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MASS FOR THE
INAUGURATION
OF THE PONTIFICATE OF
POPE BENEDICT XVI
HOMILY OF HIS HOLINESS BENEDICT XVI
St Peter's
Square
Sunday, 24 April 2005
Your Eminences,
My dear Brother Bishops and Priests,
Distinguished Authorities and Members of the Diplomatic
Corps,
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
During these days of great
intensity, we have chanted the litany of the saints on
three different occasions: at the funeral of our Holy
Father John Paul II; as the Cardinals entered the
Conclave; and again today, when we sang it with the
response: Tu illum adiuva – sustain the new
Successor of Saint Peter. On each occasion, in a
particular way, I found great consolation in listening
to this prayerful chant. How alone we all felt after the
passing of John Paul II – the Pope who for over
twenty-six years had been our shepherd and guide on our
journey through life! He crossed the threshold of the
next life, entering into the mystery of God. But he did
not take this step alone. Those who believe are never
alone – neither in life nor in death. At that moment, we
could call upon the Saints from every age – his friends,
his brothers and sisters in the faith – knowing that
they would form a living procession to accompany him
into the next world, into the glory of God. We knew that
his arrival was awaited. Now we know that he is among
his own and is truly at home. We were also consoled as
we made our solemn entrance into Conclave, to elect the
one whom the Lord had chosen. How would we be able to
discern his name? How could 115 Bishops, from every
culture and every country, discover the one on whom the
Lord wished to confer the mission of binding and
loosing? Once again, we knew that we were not alone, we
knew that we were surrounded, led and guided by the
friends of God. And now, at this moment, weak servant of
God that I am, I must assume this enormous task, which
truly exceeds all human capacity. How can I do this? How
will I be able to do it? All of you, my dear friends,
have just invoked the entire host of Saints, represented
by some of the great names in the history of God’s
dealings with mankind. In this way, I too can say with
renewed conviction: I am not alone. I do not have to
carry alone what in truth I could never carry alone. All
the Saints of God are there to protect me, to sustain me
and to carry me. And your prayers, my dear friends, your
indulgence, your love, your faith and your hope
accompany me. Indeed, the communion of Saints consists
not only of the great men and women who went before us
and whose names we know. All of us belong to the
communion of Saints, we who have been baptized in the
name of the Father, and of the Son and of the Holy
Spirit, we who draw life from the gift of Christ’s Body
and Blood, through which he transforms us and makes us
like himself. Yes, the Church is alive – this is the
wonderful experience of these days. During those sad
days of the Pope’s illness and death, it became
wonderfully evident to us that the Church is alive. And
the Church is young. She holds within herself the future
of the world and therefore shows each of us the way
towards the future. The Church is alive and we are
seeing it: we are experiencing the joy that the Risen
Lord promised his followers. The Church is alive – she
is alive because Christ is alive, because he is truly
risen. In the suffering that we saw on the Holy Father’s
face in those days of Easter, we contemplated the
mystery of Christ’s Passion and we touched his
wounds. But throughout these days we have also been
able, in a profound sense, to touch the Risen One. We
have been able to experience the joy that he promised,
after a brief period of darkness, as the fruit of his
resurrection.
The Church is alive – with
these words, I greet with great joy and gratitude all of
you gathered here, my venerable brother Cardinals and
Bishops, my dear priests, deacons, Church workers,
catechists. I greet you, men and women Religious,
witnesses of the transfiguring presence of God. I greet
you, members of the lay faithful, immersed in the great
task of building up the Kingdom of God which spreads
throughout the world, in every area of life. With great
affection I also greet all those who have been reborn in
the sacrament of Baptism but are not yet in full
communion with us; and you, my brothers and sisters of
the Jewish people, to whom we are joined by a great
shared spiritual heritage, one rooted in God’s
irrevocable promises. Finally, like a wave gathering
force, my thoughts go out to all men and women of today,
to believers and non-believers alike.
Dear friends! At this moment
there is no need for me to present a programme of
governance. I was able to give an indication of what I
see as my task in my Message of Wednesday 20 April, and
there will be other opportunities to do so. My real
programme of governance is not to do my own will, not to
pursue my own ideas, but to listen, together with the
whole Church, to the word and the will of the Lord, to
be guided by Him, so that He himself will lead the
Church at this hour of our history. Instead of putting
forward a programme, I should simply like to comment on
the two liturgical symbols which represent the
inauguration of the Petrine Ministry; both these
symbols, moreover, reflect clearly what we heard
proclaimed in today’s readings.
