MESSAGE TO THE PEOPLE OF GOD
OF THE XII ORDINARY GENERAL ASSEMBLY
OF THE SYNOD OF BISHOPS
Brothers and sisters,
“May God the Father and the Lord Jesus Christ grant peace,
love and faith to all the brothers. May grace be with all who love our Lord
Jesus Christ, in life imperishable”. With this intense and passionate greeting,
Saint Paul concluded his letter to the Christians of Ephesus (6:23-24). With
these same words we, the Synod Fathers, gathered in Rome for the XII Ordinary
General Assembly of the Synod of Bishops, under the guidance of the Holy
Father Benedict XVI, open our message addressed to the vast horizon of all
those who, in the various regions of the world, follow Christ as disciples,
and continue to love him with an imperishable love.
We will again propose to them the voice and the light of the word of
God, repeating the ancient call: “the word is very near to you, it is in
your
mouth and in
your heart for you to put into practice” (Dt 30:14). And God himself will
say to each one: “Son of man, take to heart everything I say to you, listen
carefully”
(Ezk 3:10). We are about to propose a spiritual journey consisting of four
phases and that will carry us from all eternity and the infinite nature of
God to our homes and the streets of our cities.
I. THE VOICE OF THE WORD: REVELATION
“Then the Lord spoke to you from the heart of the fire; you heard
the sound of words but saw no shape; there was only a voice!” (Dt 4:12).
It is Moses
who speaks, evoking the experience lived by Israel in the bitter solitude
of the Sinai desert. The Lord presented himself not as an image or
an effigy or
a statue similar to a golden calf, but with “a voice of words”. It
is a voice which entered the scene at the very beginning of creation, when
it tore through
the silence of nothingness: “In the beginning...God said, 'Let there
be light,' and there was light...In the beginning was the Word: the Word
was with God
and the Word was God...Through him all things came into being, not
one thing came into being except through him” (Gn 1:1.3; Jn 1:1.3).
Creation is not born of a battle of divinities, as taught by ancient
Mesopotamian myths, but of a word which defeats nothingness and creates
being. The Psalmist
sings: “By the word of the Lord the heavens were made, by the breath
of his mouth all their array...for, the moment he spoke, it was so, no
sooner had
he commanded, than there it stood” (Ps 33:6.9). And Saint Paul will
repeat: God “brings the dead to life and calls into existence what does
not yet exist”
(Rm 4:17). Thus, a first “cosmic” revelation is found which makes creation
similar to an immense page opened up before all of humanity, in which
a message from the Creator can be read : “The heavens declare the glory
of God, the
vault of heaven proclaims his handiwork, day unto day makes known his
message; night
unto night hands on the knowledge. There is no speech or language where
their voice is not heard. Their message goes out into all the earth” (Ps
19:2-5).
The divine word is, however, also at the origin of human history.
Man and woman, whom God created “in his own image” (Gn 1:27), and who
bear within
themselves
the divine imprint, can enter into dialogue with their Creator or can
wander far from him and reject him away by sinning. The word of God,
then, saves
and judges, penetrating the woven fabric of history with its tales
and events: “I have indeed seen the misery of my people in Egypt. I
have heard them crying
... I am well aware of their sufferings. And I have come down to rescue
them from the clutches of the Egyptians and bring them up out of that
country,
to
a country rich and broad” (Ex 3:7-8). The divine is therefore present
in human events which, through the action of the Lord of history, are
inserted
in the
greater plan of salvation for “everyone to be saved and reach full
knowledge of the truth” (1 Tm 2:4).
Consequently, the effective, creative and salvific divine word is
source of being and of history, of creation and redemption. The Lord
encounters humanity declaring: “I, the Lord, have spoken and done this”
(Ezk 37:14).
The voice
of God then passes into the written word, the Graphe or the Graphai,
the
Sacred Scriptures, as it is said in the New Testament. Moses had
already descended
from the mount of Sinai, “with the two tablets of the commandments
in his hands, tablets inscribed on both sides, inscribed on the front
and on the
back. The
tablets were the work of God, and the writing on them was God's writing”
(Ex 32:15-16). Moses himself obliged Israel to preserve and rewrite
these “tablets
of the commandments”: “On these stones you must write all the words
of this Law very plainly” (Dt 27:8).
