Sunday, April 8, 2007

Benedict XVI's Easter Message : "A Renewed Witness to the Resurrection of Christ"

Benedict XVI's Easter Message

"A Renewed Witness to the Resurrection of Christ"

VATICAN CITY, APRIL 8, 2007 - Here is a Vatican translation of Benedict
XVI
's Easter message delivered today at midday before he imparted his
blessing "urbi et orbi" (to the city of Rome and the world).

* * *

Dear brothers and sisters throughout the world, Men and women of good will!

Christ is risen! Peace to you! Today we celebrate the great mystery, the
foundation of Christian faith and hope: Jesus of Nazareth, the Crucified
One, has risen from the dead on the third day according to the Scriptures.
We listen today with renewed emotion to the announcement proclaimed by the
angels on the dawn of the first day after the Sabbath, to Mary of Magdala
and to the women at the sepulcher: "Why do you search among the dead for one
who is alive? He is not here, he is risen!" (Luke 24:5-6).

It is not difficult to imagine the feelings of these women at that moment:
feelings of sadness and dismay at the death of their Lord, feelings of
disbelief and amazement before a fact too astonishing to be true. But the
tomb was open and empty: the body was no longer there. Peter and John,
having been informed of this by the women, ran to the sepulcher and found
that they were right. The faith of the Apostles in Jesus, the expected
Messiah, had been submitted to a severe trial by the scandal of the cross.
At his arrest, his condemnation and death, they were dispersed. Now they are
together again, perplexed and bewildered. But the Risen One himself comes in
response to their thirst for greater certainty. This encounter was not a
dream or an illusion or a subjective imagination; it was a real experience,
even if unexpected, and all the more striking for that reason. "Jesus came
and stood among them and said to them, 'peace be with you!'" (John 20:19).

At these words their faith, which was almost spent within them, was
re-kindled. The Apostles told Thomas who had been absent from that first
extraordinary encounter: Yes, the Lord has fulfilled all that he foretold;
he is truly risen and we have seen and touched him!

Thomas however remained doubtful and perplexed. When Jesus came for a second
time, eight days later in the Upper Room, he said to him: "put your finger
here and see my hands; and put out your hand and place it in my side; do not
be faithless, but believing!" The Apostle's response is a moving profession
of faith: "My Lord and my God!" (John 20:27-28).

"My Lord and my God!" We too renew that profession of faith of Thomas. I
have chosen these words for my Easter greetings this year, because humanity
today expects from Christians a renewed witness to the resurrection of
Christ; it needs to encounter him and to know him as true God and true man.
If we can recognize in this Apostle the doubts and uncertainties of so many
Christians today, the fears and disappointments of many of our
contemporaries, with him we can also rediscover with renewed conviction,
faith in Christ dead and risen for us. This faith, handed down through the
centuries by the successors of the Apostles, continues on because the Risen
Lord dies no more. He lives in the Church and guides it firmly towards the
fulfillment of his eternal design of salvation.

We may all be tempted by the disbelief of Thomas. Suffering, evil,
injustice, death, especially when it strikes the innocent such as children
who are victims of war and terrorism, of sickness and hunger, does not all
of this put our faith to the test? Paradoxically the disbelief of Thomas is
most valuable to us in these cases because it helps to purify all false
concepts of God and leads us to discover his true face: the face of a God
who, in Christ, has taken upon himself the wounds of injured humanity.
Thomas has received from the Lord, and has in turn transmitted to the
Church, the gift of a faith put to the test by the passion and death of
Jesus and confirmed by meeting him risen. His faith was almost dead but was
born again thanks to his touching the wounds of Christ, those wounds that
the Risen One did not hide but showed, and continues to point out to us in
the trials and sufferings of every human being.

"By his wounds you have been healed" (1 Peter 2:24). This is the message
Peter addressed to the early converts. Those wounds that, in the beginning
were an obstacle for Thomas's faith, being a sign of Jesus' apparent
failure, those same wounds have become in his encounter with the Risen One,
signs of a victorious love. These wounds that Christ has received for love
of us help us to understand who God is and to repeat: "My Lord and my God!"
Only a God who loves us to the extent of taking upon himself our wounds and
our pain, especially innocent suffering, is worthy of faith.

How many wounds, how much suffering there is in the world! Natural
calamities and human tragedies that cause innumerable victims and enormous
material destruction are not lacking. My thoughts go to recent events in
Madagascar, in the Solomon Islands, in Latin America and in other regions of
the world. I am thinking of the scourge of hunger, of incurable diseases, of
terrorism and kidnapping of people, of the thousand faces of violence which
some people attempt to justify in the name of religion, of contempt for
life, of the violation of human rights and the exploitation of persons. I
look with apprehension at the conditions prevailing in several regions of
Africa. In Darfur and in the neighboring countries there is a catastrophic,
and sadly to say underestimated, humanitarian situation. In Kinshasa in the
Democratic Republic of the Congo the violence and looting of the past weeks
raises fears for the future of the Congolese democratic process and the
reconstruction of the country. In Somalia the renewed fighting has driven
away the prospect of peace and worsened a regional crisis, especially with
regard to the displacement of populations and the traffic of arms. Zimbabwe
is in the grip of a grievous crisis and for this reason the bishops of that
country in a recent document indicated prayer and a shared commitment for
the common good as the only way forward.

Likewise the population of East Timor stands in need of reconciliation and
peace as it prepares to hold important elections.

Elsewhere too, peace is sorely needed: in Sri Lanka only a negotiated
solution can put an end to the conflict that causes so much bloodshed;
Afghanistan is marked by growing unrest and instability; In the Middle East,
besides some signs of hope in the dialogue between Israel and the
Palestinian authority, nothing positive comes from Iraq, torn apart by
continual slaughter as the civil population flees. In Lebanon the paralysis
of the country's political institutions threatens the role that the country
is called to play in the Middle East and puts its future seriously in
jeopardy. Finally, I cannot forget the difficulties faced daily by the
Christian communities and the exodus of Christians from that blessed land
which is the cradle of our faith. I affectionately renew to these
populations the expression of my spiritual closeness.

Dear brothers and sisters, through the wounds of the Risen Christ we can see
the evils which afflict humanity with the eyes of hope. In fact, by his
rising the Lord has not taken away suffering and evil from the world but has
vanquished them at their roots by the superabundance of his grace. He has
countered the arrogance of evil with the supremacy of his love. He has left
us the love that does not fear death, as the way to peace and joy. "Even as
I have loved you -- he said to his disciples before his death -- so you must
also love one another" (cf. John 13:34).

Brothers and sisters in faith, who are listening to me from every part of
the world! Christ is risen and he is alive among us. It is he who is the
hope of a better future. As we say with Thomas: "My Lord and my God!", may
we hear again in our hearts the beautiful yet demanding words of the Lord:
"If any one serves me, he must follow me; and where I am, there shall my
servant be also; if any one serves me, the Father will honor him" (John
12:26). United to him and ready to offer our lives for our brothers (cf. 1
John 3:16), let us become apostles of peace, messengers of a joy that does
not fear pain - the joy of the Resurrection. May Mary, Mother of the Risen
Christ, obtain for us this Easter gift. Happy Easter to you all.

[The Holy Father greeted pilgrims in 62 languages. In English, he said:]

May the grace and joy of the Risen Christ be with you all.

C Copyright 2007 -- Libreria Editrice Vaticana

-BCA SCM-

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