Pope Benedict's Homily on the Feast of Ss. Peter and Paul
VATICAN CITY, JUNE 29, 2008 A translation of Benedict XVI's
homily for the Mass celebrated in St. Peter's Square on the
feast of Sts. Peter and Paul.
"Going to Rome Is for Paul the Expression of His
Mission"
Your Holiness and fraternal Delegates,
Lord Cardinals,
Venerable brothers in the episcopate and priesthood,
Dear brothers and sisters
From the earliest times, the Church of Rome has celebrated
the solemnity of the great apostles Peter and Paul as a
single feast on the same day, June 29. Through their
martyrdom, they became brothers; together, they are the
founders of the new Christian Rome. They are sung of as such
in the hymn of the second vespers, which goes back to
Paulinus of Aquileia (+806): "O Roma felix -- Oh happy Rome,
adorned with the crimson of the precious blood of such great
princes, you surpass every beauty of the world, not by your
own merit, but trough the merit of the saints whom you have
killed with bloody sword". The blood of martyrs does not
call for revenge -- but reconciles. It does not present
itself as an accusation but as a "golden light," according
to the words of the hymn of the first vespers. It presents
itself as the power of love which overcomes hate and
violence, founding, in this way, a new city, a new
community.
By their martyrdom, they -- Peter and Paul -- are now part
of Rome. Through martyrdom, even Peter became a Roman
citizen forever. Through their martyrdom, through their
faith and their love, the two apostles show us where true
hope lies, and are the founders of a new kind of city, which
must again and again form itself in the midst of the old
city of man, which continues to be threatened by the
opposing forces of the sin and egotism of men.
By virtue of their martyrdom, Peter and Paul are in
reciprocal relationship forever. A favorite image of
Christian iconography is the embrace of the two apostles on
the way to martyrdom. We can say that their martyrdom
itself, in its deepest reality, is the realization of a
fraternal embrace. They die for the one Christ and, in the
witness for which they give their lives, they are one. In
the writings of the New Testament, we can, so to speak,
follow the development of their embrace, this unity in
witness and in mission.
Everything starts when Paul, three years after his
conversion, goes to Jerusalem "to consult Cephas" (Galatians
1:18). Fourteen years later, he again goes up to Jerusalem
to explain "to the most esteemed persons" the Gospel that he
preaches in order so that he might not run the risk of
"running, or having run, in vain" (Galatians 2:1f). At the
end of this meeting, James, Cephas and John give him their
right hands, thus confirming the communion that unites them
in the one Gospel of Jesus Christ (Gal 2:9). A beautiful
sign of this growing interior embrace, which develops
despite the difference in temperaments and in tasks, I find
in the fact that the co-workers mentioned at the end of the
First Letter of St. Peter -- Silvanus and Mark -- were
equally close co-workers of St. Paul. This having of the
same co-workers makes the communion of the one Church, the
embrace of the great apostles, visible in a very concrete
way.
Peter and Paul met each other at least twice in Jerusalem;
at the end their paths take them to Rome. Why? Was this
perhaps more than just pure chance? Is there perhaps a
lasting message in it? Paul arrived in Rome as a prisoner,
but at the same time as a Roman citizen who, after his
arrest in Jerusalem, as a Roman citizen appealed to the
emperor, to whose tribunal he was brought. But in a more
profound sense, Paul came to Rome voluntarily. Through the
most important of his letters, he had already drawn close to
this city interiorly: to the Church in Rome, he had
addressed the writing which, more than any other, is the
synthesis of his whole proclamation and his faith. In the
opening salutation of the letter, he says that the whole
world speaks of the faith of the Christians of Rome and that
this faith, therefore, was known everywhere as exemplary
(Romans 1:8). And then he writes: "I do not want you to be
unaware, brothers, that I often planned to come to you,
though I was prevented until now" (1:13). At the end of the
letter he comes back to this theme, now speaking of a plan
to travel to Spain. "When I go to Spain I hope to see you
when I pass through and to be helped by you on my way to
that region, after having enjoyed your presence for a little
while" (15:24). "And I know that, having come to you, I
shall come in the fullness of Christ's blessing" (15:29).
