Homily of His Holiness Benedict XVI
during World Youth Day

Cologne - Marienfeld
Sunday, 21 August 2005

Yesterday
evening we came together in the presence of the
Sacred Host, in which Jesus
becomes for us the bread that sustains and feeds us (cf. John
6:35), and there we began our inner journey of
adoration. In the Eucharist,
adoration must become
union. At the celebration of the
Eucharist, we find ourselves in the
“hour” of
Jesus, to use the language of John’s Gospel. Through
the Eucharist this “hour”
of Jesus becomes our own
hour, His
presence in our midst. Together with the disciples
He celebrated the Passover of
Israel, the memorial of God’s liberating
action that led Israel from
slavery to freedom.
Jesus follows the rites of Israel.
He recites over the bread the
prayer of
praise and blessing.
But then something new happens.
He thanks God not only
for the great works of the past; He
thanks Him for
His own exaltation, soon
to be accomplished through the Cross
and Resurrection, and
He speaks to the disciples in words
that sum up the whole of the Law and the Prophets: “This
is My Body, given in sacrifice for you. This cup is the New Covenant in
My Blood”. He then
distributes the bread and the cup, and instructs them to
repeat His words and
actions of that moment over and
over again in His memory.
What
is happening? How can Jesus distribute
His Body and His
Blood? By making the bread into His
Body and the wine into His Blood,
He anticipates His
death, He
accepts it in His
heart and He transforms
it into an action
of love. What on the outside is simply
brutal violence, from within becomes an act
of total self-giving love. This is the substantial transformation
which was accomplished at the Last Supper and was destined to set in
motion a series of transformations leading ultimately to the
transformation of the world when God
will be all in all (cf. 1Corinthians 15:28). In their
hearts, people always and everywhere have
somehow expected a change, a transformation of the world. Here now is the
central act of transformation that alone can truly renew the world:
violence is transformed into
love, and death
into life.
Since
this act transmutes
death into love,
death as such is already conquered from
within, the resurrection is already present
in it. Death is, so to speak,
mortally wounded, so that
it can no longer have the last word.
To use an image well known to us today, this is like inducing
nuclear fission in the very heart of being
– the victory of
love over hatred, the
victory of love
over death. Only this intimate
explosion of good conquering
evil can then trigger off the
series of transformations that little by little will change the world.
All other changes remain superficial and cannot
save. For this reason we speak of
redemption: what had to happen at the most
intimate level has indeed happened, and we can enter into its dynamic.
Jesus can distribute
His Body, because He truly
gives Himself.
This
first fundamental transformation of
violence into love,
of death into life,
brings other changes in its wake. Bread and wine become
His Body and Blood. But it must not stop
there, on the contrary, the process of transformation must now gather
momentum. The Body and Blood of Christ
are given to us so that we ourselves will be transformed in our
turn. We are to become the Body of Christ,
His own flesh and blood. We
all eat the one bread, and this means
that we ourselves become one. In this way,
adoration, as we said earlier, becomes
union. God
no longer simply stands before us, as the One Who
is totally Other.
He is within us, and we are in
Him. His dynamic enters into
us and then seeks to spread outwards to others until it
fills the world, so that His love can truly
become the dominant measure of the world. I like to illustrate this new
step urged upon us by the Last Supper by drawing out the different
nuances of the word “adoration” in Greek
and in Latin. The Greek word is
proskynesis. It refers to the gesture of submission, the recognition
of God as our true measure, supplying the
norm that we choose to follow. It means that freedom
is not simply about enjoying life in total autonomy, but rather
about living by the measure of truth and
goodness, so that we ourselves can become
true and good.
This gesture is necessary even if initially our yearning for
freedom makes us inclined to resist
it. We can only fully accept
it when we take the
second step that the Last Supper
proposes to us. The Latin word for adoration
is ad-oratio – mouth to mouth contact, a
kiss, an embrace, and hence ultimately love.
Submission becomes union, because
He to Whom
we submit is Love. In this way submission
acquires a meaning, because it does not impose anything on us from
the outside, but liberates us deep
within.
Let us return once more to the Last Supper. The new
element to emerge here was the deeper meaning given to Israel’s ancient
prayer
of blessing, which from that point on became the word of transformation,
enabling us to participate in the “hour” of
Christ. Jesus did not instruct
us to repeat the Passover meal, which in any event, given that it is an
anniversary, is not repeatable at will.
He instructed us to enter into
His “hour”.
We enter into it through the sacred power of
the words of consecration – a transformation
brought about through the prayer of praise which places us in continuity with
Israel and the whole of salvation history,
and at the same time ushers in the new, to which the older prayer at its deepest
level was pointing. The new prayer – which the Church
calls the “Eucharistic Prayer” – brings the
Eucharist into being. It is the word of
power which transforms the gifts of the earth in an entirely new way into
God’s
gift of Himself and it draws us into this process of transformation. That is why
we call this action “Eucharist”, which is a
translation of the Hebrew word beracha –
thanksgiving, praise, blessing, and a transformation worked by the
Lord: the presence of
His “hour”.
Jesus’s hour
is the hour in which
