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Sunday, April 12, 2009
HOMILY OF HIS HOLINESS POPE BENEDICT XVI Saint Peter's Square Easter Sunday, 12 April 2009

MESSAGE OF THE HOLY FATHER FOR THE 46th WORLD DAY OF PRAYER FOR VOCATIONS

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HOMILY OF HIS HOLINESS POPE BENEDICT XVI Saint Peter's Square Easter Sunday, 12 April 2009

HOMILY OF HIS HOLINESS POPE BENEDICT XVI

Saint Peter's Square
Easter Sunday, 12 April 2009

http://whatthehealthmag.files.wordpress.com/2009/03/pope_benedict_451.jpg

Dear Brothers and Sisters,

“Christ, our Paschal lamb, has been sacrificed!” (1 Cor 5:7). On this day, Saint Paul’s triumphant words ring forth, words that we have just heard in the second reading, taken from his First Letter to the Corinthians. It is a text which originated barely twenty years after the death and resurrection of Jesus, and yet – like many Pauline passages – it already contains, in an impressive synthesis, a full awareness of the newness of life in Christ. The central symbol of salvation history – the Paschal lamb – is here identified with Jesus, who is called “our Paschal lamb”. The Hebrew Passover, commemorating the liberation from slavery in Egypt, provided for the ritual sacrifice of a lamb every year, one for each family, as prescribed by the Mosaic Law. In his passion and death, Jesus reveals himself as the Lamb of God, “sacrificed” on the Cross, to take away the sins of the world. He was killed at the very hour when it was customary to sacrifice the lambs in the Temple of Jerusalem. The meaning of his sacrifice he himself had anticipated during the Last Supper, substituting himself – under the signs of bread and wine – for the ritual food of the Hebrew Passover meal. Thus we can truly say that Jesus brought to fulfilment the tradition of the ancient Passover, and transformed it into his Passover.

On the basis of this new meaning of the Paschal feast, we can also understand Saint Paul’s interpretation of the “leaven”. The Apostle is referring to an ancient Hebrew usage: according to which, on the occasion of the Passover, it was necessary to remove from the household every tiny scrap of leavened bread. On the one hand, this served to recall what had happened to their forefathers at the time of the flight from Egypt: leaving the country in haste, they had brought with them only unleavened bread. At the same time, though, the “unleavened bread” was a symbol of purification: removing the old to make space for the new. Now, Saint Paul explains, this ancient tradition likewise acquires a new meaning, once more derived from the new “Exodus”, which is Jesus’ passage from death to eternal life. And since Christ, as the true Lamb, sacrificed himself for us, we too, his disciples – thanks to him and through him – can and must be the “new dough”, the “unleavened bread”, liberated from every residual element of the old yeast of sin: no more evil and wickedness in our heart.

“Let us celebrate the feast … with the unleavened bread of sincerity and truth”. This exhortation from Saint Paul, which concludes the short reading that was proclaimed a few moments ago, resounds even more powerfully in the context of the Pauline Year. Dear brothers and sisters, let us accept the Apostle’s invitation; let us open our spirit to Christ, who has died and is risen in order to renew us, in order to remove from our hearts the poison of sin and death, and to pour in the life-blood of the Holy Spirit: divine and eternal life. In the Easter Sequence, in what seems almost like a response to the Apostle’s words, we sang: “Scimus Christum surrexisse a mortuis vere” – we know that Christ has truly risen from the dead. Yes, indeed! This is the fundamental core of our profession of faith; this is the cry of victory that unites us all today. And if Jesus is risen, and is therefore alive, who will ever be able to separate us from him? Who will ever be able to deprive us of the love of him who has conquered hatred and overcome death?

The Easter proclamation spreads throughout the world with the joyful song of the Alleluia. Let us sing it with our lips, and let us sing it above all with our hearts and our lives, with a manner of life that is “unleavened”, that is to say, simple, humble, and fruitful in good works. “Surrexit Christus spes mea: precedet suos in Galileam” – Christ my hope is risen, and he goes before you into Galilee. The Risen One goes before us and he accompanies us along the paths of the world. He is our hope, He is the true peace of the world. Amen!

