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On St.
Ambrose of Milan
"Catechesis
Is Inseparable
From the
Testimony of
Life"
VATICAN CITY,
OCT. 24, 2007 (Zenit.org).-
Here is a
translation of
the address
Benedict XVI
delivered today
at the general
audience in St.
Peter's Square
on St. Ambrose
of Milan.
* * *
Dear brothers
and sisters:
The saintly
Bishop Ambrose,
of whom I will
speak to you
today, died
during the night
in Milan between
April 3-4, 397.
It was the dawn
of Holy
Saturday. The
day before,
toward 5 p.m.,
he began to pray
as he was lying
in bed with his
arms open in the
form of the
cross. That is
how he
participated in
the solemn
Easter triduum,
in the death and
resurrection of
Our Lord. "We
saw him moving
his lips,"
testified
Paulinus, the
faithful deacon
who was invited
by Augustine to
write Ambrose's
biography
entitled "Vita,"
"but his voice
could not be
heard."
Suddenly, the
situation seemed
to come to an
end. Honoratus,
bishop of
Vercelli, who
helped Ambrose
and who slept
upstairs from
him, was
awakened by a
voice that
repeated: "Get
up, quick!
Ambrose is
approaching
death."
Honoratus
immediately went
downstairs,
Paulinus
recounted, "and
offered the
saint the Body
of the Lord.
After having
taken it,
Ambrose
surrendered his
spirit, carrying
with him
viaticum. Thus,
his soul,
strengthened by
virtue of that
food, now enjoys
the company of
angels" ("Vita,"
47).
On that Good
Friday of 397,
the open arms of
the dying
Ambrose
expressed his
mystical
participation in
the death and
resurrection of
Our Lord. This
was his last
catechesis:
Without speaking
a word, he spoke
with the
testimony of
life.
Ambrose was not
old when he
died. He was not
even 60, for he
was born around
340 in Trier,
where his father
was prefect of
the Gauls. The
family was
Christian. When
his father died,
and he was still
a boy, his
mother brought
him to Rome to
prepare him for
a civil career,
giving him a
solid rhetorical
and juridical
education.
Around 370, he
was sent to
govern the
provinces of
Emilia and
Liguria, with
headquarters in
Milan. It was
precisely there
where the
struggle between
orthodox
Christians and
Arians was
seething,
especially after
the death of
Auxentius, the
Arian bishop.
Ambrose
intervened to
pacify those of
both factions,
and his
authority was
such that,
despite the fact
that he was
nothing more
than a simple
catechumen, he
was acclaimed by
the people as
bishop of Milan.
Until that
moment, Ambrose
had been the
highest
magistrate of
the Roman Empire
in northern
Italy. Highly
prepared
culturally, but
deficient in
knowledge of
Scriptures, the
new bishop began
to study them
energetically.
He learned to
study and
comment on the
Bible from the
works of Origen,
the undisputed
master of the
school of
Alexandria. In
this way,
Ambrose brought
to the Latin
environment the
practice of
meditating on
Scriptures
initiated by
Origen,
beginning the
practice of "lectio
divina" in the
West.
The method of "lectio"
soon guided the
preaching and
writing of
Ambrose, which
emerged
precisely from
prayerful
listening to the
word of God. A
famous opening
from one
Ambrosian
catechesis
distinctly
demonstrates how
the holy bishop
applied the Old
Testament to
Christian life:
"When we read
the histories of
the patriarchs
and the maxims
of Proverbs, we
come face to
face with
morality," the
bishop of Milan
told his
catechumens and
neophytes, "in
order that,
educated by
these, you can
then accustom
yourselves to
enter into the
life of the
fathers and to
follow the path
of obedience to
the divine
precepts" ("I
misteri," 1,1).
In other words,
neophytes and
catechumens, in
the opinion of
the bishop,
after having
learned the art
of living
morally, could
then consider
themselves
prepared for the
great mysteries
of Christ. In
this way, the
preaching of
Ambrose, which
represents the
heart of his
prodigious
literary work,
originates from
the reading of
sacred books
("The
Patriarchs," the
historical
books, and
"Proverbs," the
sapiential
books), to live
in conformity
with divine
revelation.
It is evident
that the
personal
testimony of the
preacher, and
the exemplarity
of the Christian
community,
conditions the
efficacy of any
preaching. From
this point of
view a passage
from St.
Augustine's
"Confessions" is
significant.
Augustine had
come to Milan as
a professor of
rhetoric; he was
a skeptic, not a
Christian. He
was looking, but
he wasn't able
to truly
encounter the
Christian truth.
For the young
African
rhetorician,
skeptical and
desperate, it
was not the
beautiful
homilies of
Ambrose that
converted him --
despite the fact
that he
appreciated them
immensely.
Rather, it was
the testimony of
the bishop and
the Church in
Milan, which
prayed and sang,
united as a
single body. It
was a Church
capable of
resisting the
bullying of the
emperor and his
mother, who had
demanded again
the
expropriation of
a Church
building for
Arian ceremonies
in early 386.
In the building
that was to be
expropriated,
Augustine wrote,
"the devout
people of Milan
stayed put,
ready to die
with their own
bishop." This
testimony in the
"Confessions" is
invaluable,
because it shows
that something
was moving deep
within
Augustine. He
continued,
"Despite the
fact that we
were still
spiritually
lukewarm, we
participated as
well in the
fervor of the
entire
population"
("Confessions"
9, 7).
