
THE LORD MAKES
THE PRIEST HIS FRIEND
The Lord Makes the Priest His Friend
13 April 2006
VATICAN CITY, APRIL 13, 2006. Here is a
translation of the homily Benedict XVI delivered
during the Chrism Mass, over which he presided
in St. Peter's Basilica. In the course of the
Mass, after the renewal of priestly promises,
the oil of the catechumens, and of the sick, and
the chrism were blessed.
* * *
Dear Brothers in the episcopate and priesthood,
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
Maundy Thursday is the day in which the Lord
gave the Twelve the priestly duty to celebrate,
with bread and wine, the sacrament of his Body
and Blood until his return. Replacing the
paschal lamb and all sacrifices of the Old
Covenant with the gift of his Body and Blood,
the gift of himself.
Thus the new worship is based on the fact that,
above all, God gives us a gift, and we, filled
with this gift, become his: Creation turns to
the Creator. So the priesthood also became
something new: It is no longer a question of
descent, but it is an encountering of oneself in
the mystery of Jesus Christ. He is always the
One who gives and who draws us to himself. Only
he can say: "This is my Body -- this is my
Blood."
The mystery of the Church's priesthood lies in
the fact that we, miserable human beings, in
virtue of the sacrament are able to speak with
his I: "in persona Christi." He wishes to
exercise his priesthood through us. We recall
this moving mystery, which touches us again in
every celebration of the sacrament, in a very
particular way on Maundy Thursday. Because the
everyday does not spoil what is great and
mysterious, we are in need of a similar specific
remembrance, we are in need of a return to that
hour in which he placed his hands on us and made
us participants of this mystery.
Therefore, let us again reflect on the signs in
which the sacrament was given to us. At the
center is the very ancient gesture of the
imposition of hands, with which he took
possession of me saying: "You belong to me." But
along with this, he also said: "You are under
the protection of my hands. You are under the
protection of my heart. You are kept in the palm
of my hand and because of this, you find
yourself in the vastness of my love. Remain in
the space of my hands and give me yours."
Let us remember, then that our hands were
anointed with oil which is the sign of the Holy
Spirit and of his strength. Why precisely the
hands? Man's hand is the instrument of his
action, it is the symbol of his capacity to face
the world, to the point of "taking it in hand."
The Lord has placed his hands on us and he now
wants our hands so that they will become his
hands in the world. He wants them to no longer
be instruments to take things, men, the world
for us, to reduce it to our possession, but
that, instead, they transmit his divine touch,
being at the service of his love.
He wishes them to be instruments of service and
therefore expression of the mission of the whole
person that makes himself his guarantor and
takes him to men. If man's hands represent
symbolically his faculties and, in general,
technology as power to dispose of the world, now
the anointed hands must be a sign of his
capacity to give, of creativity in molding the
world with love -- and for this we have need,
without a doubt, of the Holy Spirit.
In the Old Testament anointing is the sign of
the assumption of service: The king, prophet,
priest does and gives more than that which comes
from himself. In a certain sense, he is
expropriated from himself in the function of a
service, in which he places himself at the
disposition of someone greater than himself.
If Jesus appears today in the Gospel as the
Anointed One of God, the Christ, this means
precisely that he acts by the mission of the
Father in unity with the Holy Spirit and that,
in this way, he gives the world a new royalty, a
new priesthood, a new way of being prophet, who
does not seek himself, but lives for him, in
view of which the world was created. Let us
place our hands again today at his disposition
and let us ask him to always take us by the hand
and guide us again.
In the sacramental gesture of the imposition of
hands by the bishop, the Lord himself was
imposing his hands on us. This sacramental sign
reassume a whole existential course. On one
occasion, like the first disciples, we
encountered the Lord and heard his word: "Follow
me!" Perhaps initially we followed him in a
rather uncertain way, drawing back and wondering
if it was really our way.
And at some point of the journey perhaps we had
Peter's experience after the miraculous catch,
we were, that is, struck by his grandeur, the
greatness of the task and the insufficiency of
our poor person, to the point of wanting to go
back: "Depart from me, for I am a sinful man, O
Lord!" (Luke 5:8). But then he, with great
kindness, took us by the hand, drew us to
himself and said: "Fear not! I am with you. I do
not leave you, do not you leave me!"
And, more than once, the same thing happened to
each of us as happened to Peter when, walking on
the water, he encountered the Lord, suddenly he
remembered that the water did not support him
and that he was about to drown. And, like Peter,
we cried out: "Lord, save me!" (Matthew 14:30).
Seeing all the raging of the elements, how could
we go through the rumbling and foaming waters of
the last century and millennium? But then we
looked at him ... and he took us by the hand and
gave us a new "specific weight": the lightness
that comes from faith which attracts us to the
on high.
