EUCHARIST WITH SEMINARIANS
HOMILY OF HIS HOLINESS BENEDICT XVI
HOMILY OF HIS HOLINESS BENEDICT XVI
Cathedral of Santa María la Real de la Almudena, Madrid
Saturday, 20 August 2011
Your Eminence the Archbishop of Madrid,
Dear Brother Bishops,Dear Priests and Religious,
Dear Rectors and Formators,Dear Seminarians,
Dear Friends,
Dear Brother Bishops,Dear Priests and Religious,
Dear Rectors and Formators,Dear Seminarians,
Dear Friends,
I am very pleased to celebrate Holy Mass with you who aspire to be
Christ’s priests for the service of the Church and of man, and I thank
you for the kind words with which you welcomed me.
Today, this holy
cathedral church of Santa María La Real de la Almudena is like a great
Upper Room, where the Lord greatly desires to celebrate the Passover
with you who wish one day to preside in his name at the mysteries of
salvation. Looking at you, I again see proof of how Christ continues to
call young disciples and to make them his apostles, thus keeping alive
the mission of the Church and the offer of the Gospel to the world.
As
seminarians you are on the path towards a sacred goal: to continue the
mission which Christ received from the Father. Called by him, you have
followed his voice and, attracted by his loving gaze, you now advance
towards the sacred ministry.
Fix your eyes upon him who through his
incarnation is the supreme revelation of God to the world and who
through his resurrection faithfully fulfills his promise. Give thanks to
him for this sign of favour in which he holds each one of you.
The first reading which we heard shows us Christ as the new and
eternal priest who made of himself a perfect offering. The response to
the psalm may be aptly applied to him since, at his coming into the
world, he said to the Father, “Here I am to do your will” (cf. Ps 39:8).
He tried to please him in all things: in his words and actions, along
the way or welcoming sinners. His life was one of service and his
longing was a constant prayer, placing himself in the name of all before
the Father as the first-born son of many brothers and sisters. The
author of the Letter to the Hebrews states that, by a single offering,
he brought to perfection for all time those of us who are called to
share his sonship (cf. Heb 10:14).
The Eucharist, whose institution is mentioned in the Gospel just
proclaimed (cf. Lk 22:14-20), is the real expression of that
unconditional offering of Jesus for all, even for those who betrayed
him. It was the offering of his body and blood for the life of mankind
and for the forgiveness of sins. His blood, a sign of life, was given to
us by God as a covenant, so that we might apply the force of his life
wherever death reigns due to our sins, and thus destroy it.
Christ’s
body broken and his blood outpoured – the surrender of his freedom –
became through these Eucharistic signs the new source of mankind’s
redeemed freedom. In Christ, we have the promise of definitive
redemption and the certain hope of future blessings.
Through Christ we
know that we are not walking towards the abyss, the silence of
nothingness or death, but are rather pilgrims on the way to a promised
land, on the way to him who is our end and our beginning.
Dear friends, you are preparing yourselves to become apostles with
Christ and like Christ, and to accompany your fellow men and women along
their journey as companions and servants.
How should you behave during these years of preparation? First of
all, they should be years of interior silence, of unceasing prayer, of
constant study and of gradual insertion into the pastoral activity and
structures of the Church. A Church which is community and institution,
family and mission, the creation of Christ through his Holy Spirit, as
well as the result of those of us who shape it through our holiness and
our sins.
God, who does not hesitate to make of the poor and of sinners
his friends and instruments for the redemption of the human race, willed
it so. The holiness of the Church is above all the objective holiness
of the very person of Christ, of his Gospel and his sacraments, the
holiness of that power from on high which enlivens and impels it. We
have to be saints so as not to create a contradiction between the sign
that we are and the reality that we wish to signify.
Meditate well upon this mystery of the Church, living the years of
your formation in deep joy, humbly, clear-mindedly and with radical
fidelity to the Gospel, in an affectionate relation to the time spent
and the people among whom you live. No one chooses the place or the
people to whom he is sent, and every time has its own challenges; but in
every age God gives the right grace to face and overcome those
challenges with love and realism.
That is why, no matter the
circumstances in which he finds and however difficult they may be, the
priest must grow in all kinds of good works, keeping alive within him
the words spoken on his Ordination day, by which he was exhorted to
model his life on the mystery of the Lord’s cross.
To be modeled on Christ, dear seminarians, is to be identified ever
more closely with him who, for our sake, became servant, priest and
victim. To be modeled on him is in fact the task upon which the priest
spends his entire life. We already know that it is beyond us and we will
not fully succeed but, as St Paul says, we run towards the goal, hoping
to reach it (cf. Phil 3:12-14).
That said, Christ the High Priest is also the Good Shepherd who cares
for his sheep, even giving his life for them (cf. Jn 10:11). In order
to liken yourselves to the Lord in this as well, your heart must mature
while in seminary, remaining completely open to the Master. This
openness, which is a gift of the Holy Spirit, inspires the decision to
live in celibacy for the sake of the kingdom of heaven and, leaving
aside the world’s goods, live in austerity of life and sincere
obedience, without pretence.
Ask him to let you imitate him in his perfect charity towards all, so
that you do not shun the excluded and sinners, but help them convert
and return to the right path. Ask him to teach you how to be close to
the sick and the poor in simplicity and generosity. Face this challenge
without anxiety or mediocrity, but rather as a beautiful way of living
our human life in gratuitousness and service, as witnesses of God made
man, messengers of the supreme dignity of the human person and therefore
its unconditional defenders.
Relying on his love, do not be intimidated
by surroundings that would exclude God and in which power, wealth and
pleasure are frequently the main criteria ruling people’s lives. You may
be shunned along with others who propose higher goals or who unmask the
false gods before whom many now bow down. That will be the moment when a
life deeply rooted in Christ will clearly be seen as something new and
it will powerfully attract those who truly search for God, truth and
justice.
Under the guidance of your formators, open your hearts to the light
of the Lord, to see if this path which demands courage and authenticity
is for you. Approach the priesthood only if you are firmly convinced
that God is calling you to be his ministers, and if you are completely
determined to exercise it in obedience to the Church’s precepts.
With this confidence, learn from him who described himself as meek
and humble of heart, leaving behind all earthly desire for his sake so
that, rather than pursuing your own good, you build up your brothers and
sisters by the way you live, as did the patron saint of the diocesan
clergy of Spain, St John of Avila.
Moved by his example, look above all
to the Virgin Mary, Mother of Priests. She will know how to mould your
hearts according to the model of Christ, her divine Son, and she will
teach you how to treasure for ever all that he gained on Calvary for the
salvation of the world.
Amen.