love triumphs. In other words: it is God
Who has triumphed, because
He
is Love. Jesus’s
hour seeks to become our
own hour and will indeed become so if we allow ourselves, through the
celebration of the Eucharist, to be drawn
into that process of transformation that the Lord intends to bring about. The
Eucharist must become the centre of our
lives. If the Church tells us that the
Eucharist is an essential part of Sunday,
this is no mere positivism or thirst for power. On
Easter morning, first the women and
then the disciples had the
grace of seeing the
Lord. From that moment on, they knew that the first day of the
week, Sunday, would be His day, the day of Christ
the Lord. The day when creation began became
the day when creation was renewed. Creation and redemption belong together.
That
is why Sunday is so important. It is good that today, in many cultures,
Sunday is a free day, and is often combined with Saturday so as to
constitute a “week-end” of free time. Yet this
free time is empty if
God is not present. Dear friends! Sometimes,
our initial impression is that having to include time for
Mass on a Sunday is rather inconvenient. But if you make the
effort, you will realize that this is what gives a proper focus to your
free
time. Do not be deterred from taking part in Sunday Mass, and help others to
discover it too. This is because the Eucharist
releases the joy that we need so much, and we must learn to grasp
it ever more
deeply, we must learn to love it. Let us pledge ourselves to do this – it is
worth the effort! Let us discover the intimate riches of the
Church’s liturgy
and its true greatness: it is not we who are celebrating for
ourselves, but it
is the living God Himself Who is preparing a
banquet for us. Through your
love
for the Eucharist you will also rediscover the
sacrament of Reconciliation, in
which the merciful goodness of
God always allows us to make a fresh start in our
lives.
Anyone who has discovered Christ
must lead others to Him. A
great joy cannot be kept to oneself.
It has to
be passed on. In vast areas of the world today there is a strange forgetfulness
of God. It seems as if everything would be
just the same even without Him. But at the same time there is a feeling of
frustration, a sense of dissatisfaction with everyone and everything. People
tend to exclaim: “This cannot be what life is about!” Indeed not. And so,
together with forgetfulness of God there is
a kind of new explosion of religion. I have no wish to discredit all the
manifestations of this phenomenon. There may be sincere joy in the discovery.
Yet if it is pushed too far, religion becomes almost a consumer product. People
choose what they like, and some are even able to make a profit from it. But
religion constructed on a “do-it-yourself” basis cannot ultimately help us. It
may be comfortable, but at times of crisis we are left to ourselves. Help people
to discover the true star which points out the way to us:
Jesus Christ! Let us seek to know Him
better and better, so as to be able to guide others to
Him with conviction. This is why love for
Sacred Scripture
is so important, and in consequence, it is important to know the
faith of the Church
which opens up for us the meaning of Scripture. It is the
Holy Spirit Who guides the
Church as her faith
grows, causing her to enter ever more deeply into the
truth (cf. John 16:13). Pope John Paul II gave us a
wonderful work in which the faith of
centuries is explained synthetically: the
Catechism of the
Catholic Church. I myself recently presented the Compendium of
the Catechism, prepared at the request of the late
Holy Father. These are two fundamental texts which I recommend to all of
you.
Obviously books alone are not enough. Form communities based on
faith! In recent decades movements and communities have come to birth in which
the power of the Gospel is keenly felt. Seek communion in
faith, like
fellow travelers who continue together to follow the path of the great
pilgrimage that the Magi from the East first pointed out to us.
The spontaneity of new communities is important, but it is also important to
preserve communion with the Pope and with the Bishops. It is they who guarantee
that we are not seeking private paths, but are living as
God’s great family, founded by the Lord
through the twelve Apostles.
Once again, I must return to the
Eucharist. “Because there is one bread, we,
though many, are one body” says Saint Paul (1Corinthians
10:17). By this he meant: since we receive the same
Lord and He
gathers us together and draws us into Himself,
we ourselves are one. This must be evident in our lives. It must
be seen in our capacity to forgive. It must
be seen in our sensitivity to the needs of others. It must be seen in our
willingness to share. It must be seen in our commitment to our neighbors, both
those close at hand and those physically far away, whom we nevertheless consider
to be close. Today there are many forms of voluntary assistance, models of
mutual service, of which our society has urgent need. We must not, for example,
abandon the elderly to their solitude, we must not pass by when we meet people
who are suffering. If we think and live according to our
communion with
Christ, then our eyes will be opened. Then
we will no longer be content to scrape a living just for ourselves, but we will
see where and how we are needed. Living and acting thus, we will soon realize
that it is much better to be useful and at the disposal of others than to be
concerned only with the comforts that are offered to us. I know that you as
young people have great aspirations, that you want to pledge yourselves to build
a better world. Let others see this, let the world see it, since this is exactly
the witness that the world expects from the disciples of
Jesus Christ; in this way, and through your
love above all, the
world will be able to discover the star that we follow as believers.
Let us go forward with Christ
and let us live our lives as true worshippers of
God!
Amen

Pope Benedict XVI

|