Pope Benedict XVI greets the crowd as he begins his general audience in Paul VI hall at the Vatican Feb. 13. (CNS photo/Paul Haring)
Today Pope Benedict began his weekly general audience with
a few remarks about his impending resignation.
From the Vatican
Radio report on the audience:
As soon as the Holy Father emerged onto the stage from the
side door the crowds erupted in greeting.
“Dear brothers and sisters, as you know I decided,” he began,
only to be interrupted with prolonged applause. “Thank you for your kindness”
he responded and began again. “I decided to resign from the ministry that the
Lord had entrusted me on April 19, 2005. I did this in full freedom,” the Pope
added forcefully, “for the good of the Church after having prayed at length and
examined my conscience before God, well aware of the gravity of this act.”
But, continued Pope Benedict, “I was also well aware that I
was no longer able to fulfill the Petrine Ministry with that strength that it
demands. What sustains and illuminates me is the certainty that the Church
belongs to Christ whose care and guidance will never be lacking. I thank you
all for the love and prayer with which you have accompanied me.”
Again the Pope was interrupted by lengthy applause, and
visibly moved he continued: “I have felt, almost physically, your prayers in
these days which are not easy for me, the strength which the love of the Church
and your prayers brings to me. Continue to pray for me and for the future Pope,
the Lord will guide us!”
The Holy Father then delivered his general audience
catechesis for Ash Wednesday, which, interestingly, included a reference to
Dorothy Day. The Vatican Radio translation of the address, originally delivered
in Italian, is below:
Dear
Brothers and Sisters,
Today,
Ash Wednesday, we begin the liturgical time of Lent, forty days that prepare us
for the celebration of Holy Easter, it is a time of particular commitment in
our spiritual journey. The number forty occurs several times in the Bible. In
particular, it recalls the forty years that the Israelites wandered in the
wilderness: a long period of formation to become the people of God, but also a
long period in which the temptation to be unfaithful to the covenant with the
Lord was always present. Forty were also the days of the Prophet Elijah’s
journey to reach the Mount of God, Horeb; as well as the time that Jesus spent
in the desert before beginning his public life and where he was tempted by the
devil. In this Catechesis I would like to dwell on this moment of earthly life
of the Son of God, which we will read of in the Gospel this Sunday.
First
of all, the desert, where Jesus withdrew to, is the place of silence, of
poverty, where man is deprived of material support and is placed in front of
the fundamental questions of life, where he is pushed to towards the essentials
in life and for this very reason it becomes easier for him to find God. But the
desert is also a place of death, because where there is no water there is no
life, and it is a place of solitude where man feels temptation more intensely.
Jesus goes into the desert, and there is tempted to leave the path indicated by
God the Father to follow other easier and worldly paths (cf. Lk 4:1-13). So he
takes on our temptations and carries our misery, to conquer evil and open up
the path to God, the path of conversion.
In
reflecting on the temptations Jesus is subjected to in the desert we are
invited, each one of us, to respond to one fundamental question: what is truly
important in our lives? In the first temptation the devil offers to change a
stone into bread to sate Jesus’ hunger. Jesus replies that the man also lives
by bread but not by bread alone: without a response to the hunger for truth,
hunger for God, man cannot be saved (cf. vv. 3-4). In the second, the devil
offers Jesus the path of power: he leads him up on high and gives him dominion
over the world, but this is not the path of God: Jesus clearly understands that
it is not earthly power that saves the world, but the power of the Cross, humility,
love (cf. vv. 5-8). In the third, the devil suggests Jesus throw himself down
from the pinnacle of the Temple of Jerusalem and be saved by God through his
angels, that is, to do something sensational to test God, but the answer is
that God is not an object on which to impose our conditions: He is the Lord of
all (cf. vv. 9-12). What is the core of the three temptations that Jesus is
subjected to? It is the proposal to exploit God, to use Him for his own
interests, for his own glory and success. So, in essence, to put himself in the
place of God, removing Him from his own existence and making him seem
superfluous. Everyone should then ask: what is the role God in my life? Is He
the Lord or am I?
