We must be the custodians of nature
On Sunday, 12 November, the Holy Father celebrated a solemn Mass
with thousands of farmers from around the world who had come to Rome
to observe their Jubilee. In his homily the Pope said: "God
entrusted the earth to human beings 'to till it and keep it' (cf. Gn
2:15)", but he reminded them that "when this principle is
forgotten and they become the tyrants rather than the custodians of
nature, sooner or later the latter will rebel. The Mass was
concelebrated by 350 Cardinals, Bishops and priests, with the
participation of representatives from various agricultural
organizations and UN offices such as the FAO, IFAD and WTP. Here is
a translation of the Pope's homily, which was given in Italian.
1. "The Lord keeps faith forever" (Ps 146:6).
It is precisely in order to sing of this fidelity of the Lord
recalled just now in the Responsorial Psalm that you are here for
your Jubilee today, dear brothers and sisters. I am therefore
delighted with your beautiful witness, which was expressed a few
moments ago by Bishop Fernando Charrier, whom I cordially thank. A
respectful greeting also goes to the dignitaries who have wished to
show their participation as representatives of various States and
especially of the United Nations Organizations and Offices for Food
and Agriculture.
My thoughts turn next to the directors and members of the
National Farmers' Confederation and the other farmers'
organizations present here, as well as to the members of the bakers'
federations, of the food and agro-industrial cooperatives and of the
Forest Union of Italy. Your presence here in such numbers and
variety, dear brothers and sisters, gives us a vivid sense of the
unity of the human family and of the universal dimension of our
prayer addressed to the one God, Creator of the universe and
faithful to man.
You have come to thank God for the fruits of the earth
2. God's faithfulness! For you, people of the agricultural
world, it is a daily experience, constantly repeated in the
observation of nature. You know the language of the soil and the
seeds, of the grass and the trees, of the fruit and the flowers. In
the most varied landscapes, from the harshness of the mountains to
the irrigated plains under the most varied skies, this language has
its own fascination which you know so well. In this language, you
see God's fidelity to what he said on the third day of creation:
"Let the earth put forth vegetation, plants yielding seed, and
fruit trees bearing fruit" (Gn 1:11). In the movement of
nature, which is calm and silent but full of life, the original
pleasure of the Creator is still vibrant: "And God saw that it
was a good thing"! (Gn 1:12).
Yes, the Lord keeps faith for ever. And you, experts in
this language of fidelity—a language that is
ancient but ever new—are naturally people of
gratitude. Your prolonged contact with the wonder of the earth's
products lets you see them as an inexhaustible gift of divine
Providence. This is why your annual day is "thanksgiving
day" par excellence. This year it has an even higher
spiritual value since it is occurring during the Jubilee
which celebrates the 2,000th anniversary of Christ's birth. You have
come to give thanks for the fruits of the earth, but first of all to
acknowledge him as the Creator and, at the same time, the most
beautiful fruit of our earth, the "fruit" of Mary womb,
the Saviour of humanity and, in a certain sense, of the
"cosmos" itself. Indeed, creation, as Paul says, "has
been groaning in travail" and cherishes the hope of being set
free "from its bondage to decay" (Rom 8:21-22).
3. The "groaning" of the earth prompts us to think of
your work, dear men and women of agriculture, work that is so
important and yet not free from discomfort and hardship. The
passage we heard from the Book of Kings recalls a typical situation
of suffering, due to drought. The prophet Elijah, exhausted from
hunger and thirst is both the agent and the beneficiary of a miracle
of generosity. It fell to a young widow to rescue him, sharing with
him her last handful of flour and the last drop of her oil; her
generosity touches God's heart, to the point that the prophet can
say: "The jar of meal shall not be spent and the cruse of oil
shall not fail, until the day that the Lord sends rain upon the
earth".
The culture of the farming world has always been marked by a
sense of impending risk to the harvest, due to unforeseeable
climatic misfortunes. However, in addition to the traditional
burdens, there are often others due to human carelessness. Agricultural
activity in our era has had to reckon with the consequences of
industrialization and the sometimes disorderly development of urban
areas, with the phenomenon of air pollution and ecological
disruption with the dumping of toxic waste and deforestation.
Christians while always trusting in the help of providence, must
make responsible efforts to ensure that the value of the earth is
respected and promoted. Agricultural work should be better
and better organized and supported by social measures that fully
reward the toil it involves and the truly great usefulness that
characterizes it. If the world of the most refined technology is not
reconciled with the simple language of nature in a healthy balance,
human life will face ever greater risks, of which we are
already seeing the first disturbing signs.
