| Holy Father
celebrates Commemoration of Abraham, 'Our Father in Faith', in Paul VI Hall
After a brief General Audience on 23 February (see article below), the Holy
Father went to the Paul VI Hall for a Commemoration of Abraham, "Our Father
in Faith", which took the form of a Liturgy of the Word. The Scripture
readings recounted Abraham's genealogy, his call, God's covenant with him and
his willingness to sacrifice his son, Isaac. These texts from Genesis were
followed by readings from the Letters to the Hebrews and to the Romans that
speak of Abraham's faith; the Gospel text was taken from Jn 8:51-58. Meditation
on these readings was enhanced by artistic images from the Roman catacombs, a
work by Marc Chagall, Andrei Rublev's icon of the Trinity and photographs of the
ruins of Ur. The stage area of the hall was decorated with oak trees recalling
the terebinths of Mamre, and a stone altar suggesting the sacrifice of Isaac.
During the service the Holy Father preached the following homily in Italian.
Here is a translation.
1. "I am the Lord who brought you from Ur of the Chaldeans, to give you
this land to possess.... On that day the Lord made a covenant with Abraham,
saying: 'To your descendants I give this land, from the river of Egypt to the
great River, the river Euphrates'" (Gn 15:7, 18).
Before Moses heard Yahweh's well-known words on Mount Sinai: "I am the
Lord your God, who brought you out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of
bondage" (Ex 20:2), the Patriarch Abraham had already heard these other
words: "I am the Lord who brought you from Ur of the Chaldeans".
Therefore, our thoughts must turn to that important place in the history of
God's People, to seek there the origins of God's covenant with man. This
is why, during this year of the Great Jubilee, as our hearts return to the
beginnings of God's covenant with humanity, we turn our gaze to Abraham, to
the place where he heard God's call and responded to it with the obedience of
faith. Together with us, Jews and Muslims also look to the person of Abraham as
a model of unconditional submission to the will of God (cf. Nostra aetate, n.
3).
Abraham was tested by the God in whom he trusted
The author of the Letter to the Hebrews writes: "By faith Abraham obeyed when he was called to go out to a place which he was to receive as an
inheritance; and he went out, not knowing where he was to go" (Heb 11:8).
Behold: Abraham, whom the Apostle calls our father in faith" (cf. Rom
4:11-16), believed in God, trusted in the One who called him. He
believed in his promise. God said to Abraham: "Go from your country and
your kindred and your father's house to the land that I will show you. And I
will make of you a great nation, and I will bless you, and make your name great,
so that you will be a blessing.... by you all the families of the earth shall
bless themselves" (Gn 12:1-3). Are we talking about the route taken by one
of the many migrations typical of an era when sheep-rearing was a basic form of
economic life? Probably. Surely though, it was not only this. In
Abraham's life, which marks the beginning of salvation history, we can already
perceive another meaning of the call and the promise. The land to which human
beings, guided by the voice of God, are moving, does not belong exclusively
to the geography of this world. Abraham, the believer who accepts God's
invitation, is someone heading towards a promised land that is not of this
world.
2. In the Letter to the Hebrews we read: "By faith Abraham, when he was
tested, offered up Isaac, and he who had received the promises was ready to
offer up his only son, of whom it was said, 'Through Isaac shall your
descendants be named'" (11:17-18). This is the climax of Abraham's
faith. Abraham is tested by that God in whom he had placed his trust, that
God from whom he had received the promise about the distant future:
"Through Isaac shall your descendants be named" (Heb 11:18). He is
called, however, to offer in sacrifice to God precisely that Isaac, his only
son, on whom his every hope is based, in accordance moreover with the divine
promise. How could God's promise to him of numerous descendants come true if
Isaac, his only son, were to be offered in sacrifice?
