Transcriptions of the Addresses Given by Pope Benedict XVI to the Participants of the UNIV Encounters
2007, 4 APRIL, ST PETER'S SQUARE
The Easter Triduum
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
As the Lenten journey which began with Ash Wednesday nears its end,
today's liturgy for Wednesday of Holy Week already introduces us into
the dramatic atmosphere of the coming days, steeped in the memory of
the Passion and death of Christ. In fact, in today's liturgy, the Evangelist
Matthew presents for our meditation the brief dialogue between Jesus
and Judas that took place in the Upper Room.
"Is it I, Master?" the traitor asked the divine Teacher, who
had foretold: "Truly, I say to you, one of you will betray me".
The Lord's answer was incisive: "You have said so" (cf. Mt
26: 14-25).
For his part, John concludes the narrative announcing Judas' betrayal
with a few portentous words: "It was night" (Jn 13: 30).
When the traitor left the Upper Room, thick darkness gathered in his
heart - it was an inner night -, bewilderment increased in the hearts
of the other disciples - they too were moving towards night -, while
the steadily darkening twilight of abandonment and hatred hung over
the Son of Man who was preparing to consummate his sacrifice on the
Cross.
What we shall be commemorating in the coming days is the supreme battle
between Light and Darkness, between Life and Death. We must also put
ourselves in this context aware of our own "night", of our
sins and our responsibility if we want to benefit spiritually from the
Paschal Mystery, if we want our hearts to be enlightened through this
Mystery which constitutes the central fulcrum of our faith.
The beginning of the Easter Triduum is Holy Thursday, tomorrow. During
the Chrism Mass, which can be considered the prelude to the Sacred Triduum,
the diocesan Bishop and his closest collaborators, the priests, surrounded
by the People of God, renew the promises they made on the day of priestly
Ordination.
Year after year, this is an intense moment of ecclesial communion that
highlights the gift of the ministerial priesthood which Christ bequeathed
to his Church on the eve of his death on the Cross. And for every priest
it is a moving moment in this vigil of the Passion in which the Lord
gave himself to us, gave us the Sacrament of the Eucharist, gave us
the priesthood. It is a day that touches all our hearts.
The Oils for the celebration of the Sacraments are then blessed: the
Oil of the Catechumens, the Oil of the Sick and the Holy Chrism.
In the evening, entering the Easter Triduum, the Christian community
relives what happened at the Last Supper in the Mass of the Lord's Supper.
In the Upper Room, the Redeemer wanted to anticipate the sacrifice of
his life in the Sacrament of the bread and wine changed into his Body
and Blood: he anticipated his death, he freely gave his life, he offered
the definitive gift of himself to humanity.
With the washing of the feet, the gesture with which, having loved his
own, he loved them to the end is repeated (cf. Jn 13: 1), and he bequeathed
this act of humility to his disciples as their "badge": love
unto death.
After the Mass of the Lord's Supper, the liturgy invites the faithful
to pause in adoration before the Blessed Sacrament, reliving Jesus'
agony in Gethsemane. And we see that the disciples fell asleep, leaving
their Lord on his own.
Today too, we, his disciples, are often asleep. On this holy night of
Gethsemane, let us be vigilant, not wanting to leave the Lord on his
own at this time; thus, we can better understand the mystery of Holy
Thursday, which embraces the supreme, threefold gift of the ministry
of the Priesthood, the Eucharist and the new Commandment of Love (agape).
Good Friday, which commemorates the events between Christ's condemnation
to death and his Crucifixion, is a day of penance, fasting and prayer,
of participation in the Lord's Passion. At the prescribed hour, the
Christian Assembly, with the help of the Word of God and liturgical
actions, renews the history of human infidelity to the divine plan,
which was nonetheless brought about exactly in this way; and it listens
once again to the moving narrative of the Lord's sorrowful Passion.
The Assembly then addresses to the Heavenly Father a long "prayer
of the faithful" which embraces all the needs of the Church and
of the world.
Subsequently, the community adores the Cross and receives the Eucharist,
consuming the sacred species reserved from the Mass of the Lord's Supper
on the previous day.
In commenting on Good Friday, St John Chrysostom observes: "First,
the Cross stood for contempt, but today it is something venerable; before
it was the symbol of condemnation, today it is the hope of salvation.
It has truly become a source of infinite good; it has freed us from
error, it has dispelled our shadows, it has reconciled us with God,
it has transformed us from being enemies of God to being members of
his family, from being strangers to being his neighbours: this Cross
is the destruction of enmity, the source of peace, the casket of our
treasure" (cf. De Cruce et Latrone I, 1, 4).
To relive the Redeemer's Passion more intensely, the Christian tradition
has developed many manifestations of popular piety, including the well-known
Good Friday processions with the evocative rites, repeated each year.
However, there is one pious practice, the "Way of the Cross",
which offers us throughout the year the possibility of impressing the
mystery of the Cross ever more deeply on our minds, of accompanying
Christ along this path and thus being inwardly conformed to him. We
could say that the Way of the Cross teaches us, in the words of St Leo
the Great, to "look at the Crucified Jesus with the eyes of the
heart, to recognize in his flesh our own" (Talk 15, on the Lord's
Passion).