The Sacred Scriptures “bear witness” to the divine word in written
form. They memorialize the creative and saving event of revelation
by way of
canonical, historical and literary means. Therefore, the word of
God precedes and goes
beyond the Bible which itself is “inspired by God” and contains the
efficacious divine word (cf. 2 Tm 3:16). This is why our faith is
not only centered
on a book, but on a history of salvation and, as we will see, on
a person, Jesus
Christ, the Word of God made flesh, man and history. Precisely because
the capacity of the divine word embraces and extends beyond the Scripture,
the
constant presence of the Holy Spirit that “will lead you to the complete
truth”
(Jn 16:13) is necessary for those who read the Bible. This is the
great Tradition: the effective presence of the "Spirit of truth" in
the Church, guardian of Sacred Scripture, which are authentically
interpreted by the Church’s Magisterium.
This Tradition enables the Church to understand, interpret, communicate
and bear witness to the word of God. Saint Paul himself, proclaiming
the first
Christian creed, will recognize the need to “transmit” what he “had
received” from Tradition (1 Cor 15:3-5).
II. THE FACE OF THE WORD: JESUS CHRIST
In the original Greek, there are only three fundamental words: Logos
sarx egheneto, “the Word was made flesh”. And yet, this is the summit not
only
of that poetic and theological jewel which is the prologue to John's
Gospel (Jn 1:14), but it is the actual heart of the Christian faith. The
eternal
and divine Word enters into space and time and takes on a human face
and identity, so much so that it is possible to approach him directly asking,
as did the group of Greeks present in Jerusalem: “We should like to
see
Jesus” (Jn 12:20-21). Words without a face are not perfect, they do
not fully complete the encounter, as Job recalled, reaching the end of
his
dramatic itinerary of searching: “Before, I knew you only by hearsay
but now”... I have “seen you with my own eyes” (Jb 42:5).
Christ is “the Word [that] was with God and the Word was God” (Jn 1:1).
“He is the image of the unseen God, the first-born of all creation” (Col
1:15);
but he is also Jesus of Nazareth who walks the roads of a marginal province
of the Roman Empire, who speaks the local language, who reveals the traits
of a people, the Jews, and its culture. Therefore the real Jesus Christ
is fragile and mortal flesh; he is history and humanity, but he is also
glory,
divinity, mystery: he who revealed God to us, the God no one has ever
seen (cf. Jn 1:18). The Son of God continues to be so even in the dead
body placed
in the sepulcher and the resurrection is the living and clear proof to
this fact.
Christian tradition has often placed the Divine Word made
flesh on a parallel with the same word made book. This is what emerges already
in
the creed
when
one professes that the Son of God “was incarnate by the Holy Spirit
of the Virgin Mary, and was made man”, but also a profession of faith in
the
same “Holy Spirit, who spoke through the Prophets”. The Second Vatican
Council
gathers
this ancient tradition according to which “the body of the Son is the
Scripture transmitted to us” - as Saint Ambrose affirms (In Lucam VI,
33) - and clearly
declares: “For the words of God, expressed in human language, have
been made like human discourse, just as the Word of the eternal Father,
when he
took to himself the flesh of human weakness, was in every way made like
men”
(DV
13).
Indeed, the Bible is also “flesh”, “letter”; it expresses itself
in particular languages, in literary and historical forms, in concepts
tied to an ancient
culture, it preserves the memories of events, often tragic; its pages
not infrequently are marked by blood and violence, within it resounds
the laughter of humanity
and the flowing tears, as well as the cry of the distressed and the
joy of those in love. For this, its “bodily” dimension requires an
historical
and
literary analysis, which occurs through various methods and approaches
offered by Biblical exegesis. Every reader of Sacred Scripture, even
the most simple,
must have a proportionate knowledge of the sacred text, recalling that
the word is enveloped in concrete words, which is shaped and adapted
to make it
heard and understood by all of humanity.
This is a necessary commitment. If it is excluded, one could fall
into fundamentalism which in practice denies the Incarnation of the
divine
Word in history, does
not recognize that this word expresses itself in the Bible according
to a human language, that must be decoded, studied and understood.
Such an attitude ignores
that divine inspiration did not erase the historical identities and
personalities of its human authors. The Bible, however, is also the
eternal and divine
Word and for this reason requires another understanding, given by the
Holy Spirit
who unveils the transcendent dimension of the divine word, present
in human words.