And then he gives us the hand that supports and
carries. He holds us up. Let us always fix our
gaze on him and extend our hands to him. Let us
allow him to take us by the hand, and we will
not drown, but will serve life which is stronger
than death, and love which is stronger than
hatred. Faith in Jesus, Son of the living God,
is the means thanks to which he takes us by the
hand and guides us. One of my favorite prayers
is the prayer that the liturgy places on our
lips before Communion: "[N]ever let me be parted
from you." Let us pray that we never fall away
from communion with his Body, with Christ
himself, that we never fall away from the
Eucharistic mystery. Let us pray that he will
never let go of our hand ...
The Lord has placed his hand on us. He expressed
the meaning of such a gesture in the words: "I
no longer call you slaves, because a slave does
not know what his master is doing. I have called
you friends, because I have told you everything
I have heard from my Father" (John 15:15). I no
longer call you servants, but friends: In these
words one might even see the institution of the
priesthood. The Lord makes us his friends: he
entrusts everything to us; he entrusts himself,
so that we can speak with his I, "in persona
Christi capitis." What trust! He truly delivered
himself into our hands.
The essential signs of priestly ordination are
all deep down manifestations of that word: the
imposition of hands; the handing over of the
book -- of his word that he entrusts to us; the
handing over of the cup with which he transmits
his most profound and personal mystery. Also
part of all this is the power to absolve: He
also makes us participate in his awareness of
the misery of sin and all the darkness of the
world and gives us the key in our hands to
reopen the door to the Father's House. No longer
do I call you servants but friends. This is the
profound meaning of being a priest: to become a
friend of Jesus Christ. We should commit
ourselves again to this friendship every day.
Friendship means to share in thinking and
willing. We must exercise ourselves in this
communion of thought with Jesus, St. Paul tells
us in the Letter to the Philippians (cf. 2:2-5).
And this communion of thought is not just
something intellectual, but is a sharing of
sentiments and will and therefore also of
action.
This means that we must know Jesus in an ever
more personal way, listening to him, living
together with him, spending time with him. To
listen to him -- in "lectio divina," that is, in
reading Holy Scripture not in an academic but in
a spiritual way; thus we learn to encounter
Jesus who is present and speaks to us. We should
reason and reflect on his words and on his
action before him and with him.
The reading of sacred Scripture is prayer, it
must be prayer -- it must emerge from prayer and
lead to prayer. The evangelists tell us that the
Lord repeatedly -- for entire nights -- withdrew
to the mountain to pray alone. We also have need
of this "mountain": It is the interior height we
must scale, the mountain of prayer. Only in this
way is friendship developed. Only in this way
can we carry out our priestly service, only in
this way can we take Christ and his Gospel to
men. Simple activism may even be heroic. But
external action, in the end, remains without
fruit and loses effectiveness, if it is not born
from a profound intimate communion with Christ.
The time we dedicate to this is truly time of
pastoral activity, of an authentically pastoral
activity. A priest must be above all a man of
prayer. In its frenetic activism the world often
loses its direction. Its action and capacities
become destructive, if the strength of prayer
fails, from which spring the waters of life
capable of making the arid earth fruitful.
No longer do I call you servants, but friends.
The essence of the priesthood is to be friend of
Jesus Christ. Only in this way can we really
speak "in persona Christi," even if our interior
withdrawal from Christ cannot compromise the
validity of the sacrament. To be a friend of
Jesus, to be a priest means to be a man of
prayer. So we recognize it and come out of the
ignorance of simple servants. So we learn to
live, to suffer and to act with him and for him.
Friendship with Jesus is always par excellence
friendship with his own. We can be friends of
Christ only in communion with the whole Christ,
with the head and the body, in the exuberant
life of the Church animated by her Lord. Only in
her, thanks to the Lord, is sacred Scripture
living and timely Word. Without the living
subject of the Church that embraces the ages,
the Bible breaks up in writings that are often
heterogeneous and thus becomes a book of the
past. It is eloquent in the present only where
the "Presence" is -- where Christ remains
permanently contemporaneous to us: in the body
of his Church.
To be a priest means to become a friend of Jesus
Christ, and this ever more with the whole of our
existence. The world has need of God -- not of
any god, but of the God of Jesus Christ, of the
God who became flesh and blood, who has loved us
to the point of dying for us, who rose and has
created in himself a space for man. This God
must live in us and we in him. This is our
priestly call: Only in this way can our action
of priests bear fruits.
I would like to end this homily with a word of
Andres Santoro, the priest of the Diocese of
Rome who was killed in Trebisonda while he was
praying; Cardinal Cé communicated it to us
during the Spiritual Exercises. The word says:
"I am here to dwell in the midst of these people
and allow Jesus to do so presenting my flesh.
... One becomes capable of salvation only by
offering one's own flesh. The evil of the world
is borne and pain is shared, absorbing it in the
end in one's own flesh as Jesus did." Jesus
assumed our flesh. Let us give him ours, so that
in this way he can come into the world and
transform it. Amen!
[Translation by ZENIT]
ZE06041304

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