Text Homily, Mass in Regensburg 12 September, 2006
Homily of His Holiness Pope Benedict XVI at the Celebration of the Eucharist
(Tuesday,
12 September 2006, Islinger Feld, Regensburg)
Those who believe
are never alone. This is the theme of these days. Here we can see how
true it is. Faith brings us together and gives us a reason to celebrate. It gives
us joy in God, joy in his creation, joy in being together. I realize that this celebration
required much time and effort to prepare. By reading newspaper accounts, I had some
idea of how many people gave their time and energy to do such a fine job of readying
this esplanade. Thanks to them, we have the Cross here on the hill as a sign of God's
peace in the world; the access roads have been cleared; security and good order have
been ensured; housing has been provided, and so much more. I could not have imagined
- and even now I am only beginning to imagine - how much work, down to the smallest
details, was needed for us to meet here today. For all this I can only say, in a
word: Heartfelt thanks! May the Lord repay you for everything you have done,
and may the joy which we can now experience as a result of your preparations return
a hundredfold to each of you! I was very moved when I heard how many people, especially
from the vocational schools of Weiden and Hamburg, and how many firms and individuals,
men and women, helped to make my house and my garden a little more beautiful. I am
a bit taken aback by all this goodness, and once again I can only offer an inadequate
thank you for all your efforts. You have not done all this for just one person;
you have done it in a spirit of solidarity in faith, inspired by love of the Lord
and his Church. All this is a sign of true humanity, born of our experience of the
love of Jesus Christ. We are gathered for a celebration of faith. But the question
immediately arises: What do we actually believe? What does it mean to have faith?
Is it still something possible in the modern world? When we look at the great Summae
of theology compiled in the Middle Ages, or we think of the number of books written
each day for or against faith, we might lose heart and think that it is all too complicated.
In the end, we can no longer see the forest for the trees. True enough: faith's vision
embraces heaven and earth; past, present and future; eternity - and so it can never
be fully exhausted. And yet, deep down, it is quite simple. The Lord tells us so
when he says to the Father: Ayou have revealed these things to the simple - to those
able to see with their hearts (cf. Mt 11:25). The Church, for her part, has given
us a little Summa in which everything essential is expressed. It is the so-called
Apostles'Creed, which is usually divided into twelve articles, corresponding to the
twelve Apostles. It speaks of God, the creator and source of all that is, of Christ
and his work of salvation, and it culminates in the resurrection of the dead and life
everlasting. In its basic structure, the Creed is composed of only three main sections,
and as we see from its history, it is merely an expansion of the formula for Baptism
which the Risen Lord entrusted to his disciples for all time when he told them: Go
and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of
the Son and of the Holy Spirit (Mt 28:19).
Once we realize this, two
things become clear. First, faith is simple. We believe in God - in God, who is
the Beginning and End of human life. We believe in a God who enters into a relationship
with us human beings, who is our origin and future. Consequently, faith is, always
and inseparably, hope: the certainty that we have a future and will not end up as
nothing. And faith is love, since God's love is contagious.
A second
thing also becomes clear: the Creed is not a collection of propositions; it is not
a theory. It is anchored in the event of Baptism - a genuine encounter between God
and man. In the mystery of Baptism, God stoops to meet us; he comes close to us and
brings us in turn closer to each other. Baptism means that Jesus Christ adopts us
as his brothers and sisters, welcoming us as sons and daughters into God's own family.
He thus makes us one great family in the universal communion of the Church. Truly,
those who believe are never alone. God comes to meet us. Let us go out to meet God
and so meet one another! To the extent we can, let us make sure that none of God's
children ever feels alone!
We believe in God. This is a fundamental decision
on our part. But is such a thing still possible today? Is it reasonable? From the
Enlightenment on, science, at least in part, has applied itself to seeking an explanation
of the world in which God would be unnecessary. And if this were so, he would also
become unnecessary in our lives. But whenever the attempt seemed to be nearing success
- inevitably it would become clear: something is missing from the equation! When God
is subtracted, something doesn't add up for man, the world, the whole vast universe.
