March 22, 2008
Benedict XVI's Easter Vigil Homily
"We Are Not Called to Darkness, But to Light"
VATICAN CITY, MARCH 23, 2008 (Zenit.org).- Here is a Vatican
translation of the homily Benedict XVI delivered Holy Saturday at
the Mass of the Easter Vigil, celebrated in St. Peter's Basilica.
* * *
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
In his farewell discourse, Jesus announced his imminent death and
resurrection to his disciples with these mysterious words: "I go
away, and I will come to you", he said (Jn 14:28). Dying is a "going
away". Even if the body of the deceased remains behind, he himself
has gone away into the unknown, and we cannot follow him (cf. Jn
13:36). Yet in Jesus’s case, there is something utterly new, which
changes the world.
In the case of our own death, the "going away" is definitive, there
is no return. Jesus, on the other hand, says of his death: "I go
away, and I will come to you." It is by going away that he comes.
His going ushers in a completely new and greater way of being
present. By dying he enters into the love of the Father. His dying
is an act of love. Love, however, is immortal. Therefore, his going
away is transformed into a new coming, into a form of presence which
reaches deeper and does not come to an end. During his earthly life,
Jesus, like all of us, was tied to the external conditions of bodily
existence: to a determined place and a determined time.
Bodiliness places limits on our existence. We cannot be
simultaneously in two different places. Our time is destined to come
to an end. And between the "I" and the "you" there is a wall of
otherness. To be sure, through love we can somehow enter the other’s
existence.
Nevertheless, the insurmountable barrier of being different remains
in place. Yet Jesus, who is now totally transformed through the act
of love, is free from such barriers and limits. He is able not only
to pass through closed doors in the outside world, as the Gospels
recount (cf. Jn 20:19). He can pass through the interior door
separating the "I" from the "you", the closed door between yesterday
and today, between the past and the future. On the day of his solemn
entry into Jerusalem, when some Greeks asked to see him, Jesus
replied with the parable of the grain of wheat which has to pass
through death in order to bear much fruit. In this way he foretold
his own destiny: these words were not addressed simply to one or two
Greeks in the space of a few minutes.
Through his Cross, through his going away, through his dying like
the grain of wheat, he would truly arrive among the Greeks, in such
a way that they could see him and touch him through faith. His going
away is transformed into a coming, in the Risen Lord’s universal
manner of presence, in which he is there yesterday, today and for
ever, in which he embraces all times and all places. Now he can even
surmount the wall of otherness that separates the "I" from the
"you". This happened with Paul, who describes the process of his
conversion and his Baptism in these words: "it is no longer I who
live, but Christ who lives in me" (Gal 2:20). Through the coming of
the Risen One, Paul obtained a new identity. His closed "I" was
opened. Now he lives in communion with Jesus Christ, in the great
"I" of believers who have become -- as he puts it -- "one in Christ"
(Gal 3:28).
So, dear friends, it is clear that, through Baptism, the mysterious
words spoken by Jesus at the Last Supper become present for you once
more. In Baptism, the Lord enters your life through the door of your
heart. We no longer stand alongside or in opposition to one another.
He passes through all these doors. This is the reality of Baptism:
he, the Risen One, comes; he comes to you and joins his life with
yours, drawing you into the open fire of his love. You become one,
one with him, and thus one among yourselves. At first this can sound
rather abstract and unrealistic. But the more you live the life of
the baptized, the more you can experience the truth of these words.
Believers -- the baptized -- are never truly cut off from one
another. Continents, cultures, social structures or even historical
distances may separate us.
But when we meet, we know one another on the basis of the same Lord,
the same faith, the same hope, the same love, which form us. Then we
experience that the foundation of our lives is the same. We
experience that in our inmost depths we are anchored in the same
identity, on the basis of which all our outward differences, however
great they may be, become secondary. Believers are never totally cut
off from one another. We are in communion because of our deepest
identity: Christ within us. Thus faith is a force for peace and
reconciliation in the world: distances between people are overcome,
in the Lord we have become close (cf. Eph 2:13).
The Church expresses the inner reality of Baptism as the gift of a
new identity through the tangible elements used in the
administration of the sacrament. The fundamental element in Baptism
is water; next, in second place, is light, which is used to great
effect in the Liturgy of the Easter Vigil. Let us take a brief look
at these two elements. In the final chapter of the Letter to the
Hebrews, there is a statement about Christ which does not speak
directly of water, but the Old Testament allusions nevertheless
point clearly to the mystery of water and its symbolic meaning. Here
we read: "The God of peace … brought again from the dead our Lord
Jesus, the great shepherd of the sheep, by the blood of the eternal
covenant" (13:20).
