Celebration of First Vespers
of
The Solemnity of The Holy Apostles Peter and Paul
Basilica of St Paul
Outside-the-Walls Thursday, 28 June 2007
Your Eminences,
Venerable Brothers in the Episcopate and in the Priesthood,
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
At this First Vespers of
the Solemnity of Sts Peter and Paul, let us commemorate with
gratitude these two Apostles whose blood with that of so
many other Gospel witnesses made the Church of Rome
fruitful.
On their memorial, I am
glad to greet you all, dear brothers and sisters, starting
with the Cardinal Archpriest and the other Cardinals and
Bishops present, Father Abbot and the Benedictine Community
to which this Basilica is entrusted, the clerics, the women
and men religious and lay faithful gathered here.
I address a special
greeting to the Delegation of the Ecumenical Patriarchate of
Constantinople, which is reciprocating the presence of the
Holy See's Delegation in Istanbul for the Feast of St
Andrew.
As I had an opportunity to
say a few days ago, these meetings and initiatives are not
merely an exchange of courtesies between Churches but are
intended to express the common commitment to do everything
possible to hasten the time of full communion between the
Christian East and West.
I address with these
sentiments Metropolitan Emmanuel and Metropolitan Gennadios,
sent by my beloved Brother Bartholomew I, to whom I express
a grateful and cordial thought.
This Basilica, which has
hosted profoundly significant ecumenical events, reminds us
how important it is to pray together to implore the gift of
unity, that unity for which St Peter and St Paul spent their
lives, to the point of making the supreme sacrifice of their
blood.
A very ancient tradition
which dates back to apostolic times claims that their last
meeting before their martyrdom actually took place not far
from here: the two are supposed to have embraced and blessed
each other. And on the main portal of this Basilica they are
depicted together, with scenes of both martyrdoms.
Thus, from the outset,
Christian tradition has considered Peter and Paul to have
been inseparable, even if each had a different mission to
accomplish.
Peter professed his faith
in Christ first; Paul obtained as a gift the ability to
deepen its riches. Peter founded the first community of
Christians who came from the Chosen People; Paul became the
Apostle to the Gentiles. With different charisms they worked
for one and the same cause: the building of Christ's Church.
In the Office of Readings,
the liturgy offers us for meditation this well-known text of
St Augustine: "One day is assigned for the celebration of
the martyrdom of the two Apostles. But those two were one.
Although their martyrdom occurred on different days, they
were one. Peter went first, Paul followed. We celebrate this
feast day which is made sacred for us by the blood of these
Apostles" (Sermon 295, 7, 8).
And St Leo the Great
comments: "About their merits and virtues, which surpass all
power of speech, we must not make distinctions, because they
were equal in their election, alike in their toils,
undivided in their death" (In natali apostol., 69, 7).
In Rome, since the earliest
centuries, the bond that unites Peter and Paul in their
mission has acquired a very specific significance. Like
Romulus and Remus, the two mythical brothers who are said to
have given birth to the City, so Peter and Paul were held to
be the founders of the Church of Rome.
Speaking to the City on
this topic, St Leo the Great said: "These are your holy
Fathers and true shepherds, who gave you claims to be
numbered among the heavenly kingdoms, and built you under
much better and happier auspices than they, by whose zeal
the first foundations of your walls were laid" (Sermon 82,
7).
However humanly different
they may have been from each other and despite the tensions
that existed in their relationship, Peter and Paul appear as
the founders of a new City, the expression of a new and
authentic way of being brothers which was made possible by
the Gospel of Jesus Christ.
For this reason, it can be
said that the Church of Rome is celebrating her birthday
today, since it was these two Apostles who laid her
foundations.
Furthermore, Rome in our
day perceives with greater awareness both her mission and
her greatness. St John Chrysostom wrote: "Not so bright is
the heaven, when the sun sends forth his rays, as is the
City of Rome, sending out these two lights (Peter and Paul)
into all parts of the world... Therefore, I admire the
City... for these pillars of the Church" (Homily on St
Paul's Epistle to the Romans, 32, 24).
We will commemorate St
Peter specifically tomorrow, celebrating the Divine
Sacrifice in the Vatican Basilica, built on the site of his
martyrdom. This evening we turn our gaze to St Paul, whose
relics are preserved with deep veneration in this Basilica.