From the life
and example of
Bishop Ambrose,
Augustine
learned to
believe and to
preach. We can
refer to a
famous sermon of
the African,
which deserved
to be cited many
centuries later
in No. 25 of the
dogmatic
constitution
"Dei Verbum":
"All the clergy
must hold fast
to the sacred
Scriptures
through diligent
sacred reading
and careful
study,
especially the
priests of
Christ and
others, such as
deacons and
catechists who
are legitimately
active in the
ministry of the
word. This is to
be done so that
none of them
will become,"
and here is
where Augustine
is quoted, "'an
empty preacher
of the word of
God outwardly,
who is not a
listener to it
inwardly.'" He
had learned
precisely from
Ambrose this "to
listen
inwardly," this
diligence in
reading sacred
Scripture in a
prayerful
attitude, in
order to truly
receive it in
one's heart, and
to assimilate
the word of God.
Dear brothers
and sisters: I
would like to
present to you a
type of
"patristic icon"
that, seen in
the light of
what we have
just said,
effectively
represents the
heart of
Ambrosian
doctrine. In the
same book of
"Confessions,"
Augustine
recounts his
meeting with
Ambrose,
certainly a
meeting of great
importance for
the history of
the Church. He
writes in the
text that when
he came to see
the bishop of
Milan, the
latter was
always
surrounded by
hordes of people
with problems,
whom he tried to
help. There was
always a long
line of people
waiting to speak
to Ambrose,
looking for
comfort and
hope. When
Ambrose was not
with these
people -- and
this only
happened for
short periods of
time -- he was
either filling
his body with
the food
necessary to
live, or filling
his spirit with
reading. In this
respect
Augustine
praises Ambrose,
because Ambrose
read Scriptures
with his mouth
closed, and only
with his eyes
(cf.
"Confessions,"
6,3).
In the early
centuries of
Christianity,
reading
Scripture was
thought of
strictly in
terms of being
proclaimed, and
reading aloud
facilitated
understanding,
even for the one
who was reading
it. The fact
that Ambrose
could read
through the
pages only with
his eyes was for
Augustine a
singular
capacity for
reading and
being familiar
with Scripture.
In this reading
-- in which the
heart seeks to
understand the
word of God --
this is the
"icon" we are
talking about.
Here one can see
the method of
Ambrosian
catechesis:
Scripture
itself,
profoundly
assimilated,
suggests the
content of what
one must
announce in
order to achieve
conversion of
hearts.
Thus, according
to the teachings
of Ambrose and
Augustine,
catechesis is
inseparable from
the testimony of
life. The
catechist may
also avail
himself of what
I wrote in
"Introduction to
Christianity"
about
theologians.
Educators of the
faith cannot run
the risk of
looking like
some sort of
clown, who is
simply playing a
role. Rather,
using an image
from Origen, a
writer who was
particularly
appreciated by
Ambrose, he
should be like
the beloved
disciple, who
rested his head
on the Master's
heart and there
learned how to
think, speak and
act. In the end,
the true
disciple is he
who proclaims
the Gospel in
the most
credible and
effective
manner.
Like John the
Apostle, Bishop
Ambrose, who
never tired of
repeating "Omnia
Christus est
nobis!" --
Christ is
everything for
us! -- remained
an authentic
witness for the
Lord. With these
same words, full
of love for
Jesus, we will
conclude our
catechesis: "Omnia
Christus est
nobis! If you
want to heal a
wound, he is the
physician; is
you burn with
fever, he is the
fountain; if you
are oppressed by
iniquity, he is
justice; if you
need help, he is
strength; if you
fear death, he
is life; if you
desire heaven,
he is the way;
if you are in
darkness, he is
the light. ...
Taste and see
how good the
Lord is. Blessed
is the man who
hopes in him!"
("De virginitate,"
16,99). We also
hope in Christ.
In this way we
will be blessed
and will live in
peace.
[After the
audience, the
Pope greeted the
people in
various
languages. In
English, he
said:]
Dear
Brothers and
Sisters,
In our
catechesis on
the teachers of
the ancient
Church, we now
turn to Saint
Ambrose of
Milan. Born into
a Christian
family in the
middle of the
fourth century,
Ambrose was
educated in Rome
and sent as
governor to
Milan, where,
although a
catechumen, he
was soon
acclaimed as
Bishop. He set
about mastering
the Scriptures,
guided by the
writings of
Origen and the
practice of "lectio
divina," a form
of prayerful
meditation on
the word of God.
It was Ambrose
who introduced
this practice to
the West, and it
deeply permeated
his life and
preaching. Saint
Augustine, who
was converted in
Milan and
baptized by
Ambrose, relates
the profound
impression which
Ambrose’s
engagement with
the word of God
left upon him.
Ambrose,
contrary to the
custom of the
time, did not
read the
Scriptures
aloud, which
Augustine
interpreted as a
sign of how
deeply the
inspired word
had penetrated
the holy
Bishop’s mind
and heart. This
image can serve
as an "icon" of
Ambrose as a
catechist: his
teaching was
inseparable from
his prayer and
his entire life.
For Ambrose,
Christ was
everything --
Omnia Christus
est nobis! --
and so it must
be for every
catechist and
indeed for every
one of the
Lord’s
disciples.
I am happy to
greet the
Sisters of the
Sorrowful Mother
who are gathered
in Rome for
their Twentieth
General Chapter.
I also cordially
welcome an
ecumenical
pilgrimage of
Catholics and
Evangelical
Lutherans from
the United
States of
America. Upon
all the
English-speaking
visitors and
pilgrims I
invoke God’s
abundant
blessings of
peace and joy.
© Copyright 2007
- Libreria
Editrice
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