Through faith Abraham emerges victorious from this test, a dramatic test that
challenged his faith directly. "He considered", writes the author of
the Letter to the Hebrews, "that God was able to raise men even from the
dead" (11:9). At that humanly tragic moment, when he was ready to inflict
the mortal blow on his son, Abraham never stopped believing. Indeed, his faith
in God's promise reached its climax. He thought that "God was able to raise
men even from the dead". This is what this father, tested humanly speaking
beyond all measure, thought. And his faith, his total abandonment to God, did
not disappoint him. It is written: "hence he did receive him back"
(Heb 1:19). Isaac was given back to him because he believed in God completely
and unconditionally.
The author of the Letter seems to express something more here: all of
Abraham's experience appears to him as an analogy of the saving event of
Christ's Death and Resurrection. This man , placed at the origins of our
faith, is part of God's eternal plan. There is a tradition that the place where
Abraham was to have sacrificed his own son is the very same place where another
father, the eternal rather, would accept the offering of his Only-begotten Son,
Jesus Christ. Thus Abraham's sacrifice can be seen as a prophetic sign of
Christ's sacrifice. St John writes: "For God so loved the world that he
gave his only Son" (Jn 3:16). The Patriarch Abraham our father in faith
unknowingly brings all believers, in a certain sense, into God's eternal plan in
which the world's redemption is accomplished.
Christ leads us into the promised land of salvation
3. One day Christ said: "Truly, truly, I say to you, before Abraham I
was, I am" (Jn 8:58), and these words astonished his listeners, who
objected: "You are not yet fifty years old, and have you seen
Abraham?" (Jn 8:57). Those who reacted so reasoned in a merely human way,
and therefore did not accept what Christ said. "Are you greater than our
father Abraham, who died? And the prophets died! Who do you claim to be?"
(Jn 8:53). Jesus answered them: "Your father Abraham rejoiced that he was
to see my day; he saw it and was glad" (Jn 8:56). Abraham's vocation seems
entirely directed to the day of which Christ is speaking. Here human
calculations fail; God's measure must be applied. Only then can we
understand the proper meaning of the obedience of Abraham who "believed
against hope" (Rom 4:18). He hoped to become the father of many nations,
and today he is certainly rejoicing with us because God's promise is fulfilled
down the centuries, from generation to generation.
His believing, hoping against hope, was "reckoned to him as
righteousness" (Rom 4:22), not only in his regard, but in view of us all,
his descendants in faith. We "believe in him that raised from the dead
Jesus our Lord" (Rom 4:24), put to death for our sins and raised for our
justification (cf. Rom 4:25). Abraham did not know this, but through the
obedience of faith he directed his steps towards the fulfilment of all the
divine promises, motivated by the hope that they would come to pass. Is there
any greater promise than that fulfilled in Christ's paschal mystery? In the
faith of Abraham almighty God truly made an eternal covenant with the human
race, and its definitive fulfilment is Jesus Christ. The Only-begotten Son of
the Father, one in substance with him, became Man to lead us through the
humiliation of the Cross and the glory of the Resurrection into the land of
salvation that God, rich in mercy, had promised humanity from the very
beginning.
4. Mary, "who believed that there would be a fulfilment of what was
spoken to her from the Lord" (Lk 1:45), is an unsurpassable model of the
redeemed people on their way to the fulfilment of this universal promise.
Daughter of Abraham in faith as well as in the flesh, Mary personally shared
in this experience. Like Abraham, she too accepted the sacrifice of her Son, but
while the actual sacrifice of Isaac was not demanded of Abraham, Christ drank
the cup of suffering to the last drop. Mary personally took part in her Son's
trial, believing and hoping at the foot of the Cross (cf. Jn 19:25).
This was the epilogue of a long wait. Having been taught to meditate on the
prophetic texts, Mary foresaw what awaited her and in praising the mercy of God,
faithful to his people from generation to generation, she gave her own consent
to his plan of salvation; in particular, she said her "yes" to the
central event of this plan, the sacrifice of that Child whom she bore in her
womb. Like Abraham, she accepted the sacrifice of her Son.
Today we join our voice to hers and with her, Virgin Daughter of Zion, we
proclaim that God has remembered his mercy, "as he spoke to our fathers, to
Abraham and to his posterity for ever" (Lk 1:55).
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