Here, thus, lies the necessity of the “living Tradition
of all the Church” (DV 12) and of the faith to understand Sacred Scripture
in
a full and unified
way. Should one focus only on the “letter”, the Bible is only a solemn
document of the past, a noble, ethical and cultural witness. If,
however, the Incarnation
is excluded, it could fall into a fundamentalist equivocation or
a vague spiritualism or pop-psychology. Exegetical knowledge must, therefore,
weave itself indissolubly
with spiritual and theological tradition so that the divine and human
unity of Jesus Christ and Scripture is not broken.
In this rediscovered harmony, the face of Christ will shine in its
fullness and will help us to discover another unity, that profound
and intimate
unity of Sacred Scriptures. There are, indeed, 73 books, but they
form only one “Canon”,
in one dialogue between God and humanity, in one plan of salvation.
“At many moments in the past and by many means, God spoke to our
ancestors
through the
prophets; but in our time, the final days, he has spoken to us in
the person of his Son” (Hb 1:1-2). Christ thus retrospectively sheds
his
light on the
entire development of salvation history and reveals its coherence,
meaning, and direction.He is the seal, “the Alpha and the Omega”
(Rev 1:8) of
a dialogue between God and his creatures distributed over time and
attested to in the
Bible. It is in the light of this final seal that the words of Moses
and the prophets acquire their “full sense”. Jesus himself had indicated
this on that
spring afternoon, while he made his way from Jerusalem to the town
of Emmaus, dialoguing with Cleopas and his friend, explaining “to
them the
passages in
the Scriptures that were about himself” (Lk 24:27).
That the divine Word has put on a face is at the center of Revelation.
That is precisely why the ultimate finality of biblical knowledge
is “not the result
of an ethical choice or a lofty idea, but the encounter with an event,
a person, which gives life a new horizon and a decisive direction”
(Deus caritas est, 1).
III. THE HOUSE OF THE WORD: THE CHURCH
Just as divine wisdom in the Old Testament made her house in the cities
of men and women, supporting it with seven pillars (cf. Pr 9:1), thus also
the word of God made its house in the New Testament. The Church has as
her model the mother community of Jerusalem. The Church is founded on
Peter
and the apostles and today, through the bishops in communion with the
Successor of Peter, continues to keep, announce and interpret the word of
God (cf.
LG 13). In the Acts of the Apostles (2:42), Luke traces its architecture
based on four ideal pillars: “These remained faithful to the teaching
of the apostles, to the brotherhood, to the breaking of bread and to the
prayers”.
Here, first of all, is the apostolic didache, that is to say the preaching
of the word of God. The Apostle Paul, in fact, warns us that “faith
comes from hearing, and what is heard comes through the word of Christ”
(Rm 10:17).
The
voice of the herald comes from the Church, which proposes kerygma,
that is to say, the primary and fundamental announcement that Jesus himself
had
proclaimed
at the beginning of his public ministry: “The time is fulfilled, and
the kingdom of God is close at hand. Repent and believe the gospel” (Mk
1:15).
The apostles,
proclaiming the death and resurrection of Christ, announce the unveiling
of the kingdom of God, that is to say, the decisive divine intervention
in the
history of man: “Only in him is there salvation; for of all the names
in the world given to men, this is the only one by which we can be saved”
(Ac 4:12).
The Christian bears witness to this hope “with courtesy and respect
and
with a clear conscience”, ready, however, to be involved and, perhaps,
to be overwhelmed
by the storms of refusal and persecution, knowing that “it is better
to suffer doing right then for doing wrong” (1 P 3:16-17).
Catechesis, then, resounds in the Church: this is destined to deepen
in the Christian “the understanding of the mystery of Christ in the light
of God’s
word, so that the whole of a person’s humanity is impregnated by that
word”
in Christianity (John Paul II, Catechesi tradendae, 20). But the high
point of preaching is in the homily which, for many Christians, is still
today
the central moment of encounter with the word of God. In this act,
the minister
should be transformed into a prophet as well. He, in fact, with a clear,
incisive and substantial language must not only proclaim with authority
“God's wonderful
works in the history of salvation” (SC 35) - offered first by a clear
and vivid reading of the biblical text proposed in the liturgy - but he
must
also act
upon it in the times and moments lived by the hearers and make the
question of conversion and vital commitment blossom in their hearts: “What
are we
to do, brothers?” (Ac 2:37).
Preaching, catechesis and the homily therefore presuppose a reading
and understanding, an explaining and interpreting, an involvement of
the mind
and of the heart.