The first symbol is the
Pallium, woven in pure wool, which will be placed on my
shoulders. This ancient sign, which the Bishops of Rome
have worn since the fourth century, may be considered an
image of the yoke of Christ, which the Bishop of this
City, the Servant of the Servants of God, takes upon his
shoulders. God’s yoke is God’s will, which we
accept. And this will does not weigh down on us,
oppressing us and taking away our freedom. To know what
God wants, to know where the path of life is found –
this was Israel’s joy, this was her great privilege. It
is also our joy: God’s will does not alienate us, it
purifies us – even if this can be painful – and so it
leads us to ourselves. In this way, we serve not only
him, but the salvation of the whole world, of all
history. The symbolism of the Pallium is even more
concrete: the lamb’s wool is meant to represent the
lost, sick or weak sheep which the shepherd places on
his shoulders and carries to the waters of life. For the
Fathers of the Church, the parable of the lost sheep,
which the shepherd seeks in the desert, was an image of
the mystery of Christ and the Church. The human race –
every one of us – is the sheep lost in the desert which
no longer knows the way. The Son of God will not let
this happen; he cannot abandon humanity in so wretched a
condition. He leaps to his feet and abandons the glory
of heaven, in order to go in search of the sheep and
pursue it, all the way to the Cross. He takes it upon
his shoulders and carries our humanity; he carries us
all – he is the good shepherd who lays down his life for
the sheep. What the Pallium indicates first and foremost
is that we are all carried by Christ. But at the same
time it invites us to carry one another. Hence the
Pallium becomes a symbol of the shepherd’s mission, of
which the Second Reading and the Gospel speak. The
pastor must be inspired by Christ’s holy zeal: for him
it is not a matter of indifference that so many people
are living in the desert. And there are so many kinds of
desert. There is the desert of poverty, the desert of
hunger and thirst, the desert of abandonment, of
loneliness, of destroyed love. There is the desert of
God’s darkness, the emptiness of souls no longer aware
of their dignity or the goal of human life. The external
deserts in the world are growing, because the internal
deserts have become so vast. Therefore the earth’s
treasures no longer serve to build God’s garden for all
to live in, but they have been made to serve the powers
of exploitation and destruction. The Church as a whole
and all her Pastors, like Christ, must set out to lead
people out of the desert, towards the place of life,
towards friendship with the Son of God, towards the One
who gives us life, and life in abundance. The symbol of
the lamb also has a deeper meaning. In the Ancient Near
East, it was customary for kings to style themselves
shepherds of their people. This was an image of their
power, a cynical image: to them their subjects were like
sheep, which the shepherd could dispose of as he
wished. When the shepherd of all humanity, the living
God, himself became a lamb, he stood on the side of the
lambs, with those who are downtrodden and killed. This
is how he reveals himself to be the true shepherd: “I am
the Good Shepherd . . . I lay down my life for the
sheep”, Jesus says of himself (Jn 10:14f). It is
not power, but love that redeems us! This is God’s sign:
he himself is love. How often we wish that God would
make show himself stronger, that he would strike
decisively, defeating evil and creating a better
world. All ideologies of power justify themselves in
exactly this way, they justify the destruction of
whatever would stand in the way of progress and the
liberation of humanity. We suffer on account of God’s
patience. And yet, we need his patience. God, who became
a lamb, tells us that the world is saved by the
Crucified One, not by those who crucified him. The world
is redeemed by the patience of God. It is destroyed by
the impatience of man.
One of the basic
characteristics of a shepherd must be to love the people
entrusted to him, even as he loves Christ whom he
serves. “Feed my sheep”, says Christ to Peter, and now,
at this moment, he says it to me as well. Feeding means
loving, and loving also means being ready to
suffer. Loving means giving the sheep what is truly
good, the nourishment of God’s truth, of God’s word, the
nourishment of his presence, which he gives us in the
Blessed Sacrament. My dear friends – at this moment I
can only say: pray for me, that I may learn to love the
Lord more and more. Pray for me, that I may learn to
love his flock more and more – in other words, you, the
holy Church, each one of you and all of you
together. Pray for me, that I may not flee for fear of
the wolves. Let us pray for one another, that the Lord
will carry us and that we will learn to carry one
another.
