VISIT TO ST. PAUL'S BASILICA IN HARISSA
AND
SIGNING OF THE POST-SYNODAL APOSTOLIC EXHORTATION
SIGNING OF THE POST-SYNODAL APOSTOLIC EXHORTATION
HIS HOLINESS POPE
BENEDICT XVI
Basilica of Saint Paul, Harissa, Friday, 14 September 2012
Mr President, Your Beatitude, Venerable Patriarchs, Dear Brother Bishops and Members of the Special Council of the Synod of Bishops for the
Middle East, Distinguished Representatives of the various religious confessions,
the world of culture and civil society, Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ, Dear Friends,
I thank Patriarch Gregorios Laham for his words of welcome, and the
Secretary-General of the Synod of Bishops, Archbishop Nikola Eterović, for his
introduction. My warm greetings go to the Patriarchs, to all the Eastern and
Latin Bishops assembled in this beautiful Cathedral of Saint Paul, and to the
members of the Special Council of the Synod of Bishops for the Middle East. I
am also gratified by the presence of the Orthodox, Muslim and Druze delegations,
as well as those from the world of culture and from civil society. The happy
coexistence of Islam and Christianity, two religions that have helped to shape
great cultures, is what makes for the originality of social, political and
religious life in Lebanon. One can only rejoice in this circumstance, which must
absolutely be encouraged. I entrust this wish to the religious leaders of your
country. I greet with
affection the beloved Greek Melkite community with gratitude for your welcome.
Your presence makes my signing of the Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation
Ecclesia in Medio Oriente all the more solemn; it testifies that this
document, while addressed to the universal Church, has a particular importance
for the entire Middle East.
Providentially, this event takes place on the Feast of the Exaltation of
the Holy Cross, a celebration originating in the East in 335, following the
dedication of the Basilica of the Resurrection built over Golgotha and our
Lord’s tomb by the Emperor Constantine the Great, whom you venerate as saint. A
month from now we will celebrate the seventeen-hundredth anniversary of the
appearance to Constantine of the Chi-Rho, radiant in the symbolic night of his
unbelief and accompanied by the words: “In this sign you will conquer!” Later,
Constantine signed the Edict of Milan, and gave his name to Constantinople. It
seems to me that the Post-Synodal Exhortation can be read and understood in the
light of this Feast of the Exaltation of the Cross, and more particularly in the
light of the Chi-Rho, the two first letters of the Greek word “Christos”.
Reading it in this way leads to renewed appreciation of the identity of each
baptized person and of the Church, and is at the same time a summons to witness
in and through communion. Are not Christian communion and witness grounded in
the Paschal Mystery, in the crucifixion, death and resurrection of Christ? Is
it not there that they find their fulfilment? There is an inseparable bond
between the cross and the resurrection which Christians must never forget.
Without this bond, to exalt the cross would mean to justify suffering and
death, seeing them merely as our inevitable fate. For Christians, to exalt the
cross means to be united to the totality of God’s unconditional love for
mankind. It means making an act of faith! To exalt the cross, against the
backdrop of the resurrection, means to desire to experience and to show the
totality of this love. It means making an act of love! To exalt the cross
means to be a committed herald of fraternal and ecclesial communion, the source
of authentic Christian witness. It means making an act of hope!
In examining the present situation of the Church in the Middle East, the
Synod Fathers reflected on the joys and struggles, the fears and hopes of
Christ’s disciples in these lands. In this way, the entire Church was able to
hear the troubled cry and see the desperate faces of many men and women who
experience grave human and material difficulties, who live amid powerful
tensions in fear and uncertainty, who desire to follow Christ – the One who
gives meaning to their existence – yet often find themselves prevented from
doing so. That is why I wanted the First Letter of Saint Peter to serve as the
framework of the document. At the same time, the Church was able to admire all
that is beautiful and noble in the Churches in these lands. How can we fail to
thank God at every moment for all of you (cf. 1 Th 1:2; Part One of the
Post-Synodal Exhortation), dear Christians of the Middle East! How can we fail
to praise him for your courage and faith? How can we fail to thank him for the
flame of his infinite love which you continue to keep alive and burning in these
places which were the first to welcome his incarnate Son? How can we fail to
praise and thank him for your efforts to build ecclesial and fraternal
communion, and for the human solidarity which you constantly show to all God’s
children?