© Copyright 2009 - Libreria Editrice Vaticana

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MESSAGE OF THE HOLY FATHER FOR THE 46th WORLD DAY OF PRAYER FOR VOCATIONS

MESSAGE OF THE HOLY FATHER
FOR THE 46th WORLD DAY
OF PRAYER FOR VOCATIONS

3 MAY 2009, FOURTH SUNDAY OF EASTER


Theme: Faith in the divine initiative - the human response

Dear Brothers in the Episcopate and in the Priesthood,
Brothers and Sisters,

On the occasion of the next World Day of prayer for vocations to the priesthood and to the consecrated life, which will be celebrated on 3 May 2009, the Fourth Sunday of Easter, I want to invite all the People of God to reflect on the theme: Faith in the divine initiative - the human response. The exhortation of Jesus to his disciples: “Pray therefore the Lord of the harvest to send out labourers into his harvest” (Mt 9:38) has a constant resonance in the Church. Pray! The urgent call of the Lord stresses that prayer for vocations should be continuous and trusting. The Christian community can only really “have ever greater faith and hope in God's providence” (Sacramentum Caritatis, 26) if it is enlivened by prayer.

The vocation to the priesthood and to the consecrated life constitutes a special gift of God which becomes part of the great plan of love and salvation that God has for every man and woman and for the whole of humanity. The Apostle Paul, whom we remember in a special way during this Pauline Year dedicated to the Two-thousandth anniversary of his birth, writing to the Ephesians says, “Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us in Christ with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places, even as he chose us in him before the foundation of the world, that we should be holy and blameless before him” (Ef 1:3-4). In the universal call to holiness, of particular relevance is God’s initiative of choosing some to follow his Son Jesus Christ more closely, and to be his privileged ministers and witnesses. The divine Master personally called the Apostles “to be with him, and to be sent out to preach and have authority to cast out demons” (Mk 3:14-15); they, in turn, gathered other disciples around them as faithful collaborators in this mission. In this way, responding to the Lord’s call and docile to the movement of the Holy Spirit, over the centuries, countless ranks of priests and consecrated persons placed themselves totally at the service of the Gospel in the Church. Let us give thanks to God, because even today he continues to call together workers into his vineyard. While it is undoubtedly true that a worrisome shortage of priests is evident in some regions of the world, and that the Church encounters difficulties and obstacles along the way, we are sustained by the unshakable certitude that the one who firmly guides her in the pathways of time towards the definitive fulfilment of the Kingdom is he, the Lord, who freely chooses persons of every culture and of every age and invites them to follow him according to the mysterious plans of his merciful love.

Our first duty, therefore, is to keep alive in families and in parishes, in movements and in apostolic associations, in religious communities and in all the sectors of diocesan life this appeal to the divine initiative with unceasing prayer. We must pray that the whole Christian people grows in its trust in God, convinced that the “Lord of the harvest” does not cease to ask some to place their entire existence freely at his service so as to work with him more closely in the mission of salvation. What is asked of those who are called, for their part, is careful listening and prudent discernment, a generous and willing adherence to the divine plan, and a serious study of the reality that is proper to the priestly and religious vocations, so as to be able to respond responsibly and with conviction.

The Catechism of the Catholic Church rightly reminds us that God’s free initiative requires a free response on the part of men and women; a positive response which always presupposes acceptance of and identification with the plan that God has for everyone; a response which welcomes the Lord’s loving initiative and becomes, for the one who is called, a binding moral imperative, an offering of thanksgiving to God and a total cooperation with the plan which God carries out in history (cf. n. 2062).

Contemplating the mystery of the Eucharist, which expresses in a sublime way the free gift of the Father in the Person of his Only Begotten Son for the salvation of mankind, and the full and docile readiness of Christ to drink to the dregs the “cup” of the will of God (cf. Mt 26:39), we can more readily understand how “faith in the divine initiative” models and gives value to the “human response”. In the Eucharist, that perfect gift which brings to fulfilment the plan of love for the redemption of the world, Jesus offers himself freely for the salvation of mankind. “The Church”, my beloved predecessor John Paul II wrote, “has received the Eucharist from Christ her Lord not as a gift – however precious – among so many others, but as the gift par excellence, for it is the gift of himself, of his person in his sacred humanity, as well as the gift of his saving work” (Ecclesia de Eucharistia, 11).

It is priests who are called to perpetuate this salvific mystery from century to century until the Lord’s glorious return, for they can contemplate, precisely in the Eucharistic Christ, the eminent model of a “vocational dialogue” between the free initiative of the Father and the faithful response of Christ. In the celebration of the Eucharist it is Christ himself who acts in those whom he chooses as his ministers; he supports them so that their response develops in a dimension of trust and gratitude that removes all fear, even when they experience more acutely their own weakness (cf. Rm 8:26-28), or indeed when the experience of misunderstanding or even of persecution is most bitter (cf. Rm 8:35-39).

