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Sacramental oil a sign of
God's mercy
During Chrism Mass Pope asks
faithful not to accept injustice of any kind, including abortion
On Holy Thursday morning, 1 April
[2010], the Holy Father celebrated the Chrism Mass in St Peter's
Basilica. In explaining the meaning of the holy oils blessed on this
occasion, the Pope described the priestly vocation and, more generally,
the mission of Christians. The following is a translation of the Pope's
Homily, which was given in Italian.
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
At the centre of the Church's worship is the notion of "sacrament".
This means that it is not primarily we who act, but God comes first to
meet us through his action, he looks upon us and he leads us to himself.
Another striking feature is this: God touches us through material
things, through gifts of creation that he takes up into his service,
making them instruments of the encounter between us and himself. There
are four elements in creation on which the world of sacraments is built:
water, bread, wine and olive oil. Water, as the basic element and
fundamental condition of all life, is the essential sign of the act in
which, through baptism, we become Christians and are born to new life.
While water is the vital element everywhere, and thus represents the
shared access of all people to rebirth as Christians, the other three
elements belong to the culture of the Mediterranean region. In other
words, they point towards the concrete historical environment in which
Christianity emerged. God acted in a clearly defined place on the earth,
he truly made history with men. On the one hand, these three elements
are gifts of creation, and on the other, they also indicate the locality
of the history of God with us. They are a synthesis between creation and
history: gifts of God that always connect us to those parts of the world
where God chose to act with us in historical time, where he chose to
become one of us.
Within these three elements there is a further gradation. Bread has
to do with everyday life. It is the fundamental gift of life day by day.
Wine has to do with feasting, with the fine things of creation, in
which, at the same time, the joy of the redeemed finds particular
expression. Olive oil has a wide range of meaning. It is nourishment, it
is medicine, it gives beauty, it prepares us for battle and it gives
strength. Kings and priests are anointed with oil, which is thus a sign
of dignity and responsibility, and likewise of the strength that comes
from God. Even the name that we bear as "Christians" contains the
mystery of the oil. The word "Christians", in fact, by which Christ's
disciples were known in the earliest days of Gentile Christianity, is
derived from the word "Christ" (Acts 11:20-21)
—
the Greek translation of the word "Messiah", which means "anointed one".
To be a Christian is to come from Christ, to belong to Christ, to the
anointed one of God, to whom God granted kingship and priesthood. It
means belonging to him whom God himself anointed — not with material
oil, but with the One whom the oil represents: with his Holy Spirit.
Olive oil is thus in a very particular way a symbol of the total
compenetration of the man Jesus by the Holy Spirit.
In the Chrism Mass on Holy Thursday, the
holy oils are at the centre of the liturgical action. They are
consecrated in the bishop's cathedral for the whole year. They thus
serve also as an expression of the Church's unity, guaranteed by the
episcopate, and they point to Christ, the true "shepherd and guardian"
of our souls, as Saint Peter calls him (1 Pet 2:25). At the same time,
they hold together the entire liturgical year, anchored in the mystery
of Holy Thursday. Finally, they point to the Garden of Olives, the scene
of Jesus' inner acceptance of his Passion. Yet the Garden of Olives is
also the place from which he ascended to the Father, and is therefore
the place of redemption: God did not leave Jesus in death. Jesus lives
for ever with the Father, and is therefore omnipresent, with us always.
This double mystery of the Mount of Olives is also always "at work"
within the Church's sacramental oil. In four sacraments, oil is the sign
of God's goodness reaching out to touch us: in baptism, in confirmation
as the sacrament of the Holy Spirit, in the different grades of the
sacrament of holy orders and finally in the anointing of the sick, in
which oil is offered to us, so to speak, as God's medicine — as the
medicine which now assures us of his goodness, offering us strength and
consolation, yet at the same time points beyond the moment of the
illness towards the definitive healing, the resurrection (cf. Jas 5:14).
Thus oil, in its different forms, accompanies us throughout our lives:
beginning with the catechumenate and baptism, and continuing right up to
the moment when we prepare to meet God, our Judge and Saviour.
Moreover, the Chrism Mass, in which the
sacramental sign of oil is presented to us as part of the language of
God's creation, speaks in particular to us who are priests: it speaks of
Christ, whom God anointed King and Priest — of him who makes us sharers
in his priesthood, in his "anointing", through our own priestly
ordination.
I should like, then, to attempt a brief
interpretation of the mystery of this holy sign in its essential
reference to the priestly vocation. In popular etymologies a connection
was made, even in ancient times, between the Greek word "elaion" — oil —
and the word "eleos" — mercy. In fact, in the various sacraments,
consecrated oil is always a sign of God's mercy. So the meaning of
priestly anointing always includes the mission to bring God's mercy to
those we serve. In the lamp of our lives, the oil of mercy should never
run dry. Let us always obtain it from the Lord in good time — in our
encounter with his word, in our reception of the sacraments, in the time
we spend with him in prayer.
