We bring you the text of Pope Benedict XVI's catechesis during the weekly General
Audience in the Vatican's Paul VI Audience Hall on Wednesday, August 8, 2007. Dear
Brothers and Sisters, "...Gregory Nazianzus.....was a native of Cappadocia. As
a distinguished theologian, orator and champion of the Christian faith in the fourth
century, he was famous for his eloquence, and as a poet, he also had a refined and
sensitive soul. Gregory was born into a noble family in about 330 A.D. and his
mother consecrated him to God at birth. After his education at home, he attended the
most famous schools of his time: he first went to Caesarea in Cappadocia, where he
made friends with Basil, the future Bishop of that city, and went on to stay in other
capitals of the ancient world, such as Alexandria, Egypt and in particular Athens,
where once again he met Basil (cf. Orationes 43: 14-24; SC 384: 146-180). Remembering
this friendship, Gregory was later to write: "Then not only did I feel full of veneration
for my great Basil because of the seriousness of his morals and the maturity and wisdom
of his speeches, but he induced others who did not yet know him to be like him....
The same eagerness for knowledge motivated us.... This was our competition: not who
was first but who allowed the other to be first. It seemed as if we had one soul in
two bodies" (Orationes 43: 16, 20; SC 384: 154-156, 164]. These words more or
less paint the self-portrait of this noble soul. Yet, one can also imagine how this
man, who was powerfully cast beyond earthly values, must have suffered deeply for
the things of this world. On his return home, Gregory received Baptism and developed
an inclination for monastic life: solitude as well as philosophical and spiritual
meditation fascinated him. He himself wrote: "Nothing seems to me greater than
this: to silence one's senses, to emerge from the flesh of the world, to withdraw
into oneself, no longer to be concerned with human things other than what is strictly
necessary; to converse with oneself and with God, to lead a life that transcends the
visible; to bear in one's soul divine images, ever pure, not mingled with earthly
or erroneous forms; truly to be a perfect mirror of God and of divine things, and
to become so more and more, taking light from light...; to enjoy, in the present hope,
the future good, and to converse with angels; to have already left the earth even
while continuing to dwell on it, borne aloft by the spirit" (Orationes 2: 7; SC 247:
96). As he confides in his autobiography (cf. Carmina [historica] 2: 1, 11, De
Vita Sua 340-349; PG 37: 1053), he received priestly ordination with a certain reluctance
for he knew that he would later have to be a Bishop, to look after others and their
affairs, hence, could no longer be absorbed in pure meditation. However, he subsequently
accepted this vocation and took on the pastoral ministry in full obedience, accepting,
as often happened to him in his life, to be carried by Providence where he did not
wish to go (cf. Jn 21: 18). In 371, his friend Basil, Bishop of Caesarea, against
Gregory's own wishes, desired to ordain him Bishop of Sasima, a strategically important
locality in Cappadocia. Because of various problems, however, he never took possession
of it and instead stayed on in the city of Nazianzus. In about 379, Gregory was
called to Constantinople, the capital, to head the small Catholic community faithful
to the Council of Nicea and to belief in the Trinity. The majority adhered instead
to Arianism, which was "politically correct" and viewed by emperors as politically
useful. Thus, he found himself in a condition of minority, surrounded by hostility.
He delivered five Theological Orations (Orationes 27-31; SC 250: 70-343) in the little
Church of the Anastasis precisely in order to defend the Trinitarian faith and to
make it intelligible. These discourses became famous because of the soundness
of his doctrine and his ability to reason, which truly made clear that this was the
divine logic. And the splendour of their form also makes them fascinating today. It
was because of these orations that Gregory acquired the nickname: "The Theologian".
This is what he is called in the Orthodox Church: the "Theologian". And this is
because to his way of thinking theology was not merely human reflection or even less,
only a fruit of complicated speculation, but rather sprang from a life of prayer and
holiness, from a persevering dialogue with God. And in this very way he causes the
reality of God, the mystery of the Trinity, to appear to our reason. In the silence
of contemplation, interspersed with wonder at the marvels of the mystery revealed,
his soul was engrossed in beauty and divine glory. While Gregory was taking part
in the Second Ecumenical Council in 381, he was elected Bishop of Constantinople and
presided over the Council; but he was challenged straightaway by strong opposition,
to the point that the situation became untenable. These hostilities must have been
unbearable to such a sensitive soul. What Gregory had previously lamented with
heartfelt words was repeated: "We have divided Christ, we who so loved God and Christ!
We have lied to one another because of the Truth, we have harboured sentiments of
hatred because of Love, we are separated from one another" (Orationes 6: 3; SC 405:
128). Thus, in a tense atmosphere, the time came for him to resign. In the
packed cathedral, Gregory delivered a farewell discourse of great effectiveness and
dignity (cf. Orationes 42; SC 384: 48-114). He ended his heartrending speech with
these words: "Farewell, great city, beloved by Christ.... My children, I beg you,
jealously guard the deposit [of faith] that has been entrusted to you (cf. I Tm 6:
20), remember my suffering (cf. Col 4: 18). May the grace of Our Lord Jesus Christ
be with you all" (cf. Orationes 42: 27; SC 384: 112-114). Gregory returned to
Nazianzus and for about two years devoted himself to the pastoral care of this Christian
community. He then withdrew definitively to solitude in nearby Arianzo, his birthplace,
and dedicated himself to studies and the ascetic life. It was in this period that
he wrote the majority of his poetic works and especially his autobiography: the De
Vita Sua, a reinterpretation in verse of his own human and spiritual journey, an exemplary
journey of a suffering Christian, of a man of profound interiority in a world full
of conflicts. He is a man who makes us aware of God's primacy, hence, also speaks
to us, to this world of ours: without God, man loses his grandeur; without God, there
is no true humanism. Consequently, let us too listen to this voice and seek to
know God's Face. In one of his poems he wrote, addressing himself to God: "May
you be benevolent, You, the hereafter of all things" (Carmina [dogmatica] 1: 1, 29;
PG 37: 508). And in 390, God welcomed into his arms this faithful servant who
had defended him in his writings with keen intelligence and had praised him in his
poetry with such great love. "