There are two things made evident here: Rome is for Paul a
stage on the way to Spain, that is -- according to his
conception of the world -- towards the extreme end of the
earth. He considers his mission to be the fulfillment of the
task received from Christ, the bringing of the Gospel to the
very ends of the world. Rome is along this route. While Paul
usually only goes to places where the Gospel had not yet
been announced, Rome is an exception. There he finds a
Church whose faith the world speaks about. Going to Rome is
part of the universality of his mission as one sent to all
peoples. The way to Rome, which, already before his external
trip, he had traveled interiorly with his letter, is an
integral part of his task of bringing the Gospel to all
peoples -- of founding the Church, catholic and universal.
Going to Rome is for him the expression of his mission's
catholicity. Rome must make the faith visible to the whole
world, it must be the meeting place in the one faith.
But why did Peter go to Rome? About this the New Testament
does not say anything directly. But it gives us some
indication. The Gospel of St. Mark, which we may consider a
reflection of the preaching of St. Peter, is intimately
oriented towards the moment when the Roman centurion, facing
the death of Christ on the cross, says, "Truly this man was
the Son of God!" (15:39). At the cross the mystery of Jesus
Christ is revealed. Beneath the Cross the Church of the
gentiles is born: the centurion of the Roman execution squad
recognizes the Son of God in Christ. The Acts of the
Apostles describe the episode of Cornelius, the centurion of
the Italic cohort, as a decisive stage for the entrance of
the Gospel into the pagan world. Following a command of God,
he sends someone to get Peter, and Peter, also following a
divine order, goes to the centurion's house and preaches.
While he is speaking, the Holy Spirit descends on the
gathered domestic community and Peter says: "Can anyone
withhold the water for baptizing these people, who have
received the holy Spirit even as we have?" (Acts 10:47).
Thus, in the Council of the Apostles, Peter becomes the
intercessor for the Church of the pagans who do not need the
Law because God "has purified their hearts with faith" (Acts
15:9). Certainly, in the Letter to the Galatians, Paul says
that God gave strength to Peter for the apostolic ministry
among the circumcised, and to Paul himself, the ministry
among the pagans instead (Gal 2:8). But this assignment
could be in force only as long as Peter remained with the 12
in Jerusalem in the hope that all of Israel would adhere to
Christ. In the face of later developments, the 12 recognized
the time in which they too must go forth into the world to
announce the Gospel to it. Peter who, following divine
order, had been the first to open the door to pagans, now
leaves the leadership of the Christian-Jewish Church to
James the Less, in order to dedicate himself to his true
mission: to the ministry of the unity of the one Church of
God made up of Jews as well as pagans. The desire of Paul to
go to Rome highlights above all, as we have seen, the word "catholica"
["catholic"] among the characteristics of the Church.
St. Peter's journey to Rome, as representative of the
peoples of the world, is above all associated with the word
"una" ["one"]: he has the task of creating the "unity" of
the "catholica," of the Church made up of Jews and pagans,
the Church of all peoples. And this is the permanent mission
of Peter: to make sure that the Church never identifies
herself with any one nation, any one culture or any one
state. That it may always be the Church of all. That it may
unite mankind beyond every frontier and, amidst the
divisions of this world, make God's peace present, the
reconciling power of his love. Due to technology that is now
the same everywhere, due to the global information network,
and due also to the linking of common interests, there are
new modes of unity in the world, which have caused the
explosion of new oppositions and given new impetus to old
ones. In the midst of this external unity, based on material
things, we have all the more need of interior unity which
comes from the peace of God - the unity of all those who,
through Jesus Christ, have become brothers and sisters. This
is the permanent mission of Peter, as well as the special
task entrusted to the Church of Rome.
Dear confreres in the Episcopate! I wish now to address
those of you who have come to Rome to receive the pallium as
the symbol of your rank and your responsibility as
archbishops in the Church of Jesus Christ. The pallium is
woven from the wool of the sheep that the Bishop of Rome
blesses every year on the Feast of Peter's Chair, thus
setting them apart, so to speak, to be a symbol for the
flock of Christ, over which you preside.