At the beginning of the
Letter to the Romans, as we have just heard, St Paul greeted
the community of Rome, introducing himself as "a servant of
Jesus Christ, called to be an apostle" 1). He uses the term
"servant", in Greek, doulos, to indicate a relationship of
total and unconditional belonging to the Lord Jesus;
moreover, it is a translation of the Hebrew, 'ebed, thus
alluding to the great servants whom God chose and called for
an important and specific mission.
Paul knew he was "called to
be an apostle", that is, that he had not presented himself
as a candidate, nor was his a human appointment, but solely
by a divine call and election.
The Apostle to the Gentiles
repeats several times in his Letters that his whole life is
a fruit of God's freely given and merciful grace (cf. I Cor
15: 9-10; II Cor 4: 1; Gal 1: 15). He was chosen to proclaim
"the Gospel of God" (Rom 1: 1), to disseminate the
announcement of divine Grace which in Christ reconciles man
with God, himself and others.
From his Letters, we know
that Paul was far from being a good speaker; on the
contrary, he shared with Moses and Jeremiah a lack of
oratory skill. "His bodily presence is weak, and his speech
of no account" (II Cor 10: 10), his adversaries said of him.
The extraordinary apostolic
results that he was able to achieve cannot, therefore, be
attributed to brilliant rhetoric or refined apologetic and
missionary strategies.
The success of his
apostolate depended above all on his personal involvement in
proclaiming the Gospel with total dedication to Christ; a
dedication that feared neither risk, difficulty nor
persecution.
"Neither death, nor life",
he wrote to the Romans, "nor angels, nor principalities, nor
things present, nor things to come, nor powers, nor height,
nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able
to separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our
Lord" (8: 38-39).
From this we can draw a
particularly important lesson for every Christian. The
Church's action is credible and effective only to the extent
to which those who belong to her are prepared to pay in
person for their fidelity to Christ in every circumstance.
When this readiness is lacking, the crucial argument of
truth on which the Church herself depends is also absent.
Dear brothers and
sisters,
As in early times, today
too Christ needs apostles ready to sacrifice themselves. He
needs witnesses and martyrs like St Paul. Paul, a former
violent persecutor of Christians, when he fell to the ground
dazzled by the divine light on the road to Damascus, did not
hesitate to change sides to the Crucified One and followed
him without second thoughts. He lived and worked for Christ,
for him he suffered and died. How timely his example is
today!
And for this very
reason I am pleased to announce officially that we shall be
dedicating a special Jubilee Year to the Apostle Paul from
28 June 2008 to 29 June 2009, on the occasion of the
bimillennium of his birth, which historians have placed
between the years 7 and 10 A.D.
It will be possible to
celebrate this "Pauline Year" in a privileged way in Rome
where the sarcophagus which, by the unanimous opinion of
experts and an undisputed tradition, preserves the remains
of the Apostle Paul, has been preserved beneath the Papal
Altar of this Basilica for 20 centuries.
It will thus be possible to
have a series of liturgical, cultural and ecumenical events
taking place at the Papal Basilica and at the adjacent
Benedictine Abbey, as well as various pastoral and social
initiatives, all inspired by Pauline spirituality.
In addition, special
attention will be given to penitential pilgrimages that will
be organized to the Apostle's tomb to find in it spiritual
benefit. Study conventions and special publications on
Pauline texts will also be promoted in order to make ever
more widely known the immense wealth of the teaching they
contain, a true patrimony of humanity redeemed by Christ.
Furthermore, in every part
of the world, similar initiatives will be implemented in the
dioceses, shrines and places of worship, by Religious and by
the educational institutions and social-assistance centres
which are named after St Paul or inspired by him and his
teaching.
Lastly, there is one
particular aspect to which special attention must be paid
during the celebration of the various moments of the 2,000th
Pauline anniversary: I am referring to the ecumenical
dimension. The Apostle to the Gentiles, who was especially
committed to taking the Good News to all peoples, left no
stones unturned for unity and harmony among all Christians.
May he deign to guide and
protect us in this bimillenial celebration, helping us to
progress in the humble and sincere search for the full unity
of all the members of Christ's Mystical Body.
Amen.