The second symbol used in
today’s liturgy to express the inauguration of the
Petrine Ministry is the presentation of the fisherman’s
ring. Peter’s call to be a shepherd, which we heard in
the Gospel, comes after the account of a miraculous
catch of fish: after a night in which the disciples had
let down their nets without success, they see the Risen
Lord on the shore. He tells them to let down their nets
once more, and the nets become so full that they can
hardly pull them in; 153 large fish: “and although there
were so many, the net was not torn” (Jn
21:11). This account, coming at the end of Jesus’s
earthly journey with his disciples, corresponds to an
account found at the beginning: there too, the disciples
had caught nothing the entire night; there too, Jesus
had invited Simon once more to put out into the
deep. And Simon, who was not yet called Peter, gave the
wonderful reply: “Master, at your word I will let down
the nets.” And then came the conferral of his mission:
“Do not be afraid. Henceforth you will be catching men”
(Lk 5:1-11). Today too the Church and the
successors of the Apostles are told to put out into the
deep sea of history and to let down the nets, so as to
win men and women over to the Gospel – to God, to
Christ, to true life. The Fathers made a very
significant commentary on this singular task. This is
what they say: for a fish, created for water, it is
fatal to be taken out of the sea, to be removed from its
vital element to serve as human food. But in the mission
of a fisher of men, the reverse is true. We are living
in alienation, in the salt waters of suffering and
death; in a sea of darkness without light. The net of
the Gospel pulls us out of the waters of death and
brings us into the splendour of God’s light, into true
life. It is really true: as we follow Christ in this
mission to be fishers of men, we must bring men and
women out of the sea that is salted with so many forms
of alienation and onto the land of life, into the light
of God. It is really so: the purpose of our lives is to
reveal God to men. And only where God is seen does life
truly begin. Only when we meet the living God in Christ
do we know what life is. We are not some casual and
meaningless product of evolution. Each of us is the
result of a thought of God. Each of us is willed, each
of us is loved, each of us is necessary. There is
nothing more beautiful than to be surprised by the
Gospel, by the encounter with Christ. There is nothing
more beautiful than to know Him and to speak to others
of our friendship with Him. The task of the shepherd,
the task of the fisher of men, can often seem
wearisome. But it is beautiful and wonderful, because it
is truly a service to joy, to God’s joy which longs to
break into the world.
Here I want to add something:
both the image of the shepherd and that of the fisherman
issue an explicit call to unity. “I have other sheep
that are not of this fold; I must lead them too, and
they will heed my voice. So there shall be one flock,
one shepherd” (Jn 10:16); these are the words of
Jesus at the end of his discourse on the Good
Shepherd. And the account of the 153 large fish ends
with the joyful statement: “although there were so many,
the net was not torn” (Jn 21:11). Alas, beloved
Lord, with sorrow we must now acknowledge that it has
been torn! But no – we must not be sad! Let us rejoice
because of your promise, which does not disappoint, and
let us do all we can to pursue the path towards the
unity you have promised. Let us remember it in our
prayer to the Lord, as we plead with him: yes, Lord,
remember your promise. Grant that we may be one flock
and one shepherd! Do not allow your net to be torn, help
us to be servants of unity!
At this point, my mind goes
back to 22 October 1978, when Pope John Paul II began
his ministry here in Saint Peter’s Square. His words on
that occasion constantly echo in my ears: “Do not be
afraid! Open wide the doors for Christ!” The Pope was
addressing the mighty, the powerful of this world, who
feared that Christ might take away something of their
power if they were to let him in, if they were to allow
the faith to be free. Yes, he would certainly have taken
something away from them: the dominion of corruption,
the manipulation of law and the freedom to do as they
pleased. But he would not have taken away anything that
pertains to human freedom or dignity, or to the building
of a just society. The Pope was also speaking to
everyone, especially the young. Are we not perhaps all
afraid in some way? If we let Christ enter fully into
our lives, if we open ourselves totally to him, are we
not afraid that He might take something away from
us? Are we not perhaps afraid to give up something
significant, something unique, something that makes life
so beautiful? Do we not then risk ending up diminished
and deprived of our freedom? And once again the Pope
said: No! If we let Christ into our lives, we lose
nothing, nothing, absolutely nothing of what makes life
free, beautiful and great. No! Only in this friendship
are the doors of life opened wide. Only in this
friendship is the great potential of human existence
truly revealed. Only in this friendship do we experience
beauty and liberation. And so, today, with great
strength and great conviction, on the basis of long
personal experience of life, I say to you, dear young
people: Do not be afraid of Christ! He takes nothing
away, and he gives you everything. When we give
ourselves to him, we receive a hundredfold in
return. Yes, open, open wide the doors to Christ – and
you will find true life. Amen.
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