Thus in preaching a dual movement is achieved. With the first, one
goes back to the roots of the sacred texts, the events, the first words
of the
history
of salvation, to understand them in their meaning and in their message.
With the second movement, one returns to the present, to the today
lived by those
who hear and read, always with Christ in mind, who is the guiding light
destined to unite the Scriptures. This is what Jesus himself did -
as has already been
said - in his journey to Jerusalem in Emmaus with two of his disciples.
This is what the deacon Phillip would do on the way from Jerusalem
to Gaza, when
he spoke this emblematic dialogue with the Ethiopian official: “Do
you understand what you are reading? ... How could I, unless I have
someone
to guide me?”
(Ac 8:30-31). And the finality will be the full encounter with Christ
in the sacrament. This is how the second pillar that supports the Church,
the house
of the divine word, presents itself.
It is the breaking of the bread. The scene at Emmaus (cf. Lk 24:13-35)
is once again exemplary, and reproduces what happens every day in our
churches: the homily by Jesus about Moses and the prophets gives way
to the breaking
of the Eucharistic Bread at the table. This is the moment of God’s
intimate dialogue with His people. It is the act of the new covenant
sealed in the
blood
of Christ (cf. Lk 22:20). It is the supreme work of the Word who offers
himself as food in his immolated body, it is the source and summit
of the life and
mission of the Church. The Gospel account of the Last Supper, the memorial
of Christ’s sacrifice, when proclaimed in the eucharistic celebration,
through the invocation of the Holy Spirit, becomes event and sacrament.
This is why
the Second Vatican Council, in a very intense passage, declared: “The
Church has always venerated the divine Scriptures just as she venerates
the body
of the Lord, since, especially in the sacred liturgy, she unceasingly
receives and offers to the faithful the bread of life from the table
both of God’s
word
and of Christ’s body” (DV 21). Therefore, we must place at the center
of Christian life “the liturgy of the word and the eucharistic liturgy,
[which]
are so closely
connected with each other that they form but one single act of worship”
(SC 56).
The third pillar of the spiritual building of the Church, the house
of the word, is made up of prayers, woven from - as recalled by Saint
Paul - “psalms
and hymns and inspired songs” (Col 3: 16). A privileged place is naturally
taken by the Liturgy of the Hours, the prayer of the Church par excellence,
destined to give rhythm to the days and times of the Christian year,
offering, above all with the Psalmody, the daily spiritual food of the
faithful.
Alongside this and the community celebrations of the word, tradition
has introduced the
practice of Lectio divina, the prayerful reading in the Holy Spirit
that is able to open to the faithful the treasure of the word of God, and
also
to create
the encounter with Christ, the living divine Word.
This begins with the reading (lectio) of the text, which provokes
the question of true knowledge of its real content: what does the biblical
text say
in itself? Then follows meditation (meditatio) where the question is:
what does the Biblical
text say to us? In this manner, one arrives at prayer (oratio), which
presupposes this other question: what do we say to the Lord in answer
to his word?
And one ends with contemplation (contemplatio) during which we assume,
as God’s
gift, the same gaze in judging reality and ask ourselves: what conversion
of the mind, the heart and life does the Lord ask of us?
Before the prayerful reader of the word of God rises ideally the
figure of Mary, the Mother of the Lord, who “treasured all these things
and
pondered them in her heart” (Lk 2:19; cf. 2:51), that is - as the original
Greek
says
- finding the profound knot that unites apparently distinct events,
acts and things in the great divine plan. The attitude of Mary, the
sister of
Martha
can also be proposed to the faithful, when they read the Bible, because
she sits at the feet of the Lord listening to his word, not allowing
external concerns
to absorb her soul completely, allowing even the free time for “the
better part” which must not be taken away (cf. Lk 10:38-42).
Finally, we reach the last pillar that supports the Church, the
house of the word: the koinonia, brotherly love, another name for the
agape,
that is
to say, Christian love. As Jesus mentioned, to become his brothers
and his sisters one must be like “those who hear the word of God and
put it
into practice”
(Lk 8:21).
Authentic hearing is obeying and acting. It means making justice
and love blossom in life. It is offering, in life and in society, a
witness
like
the call of
the prophets, which united continuously the word of God and life, faith
and rectitude, worship and social commitment. This is what Jesus stated
many times,
beginning with the famous warning in the Sermon on the Mount: “It is
not anyone who says to me, ‘Lord, Lord’, who will enter the kingdom of
Heaven,
but the
person who does the will of my Father in heaven” (Mt 7:21). This phrase
seems to echo the divine word proposed by Isaiah: “this people approaches
me only
in words, honors me only with lip-service, while their hearts are far
from me” (29:13). These warnings also concern the churches when they are
not
faithful to the obedient hearing of the word of God.
