Dear Young Friends,
We
have come here today to accompany Jesus on his journey of sorrow and
love, the Way of the Cross, which is one of the most intense moments of
World Youth Day.
At the end of the Holy Year of Redemption, Blessed John
Paul II chose to entrust the Cross to you, young people, asking you “to
carry it throughout the world as a symbol of Christ’s love for
humanity, and announce to everyone that only in the death and
resurrection of Christ can we find salvation and redemption” (Address to
Young People, 22 April 1984).
Since then, the World Youth Day Cross has
travelled to every continent and through a variety of human situations.
It is, as it were, almost “steeped” in the life experiences of the
countless young people who have seen it and carried it. No one can
approach and touch the Cross of Jesus without leaving something of
himself or herself there, and without bringing something of the Cross of
Jesus into his or her own life.
I have three questions that I hope will
echo in your hearts this evening as you walk beside Jesus: What have
you left on the Cross, dear young people of Brazil, during these two
years that it has been crisscrossing your great country? What has the
Cross of Jesus left for you, in each one of you? Finally, what does this
Cross teach us?
1.
According to an ancient Roman tradition, while fleeing the city during
the persecutions of Nero, Saint Peter saw Jesus who was travelling in
the opposite direction, that is, toward the city, and asked him in
amazement: “Lord, where are you going?” Jesus’ response was: “I am going
to Rome to be crucified again.”
At that moment, Peter understood that
he had to follow the Lord with courage, to the very end. But he also
realized that he would never be alone on the journey; Jesus, who had
loved him even unto death on the Cross, would always be with him. Jesus,
with his Cross, walks with us and takes upon himself our fears, our
problems, and our sufferings, even those which are deepest and most
painful.
With the Cross, Jesus unites himself to the silence of the
victims of violence, those who can no longer cry out, especially the
innocent and the defenceless; with the Cross, he is united to families
in trouble, those who mourn the loss of their children, or who suffer
when they see them fall victim to false paradises, such as that offered
by drugs.
On the Cross, Jesus is united with every person who suffers
from hunger in a world where tons of food are thrown out each day; on
the Cross, Jesus is united with those who are persecuted for their
religion, for their beliefs or simply for the colour of their skin; on
the Cross, Jesus is united with so many young people who have lost faith
in political institutions, because they see in them only selfishness
and corruption; he unites himself with those young people who have lost
faith in the Church, or even in God because of the counter-witness of
Christians and ministers of the Gospel.
The Cross of Christ bears the
suffering and the sin of mankind, including our own. Jesus accepts all
this with open arms, bearing on his shoulders our crosses and saying to
us: “Have courage! You do not carry your cross alone! I carry it with
you. I have overcome death and I have come to give you hope, to give you
life” (cf. Jn 3:16).
2.
And so we can answer the second question: What has the Cross given to
those who have gazed upon it or touched it? What has it left in each one
of us? It gives us a treasure that no one else can give: the certainty
of the unshakable love which God has for us. A love so great that it
enters into our sin and forgives it, enters into our suffering and gives
us the strength to bear it. It is a love which enters into death to
conquer it and to save us. The Cross of Christ contains all the love of
God, his immeasurable mercy.
This
is a love in which we can place all our trust, in which we can believe.
Dear young people, let us entrust ourselves to Jesus, let us give
ourselves over entirely to him (cf. Lumen Fidei, 16)! Only in Christ
crucified and risen can we find salvation and redemption. With him,
evil, suffering, and death do not have the last word, because he gives
us hope and life: he has transformed the Cross from an instrument of
hate, defeat and death into a sign of love, victory and life.
The
first name given to Brazil was “The Land of the Holy Cross”. The Cross
of Christ was planted five centuries ago not only on the shores of this
country, but also in the history, the hearts and the lives of the people
of Brazil and elsewhere. The suffering Christ is keenly felt here, as
one of us who shares our journey even to the end. There is no cross, big
or small, in our life which the Lord does not share with us.
3.
But the Cross of Christ invites us also to allow ourselves to be smitten
by his love, teaching us always to always look upon others with mercy
and tenderness, especially those who suffer, who are in need of help,
who need a word or a concrete action which requires us to step outside
ourselves to meet them and to extend a hand to them.
How many people
were with Jesus on the way to Calvary: Pilate, Simon of Cyrene, Mary,
the women.... Sometimes
we can be like Pilate, who did not have the courage to go against the
tide to save Jesus’ life, and instead washed his hands. Dear friends,
the Cross of Christ teaches us to be like Simon of Cyrene, who helped
Jesus to carry that heavy wood; it teaches us to be like Mary and the
other women, who were not afraid to accompany Jesus all the way to the
end, with love and tenderness.
And you? Who are you like? Like Pilate?
Like Simon? Like Mary?
Dear
friends, let us bring to Christ’s Cross our joys, our sufferings and
our failures. There we will find a Heart that is open to us and
understands us, forgives us, loves us and calls us to bear this love in
our lives, to love each person, each brother and sister, with the same
love. Amen!