Precisely in this lies the true Christian wisdom which we want to learn
by taking the Way of the Cross on Good Friday at the Colosseum.
Holy Saturday is the day when the liturgy is hushed, the day of great
silence, and Christians are invited to preserve interior recollection,
often difficult to encourage in our day, in order to be better prepared
for the Easter Vigil.
Spiritual retreats and Marian prayer meetings are organized in many
communities in order to be united with the Mother of the Redeemer, who
waited, anxious but trusting, for the Resurrection of her Crucified
Son.
Finally, during the Easter Vigil the veil of sorrow which shrouds the
Church because of the death and burial of the Lord will be torn by the
victorious cry: Christ is risen and has defeated death for ever! We
will then truly be able to understand the mystery of the Cross, "since
God also creates wonders even in the impossible", an ancient writer
says, "so that we may know that he alone can do what he wills.
From his death comes our life, from his wounds our healing, from his
fall our resurrection, from his descent our uplifting" (Anonymous,
Quartodecimano).
Enlivened by a stronger faith, we welcome in the heart of the Easter
Vigil the newly baptized and renew the promises of our Baptism. Thus,
we will feel that the Church is ever alive, ever rejuvenated, ever beautiful
and holy, for she is founded on Christ, who having risen, will never
die again.
Dear brothers and sisters, the Paschal Mystery which the Holy Triduum
enables us to relive is not only the memory of a past reality; it is
also a reality in our time. Christ also conquers sin and death today
with his love. Evil in all its forms does not have the last word. The
final triumph, the triumph of truth and love, is Christ's!
If we are willing to suffer and die with him, St Paul will remind us
in the Easter Vigil, his life will become our life (cf. Rom 6: 9). Our
Christian life is supported by and built upon this certainty.
As I invoke the intercession of Mary Most Holy, who followed Jesus on
the Way of the Passion and Cross and embraced him after his deposition,
I express the hope that you will all take part devoutly in the Easter
Triduum, to taste the joy of Easter with all your loved ones.
I am pleased to welcome the many university students gathered in Rome
for "UNIV" 2007. May these days of reflection, friendship
and prayer inspire in you a deeper love for Our Lord and his Church!
To all the English-speaking visitors present at today's Audience, especially
those from England, Ireland, Australia, Canada and the United States,
I offer my prayerful good wishes for a happy and spiritually enriching
celebration of Easter. Good Easter to all of you!
* * *
I am pleased to welcome the many university students gathered in Rome
for Univ 2007. May these days of reflection, friendship and prayer inspire
in you a deeper love for our Lord and his Church! To all the English-speaking
visitors present at today’s Audience, especially those from England,
Ireland, Denmark, Australia, Canada and the United States, I offer my
prayerful good wishes for a happy and spiritually enriching celebration
of Easter.
Saludo cordialmente a los visitantes de lengua española. Sobre todo,
saludo al numeroso grupo que participa en la UNIV 2007. Queridos jóvenes:
Os invito a celebrar estos días santos, conscientes de que Cristo ha
dado su vida por cada uno de nosotros. Después del gesto humilde del
lavatorio de los pies, él nos dice: «también vosotros debéis lavaros
los pies unos a otros: os he dado ejemplo para que lo que yo he hecho
con vosotros, vosotros también lo hagáis», es decir, amar a los demás
cómo él nos ha amado ¡Feliz Pascua de resurrección para todos!
Rivolgo un cordiale benvenuto ai pellegrini di lingua italiana. In particolare
saluto voi, partecipanti all’incontro internazionale dell’UNIV, promosso
dalla Prelatura dell'Opus Dei. Cari amici, vi auguro che queste giornate
romane siano per tutti occasione di una forte esperienza ecclesiale
perché possiate tornare a casa animati dal desiderio di servire più
generosamente Cristo e i fratelli. “Servizio: come mi piace questa parola!”
– diceva san Josémaria Escrivá – ed aggiungeva “confidiamo al Signore
la nostra decisione di volere imparare a servire, perché soltanto così
potremo non solo conoscere Cristo, ma farlo conoscere e amare dagli
altri” (E’ Gesù che parla, 182).
Domani entreremo nel Sacro Triduo che ci farà rivivere i misteri centrali
della nostra salvezza. Invito voi, cari giovani, a guardare alla Croce
e trarre da essa luce per camminare fedelmente sulle orme del Redentore.
Per voi, cari malati, la Passione del Signore, culminante nel trionfo
glorioso della Pasqua, costituisca sempre, specialmente nei momenti
della prova, sorgente di speranza e di conforto. E voi, cari sposi novelli,
disponete i vostri cuori a celebrare con intensa partecipazione il Mistero
pasquale, perché la vostra esistenza diventi ogni giorno un dono reciproco,
aperto all'amore fecondo di bene.
© Copyright 2007 - Libreria Editrice Vaticana
We want to assure the Pope that his words will be the subject of our reflections throughout this week; his messages have always been the high point of UNIV congresses.
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