Therefore this must already be visible and legible on the face and
in the hands of the faithful, as suggested by Saint Gregory the Great
who saw
in Saint Benedict,
and in other great men of God, witnesses of communion with God and
with the sisters and brothers, the word of God come to life. The just
and faithful
man
not only “explains” the Scriptures, but also “unfolds” them before
all as a living and practiced reality. This is why viva lectio, vita
bonorum,
the life
of the good is a living lecture/lesson of the word of God. Saint John
Chrysostom had already observed that the apostles came down from the
mount in Galilee,
where they had met the risen Lord, without any written stone tablets
as Moses had: their lives would become the living gospel, from that
moment
on.
In the house of the word we also encounter brothers and sisters from
other Churches and ecclesial communities who, even with the still existing
separations,
find themselves with us in the veneration and love for the word of
God, the principle and source of a first and real unity, even if not
a full
unity. This
bond must always be reinforced through the common biblical translations,
the spreading of the sacred text, ecumenical biblical prayer, exegetical
dialogue,
the study and the comparison between the various interpretations of
the Holy Scriptures, the exchange of values inherent in the various
spiritual
traditions
and the announcement and the common witness of the word of God in a
secularized world.
IV. THE ROADS OF THE WORD: MISSION
“For the Law will go forth from Zion and the word of the Lord from
Jerusalem” (Is 2:3). The embodied Word of God “issues from” his house, the
temple,
and walks along the roads of the world to encounter the great pilgrimage
that the people of earth have taken up in search of truth, justice and
peace. In fact, even in the modern secularized city, in its squares and
in its streets - where disbelief and indifference seem to reign, where
evil seems to prevail over good, creating the impression of a victory
of Babylon over Jerusalem - one can find a hidden yearning, a germinating
hope, a quiver of expectation. As can be read in the book of the prophet
Amos, “The days are coming, declares the Lord God, when I shall send
a
famine on the country: not hunger for food, not thirst for water, but
famine for hearing the word of the Lord” (8:11). The evangelizing mission
of the
Church wants to answer this hunger.
Even the risen Christ makes an appeal to the hesitant apostles, to
go forth from their protected horizon: “Go, therefore, and make disciples
of all nations…and
teach them to observe the commands I gave you” (Mt 28:19-20). The Bible is
fraught with appeals “not to be silent”, to “speak out”, to “proclaim the
word at the right and at the wrong time”, to be the sentinels that tear away
the
silence of indifference. The roads that open before us are not only the ones
upon which Saint Paul and the first evangelizers traveled but are also the
ones of all the missionaries who, after them, go towards the people in faraway
lands.
Communication now casts a network that envelops the entire globe
and the call of Christ gains a new meaning: “What I say to you in the dark,
tell in
the daylight, what you hear in whispers, proclaim from the housetops”
(Mt
10:27). Of course, the sacred word must have its primary transparency
and diffusion
through the printed text, with translations made according to the multiplicity
of languages on our planet. But the voice of the divine word must echo
even through the radio, the information highway of the internet, the channels
of “on line” virtual circulation, CDs, DVDs, podcasts, etc. It must
appear
on
all television and movie screens, in the press, and in cultural and social
events.
This new communication, in relationship to the traditional one, has
created its own specific and expressive grammar and, therefore, makes
it necessary
not only to be technically prepared, but also culturally prepared for
this task. In an age of images particularly provided by the dominating
means
of communication, such as television, the privileged model of Christ
is still
meaningful and evocative today. He would turn to the sign, the story,
the example, the daily experience, the parable: “He told them many things
in
parables ...
indeed, he would never speak to them except in parables” (Mt 13:3.34).
In proclaiming the kingdom of God, Jesus never spoke over the heads of
the people with a vague,
abstract or ethereal language. Rather, he would conquer them by starting
there where their feet were placed, in order to lead them, through daily
events,
to the revelation of the kingdom of heaven. Thus, the scene evoked by
John becomes significant: “Some wanted to arrest him, but no one actually
laid
a hand on him. The guards went back to the chief priests and Pharisees
who said
to them, ‘Why haven’t you brought him?’ The guards replied, ‘No one has
ever spoken like this man’”(7:44-46).