So we end up with two alternatives. What came first? Creative Reason, the Spirit
who makes all things and gives them growth, or Unreason, which, lacking any meaning,
yet somehow brings forth a mathematically ordered cosmos, as well as man and his reason.
The latter, however, would then be nothing more than a chance result of evolution
and thus, in the end, equally meaningless. As Christians, we say:B I believe in
God the Father, the Creator of heaven and earth - I believe in the Creator Spirit.
We believe that at the beginning of everything is the eternal Word, with Reason and
not Unreason. With this faith we have no reason to hide, no fear of ending up in
a dead end. We rejoice that we can know God! And we try to let others see the reasonableness
of our faith, as Saint Peter bids us do in his First Letter (cf. 3:15)!
We
believe in God. This is what the main sections of the Creed affirm, especially the
first section. But another question now follows: in what God? Certainly we believe
in the God who is Creator Spirit, creative Reason, the source of everything that exists,
including ourselves. The second section of the Creed tells us more. This creative
Reason is Goodness, it is Love. It has a face. God does not leave us groping in
the dark. He has shown himself to us as a man. In his greatness he has let himself
become small. Whoever has seen me has seen the Father, Jesus says (Jn 14:9).
God has taken on a human face. He has loved us even to the point of letting himself
be nailed to the Cross for our sake, in order to bring the sufferings of mankind to
the very heart of God. Today, when we have learned to recognize the pathologies and
the life-threatening diseases associated with religion and reason, and the ways that
God's image can be destroyed by hatred and fanaticism, it is important to state clearly
the God in whom we believe, and to proclaim confidently that this God has a human
face. Only this can free us from being afraid of God - which is ultimately at the
root of modern atheism. Only this God saves us from being afraid of the world and
from anxiety before the emptiness of life. Only by looking to Jesus Christ does our
joy in God come to fulfilment and become redeemed joy. During this solemn Eucharistic
celebration, let us look to the Lord and ask him to give us the immense joy which
he promised to his disciples (cf. Jn 16:24)!
The second section of the
Creed ends by speaking of the last judgement and the third section by speaking of
the resurrection of the dead. Judgement - doesn't this word also make us afraid?
On the other hand, doesn't everyone want to see justice eventually rendered to all
those who were unjustly condemned, to all those who suffered in life, who died after
lives full of pain? Don't we want the outrageous injustice and suffering which we
see in human history to be finally undone, so that in the end everyone will find happiness,
and everything will be shown to have meaning? This triumph of justice, this joining
together of the many fragments of history which seem meaningless and giving them their
place in a bigger picture in which truth and love prevail: this is what is meant by
the concept of universal judgement. Faith is not meant to instil fear; rather it
is meant - surely - to call us to accountability. We are not meant to waste our lives,
misuse them, or spend them selfishly. In the face of injustice we must not remain
indifferent and thus end up as silent collaborators or outright accomplices. We need
to recognize our mission in history and to strive to carry it out. What is needed
is not fear, but responsibility - responsibility and concern for our own salvation,
and for the salvation of the whole world. But when responsibility and concern tend
to bring on fear, then we should remember the words of Saint John: My little ones,
I am writing this to keep you from sin. But if anyone should sin, we have an advocate
with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous one (1 Jn 2:1). No matter what
our hearts may charge us with - God is greater than our hearts and all is known to
him (ibid., 3:20).
Today we celebrate the feast of the Most Holy
Name of Mary. To all those women who bear that name - my own mother and my sister
were among them - I offer my heartfelt good wishes for their feast day. Mary, the
Mother of the Lord, has received from the faithful the title of Advocate, for she
is our advocate before God. And this is how we see her, from the wedding-feast of
Cana onwards: as a woman who is kindly, filled with maternal concern and love, a woman
who is attentive to the needs of others and, out of desire to help them, brings those
needs before the Lord. In today's Gospel we have heard how the Lord gave Mary as
a Mother to the beloved disciple and, in him, to all of us. In every age, Christians
have received with gratitude this legacy of Jesus, and, in their recourse to his Mother,
they have always found the security and confident hope which gives them joy in God.
May we too receive Mary as the lodestar guiding our lives, introducing us into the
great family of God! Truly, those who believe are never alone. Amen!