Pope Benedict XVI in English - Weekly General Audience
(23 Sept 09 - RV) Dear Brothers and Sisters, Our catechesis today turns to an outstanding
churchman of the eleventh century, Saint Anselm of Canterbury. Anselm received a
monastic education in his native town of Aosta, in the north of Italy, and entered
the Benedictine monastery of Bec in Normandy. Under the guidance of his prior, Lanfranc
of Pavia, he devoted himself to study and prayer, and eventually was elected abbot
of Bec. Some time later he succeeded Lanfranc as Archbishop of Canterbury. Anselm’s
years in England were marked by the reorganization of ecclesial life in the wake of
the Norman invasion and the struggle for the Church’s legitimate freedom from political
inroads, which resulted in his being exiled for three years. This great spiritual
leader was also a brilliant teacher, writer and speculative theologian. In the prayer
which opens his most celebrated work, the Proslogion, he expresses his desire
to understand the faith, the divine truth which his heart already believes and loves.
May Saint Anselm’s life and teaching inspire us to a more fruitful contemplation of
the mysteries of the Christian faith, and a deeper love of the Lord and his Church.*
* *I offer a warm welcome to the English-speaking visitors present at today’s Audience,
including the members of the Australian Girls Choir and the school groups from Norway
and Scotland. I ask you to join me in praying that my imminent visit to the Czech
Republic will bear many spiritual fruits, and upon all of you and your families, I
invoke God’s blessings of joy and peace!