When we put the pallium on our shoulders, this gesture
reminds us of the Shepherd who puts the lost sheep upon his
shoulders -- the lost sheep who by himself can no longer
find the way home -- and takes him back to the sheepfold.
The Fathers of the Church saw in this sheep the image of all
mankind, of human nature in its entirety, which is lost its
and can no longer find the way home. The Shepherd who takes
the sheep home can only be the Logos, the eternal Word of
God himself. In the Incarnation, he placed us all -- the
sheep who is man -- on his shoulders. He, the eternal Word,
the true Shepherd of mankind, carries us; in his humanity he
carries each of us on his shoulders. On the way of the
Cross, he carried us home, he takes us home. But he also
wants men who can "carry" together with him. Being a
shepherd in the Church of Christ means taking part in this
task, which the pallium commemorates. When we put it on, he
asks us: "Will you also carry, together with me, those who
belong to me? Will you bring them to me, to Jesus Christ?"
What comes to mind next is the order Peter received from the
Risen Christ, who links the command, "Feed my sheep"
inseparably with the question, "Do you love me? Do you love
me more than others do?" Every time we put on the pallium of
the shepherd of Christ's flock, we should hear this
question, "Do you love me?" and we must ask ourselves about
that "more" of love that he expects from the shepherd.
Thus the pallium becomes a symbol of our love for the
Shepherd Christ and our loving together with him -- it
becomes the symbol of the calling to love men as he does,
together with him: those who are searching, those who have
questions, those who are self-assured and the humble, the
simple and the great; it becomes the symbol of the calling
to love all of them with the strength of Christ and in view
of Christ, so that they may find him, and in him, find
themselves. But the pallium which you will receive "from"
the tomb of Peter has yet another meaning, inseparably
connected with the first. To understand this, a word from
the First Letter of St. Peter may help us. In his
exhortation to priests to feed the flock in the correct way,
St. Peter calls himself a "synpresbýteros" -- co-priest
(5:1). This formula implicitly contains the affirmation of
the principle of apostolic succession: the shepherds who
follow are shepherds like him; together with him, they
belong to the common ministry of the shepherds of the Church
of Jesus Christ, a ministry that continues in them. But this
"co-" (in co-priest) has still two other meanings. It also
expresses the reality that we indicate today by what is said
today about the "collegiality" of bishops. We are all
"co-priests." No one is a shepherd by himself. We are in the
succession of the apostles thanks only to being in the
communion of the college in which the college of apostles
finds its continuation. The communion -- the "we" -- of the
shepherds is part of being shepherds, because there is only
one flock, the one Church of Jesus Christ. Finally, this
"co-" also refers to communion with Peter and his successor
as a guarantee of unity. Thus, the pallium speaks to us of
the catholicity of the Church, of the universal communion of
shepherd and flock. And it refers us to apostolicity: to
communion with the faith of the apostles on which the Church
is founded. It speaks to us of the "ecclesia" that is "una,"
"catholica," "apostolic," and naturally, binding us to
Christ, it speaks to us of the fact that the Church is
"sancta" us that the Church is holy, and that our work is a
service of this holiness.
This brings me back, finally, to St. Paul and his mission.
He expressed the essence of his mission, as well as the most
profound reason for his desire to go to Rome, in Chapter 15
of the Letter to the Romans, in an extraordinarily beautiful
passage. He knows he has been called "to be a 'leitourgos'
of Christ Jesus for the Gentiles, serving the Gospel of God
as a priest, so that the pagans become an acceptable
offering, sanctified by the holy Spirit" (15:16). Only in
this passage does Paul use the word "hierourgein" -- serving
as a priest -- together with "leitourgos" -- liturgist: he
speaks of the cosmic liturgy, in which the world of men
itself must become worship of God, an offering in the Holy
Spirit. When the whole world will have become the liturgy of
God, when in its reality it will have become adoration, then
it will have reached its goal, then it will be whole and
saved. And this is the ultimate objective of St. Paul's
apostolic mission and of ours. It is to such a mystery that
the Lord calls us. Let us pray in this hour that he may help
us carry it out in the right way, to become true liturgists
of Jesus Christ. Amen.
[Translation by Joseph G. Trabbic]