In this sentence, there is an echo of the prophecy of Isaiah, in
which Moses is described as the shepherd whom the Lord brought up
from the water, from the sea (cf. 63:11). Jesus appears as the new,
definitive Shepherd who brings to fulfillment what Moses had done:
he leads us out of the deadly waters of the sea, out of the waters
of death. In this context we may recall that Moses’ mother placed
him in a basket in the Nile. Then, through God’s providence, he was
taken out of the water, carried from death to life, and thus --
having himself been saved from the waters of death -- he was able to
lead others through the sea of death. Jesus descended for us into
the dark waters of death.
But through his blood, so the Letter to the Hebrews tells us, he was
brought back from death: his love united itself to the Father’s
love, and thus from the abyss of death he was able to rise to life.
Now he raises us from death to true life. This is exactly what
happens in Baptism: he draws us towards himself, he draws us into
true life. He leads us through the often murky sea of history, where
we are frequently in danger of sinking amid all the confusion and
perils. In Baptism he takes us, as it were, by the hand, he leads us
along the path that passes through the Red Sea of this life and
introduces us to everlasting life, the true and upright life. Let us
grasp his hand firmly! Whatever may happen, whatever may befall us,
let us not lose hold of his hand! Let us walk along the path that
leads to life.
In the second place, there is the symbol of light and fire. Gregory
of Tours recounts a practice that in some places was preserved for a
long time, of lighting the new fire for the celebration of the
Easter Vigil directly from the sun, using a crystal. Light and fire,
so to speak, were received anew from heaven, so that all the lights
and fires of the year could be kindled from them. This is a symbol
of what we are celebrating in the Easter Vigil.
Through his radical love for us, in which the heart of God and the
heart of man touched, Jesus Christ truly took light from heaven and
brought it to the earth -- the light of truth and the fire of love
that transform man’s being. He brought the light, and now we know
who God is and what God is like. Thus we also know what our own
situation is: what we are, and for what purpose we exist. When we
are baptized, the fire of this light is brought down deep within
ourselves. Thus, in the early Church, Baptism was also called the
Sacrament of Illumination: God’s light enters into us; thus we
ourselves become children of light.
We must not allow this light of truth, that shows us the path, to be
extinguished. We must protect it from all the forces that seek to
eliminate it so as to cast us back into darkness regarding God and
ourselves. Darkness, at times, can seem comfortable. I can hide, and
spend my life asleep. Yet we are not called to darkness, but to
light. In our baptismal promises, we rekindle this light, so to
speak, year by year. Yes, I believe that the world and my life are
not the product of chance, but of eternal Reason and eternal Love,
they are created by Almighty God. Yes, I believe that in Jesus
Christ, in his incarnation, in his Cross and resurrection, the face
of God has been revealed; that in him, God is present in our midst,
he unites us and leads us towards our goal, towards eternal Love.
Yes, I believe that the Holy Spirit gives us the word of truth and
enlightens our hearts; I believe that in the communion of the Church
we all become one Body with the Lord, and thus we encounter his
resurrection and eternal life. The Lord has granted us the light of
truth. This light is also fire, a powerful force coming from God, a
force that does not destroy, but seeks to transform our hearts, so
that we truly become men of God, and so that his peace can become
active in this world.
In the early Church there was a custom whereby the Bishop or the
priest, after the homily, would cry out to the faithful: "Conversi
ad Dominum" -- turn now towards the Lord. This meant in the first
place that they would turn towards the East, towards the rising sun,
the sign of Christ returning, whom we go to meet when we celebrate
the Eucharist. Where this was not possible, for some reason, they
would at least turn towards the image of Christ in the apse, or
towards the Cross, so as to orient themselves inwardly towards the
Lord.
Fundamentally, this involved an interior event; conversion, the
turning of our soul towards Jesus Christ and thus towards the living
God, towards the true light. Linked with this, then, was the other
exclamation that still today, before the Eucharistic Prayer, is
addressed to the community of the faithful: "Sursum corda" -- "Lift
up your hearts", high above the tangled web of our concerns,
desires, anxieties and thoughtlessness -- "Lift up your hearts, your
inner selves!" In both exclamations we are summoned, as it were, to
a renewal of our Baptism: Conversi ad Dominum -- we must distance
ourselves ever anew from taking false paths, onto which we stray so
often in our thoughts and actions.
We must turn ever anew towards him who is the Way, the Truth and the
Life. We must be converted ever anew, turning with our whole life
towards the Lord. And ever anew we must allow our hearts to be
withdrawn from the force of gravity, which pulls them down, and
inwardly we must raise them high: in truth and love. At this hour,
let us thank the Lord, because through the power of his word and of
the holy Sacraments, he points us in the right direction and draws
our heart upwards. Let us pray to him in these words: Yes, Lord,
make us Easter people, men and women of light, filled with the fire
of your love. Amen.
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