The awareness of being saved by the love of Christ, which every Mass nourishes in the faithful and especially in priests, cannot but arouse within them a trusting self-abandonment to Christ who gave his life for us. To believe in the Lord and to accept his gift, therefore, leads us to entrust ourselves to Him with thankful hearts, adhering to his plan of salvation. When this does happen, the one who is “called” voluntarily leaves everything and submits himself to the teaching of the divine Master; hence a fruitful dialogue between God and man begins, a mysterious encounter between the love of the Lord who calls and the freedom of man who responds in love, hearing the words of Jesus echoing in his soul, “You did not choose me, but I chose you and appointed you that you should go and bear fruit and that your fruit should abide” (Jn 15:16).

This intertwining of love between the divine initiative and the human response is present also, in a wonderful way, in the vocation to the consecrated life. The Second Vatican Council recalls, “The evangelical counsels of chastity dedicated to God, poverty and obedience are based upon the words and examples of the Lord. They were further commanded by the apostles and Fathers of the Church, as well as by the doctors and pastors of souls. The counsels are a divine gift, which the Church received from its Lord and which it always safeguards with the help of His grace” (Lumen Gentium, 43).

Once more, Jesus is the model of complete and trusting adherence to the will of the Father, to whom every consecrated person must look. Attracted by him, from the very first centuries of Christianity, many men and women have left families, possessions, material riches and all that is humanly desirable in order to follow Christ generously and live the Gospel without compromise, which had become for them a school of deeply rooted holiness. Today too, many undertake this same demanding journey of evangelical perfection and realise their vocation in the profession of the evangelical counsels. The witness of these our brothers and sisters, in contemplative monasteries, religious institutes and congregations of apostolic life, reminds the people of God of “that mystery of the Kingdom of God is already at work in history, even as it awaits its full realization in heaven” (Vita Consecrata, 1).

Who can consider himself worthy to approach the priestly ministry? Who can embrace the consecrated life relying only on his or her own human powers? Once again, it is useful to reiterate that the response of men and women to the divine call, whenever they are aware that it is God who takes the initiative and brings His plan of salvation to fulfilment, is never patterned after the timid self-interest of the worthless servant who, out of fear, hid the talent entrusted to him in the ground (cf. Mt 25:14-30), but rather expresses itself in a ready adherence to the Lord’s invitation, as in the case of Peter who, trusting in the Lord’ word, did not hesitate to let down the net once more even after having toiled all night and catching nothing (cf. Lk 5:5). Without in any sense renouncing personal responsibility, the free human response to God thus becomes “co-responsibility”, responsibility in and with Christ, through the action of his Holy Spirit; it becomes communion with the One who makes it possible for us to bear much fruit (cf. Jn 15:5).

An emblematic human response, full of trust in God’s initiative, is the generous and unmitigated “Amen” of the Virgin of Nazareth, uttered with humble and decisive adherence to the plan of the Most High announced to her by God’s messenger (cf. Lk 1:38). Her prompt “Yes” allowed Her to become the Mother of God, the Mother of our Saviour. Mary, after this first “fiat”, had to repeat it many times, even up to the culminating moment of the crucifixion of Jesus, when “standing by the cross of Jesus” as the Evangelist John notes, she participated in the dreadful suffering of her innocent Son. And it was from the cross, that Jesus, while dying, gave her to us as Mother and entrusted us to her as sons and daughters (cf. Jn 19:26-27); she is especially the Mother of priests and consecrated persons. I want to entrust to her all those who are aware of God’s call to set out on the road of the ministerial priesthood or consecrated life.

Dear friends, do not become discouraged in the face of difficulties and doubts; trust in God and follow Jesus faithfully and you will be witnesses of the joy that flows from intimate union with him. Imitating the Virgin Mary whom all generations proclaim as blessed because she believed (cf. Lk 1:48), commit yourselves with every spiritual energy, to realise the heavenly Father’s plan of salvation, cultivating in your heart, like her, the ability to be astonished and to adore him who is mighty and does “great things”, for Holy is his name (cf. Lk 1:49).