Ecclesia in Medio Oriente makes it possible to rethink the
present in order to look to the future with the eyes of Christ. By its biblical
and pastoral orientation, its invitation to deeper spiritual and ecclesiological
reflection, its call for liturgical and catechetical renewal, and its summons to
dialogue, the Exhortation points out a path for rediscovering what is essential:
being a follower of Christ even in difficult and sometimes painful situations
which may lead to the temptation to ignore or to forget the exaltation of the
cross. It is here and now that we are called to celebrate the victory of love
over hate, forgiveness over revenge, service over domination, humility over
pride, and unity over division. In the light of today’s Feast, and in view of a
fruitful application of the Exhortation, I urge all of you to fear not, to stand
firm in truth and in purity of faith. This is the language of the cross,
exalted and glorious! This is the “folly” of the cross: a folly capable of
changing our sufferings into a declaration of love for God and mercy for our
neighbour; a folly capable of transforming those who suffer because of their
faith and identity into vessels of clay ready to be filled to overflowing by
divine gifts more precious than gold (cf. 2 Cor 4:7-18). This is more
than simply picturesque language: it is a pressing appeal to act concretely in a
way which configures us ever more fully to Christ, in a way which helps the
different Churches to reflect the beauty of the first community of believers
(cf. Acts 2:41-47: Part Two of the Exhortation); in a way like that of
the Emperor Constantine, who could bear witness and bring Christians forth from
discrimination to enable them openly and freely to live their faith in Christ
crucified, dead and risen for the salvation of all.
Ecclesia in Medio Oriente provides some elements that are helpful
for a personal and communal examination of conscience, and an objective
evaluation of the commitment and desire for holiness of each one of Christ’s
disciples. The Exhortation shows openness to authentic interreligious dialogue
based on faith in the one God, the Creator. It also seeks to contribute to an
ecumenism full of human, spiritual and charitable fervour, in evangelical truth
and love, drawing its strength from the commandment of the risen Lord: “Go
therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the
Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all that
I have commanded you. Behold, I am with you always, to the close of the age” (Mt
28:19-20).
The Exhortation as a whole is meant to help each of the Lord’s disciples
to live fully and to pass on faithfully to others what he or she has become by
Baptism: a child of light, sharing in God’s own light, a lamp newly lit amid the
troubled darkness of this world, so that the light may shine in the darkness
(cf. Jn 1:4f. and 2 Cor 4:1-6). The document seeks to help purify
the faith from all that disfigures it, from everything that can obscure the
splendour of Christ’s light. For communion is true fidelity to Christ, and
Christian witness is the radiance of the paschal mystery which gives full
meaning to the cross, exalted and glorious. As his followers, “we proclaim
Christ crucified … the power of God and the wisdom of God” (1 Cor
1:23-24; cf. Part Three of the Exhortation).
“Fear not, little flock” (Lk 12:32) and remember the promise made
to Constantine: “In this sign you will conquer!” Churches of the Middle East,
fear not, for the Lord is truly with you, to the close of the age! Fear not,
because the universal Church walks at your side and is humanly and spiritually
close to you! It is with this hope and this word of encouragement to be active
heralds of the faith by your communion and witness, that on Sunday I will
entrust the Post-Synodal Exhortation Ecclesia in Medio Oriente to my
venerable brother Patriarchs, Archbishops and Bishops, and to all priests,
deacons, men and women religious, the seminarians and all the lay faithful.
“Be of good cheer” (Jn 16:33)! Through the intercession of the Virgin
Mary, the Theotókos, I invoke God’s abundant gifts upon all of you with
great affection! God grant that all the peoples of the Middle East may live in
peace, fraternity and religious freedom! لِيُبَارِك الربُّ جميعَكُم [May God bless all of you!]
Video: Papal Visit to St Paul's Basilica in Harissa
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