Christ proceeds along the streets of our cities and stops at the
doorstep of our homes: “Look, I am standing at the door, knocking.
If one of you
hears me calling and opens the door, I will come in to share a meal
at that person’s
side” (Rev 3:20). The family, enclosed between the domestic walls with
its joys and sufferings, is a fundamental space where the word of God
is to be
allowed to enter. The Bible is full of small and great family stories,
and the Psalmist depicts with liveliness the serene picture of a father
sitting
at the table, surrounded by his wife, like a fruitful vine, and by
his children, “shoots of an olive tree” (Ps 128). In the same way, Christianity
itself, from
its origins, celebrated the liturgy in the daily home life, just as
Israel
entrusted the Passover celebration to the family (cf. Ex 12:21-27).
The spreading of the word of God is passed on through the generations
so that parents become “the first preachers of the faith” (LG 11).
Once more
the Psalmist
recalled that: “What we have heard and know, what our ancestors have
told us, we shall not conceal from their descendants, but will tell
to a generation
still to come: the praises of the Lord, his power, the wonderful deeds
he has
done ... They should be sure to tell their own children” (Ps 78:3-4.6).
Therefore, every home should have its own Bible and safeguard it
in a visible and dignified way, to read it and to pray with it, while,
at the same time,
the family should propose forms and models of a prayerful, catechetical
and didactic education on how to use the Scriptures, so that “young
men and women,
old people and children together” (Ps 148:12) may hear, understand,
glorify and live the word of God. In particular, the new generations,
children
and youth, should be the ones receiving an appropriate and specific
pedagogy that
leads them to experience the fascination of the figure of Christ, opening
the door of their mind and their heart, as well as through the encounter
with and
authentic witness of adults, the positive influence of friends and
the great company of the ecclesial community.
Jesus, in his parable
of the sower, reminds us that there are arid lands, full of rocks,
choked by thorns (cf. Mt 13:3-7). He who goes
forth into the
streets of the world also discovers the slums where suffering and
poverty, humiliation and oppression, marginalization and misery, physical
and
psychological ills and loneliness can be found. Often the stones
on the road are bloody
because of wars and violence; in the palaces of power, corruption
meets injustice.
The voices of the persecuted rise on behalf of faithfulness to their
conscience and fidelity to their faith. One can be swept away by
the crises of life,
or a soul can be devoid of any meaning that would give sense and
value to life
itself. Like “phantoms who go their way, mere vapor their pursuits”
(Ps 39:7), many feel the silence of God, his apparent absence and
indifference, hanging
over them: “How long, Lord, will you forget me? For ever? How long
will
you turn away your face from me?” (Ps 13:1). And, in the end, there
arises for
everyone, the mystery of death.
This immense sigh of suffering that rises from the earth to heaven
is continuously represented by the Bible, which proposes an historical
and incarnated faith.
It is enough to think only of the pages marked by violence and oppression,
of the harsh and continuous cry of Job, of the vehement pleas of
the Psalms, of the subtle internal crisis that passes through the
soul of Qoheleth,
of the vigorous prophetic denunciations against social injustice.
The sentence of the radical sin that appears in all its devastating
force, from the
beginning
of humanity in a fundamental text of Genesis (chapter 3), is unconditional.
In fact, the “mystery of iniquity” is present and acts in history,
but it is revealed by the word of God that assures the victory of
good over
evil, in
Christ.
But above all in the Scriptures, the figure of Christ, who begins
his public ministry with a proclamation of hope for the last persons
of the earth,
dominates: “The spirit of the Lord is upon me, for he has anointed
me to bring the good
news to the afflicted. He has sent me to proclaim liberty to captives,
sight to the blind, to let the oppressed go free, to proclaim a year
of favour from
the Lord” (Lk 4:18-19). He repeatedly places his hands on ill and
diseased flesh. His words proclaim justice, instill courage to the
disheartened
and offer forgiveness to sinners. Finally, he himself approaches
the lowest level,
“he emptied himself” of his glory , “taking the form of a slave,
becoming as human beings are; and being in every way like a human
being, he was
humbler
yet, even to accepting death, death on a cross” (Phil 2:7-8).
