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MESSAGE OF HIS HOLINESS
BENEDICT XVI
FOR LENT 2006
“Jesus, at
the sight of the crowds, was moved with
pity” (Mt
9:36)
Dear
Brothers and Sisters!
Lent is a
privileged time of interior pilgrimage
towards Him Who is the fount of mercy.
It is a pilgrimage in which He Himself
accompanies us through the desert of our
poverty, sustaining us on our way
towards the intense joy of Easter. Even
in the “valley of darkness” of which the
Psalmist speaks (Ps 23:4), while
the tempter prompts us to despair or to
place a vain hope in the work of our own
hands, God is there to guard us and
sustain us. Yes, even today the Lord
hears the cry of the multitudes longing
for joy, peace, and love. As in every
age, they feel abandoned. Yet, even in
the desolation of misery, loneliness,
violence and hunger that
indiscriminately afflict children,
adults, and the elderly, God does not
allow darkness to prevail. In fact, in
the words of my beloved Predecessor,
Pope John Paul II, there is a “divine
limit imposed upon evil”, namely, mercy
(Memory and Identity, pp. 19ff.).
It is with these thoughts in mind that I
have chosen as my theme for this Message
the Gospel text: “Jesus, at the sight of
the crowds, was moved with pity” (Mt
9:36).
In this light,
I would like to pause and reflect upon
an issue much debated today: the
question of development. Even now, the
compassionate “gaze” of Christ continues
to fall upon individuals and peoples.
He watches them, knowing that the divine
“plan” includes their call to
salvation. Jesus knows the perils that
put this plan at risk, and He is moved
with pity for the crowds. He chooses to
defend them from the wolves even at the
cost of His own life. The gaze of Jesus
embraces individuals and multitudes, and
he brings them all before the Father,
offering Himself as a sacrifice of
expiation.
Enlightened by
this Paschal truth, the Church knows
that if we are to promote development in
its fulness, our own “gaze” upon mankind
has to be measured against that of
Christ. In fact, it is quite impossible
to separate the response to people’s
material and social needs from the
fulfilment of the profound desires of
their hearts. This has to be emphasized
all the more in today’s rapidly changing
world, in which our responsibility
towards the poor emerges with ever
greater clarity and urgency. My
venerable Predecessor, Pope Paul VI,
accurately described the scandal of
underdevelopment as an outrage against
humanity. In this sense, in the
Encyclical Populorum Progressio,
he denounced “the lack of material
necessities for those who are without
the minimum essential for life, the
moral deficiencies of those who are
mutilated by selfishness” and
“oppressive social structures, whether
due to the abuses of ownership or to the
abuses of power, to the exploitation of
workers or to unjust transactions” (ibid.,
21). As the antidote to such evil, Paul
VI suggested not only “increased esteem
for the dignity of others, the turning
towards the spirit of poverty,
cooperation for the common good, the
will and desire for peace”, but also
“the acknowledgement by man of supreme
values, and of God, their source and
their finality” (ibid.). In this
vein, the Pope went on to propose that,
finally and above all, there is “faith,
a gift of God accepted by the good will
of man, and unity in the charity of
Christ” (ibid.). Thus, the
“gaze” of Christ upon the crowd impels
us to affirm the true content of this
“complete humanism” that, according to
Paul VI, consists in the “fully-rounded
development of the whole man and of all
men” (ibid., 42). For this
reason, the primary contribution that
the Church offers to the development of
mankind and peoples does not consist
merely in material means or technical
solutions. Rather, it involves the
proclamation of the truth of Christ, Who
educates consciences and teaches the
authentic dignity of the person and of
work; it means the promotion of a
culture that truly responds to all the
questions of humanity.
In the face of
the terrible challenge of poverty
afflicting so much of the world’s
population, indifference and
self-centered isolation stand in stark
contrast to the “gaze” of Christ.
Fasting and almsgiving, which, together
with prayer, the Church proposes in a
special way during the Lenten Season,
are suitable means for us to become
conformed to this “gaze”. The examples
of the saints and the long history of
the Church’s missionary activity provide
invaluable indications of the most
effective ways to support development.
Even in this era of global
interdependence, it is clear that no
economic, social, or political project
can replace that gift of self to another
through which charity is expressed.
Those who act according to the logic of
the Gospel live the faith as friendship
with God Incarnate and, like Him, bear
the burden of the material and spiritual
needs of their neighbours. They see it
as an inexhaustible mystery, worthy of
infinite care and attention. They know
that he who does not give God gives too
little; as Blessed Teresa of Calcutta
frequently observed, the worst poverty
is not to know Christ. Therefore, we
must help others to find God in the
merciful face of Christ. Without this
perspective, civilization lacks a solid
foundation.
Thanks to men
and women obedient to the Holy Spirit,
many forms of charitable work intended
to promote development have arisen in
the Church: hospitals, universities,
professional formation schools, and
small businesses. Such initiatives
demonstrate the genuine humanitarian
concern of those moved by the Gospel
message, far in advance of other forms
of social welfare. These charitable
activities point out the way to achieve
a globalization that is focused upon the
true good of mankind and, hence, the
path towards authentic peace. Moved
like Jesus with compassion for the
crowds, the Church today considers it
her duty to ask political leaders and
those with economic and financial power
to promote development based on respect
for the dignity of every man and woman.
An important litmus test for the success
of their efforts is religious liberty,
understood not simply as the freedom to
proclaim and celebrate Christ, but also
the opportunity to contribute to the
building of a world enlivened by
charity. These efforts have to include
a recognition of the central role of
authentic religious values in responding
to man’s deepest concerns, and in
supplying the ethical motivation for his
personal and social responsibilities.
These are the criteria by which
Christians should assess the political
programmes of their leaders.
We cannot
ignore the fact that many mistakes have
been made in the course of history by
those who claimed to be disciples of
Jesus. Very often, when having to
address grave problems, they have
thought that they should first improve
this world and only afterwards turn
their minds to the next. The temptation
was to believe that, in the face of
urgent needs, the first imperative was
to change external structures. The
consequence, for some, was that
Christianity became a kind of moralism,
‘believing’ was replaced with ‘doing’.
Rightly, therefore, my Predecessor, Pope
John Paul II, of blessed memory,
observed: “The temptation today is to
reduce Christianity to merely human
wisdom, a pseudo-science of well-being.
In our heavily secularized world, a
‘gradual secularization of salvation’
has taken place, so that people strive
for the good of man, but man who is
truncated…We know, however, that Jesus
came to bring integral salvation”
It is this
integral salvation that Lent puts before
us, pointing towards the victory of
Christ over every evil that oppresses
us. In turning to the Divine Master, in
being converted to Him, in experiencing
His mercy through the Sacrament of
Reconciliation, we will discover a
“gaze” that searches us profoundly and
gives new life to the crowds and to each
one of us. It restores trust to those
who do not succumb to skepticism,
opening up before them the perspective
of eternal beatitude. Throughout
history, even when hate seems to
prevail, the luminous testimony of His
love is never lacking. To Mary, “the
living fount of hope” (Dante Alighieri,
Paradiso, XXXIII, 12), we entrust
our Lenten journey, so that she may lead
us to her Son. I commend to her in
particular the multitudes who suffer
poverty and cry out for help, support,
and understanding. With these
sentiments, I cordially impart to all of
you a special Apostolic Blessing. |