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HOMILY FROM HOLY MASS AT THE ATHENS SPORTS PALACE
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Saturday, 5 May 2001
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
"What therefore you worship as unknown, this I proclaim to you"
(Acts 17:23). Reported in the Acts of the Apostles, these words that Paul spoke
at the Areopagus in Athens represent one of the first proclamations of the
Christian faith in Europe. If we consider the role of Greece in the formation of
ancient culture, we will understand that this speech by Paul can be considered
the very symbol of the encounter of the Gospel with human culture. "To
those sanctified in Christ Jesus, called to be saints together with all those
who in every place call on the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, . . . grace to you
and peace from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ (1 Cor 1:2,3). Using
these words of the Apostle to the community in Corinth, I greet you with
affection, all of you, Bishops, priests and lay Catholic faithful living in
Greece. I thank first of all His Grace Nikolaus Foscolos, Archbishop of Athens
and President of the Episcopal Conference of Greece, for his welcome and cordial
greeting. Gathered together this morning for the Eucharistic celebration, we ask
the Apostle Paul to give us his fervor in faith and in proclaiming the Gospel
to all the Nations, as well as his concern for the unity of the Church. I
rejoice in the presence of other Christian confessions at this Divine Liturgy,
who thus bear witness to their interest in the life of the Catholic community
and to their common brotherhood in Christ.
2. Paul clearly reminds us that we cannot enclose God in our very human ways
of seeing or doing. If we wish to welcome the Lord, we are called to conversion.
This is the path put before us, the path that enables us to follow Christ in
order to live as he did, sons and daughters in the Son. We can therefore
re-interpret our personal journey and that the Church as a Paschal experience.
We must be purified in order to enter fully into the divine will, accepting that
God, by his grace, transforms our being and our existence, as was the case with
Paul, who was transformed from persecutor to missionary (cf. Gal 1:11-24). Thus
we pass through the trials of Good Friday, with its sufferings, with its
darkness of faith with its mutual misunderstandings. But we also experience
moments of light, like the dawn of Easter Sunday, in which the Risen One
communicates to us his joy and leads us to all truth. Viewing our personal
history and that of the Church in this way, we cannot fail to live in hope,
certain that the Master of history will lead us along paths known to him alone.
Let us ask the Holy Spirit to help us to be witnesses to the Good News of God's
love by our words and our actions! For the spirit inspires missionary fervour in
his Church, it is he who calls and sends, and the true apostle is first of all a
person who is "tuned in", a servant ready for God's action.
3. To be here in Athens and to recall the life and work of Paul is to be
invited to proclaim the Gospel to the ends of the earth, to put before our
contemporaries the salvation wrought by Christ showing them the ways of holiness
and of an upright moral life which is the response to the Lord's call. The
Gospel is universal good news which all peoples can understand. Speaking to the
Athenians, Saint Paul wishes to hide nothing of the faith which he has received;
like every apostle, he must carefully guard the deposit of faith (cf. 2 Tim
1:14). It begins with references that are familiar to his listeners and their
way of thinking, and this so that they may better understand the Gospel that he
has come to bring them. Paul depends on the natural knowledge of God and on the
deep spiritual desire present in his audience in order to prepare them to
receive the revelation of the one and true God.
4. If, to the Athenians, he was able to quote ancient classical authors, the
reason is that, in a certain way, his own personal culture had been fashioned by
Hellenism. He therefore used his own training to proclaim the Gospel in words
that would make an impression on his listeners (cf. Acts 17:17). What a lesson!
In order to proclaim the Good News to the men and women of our time, the Church
must be attentive to their cultures and their ways of communicating, without
allowing the Gospel message to be altered or its meaning or scope diminished.
"In the Third Millennium, Christianity will have to respond more
effectively to this need for inculturation" (Novo Millennio Ineunte, 40).
Paul's masterful speech invites Christ's disciples to enter into a truly
missionary dialogue with their contemporaries, with respect for what they are,
but at the same time with a clear and forceful presentation of the Gospel,
together with its implications and demands in people's lives.