In this way Christ feels the fear of death (“?Father’, he said, ?if
you are willing, take this cup away from me’”), He experiences loneliness
because
of
the abandonment and betrayal by friends, he penetrates the darkness
of the cruelest physical pain through his crucifixion and even the
darkness
of the
Father’s silence (“My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?”) (Mk
15:34) and reaches the last abyss of any man, that of death (“he
gave a loud cry
and breathed
his last”). To him, the definition that Isaiah gave to the servant
of the Lord truly can be applied: “the lowest of men, a man of sorrows”
(53:3).
Even so, even in that extreme moment, he does not cease being the
Son of God: in his solidarity of love and with the sacrifice of himself,
he sows
a seed
of divinity in the finiteness and evil of humanity, in other words,
a principle of freedom and salvation. With his offering of himself
to us he pours out
redemption on pain and death, assumed and lived by him, and also
opens to us the dawn
of resurrection. Therefore the Christian has the mission to announce
this divine word of hope, by sharing with the poor and the suffering,
through
the witness
of his faith in the kingdom of truth and life, of holiness and grace,
of justice, of love and peace, through the loving closeness that
neither judges
nor condemns,
but that sustains, illuminates, comforts and forgives, following
the words of Christ: “Come to me, all you who labour and are overburdened,
and I
will give you rest” (Mt 11:28).
Along the roads of the world, the divine word generates for us
Christians an equally intense encounter with the Jewish people, who
are intimately
bound through the common recognition and love for the Scripture of
the Old Testament
and because from Israel “so far as physical descent is concerned,
came Christ” (Rm 9:5). Every page of the Jewish Scriptures enlighten
the mystery
of God
and of man. They are treasures of reflection and morality, an outline
of the long itinerary of the history of salvation to its integral
fulfillment,
and
illustrate with vigor the incarnation of the divine word in human
events. They allow us to fully understand the figure of Christ, who
declared “Do
not imagine
that I have come to abolish the Law or the Prophets. I have come
not to abolish but to fulfill them” (Mt 5:17). These are a way of
dialogue with
the chosen
people, “who were adopted as children, the glory was theirs and the
covenants; to them were given the Law and the worship of God and
the promises” (Rm
9:4), and they allow us to enrich our interpretation of the Sacred
Scriptures with
the fruitful resources of the Hebrew exegetical tradition.
“Blessed be my people Egypt, Assyria my creation, and Israel my heritage”
(Is 19:25). The Lord, then, spreads the protective mantle of his
blessing all over
the peoples of the earth: “he wants everyone to be saved and reach
full knowledge of the truth” (1 Tm 2:4). We, also as Christians are
invited,
along the roads
of the world - without falling into a syncretism that confuses and
humiliates our own spiritual identity, to enter into dialogue with
respect towards
men and women of the other religions, who faithfully hear and practice
the directives
of their sacred books, starting with Islam, which welcomes many biblical
figures, symbols and themes in its tradition, and which offers the
witness of sincere
faith in the One, compassionate and merciful God, the Creator of
all beings and Judge of humanity.
The Christian also finds common harmony with the great religious
traditions of the Orient that teach us, in their holy writings, respect
for life,
contemplation, silence, simplicity, renunciation, as occurs in Buddhism.
Or, as in Hinduism,
they exalt the sense of the sacred, sacrifice, pilgrimage, fasting,
and sacred symbols. Or, as in Confucianism, they teach wisdom and
family and
social values.
Even to the traditional religions with their spiritual values expressed
in the rites and oral cultures, we would like to pay our cordial
attention and
engage in a respectful dialogue with them. Also to those who do not
believe in God but who endeavour to “do what is right, to love goodness
and to
walk humbly” (Mi 6:8), we must work with them for a more just and
peaceful world,
and offer in dialogue our genuine witness to the Word of God that
can reveal to them new and higher horizons of truth and love.
In his Letter to the Artists (1999), John Paul II recalled that
“Sacred Scripture has thus become a sort of ?immense vocabulary’
(Paul Claudel)
and ?iconographic atlas’ (Marc Chagall), from which both Christian
culture and
art have drawn” (No. 5). Goethe was convinced that the Gospel was
the “mother tongue of Europe”. The Bible, as it is commonly said,
is “the great code”
of universal culture: artists imaginatively dipped their paintbrush
in that alphabet
coloured by stories, symbols, and figures which are the biblical
pages. Musicians composed their harmonies around the sacred texts,
especially
the Psalms. For
centuries authors went back to those old stories that became existential
parables; poets asked themselves about the mystery of the spirit,
infinity, evil, love,
death and life, frequently gathering the poetical feelings that enlivened
the biblical pages. Thinkers, men of learning and society itself
frequently used
the spiritual and ethical concepts (for example the Decalogue) of
the word of God as a reference, even if merely in contrast. Even
when the figure
or the idea present in the Scriptures was deformed, it was recognized
as being
an essential and constitutive element of our civilization.