Overcoming
the temptation to place God in submission to oneself and one’s own interests or
to put Him in a corner and converting oneself to the proper order of
priorities, giving God the first place, is a journey that every Christian must
undergo. “Conversion,” an invitation that we will hear many times in Lent,
means following Jesus in so that his Gospel is a real life guide, it means
allowing God transform us, no longer thinking that we are the only protagonists
of our existence, recognizing that we are creatures who depend on God, His
love, and that only by “losing” our life in Him can we truly have it. This
means making our choices in the light of the Word of God. Today we can no
longer be Christians as a simple consequence of the fact that we live in a
society that has Christian roots: even those born to a Christian family and
formed in the faith must, each and every day, renew the choice to be a
Christian, to give God first place, before the temptations continuously
suggested by a secularized culture, before the criticism of many of our
contemporaries.
The
tests which modern society subjects Christians to, in fact, are many, and
affect the personal and social life. It is not easy to be faithful to Christian
marriage, practice mercy in everyday life, leave space for prayer and inner
silence, it is not easy to publicly oppose choices that many take for granted,
such as abortion in the event of an unwanted pregnancy, euthanasia in case of
serious illness, or the selection of embryos to prevent hereditary diseases.
The temptation to set aside one’s faith is always present and conversion
becomes a response to God which must be confirmed several times throughout
one’s life.
The major conversions like that of St. Paul on the
road to Damascus, or St. Augustine, are an example and stimulus, but also in
our time when the sense of the sacred is eclipsed, God's grace is at work and
works wonders in life of many people. The Lord never gets tired of knocking at
the door of man in social and cultural contexts that seem engulfed by
secularization, as was the case for the Russian Orthodox Pavel Florensky. After
a completely agnostic education, to the point he felt an outright hostility
towards religious teachings taught in school, the scientist Florensky came to
exclaim: “No, you cannot live without God,” and to change his life completely,
so much so he became a monk.
I
also think the figure of Etty Hillesum, a young Dutch woman of Jewish origin
who died in Auschwitz. Initially far from God, she found Him looking deep
inside herself and wrote: “There is a well very deep inside of me. And God is
in that well. Sometimes I can reach Him, more often He is covered by stone and
sand: then God is buried. We must dig Him up again “(Diary, 97). In her
scattered and restless life, she finds God in the middle of the great tragedy
of the twentieth century, the Shoah. This young fragile and dissatisfied woman,
transfigured by faith, becomes a woman full of love and inner peace, able to
say: “I live in constant intimacy with God.”
The
ability to oppose the ideological blandishments of her time to choose the
search for truth and open herself up to the discovery of faith is evidenced by
another woman of our time, the American Dorothy Day. In her autobiography, she
confesses openly to having given in to the temptation that everything could be
solved with politics, adhering to the Marxist proposal: “I wanted to be with
the protesters, go to jail, write, influence others and leave my dreams to the
world. How much ambition and how much searching for myself in all this!” The
journey towards faith in such a secularized environment was particularly
difficult, but Grace acts nonetheless, as she points out: “It is certain that I
felt the need to go to church more often, to kneel, to bow my head in prayer. A
blind instinct, one might say, because I was not conscious of praying. But I
went, I slipped into the atmosphere of prayer...” God guided her to a conscious
adherence to the Church, in a lifetime spent dedicated to the underprivileged.
In
our time there are no few conversions understood as the return of those who,
after a Christian education, perhaps a superficial one, moved away from the
faith for years and then rediscovered Christ and his Gospel. In the Book of
Revelation we read: “Behold, I stand at the door and knock. If anyone hears my
voice and opens the door, [then] I will enter his house and dine with him, and
he with me”(3, 20). Our inner person must prepare to be visited by God, and for
this reason we should allow ourselves be invaded by illusions, by appearances,
by material things.
In this time of Lent, in the
Year of the faith, we renew our
commitment to the process of conversion, to overcoming the tendency to close in
on ourselves and instead, to making room for God, looking at our daily reality
with His eyes. The alternative between being wrapped up in our egoism and being
open to the love of God and others, we could say corresponds to the
alternatives to the temptations of Jesus: the alternative, that is, between
human power and love of the Cross, between a redemption seen only in material well-being
and redemption as the work of God, to whom we give primacy in our lives.
Conversion means not closing in on ourselves in the pursuit of success,
prestige, position, but making sure that each and every day, in the small
things, truth, faith in God and love become most important.