5. Brothers and sisters, your country enjoys a long tradition of wisdom, and
humanism. Since the beginnings of Christianity philosophers have taken on the
task of "bringing to light the link between reason and religion . . . This
opened a path which took its rise from ancient traditions but allowed a
development satisfying the demands of universal reason" (Fides et Ratio,
36). This work done by philosophers and the early Christian apologists made it
possible afterwards-following Saint Paul and his speech in Athens-for Christian
faith and philosophy to engage in a fruitful dialogue. It is important to create
opportunities for dialogue with our contemporaries, using the example of Saint
Paul and the first communities, especially where the future of mankind and
humanity is at stake. In this way, decisions will not be guided only by
political or economic interests unaware of the dignity of persons and the
obligations deriving from that dignity. Rather there will be a spiritual element
present, reminding people of every individual's high position and dignity. The
"areopagi" that today call out for the witness of Christians are many
(cf. Redemptoris Missio, 37); and I encourage you to be present to the world.
Like the Prophet Isaiah, Christians have been placed as watchmen on the summit
of the walls (cf. Is 21:11-12), to disown the human consequences of present
situations, to discern the seeds of hope within society, and to show the world
the light of Easter that illuminates with the radiance of a new day all human
realities. Cyril and Methodius, the two Brothers from Salonika, understood the
call of the Risen One: "Go into all the world and preach the Gospel to the
whole creation" (Mk 16:15). Having departed for the encounter with the Slav
peoples, they brought them the Gospel in their own language. They "not only
carried out their mission with full respect for the culture already existing
among the Slav peoples, but together with religion they eminently and
unceasingly promoted and extended that culture" (Slavorum Apostoli, 26).
May their example and prayer help us to respond ever more effectively to the
demands of inculturation and to rejoice in the beauty of the multiform face of
Christ's Church!
6. In his personal experience as a believer and in his ministry as an
Apostle, Paul understood that Christ alone was the way of salvation, he who, by
his grace, reconciles people among themselves and with God. "For he is our
peace, who has made us both one, and has broken down the dividing wall of
hostility" (Eph 2:14). The Apostle then became the defender of unity,
within communities as well as between them consumed as he was with "concern
for all the Churches" (2 Cor 11:28)! Passion for the unity of the Church
must be a mark of all Christ's disciples. Unhappily, as we cross the threshold
of the new millennium, we take with us the sad heritage of the past . . . there
is still along way to go" (Novo Millennio Ineunte, 48). But that must not
discourage us; our love of the Lord impels us to be ever more involved in work
for unity. In order to take new steps in this direction, it is important to
"start afresh from Christ" (cf. Novo Millennio Ineunte, 29). "It
is on Jesus' prayer and not on our own strength that we base the hope that even
within history we shall be able to reach full and viable communion with all
Christians. May the memory of the time when the Church breathed with 'both
lungs' spur Christians of East and West to walk together in unity of faith and
with respect for legitimate diversity, accepting and sustaining each other as
members of the one Body of Christ" (Novo Millennio Ineunte, 48)! The Virgin
Mary, by her prayer and maternal presence, accompanied the life and mission of
the first Christian community, gathered around the Apostles (cf. Acts 1: 14).
With them, she received the Spirit at Pentecost! May she watch over the path
that we must now walk in order to move towards full unity with our brethren of
the East and in order to fulfill with one another, in openness and enthusiasm,
the mission that Christ has entrusted to his Church. May the Virgin Mary-so
venerated in your country and most especially in her island shrines, such as the
Virgin of the Annunciation on the island of Tinos, and under the title of Our
Lady of Mercy at Faneromeni on Syros-lead us always to her Son Jesus (cf. Jn
2:5). He is the Christ, he is the Son of God, "the true light that
enlightens every man" by coming into the world (cf. Jn 1:9). Strengthened
in the hope that comes to us from Christ, and sustained by the fraternal prayer
of those who have gone before us in faith, let us continue our earthly
pilgrimage as true messengers of the Good News, filled with joy at the Easter
praise that is in our hearts and wishing to share it with all people:
"Praise the Lord, all nations! Extol him, all peoples! For great is his
steadfast love towards us; and the faithfulness of the Lord endures for
ever!" (Ps 117).
Amen.
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