of God’s concern.
Whatever the field of activity entrusted to him, the priest,
with the Lord, ought to be able to say: “I
know my sheep and mine know me”. “To know”, in
the idiom of sacred Scripture, never refers to merely exterior
knowledge, like the knowledge of someone’s telephone number. “Knowing” means
being inwardly close to another person. It means loving him
or her. We should strive to “know” men and women
as God does and for God’s sake; we should strive
to walk with them along the path of God´s friendship.
Let
us return to our Psalm. There we read: “He leads
me in right paths for his name’s sake. Even though
I walk through the darkest valley, I fear no evil;
for you are with me; your rod and your staff
– they comfort me” (23[22]:3ff.). The shepherd points out the
right path to those entrusted to him. He goes before
them and leads them. Let us put it differently: the
Lord shows us the right way to be human. He
teaches us the art of being a person. What must
I do in order not to fall, not to squander
my life in meaninglessness? This is precisely the question which
every man and woman must ask and one which remains
valid at every moment of one’s life. How much darkness
surrounds this question in our own day! We are constantly
reminded of the words of Jesus, who felt compassion for
the crowds because they were like a flock without a
shepherd. Lord, have mercy on us too! Show us the
way! From the Gospel we know this much: he is
himself the way. Living with Christ, following him – this
means finding the right way, so that our lives can
be meaningful and so that one day we might say:
“Yes, it was good to have lived”. The people of
Israel continue to be grateful to God because in the
Commandments he pointed out the way of life. The great
Psalm 119(118) is a unique expression of joy for this
fact: we are not fumbling in the dark. God has
shown us the way and how to walk aright. The
message of the Commandments was synthesized in the life of
Jesus and became a living model. Thus we understand that
these rules from God are not chains, but the way
which he is pointing out to us. We can be
glad for them and rejoice that in Christ they stand
before us as a lived reality. He himself has made
us glad. By walking with Christ, we experience the joy
of Revelation, and as priests we need to communicate to
others our own joy at the fact that we have
been shown the right way of life.
Then there is
the phrase about the “darkest valley” through which the Lord
leads us. Our path as individuals will one day lead
us into the valley of the shadow of death, where
no one can accompany us. Yet he will be there.
Christ himself descended into the dark night of death. Even
there he will not abandon us. Even there he will
lead us. “If I sink to the nether world, you
are present there”, says Psalm 139(138). Truly you are there,
even in the throes of death, and hence our Responsorial
Psalm can say: even there, in the darkest valley, I
fear no evil. When speaking of the darkest valley, we
can also think of the dark valleys of temptation, discouragement
and trial through which everyone has to pass. Even in
these dark valleys of life he is there. Lord, in
the darkness of temptation, at the hour of dusk when
all light seems to have died away, show me that
you are there. Help us priests, so that we can
remain beside the persons entrusted to us in these dark
nights. So that we can show them your own light.
“Your
rod and your staff – they comfort me”: the shepherd
needs the rod as protection against savage beasts ready to
pounce on the flock; against robbers looking for prey. Along
with the rod there is the staff which gives support
and helps to make difficult crossings. Both of these are
likewise part of the Church’s ministry, of the priest’s ministry.
The Church too must use the shepherd’s rod, the rod
with which he protects the faith against those who falsify
it, against currents which lead the flock astray. The use
of the rod can actually be a service of love.
Today we can see that it has nothing to do
with love when conduct unworthy of the priestly life is
tolerated. Nor does it have to do with love if
heresy is allowed to spread and the faith twisted and
chipped away, as if it were something that we ourselves
had invented. As if it were no longer God’s gift,
the precious pearl which we cannot let be taken from
us. Even so, the rod must always become once again
the shepherd’s staff – a staff which helps men and
women to tread difficult paths and to follow the Lord.
At
the end of the Psalm we read of the table
which is set, the oil which anoints the head, the
cup which overflows, and dwelling in the house of the
Lord. In the Psalm this is an expression first and
foremost of the prospect of the festal joy of being
in God’s presence in the temple, of being his guest,
whom he himself serves, of dwelling with him. For us,
who pray this Psalm with Christ and his Body which
is the Church, this prospect of hope takes on even
greater breadth and depth. We see in these words a
kind of prophetic foreshadowing of the mystery of the Eucharist,
in which God himself makes us his guests and offers
himself to us as food – as that bread and
fine wine which alone can definitively sate man’s hunger and
thirst. How can we not rejoice that one day we
will be guests at the very table of God and
live in his dwelling-place? How can we not rejoice at
the fact that he has commanded us: “Do this in
memory of me”? How can we not rejoice that he
has enabled us to set God’s table for men and
women, to give them his Body and his Blood, to
offer them the precious gift of his very presence. Truly
we can pray together, with all our heart, the words
of the Psalm: “Goodness and mercy shall follow me all
the days of my life” (Ps 23[22]:6).
Finally, let us take
a brief look at the two communion antiphons which the
Church offers us in her liturgy today. First there are
the words with which Saint John concludes the account of
Jesus’ crucifixion: “One of the soldiers pierced his side with
a spear, and at once blood and water came out”
(Jn 19:34). The heart of Jesus is pierced by the
spear. Once opened, it becomes a fountain: the water and
the blood which stream forth recall the two fundamental sacraments
by which the Church lives: Baptism and the Eucharist. From
the Lord’s pierced side, from his open heart, there springs
the living fountain which continues to well up over the
centuries and which makes the Church. The open heart is
the source of a new stream of life; here John
was certainly also thinking of the prophecy of Ezechiel who
saw flowing forth from the new temple a torrent bestowing
fruitfulness and life (Ez 47): Jesus himself is the new
temple, and his open heart is the source of a
stream of new life which is communicated to us in
Baptism and the Eucharist.
The liturgy of the Solemnity of the
Sacred Heart of Jesus also permits another phrase, similar to
this, to be used as the communion antiphon. It is
taken from the Gospel of John: Whoever is thirsty, let
him come to me. And let the one who believes
in me drink. As the Scripture has said: “Out of
his heart shall flow rivers of living water” (cf. Jn
7:37ff.) In faith we drink, so to speak, of the
living water of God’s Word. In this way the believer
himself becomes a wellspring which gives living water to the
parched earth of history. We see this in the saints.
We see this in Mary, that great woman of faith
and love who has become in every generation a wellspring
of faith, love and life. Every Christian and every priest
should become, starting from Christ, a wellspring which gives life
to others. We ought to be offering life-giving water to
a parched and thirst world. Lord, we thank you because
for our sake you opened your heart; because in your
death and in your resurrection you became the source of
life. Give us life, make us live from you as
our source, and grant that we too may be sources,
wellsprings capable of bestowing the water of life in our
time. We thank you for the grace of the priestly
ministry. Lord bless us, and bless all those who in
our time are thirsty and continue to seek. Amen.
________________________________________
Greetings to English-speaking priests:
I now wish to greet all
the English-speaking priests present at today’s celebration! My dear brothers,
as I thank you for your love of Christ and
of his bride the Church, I ask you again solemnly
to be faithful to your promises. Serve God and your
people with holiness and courage, and always conform your lives
to the mystery of the Lord’s cross. May God bless
your apostolic labours abundantly!