The human heart is the first ground to be cultivated
4. Therefore, dear brothers and sisters, be grateful to the Lord,
but at the same time be proud of the task that your work assigns
to you. Work in such a way that you resist the temptations of a
productivity and profit that are detrimental to the respect for
nature. God entrusted the earth to human beings "to till it and
keep it" (cf. Gn 2:15). When this principle is forgotten and
they become the tyrants rather than the custodians of nature, sooner
or later the latter will rebel.
But you understand clearly, dear friends, that this principle of
order, which applies to agricultural work as well as to every other
area of human activity, is rooted in the human heart. The
"heart" itself is therefore the first ground to be
cultivated. It was not by chance that, when Jesus wanted to
explain the work of God's word, he used the parable of the sower as
an illuminating example taken from the farming world. God's word is
a seed meant to bear abundant fruit, but unfortunately it often
falls on unsuitable ground, where stones or weeds and thorns—various
terms for our sins—prevent it from taking
root and growing (cf. Mt 13:13-23, par.). Thus, a Father of the
Church gives the following advice precisely to a farmer: "So
when you are in the field and are looking at your farm, consider
that you too are Christ's field and devote attention to yourself as
you do to your field. The same beauty that you require your peasant
to give to your field, give to God in the cultivation of your heart
..." (St Paulinus of Nola, Letter 39, 3 to Aper and
Amanda).
It is because of this "cultivation of the spirit" that
you are here to celebrate the Jubilee today. You present to the
Lord, even before your professional efforts, the daffy work of
purifying your heart: a demanding task, which we will never succeed
in doing on our own. Our strength is Christ, who, as the Letter to
the Hebrews just reminded us, "appeared once for all at the end
of the age to put away sin by the sacrifice of himself" (Heb
9:26).
5. This sacrifice, offered once and for all on Golgotha, is made
real for us every time we celebrate the Eucharist. Here Christ makes
himself present with his body and blood to become our food.
How significant it must be for you, men and women of the
agricultural world, to contemplate on the altar this miracle which
crowns and exalts the very wonders of nature, Is not a miracle
worked each day when a seed becomes an ear of corn and so many
grains from it ripen to be ground and made into bread? Is not the
cluster of grapes that hangs on the branch of the vine one of
nature's miracles? All this already mysteriously bears the mark of
Christ, since "all things were made through him, and without
him was not anything made that was made" Jn 1:3). But greater
still is the event of grace in which the Word and the Spirit of God
make the bread and wine, "fruit of the earth and work of human
hands", the Body and Blood of the Redeemer. The Jubilee grace
that you have come to implore is none other than a superabundance of
Eucharistic grace, the power that raises us and heals us from within
by grafting us on to Christ.
We must contribute to a culture of solidarity
6. The attitude that we should take towards this grace is
suggested to us by the Gospel example of the poor widow who
puts her small coins into the treasury but in fact gives more than
everyone else, since she is not giving out of her abundance, but is
putting in "her whole living" (Mk 12:44). Thus this
unknown woman is following in the footsteps of the widow of
Zarephath, who opened her home and her table to Elijah. Both are
sustained by their faith in the Lord. Both draw from faith the
strength for heroic charity.
They invite us to open our Jubilee celebration to the horizons of
love and to see all the poor and needy of this world. What we do for
the least of them we will have done for Christ (cf. Mt
25:40).
And how could we forget that the sphere of agricultural work
involves human situations that deeply challenge us? Entire peoples,
who depend primarily on fanning in economically less developed
regions, live in conditions of poverty. Vast regions have been
devastated by frequent natural disasters. And sometimes these
misfortunes are accompanied by the consequences of war, which not
only claims victims, but sows destruction, depopulates fertile lands
and even leaves them overrun with weapons and harmful substances.
7. The Jubilee began in Israel as a great time for
reconciliation and the redistribution of goods. To accept this
message today certainly cannot mean limiting oneself to a small
donation. We must contribute to a culture of solidarity which, at
the political and economic level, both national and international,
encourages generous and effective initiatives for the benefit of
less fortunate peoples.
Today we want to remember all these brothers and sisters in our
prayer, with the intention of expressing our love for them in active
solidarity, so that everyone without exception can enjoy the fruits
of "mother earth" and live lives worthy of God's children.
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