As a consequence of the story of the
dove bearing an olive branch to signal the end of the flood — and thus
God's new peace with the world of men — not only the dove but also the
olive branch and oil itself have become symbols of peace. The Christians
of antiquity loved to decorate the tombs of their dead with the crown of
victory and the olive branch, symbol of peace. They knew that Christ
conquered death and that their dead were resting in the peace of Christ.
They knew that they themselves were awaited by Christ, that he had
promised them the peace which the world cannot give. They remembered
that the first words of the Risen Lord to his disciples were: "Peace be
with you!" (Jn 20:19). He himself, so to speak, bears the olive branch,
he introduces his peace into the world. He announces God's saving
goodness. He is our peace. Christians should therefore be people of
peace, people who recognize and live the mystery of the Cross as a
mystery of reconciliation. Christ does not conquer through the sword,
but through the Cross. He wins by conquering hatred. He wins through the
force of his greater love. The Cross of Christ expresses his "no" to
violence. And in this way, it is God's victory sign, which announces
Jesus' new way. The one who suffered was stronger than the ones who
exercised power. In his self-giving on the Cross, Christ conquered
violence. As priests we are called, in fellowship with Jesus Christ, to
be men of peace, we are called to oppose violence and to trust in the
greater power of love.
A further aspect of the symbolism of oil
is that it strengthens for battle. This does not contradict the theme of
peace, but forms part of it. The battle of Christians consisted — and
still consists — not in the use of violence, but in the fact that they
were — and are — ready to suffer for the good, for God. It consists in
the fact that Christians, as good citizens, keep the law and do what is
just and good. It consists in the fact that they do not do whatever
within the legal system in force is not just but unjust. The battle of
the martyrs consists in their concrete "no" to injustice: by taking no
part in idolatry, in Emperor worship, they refused to bow down before
falsehood, before the adoration of human persons and their power. With
their "no" to falsehood and all its consequences, they upheld the power
of right and truth. Thus they served true peace. Today too it is
important for Christians to follow what is right, which is the
foundation of peace. Today too it is important for Christians not to
accept a wrong that is enshrined in law — for example the killing of
innocent unborn children. In this way we serve peace, in this way we
find ourselves following in the footsteps of Jesus Christ, of whom Saint
Peter says: "When he was reviled he did not revile in return; when he
suffered, he did not threaten; but he trusted to him who judges justly.
He himself bore our sins in his body on the tree, that we might die to
sin and live to righteousness" (1 Pet 2:23f.).
The Fathers of the Church were
fascinated by a phrase from Psalm 45 (44)
—
traditionally held to be Solomon's wedding
psalm which was reinterpreted by Christians as the psalm for the
marriage of the new Solomon, Jesus Christ, to his Church. To the King,
Christ, it is said: "Your love is for justice; your hatred for evil.
Therefore God, your God, has anointed you with the oil of gladness above
other kings" (v. 8). What is this oil of gladness with which the true
king, Christ, was anointed? The Fathers had no doubt in this regard: the
oil of gladness is the Holy Spirit himself, who was poured out upon
Jesus Christ. The Holy Spirit is the gladness that comes from God. From
Jesus this gladness sweeps over us in his Gospel, in the joyful message
that God knows us, that he is good and that his goodness is the power
above all powers; that we are wanted and loved by him. Gladness is the
fruit of love. The oil of gladness, which was poured out over Christ and
comes to us from him, is the Holy Spirit, the gift of Love who makes us
glad to be alive. Since we know Christ, and since in him we know the
true God, we know that it is good to be a human being. It is good to be
alive, because we are loved, because truth itself is good.
In the early Church, the consecrated oil
was considered a special sign of the presence of the Holy Spirit, who
communicates himself to us as a gift from Christ. He is the oil of
gladness. This gladness is different from entertainment and from the
outward happiness that modern society seeks for itself. Entertainment,
in its proper place, is certainly good and enjoyable. It is good to be
able to laugh. But entertainment is not everything. It is only a small
part of our lives, and when it tries to be the whole, it becomes a mask
behind which despair lurks, or at least doubt over whether life is
really good, or whether non-existence might perhaps be better than
existence. The gladness that comes to us from Christ is different. It
does indeed make us happy, but it can also perfectly well coexist with
suffering. It gives us the capacity to suffer and, in suffering, to
remain nevertheless profoundly glad. It gives us the capacity to share
the suffering of others and thus by placing ourselves at one another's
disposal, to express tangibly the light and the goodness of God. I am
always struck by the passage in the Acts of the Apostles which recounts
that after the Apostles had been whipped by order of the Sanhedrin, they
"rejoiced that they were counted worthy to suffer dishonour for the name
of Jesus" (Acts 5:41). Anyone who loves is ready to suffer for the
beloved and for the sake of his love, and in this way he experiences a
deeper joy. The joy of the martyrs was stronger than the torments
inflicted on them. This joy was ultimately victorious and opened the
gates of history for Christ. As priests, we are — in Saint Paul's words
— "co-workers with you for your joy" (2 Cor 1:24). In the fruit of the
olive-tree, in the consecrated oil, we are touched by the goodness of
the Creator, the love of the Redeemer. Let us pray that his gladness may
pervade us ever more deeply and that we may be capable of bringing it
anew to a world in such urgent need of the joy that has its source in
truth. Amen.
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