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Pope Benedict XVI meditates on God's Word in light
of the Synod's work
God's Word more stable than any human
reality
On the opening day of the Synod, Monday, 6 October
[2008], during the Liturgy of the Hours celebration of the Third Hour,
the Holy Father addressed the assembly in Italian. The following is a
translation.
Dear Brothers in the Episcopacy,
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
At the beginning of our synod the Liturgy of the Hours
presents a passage from Psalm 118 on the Word of God: a praise of his
Word, an expression of the joy of Israel in learning it and, in it, to
recognize his will and his Face. I would like to meditate on some verses
of this Psalm with you.
It begins like this: "In aeternum, Domine, verbum
tuum constitutum est in caelo... firmasti terram, et permanet". This
refers to the solidity of the Word. It is solid, it is the true reality
on which one must base one's life. Let us remember the words of Jesus
who continues the words of this Psalm: "Heaven and earth will pass away,
but my words will never pass away".
Humanly speaking, the word, my human word, is almost
nothing in reality, a breath. As soon as it is pronounced it disappears.
It seems to be nothing. But already the human word has incredible power.
Words create history, words form thoughts, the thoughts that create the
word. It is the word that forms history, reality.
Furthermore, the Word of God is the foundation of
everything, it is the true reality. And to be realistic, we must rely
upon this reality. We must change our idea that matter, solid things,
things we can touch, are the more solid, the more certain reality.
At the end of the Sermon on the Mount the Lord speaks to
us about the two possible foundations for building the house of one's
life: sand and rock. The one who builds on sand builds only on visible
and tangible things, on success, on career, on money. Apparently these
are the true realities. But all this one day will pass away. We can see
this now with the fall of large banks: this money disappears, it is
nothing.
And thus all things, which seem to be the true realities
we can count on, are only realities of a secondary order. The one who
builds his life on these realities, on matter, on success, on
appearances, builds upon sand.
Only the Word of God is the foundation of all reality,
it is as stable as the heavens and more than the heavens, it is reality.
Therefore, we must change our concept of realism. The realist is the one
who recognizes the Word of God, in this apparently weak reality, as the
foundation of all things. Realist is the one who builds his life on this
foundation, which is permanent.
Thus the first verses of the Psalm invite us to discover
what reality is and how to find the foundation of our life, how to build
life.
The following verse says: "Omnia serviunt tibi".
All things come from the Word, they are products of the Word. "In the
beginning was the Word". In the beginning the heavens spoke. And thus
reality was born of the Word, it is
"creatura Verbi".
All is created from the
Word and all is called to serve the Word. This means that all of
creation, in the end, is conceived of to create the place of encounter
between God and his creature, a place where the history of love between
God and his creature can develop.
"Omnia serviunt tibi". The history of salvation is
not a small event, on a poor planet, in the immensity of the universe.
It is not a minimal thing which happens by chance on a lost planet. It
is the motive for everything, the motive for creation. Everything is
created so that this story can exist, the encounter between God and his
creature.
In this sense, salvation history, the Covenant, precedes
creation. During the Hellenistic period, Judaism developed the idea that
the Torah would have preceded the creation of the material world.
This material world seems to have been created solely to make room for
the Torah, for this Word of God that creates the answer
and becomes the history of love. The mystery of Christ already is
mysteriously revealed here.
This is what we are told in the Letter to the Ephesians
and to the Colossians: Christ is the protòtypos,
the firstborn of creation, the idea for which the universe was
conceived.
He welcomes all. We enter in the movement of the
universe by uniting with Christ. One can say that, while material
creation is the condition for the history of salvation, the history of
the Covenant is the true cause of the cosmos. We reach the roots of
being by reaching the mystery of Christ, his living word that is the aim
of all creation.
"Omnia serviunt tibi". In serving the Lord we
achieve the purpose of being, the purpose of our own existence.
Let us take a leap forward: "Mandata tua exquisivi".
We are always searching for the Word of God. It is not merely
present in us. Just reading it does not mean necessarily that we have
truly understood the Word of God. The danger is that we only see the
human words and do not find the true actor within, the Holy Spirit. We
do not find the Word in the words.
In this context St Augustine recalls the scribes and
pharisees who were consulted by Herod when the Magi arrived. Herod wants
to know where the Saviour of the world would be born. They know it, they
give the correct answer: in Bethlehem.
They are great specialists who know everything. However
they do not see reality, they do not know the Saviour. St Augustine
says: they are signs on the road for others, but they themselves do not
move. This is a great danger as well in our reading of Scripture: we
stop at the human words, words form the past, history of the past, and
we do not discover the present in the past, the Holy Spirit who speaks
to us today in the words from the past. In this way we do not enter the
interior movement of the Word, which in human words conceals and which
opens the divine words.
Therefore, there is always a need for "exquisivi".
We must always look for the Word within the words.
Therefore, exegesis, the true reading of Holy Scripture,
is not only a literary phenomenon, not only reading a text. It is the
movement of my existence. It is moving towards the Word of God in the
human words. Only by conforming ourselves to the Mystery of God, to the
Lord who is the Word, can we enter within the Word, can we truly find
the Word of God in human words. Let us pray to the Lord that he may help
us search the word, not only with our intellect but also with our entire
existence.
At the end: "Omni consummationi vidi finem, latum
praeceptum tuum nimis".
All human things, all the things we can invent, create,
are finite. Even all human religious experiences are finite, showing an
aspect of reality, because our being is finite and can only understand a
part, some elements: "latum
praeceptum tuum nimis". Only God
is infinite. And therefore His Word too is universal and knows no
boundaries.
Therefore by entering into the Word of God we really
enter into the divine universe. We escape the limits of our experience
and we enter into the reality that is truly universal. Entering into
communion with the Word of God, we enter a communion of the Church that
lives the Word of God. We do not enter into a small group, with the
rules of a small group, but we go beyond our limitations. We go towards
the depths, in the true grandeur of the only truth, the great truth of
God. We are truly a part of what is universal.
And thus we go out into the communion of all our
brothers and sisters, of all humanity, because the desire for the Word
of God, which is one, is hidden in our heart.
Therefore even evangelization, the proclamation of the
Gospel, the mission are not a type of ecclesial colonialism, where we
wish to insert others into our group. It means going beyond the
individual culture into the universality that connects all, unites all,
makes us all brothers. Let us pray once again that the Lord may help us
to truly enter the "breadth" of His Word and thus to open ourselves to
the universal horizon that unites us with all our differences.
At the end, we return to a preceding verse: "Tuus sum
ego: salvum me fac". The text translates as: "I am yours". The Word
of God is like a stairway that we can climb and, with Christ, even
descend into the depths of his love. It is a stairway to reach the Word
in the words.
"I am yours". The word has a Face, it is a person,
Christ. Before we can say "I am yours", he has already told us "I am
yours". The Letter to the Hebrews, quoting Psalm 39, says: "You gave me
a body.... Then I said, `Here I am, I am coming'. The Lord prepared a
body to come. With his Incarnation he said: I am yours. And in Baptism
he said to me: I am yours. In the Holy Eucharist, he says ever anew: I
am yours, so that we may respond: Lord, I am yours.
In the way of the Word, entering the mystery of his
Incarnation, of his being among us, we want to appropriate his being, we
want expropriate our existence, giving ourselves to him who gave Himself
to us.
"I am yours". Let us pray the Lord that we may learn to
say this word with our whole being. Thus we will be in the heart of the
Word. Thus we will be saved.
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