From the Vatican, 20 January 2009

BENEDICT XVI

© Copyright 2009 - Libreria Editrice Vaticana

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Crux of the Matter - Amy L. Cavender, CSC, Indiana

Colwich Novitiate - Noviceship, England

Crying Out in the Wilderness - Richard Beebe, SJ, Michigan

CSJ Novitiate - Group

Day by Day - Sr. Lynn, Missouri

Deo Gratia - Nader's Blog - Nader Ata, Texas

The Digital Nun - Sister Judy Connor, CDP

Discover God in the Everyday. With us. - Ferdinand Benedictines, Indiana

Dominican Cooperator Brother - Br. Paul, OP, Missouri

Dominican Sisters of Blauvelt - Dominican Sisters, New York

Franciscan Footprints - Sr. Veronica

Franciscan Life - Sr. Ann Marie, Pennsylvania

Franciscan Musings - Rashfriar, Washington, DC

Franciscan Sisters of Christian Charity - Group

A Friar Style? - Freddie

From Marbury's Hilltop - St. Jude Monastery, Alabama

Happynun Thinks Aloud - Happynun

Hell Burns - Sr. Helena Burns, Chicago

Hope-Full Signs - Sr. Judith, New Jersey

IHM Calling - Sister Mary Bea, Michigan

In the Shadow of His Wings - Passionist Nuns, Kentucky

The Itinerant's Path - Br. Vincent J. Celeste, FMS, Philippines

A Jesuit's Journey - Ryan Duns, SJ

The Journey - Sr. Paulina Quinn, OP

Kicking and Screaming - Tom Gibbons, CSP

La Paz de Susan - Susan Dewitt, CSJP, Washington

The Last Brother? Not if I Can Help It! - Br. James Hayes, England

Life at the Convent - Sr. Mary Lou, Minnesota

Life at the Monastery of St. Gertrude

The Life of a New Sister - Sr. Nicole Trahan, Texas

Life on Lotus Lane - Dominican Nuns, Texas

Light through Stained-Glass Windows - Susan Doubet, OSB

Little Portion Hermitage - Friar Rex, Maine

Live Jesus! - a Visitation Nun, Washington D. C.

Living the Zeal of Benedict - Marilyn Schauble, OSB, Pennsylvania

Meg Funk - Sr. Meg Funk, Indiana

Monastery Podcast - Benedictine Sisters of Perpetual Adoration

Monastic Moments - Sr. Patricia, Washington

Monastic Musings - Edith, OSB, Minnesota

Monastics on a Journey - Sister Vicki Ix, OSB, Virginia

Moniales - Dominican Nuns, New Jersey

Monks on a Mission - Monks of Schuyler, Nebraska

Musings of a Discerning Woman - Susan Rose Francois, CSJP, New Jersey

My Movies - Sr. Rose Pacatte, FSP, California

Notes from Stillsong Hermitage - Sister Laurel M. O'Neal, Erem Dio, California

Nunblog - Sr. Anne FSP, Illinois

NunEssential - Sr. MJ

A Nun's Life - Julie Vieira, IHM

Nunsuch - Sandy Yost, CSJ, Michigan

On a PENsive Mood - Br. Donnie Duchin Duya, SDB, Philippines

One Mind and Heart Intent Upon God - West Coast Augustianians

"Open Wide the Doors to Christ!" - Sr. Marianne Lorraine Trouve FSP, Massachusetts

OPreach - Sr. Pat Farrell, OP, California

Other than Being - Br. Thomas Gricoski, OSB, Indiana

The Passionist Charism - Passionistcharism, Australia

Pause for Prayer - Sr. Janet

PR Woman for Christ - Sister Mary Peter

Reflections of an RSCJ - Helen Rosenthal, RSCJ, Florida

Religious Life Rocks! - Sr. Katy, Wisconsin

Renungan Dan Inspirasi Harian - Reynaldo Fulgentio Tardelly, S.X., Indonesia

Running the Race of Life - Jonathan St. Andre

The School Sisters of St. Francis - Sr. Mary Michael and Sr. Maryana, Texas

Sister Christer - Sr. Christine Wilcox OP, California

Sisters of the Gospel of Life - Sr. Andrea & Sr. Roseann

Sisters of the Holy Family's Web Log - Sisters of the Holy Family, California

"So That in All Things...God May Be Glorified" - Sr. Nicolette Etienne, OSB, Indiana

A Space for Seeking and Deepening - Sr. Margaret Kerry

Sub Tuum - Br. Stephen, O.Cist., Wisconsin

Subiaco Abbey - Monks of Subiaco, Arkansas

The Story of a Vocation/La Historia de una Vocación - Sr. Helga, Texas

Take with You Words - Sr. Genevieve Glen, OSB and Edith, OSB

Theology of the Body - Sr. Anne, Illinois

Under a Chindolea - Markel, SJ & Mason Slidell

A Vow of Conversation - Macrina Walker, OCSO, Netherlands

Within and Beyond - Dom Lawrence, OSB, New Mexico

Witness Christ: Walking through Life with God - Luuk Dominiek Jansen, OP, Ireland

1 Franciscan Way - 1 Franciscan Way, Illinois

100% Katolikong Pinoy- Kuya Francis

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