Pope Benedict's Homily at Pauline Year Inauguration
ROME, JUNE 28, 2008 - The inaugural ceremony of the Pauline
Jubilee Year at the Basilica of St. Paul's Outside the
Walls.
"Paul Wants to Speak With Us Today"
Holiness and Fraternal Delegates,
Lord Cardinals,
Venerable Brothers in the Episcopate and the Priesthood,
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
We are gathered before the tomb of St. Paul, who was born
2,000 years ago in Tarsus of Cilicia, in present-day Turkey.
Who was this Paul? In the temple of Jerusalem, before an
agitated crowd that wanted to kill him, he introduced
himself with these words: "I am a Jew, born in Tarsus of
Cilicia, but educated in this city, instructed at the feet
of Gamaliel in the exact observance of the Law of our
fathers; I was full of zeal for God." At the end of his
journey he would say of himself: "I have been made a herald
and apostle, teacher of the Gentiles in the faith and in the
truth."
Teacher of the Gentiles, apostle and herald of Jesus Christ,
thus he characterized himself in a retrospective look over
his life. However, he did not look only to the past.
"Teacher of the Gentiles" -- this word opens to the future,
which we recall with veneration. He is, also for us, our
teacher, apostle and herald of Jesus Christ.
Therefore, we have come together not to reflect on a past
history, irrevocably surpassed. Paul wants to speak with us
today. That is why I wanted to convoke this special "Pauline
year": to listen to him and to drink from him, as our
teacher, in the faith and truth, in which are rooted the
reasons for unity among the disciples of Christ. In this
perspective, I wished to light -- for this bimillenary of
the apostle's birth -- a special "Pauline Flame," which will
remain lit during the whole year, in a special niche placed
in the portico of the basilica. To solemnize this event, I
have also opened the so-named Pauline Door, through which I
entered the basilica accompanied by the patriarch of
Constantinople, the cardinal archpriest and other religious
authorities.
For me it is a motive of profound joy that the opening of
the Pauline year assumes a special ecumenical character,
given the presence of numerous delegates and representatives
of other Churches and ecclesial communities, which I welcome
with an open heart. I greet first of all His Holiness
Patriarch Bartholomew I and the members of the delegation
accompanying him, as well as the large group of laymen from
several parts of the world who have come to Rome to
participate in these moments of prayer and reflection with
him and all of us. I greet the fraternal delegates of the
Churches that have a special bond with the Apostle Paul --
Jerusalem, Antioch, Cyprus and Greece -- that form part of
the geographic environment of the apostle's life before his
arrival in Rome. I cordially greet the brothers of the
different Churches and ecclesial communities of the East and
West, together with all of you I have wished to take part in
this solemn opening of the year dedicated to the Apostles of
the Gentiles.
We are gathered, therefore, to questions ourselves about the
great apostle of the Gentiles. Not only do we ask ourselves,
"Who was Paul?" Above all, we ask ourselves "Who is Paul?"
"What is he saying to me?" At this hour of the beginning of
the Pauline year that we are inaugurating, I would like to
choose three texts from the rich testimony of the New
Testament, in which [Paul's] inner physiognomy appears, that
which is specific about his character.
In the Letter to the Galatians, he has given us a very
personal profession of faith, in which he opens his heart to
the readers of all times and reveals what is the most
profound source of his life: "I live in the faith of the Son
of God who loved me and gave himself up for me." All that
Paul does starts from this center. His faith is the
experience of being loved by Jesus Christ in a totally
personal way; it is awareness of the fact that Christ faced
death not for something anonymous, but for love of him, of
Paul, and that, risen, Christ still loves him, has given
himself for him. His faith is having been captured by the
love of Jesus Christ, a love that affects him in his
innermost being and transforms him. His faith is not a
theory, an option about God or the world. His faith is the
impact of the love of God on his heart. So, this faith
itself is love of Jesus Christ.
For many, Paul appears as a combative man who knows how to
use the sword of the word. Indeed, in his path as apostle,
there was no lack of disputes. He did not seek a superficial
harmony. In his first letter dedicated to the Thessalonians,
he himself says: "We had the courage in our God to declare
to you the Gospel of God in face of great opposition. … For
we never used either words of flattery, as you know, or a
cloak for greed." The truth was too great for him to be
ready to sacrifice it in view of an external success. The
truth he had experienced in his encounter with the Risen One
merited for him struggle, persecution, and suffering.
However, what motivated him in the depth of his being was
being loved by Jesus Christ and the desire to transmit this
love to others. Paul was someone able to love, and all his
work and suffering is explained from this center.
