Text of Pope Benedict XVI's Remarks at Amman's Regina Pacis Centre
Your Beatitudes, Your Excellencies, Dear Friends,
I am very happy to
be here with you this afternoon, and to greet each of you and your family members,
wherever they may be. I thank His Beatitude Patriarch Fouad Twal for his kind words
of welcome and in a special way I wish to acknowledge the presence among us of Bishop
Selim Sayegh, whose vision and labours for this Centre, together with those of His
Beatitude Patriarch Emeritus Michel Sabbah, are today honored through the blessing
of the new extensions which has just taken place. I also wish to greet with great
affection the Central Committee members, the Comboni Sisters and the dedicated lay
staff, including those who work in the Centre’s many community branches and units.
Your reputation for outstanding professional competence, compassionate care and resolute
promotion of the rightful place in society of those with special needs is well known
here and throughout the Kingdom. To the young people present, I thank you for your
moving welcome. It is a great joy for me to be with you. As you know, my visit
to the Our Lady of Peace Centre here in Amman is the first stop along my journey of
pilgrimage. Like countless pilgrims before me it is now my turn to satisfy that profound
wish to touch, to draw solace from and to venerate the places where Jesus lived, the
places which were made holy by his presence. Since apostolic times, Jerusalem has
been the primary place of pilgrimage for Christians, but earlier still, in the ancient
Near East, Semitic peoples built sacred shrines in order to mark and commemorate a
divine presence or action. And ordinary people would travel to these centres carrying
a portion of the fruits of their land and livestock to offer in homage and thanksgiving.
Dear friends, every one of us is a pilgrim. We are all drawn forward, with purpose,
along God’s path. Naturally, then, we tend to look back on life – sometimes with
regrets or hurts, often with thanksgiving and appreciation – and we also look ahead
– sometimes with trepidation or anxiety, but always with expectation and hope, knowing
too that there are others who encourage us along the way. I know that the journeys
that have led many of you to the “Regina Pacis” Centre have been marked by suffering
or trial. Some of you struggle courageously with disabilities, others of you have
endured rejection, and some of you are drawn to this place of peace simply for encouragement
and support. Of particular importance, I know, is the Centre’s great success in promoting
the rightful place of the disabled in society and in ensuring that suitable training
and opportunities are provided to facilitate such integration. For this foresight
and determination you all deserve great praise and encouragement! At times it is
difficult to find a reason for what appears only as an obstacle to be overcome or
even as pain – physical or emotional – to be endured. Yet faith and understanding
help us to see a horizon beyond our own selves in order to imagine life as God does.
God’s unconditional love, which gives life to every human individual, points to a
meaning and purpose for all human life. His is a saving love (cf. Jn 12:32). As
Christians profess, it is through the Cross that Jesus in fact draws us into eternal
life, and in so doing indicates to us the way ahead – the way of hope which guides
every step we take along the way, so that we too become bearers of that hope and charity
for others. Friends, unlike the pilgrims of old, I do not come bearing gifts or
offerings. I come simply with an intention, a hope: to pray for the precious gift
of unity and peace, most specifically for the Middle East. Peace for individuals,
for parents and children, for communities, peace for Jerusalem, for the Holy Land,
for the region, peace for the entire human family; the lasting peace born of justice,
integrity and compassion, the peace that arises from humility, forgiveness and the
profound desire to live in harmony as one. Prayer is hope in action. And in fact
true reason is contained in prayer: we come into loving contact with the one God,
the universal Creator, and in so doing we come to realize the futility of human divisions
and prejudices and we sense the wondrous possibilities that open up before us when
our hearts are converted to God’s truth, to his design for each of us and our world.
Dear young friends, to you in particular I wish to say that standing in your midst
I draw strength from God. Your experience of trials, your witness to compassion,
and your determination to overcome the obstacles you encounter, encourage me in the
belief that suffering can bring about change for the good. In our own trials, and
standing alongside others in their struggles, we glimpse the essence of our humanity,
we become, as it were, more human. And we come to learn that, on another plane, even
hearts hardened by cynicism or injustice or unwillingness to forgive are never beyond
the reach of God, can always be opened to a new way of being, a vision of peace.
I exhort you all to pray every day for our world. And today I want to ask you
to take up a specific task: please pray for me every day of my pilgrimage; for my
own spiritual renewal in the Lord, and for the conversion of hearts to God’s way of
forgiveness and solidarity so that my hope – our hope – for unity and peace in the
world will bear abundant fruit. May God bless each of you and your families,
and the teachers, caregivers, administrators and benefactors of this Centre and may
Our Lady, Queen of Peace, protect you and guide you along the pilgrim way of her Son,
the Good Shepherd.