Because of this, the Bible - which teaches us also the via pulchritudinis,
that is to say, the path of beauty to understand and reach God (as
Ps 47:7 invites us: “learn the music, let it sound for God!”) - is
necessary not
only for the believer, but for all to rediscover the authentic meanings
of various
cultural expressions and above all to find our historical, civil,
human and spiritual identity once again. This is the origin of our
greatness
and through
it we can present ourselves with our noble heritage to other civilizations
and cultures, without any inferiority complex. The Bible should,
therefore, be known and studied by all, under this extraordinary
profile of beauty
and human and cultural fruitfulness.
Nevertheless, the word of God - using a meaningful Pauline image
– “cannot be chained up” (2 Tm 2:9) to a culture; on the contrary,
it aspires to
cross borders and the Apostle himself was an exceptional craftsman
of inculturation of the biblical message into new cultural references.
This is what the
Church
is called upon to perform even today through a delicate but necessary
process, which received a strong impulse from the Magisterium of
Pope Benedict XVI.
She should make the word of God penetrate into the many cultures
and express it according to their languages, their concepts, their
symbols and their
religious traditions. But she should always be able to maintain the
genuine substance
of its contents, watching over and controlling the risks of degeneration.
Therefore the Church must make the values that the word of God offers
to all cultures shine, so they may be purified and fruitful. As John
Paul
II said
to the Bishops of Kenya during his trip to Africa in 1980, “inculturation
will truly be a reflection of the Incarnation of the Word, when a
culture, transformed
and regenerated by the gospel, brings forth from its own living tradition
original expressions of Christian life, celebration and thought”.
CONCLUSION
“Then I heard the voice I had heard from heaven speaking to me again.
?Go’, it said, ?and take that open scroll from the hand of the angel standing
on sea and land’. I went to the angel and asked him to give me the small
scroll, and he said, ?Take it and eat it; it will turn your stomach sour,
but it will taste as sweet as honey’. So I took it out of the angel's
hand,
and I ate it and it tasted sweet as honey, but when I had eaten it my
stomach turned sour” (Rev 10:8-11).
Brothers and sisters of the whole world, let us receive this invitation;
let us approach the table of the word of God, so as to be nourished and
live “not
on bread alone but on every word that comes from the mouth of God” (Dt
8:3; Mt 4:4). Sacred Scripture - as affirmed by a great figure of the Christian
culture – “has provided passages of consolation and of warning for all
conditions”
(B. Pascal, Pensees, no. 532 ed. Brunschvicg).
The word of God, in fact,
is “sweeter than honey, that drips from the comb” (Ps 19:10), “Your word
is a lamp for my feet, a light on my path”
(Ps
119:105), but is also: “like fire, says the Lord, like a hammer shattering
a rock”
(Jer 23:29). It is like the rain that irrigates the earth, fertilizes
it and makes
it spring forth, and in doing this he makes the aridity of our spiritual
deserts flourish (cf. Is 55:10-11). But it is also: “something alive
and active: it
cuts more incisively than any two-edged sword: it can seek out the
place where soul is divided from spirit, or joints from marrow; it can pass
judgment on
secret emotions and thoughts” (Heb 4:12).
Our gaze is turned lovingly towards all those engaged in study, catechists
and the other servants of the word of God to express our most intense
and cordial gratitude for their precious and important ministry.
We also address
our persecuted
brothers and sisters or those who are put to death because of the
word of God and because of the witness they render to the Lord Jesus (cf.
Rev 6:9): as
witnesses and martyrs they tell us of “the power of the word” (Rm
1:16),
origin of their faith, of their hope and of their love for God and
for men.
Let us now remain silent, to hear the word of God with effectiveness
and let us maintain this silence after hearing, so that it may
continue to
dwell in
us, to live in us, and to speak to us. Let it resonate at the beginning
of our day so that God has the first word and let it echo in us
in the evening
so that God has the last word.
Dear brothers and sisters, “All those who are with me send their
greetings. Greetings to those who love us in the faith. Grace be
with you all!”
(Tt 3:15).