The concepts underlying his proclamation can only be
understood on the basis of this. Let us take only one of his
key words: freedom. The experience of being loved to the end
by Christ opened his eyes about truth and the path of human
existence; that experience embraced everything. Paul was
free as a man loved by God that, in virtue of God, was able
to love together with him. This love is now the "law" of his
life and, precisely thus, was the freedom of his life. He
speaks and acts, moved by the responsibility of love; he is
free, and given that he is one who loves, he lives totally
in the responsibility of this love and does not take freedom
as a pretext for pleasure and egoism. He who loves Christ as
Paul loved him, can truly do what he wills, because his love
is united to the will of Christ and, therefore, to the will
of God, because his will is anchored in truth and because
his will is no longer simply his will, arbiter of his
autonomous I, but is integrated in the freedom of God and
from it receives the path to follow.
In the search for St. Paul's inner physiognomy, I would
like, in the second place, to recall the word that the Risen
Christ spoke to him on the road to Damascus. Earlier the
Lord asked him: "Saul, Saul, why do you persecute me?" He
answered: "Who are you, Lord?" And he received the reply: "I
am Jesus, whom you are persecuting." By persecuting the
Church, Paul was persecuting Jesus himself. "You are
persecuting me."
Jesus identifies himself with the Church in a single
subject. In this exclamation of the Risen One -- which
transformed Saul's life -- is contained the whole doctrine
of the Church as Body of Christ. Christ did not return to
Heaven, leaving a handful of followers to carry his cause
forward. The Church is not an association that wishes to
promote a certain cause. It is not about a cause. It is
about the person of Jesus Christ, who also as Risen remained
"flesh." He has flesh and bones," affirms the Risen One in
Luke, in face of the disciples who thought he was a ghost.
He has a body. He is personally present in the Church. "Head
and Body" form a single subject, said Augustine. "'Know you
not that your bodies are members of Christ?' wrote Paul to
the Corinthians, and he adds: 'That, according to the Book
of Genesis, man and woman become one flesh?'"
So Christ becomes one spirit with his own, one subject in
the new world of the resurrection. In all this, the
Eucharistic mystery is visualized, in which Christ
constantly gives his Body and makes of us one Body: "Is not
the bread we break communion with the body of Christ?
Because, though being many, we are only one bread and one
body, as we all share in one bread."
He addresses us with these words, at this moment, not just
Paul but the Lord himself: "How were you able to lacerate my
Body?" Before the face of Christ, this question becomes at
the same time an urgent appeal: Bring us together again from
all our divisions. Make this again a reality today: There is
only one bread; therefore, we, despite being many, are only
one body.
For Paul the word Church as Body of Christ is not just any
analogy. It goes far beyond a comparison. "Why do you
persecute me?"
Christ attracts us continually to his Body, he builds his
Body from the Eucharistic center, which for Paul is the
center of Christian existence, in virtue of which all, as
well as each individual can experience in a totally personal
way: "He has loved me and given himself up for me."
I would like to conclude with a later word of St. Paul, an
exhortation to Timothy from prison, in face of death.
"Endure with me sufferings for the Gospel," said the apostle
to his disciple. This sentence, which is at the end of the
roads traveled by the apostle as a testament, leads us back
to the beginning of his mission. While, after his encounter
with the Risen One, the blind Paul was in his room in
Damascus, Ananias received the order to go where the feared
persecutor was and lay his hands on him, so that he would
recover his sight.
To Ananias' objection that this Saul was a dangerous
persecutor of Christians, this answer was given: "This man
must take my name to the Gentiles, to kings and to the
children of Israel. I will show him all he will have to
suffer for my name."
The task of proclamation and the call to suffering for
Christ are inseparably together. The call to be teacher of
the Gentiles is at the same time and intrinsically a call to
suffering in communion with Christ, who has redeemed us
through his passion. In a world in which lying is powerful,
truth is paid for with suffering. He who wishes to avoid
suffering, to keep it far from himself, will have pushed
away life itself and its grandeur; he cannot be a servant of
truth and thus a servant of faith. There is no love without
suffering, without the suffering of denying ourselves, of
the transformation and purification of the "I" for true
freedom.
Wherever there is nothing worth suffering for, life itself
also loses its value. The Eucharist -- center of our
Christian being -- is based on the sacrifice of Jesus for
us; it was born from the suffering of the love that found
its culmination on the cross. We live from this love that
gives itself. This gives us the courage and strength to
suffer with Christ and for him, thus knowing that precisely
in this way our life becomes great, mature and true.
In the light of all of St. Paul's letters we see how on his
journey as teacher of the Gentiles, the prophecy of Ananias
was fulfilled at the hour of the calling: "I will show him
all that he will have to suffer for my name." His suffering
makes him credible as teacher of truth, which does not seek
its own benefit, its own glory or personal pleasure, but is
committed to him who loved us and gave himself up for all of
us.
At this hour in which we thank the Lord for having called
Paul, making him the light of the Gentiles and teacher of us
all, we pray: Give us also today the testimony of the
Resurrection, touched by your love, and [make us] able to
carry the light of the Gospel in our time. St. Paul, pray
for us. Amen.
[Translation by ZENIT]