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Benedict XVI's
Homily on Palm Sunday

VATICAN CITY, APRIL 10,
2006 (Zenit.org).- Here is a translation
of Benedict XVI's homily during the Mass on Palm Sunday, 21st World
Day of Youth, whose theme was "Thy Word Is a Lamp to My Feet and a
Light to My Path" (Psalm 118[119]:105).
* * *
For 20 years, thanks to Pope John Paul II, Palm Sunday has become in
a particular way the Day of Youth, the day that young people around
the world go out to meet Christ, wishing to accompany him in their
cities and countries so that he will be among us and be able to
establish his peace in the world. If we want to go out to encounter
Jesus and then walk with him on his way, we must ask: On what path
does he wish to guide us? What do we expect from him? What does he
expect from us?
To understand what occurred on Palm Sunday and to know what it meant
not only for that time but for all times, a detail is important,
which became for his disciples the key to understand that event
when, after Easter, they recalled those tumultuous days with a new
look.
Jesus entered the Holy City riding on a donkey, that is, the animal
of simple country people and, moreover, a donkey that did not belong
to him, that he had been loaned for this occasion. He did not arrive
in a luxurious royal carriage, or on horseback as the world's great,
but on a borrowed donkey. John tells us initially that the disciples
did not understand this.
Only after Passover did they realize that in this way Jesus was
fulfilling the prophets' proclamations; he showed that his action
derived from the Word of God and led to its fulfillment. They
remembered, says John, that one reads in the prophet Zechariah:
"Fear not, daughter of Zion; behold your king is coming, sitting on
an ass's colt" (John 12:15; cf. Zechariah 9:9).
To understand the meaning of the prophecy and thus Jesus' action, we
must listen to the whole text of Zechariah, who continues saying:
"He will cut off the chariot from Ephraim and the war horse from
Jerusalem; and the battle bow shall be cut off, and he shall command
peace to the nations; his dominion shall be from sea to sea, and
from the River to the ends of the earth" (9:10).
In this way, the prophet makes three affirmations about the future
king.
First, he says he will be a king of the poor, a poor man among the
poor and for the poor. Poverty is understood in this case in the
sense of the "anawim" of Israel, of those believing and humble souls
that we see around Jesus, in the perspective of the first beatitude
of the Sermon on the Mount.
One can be materially poor but have a heart full of anxiety for
wealth and power, which comes from wealth. The fact that one lives
in envy and avarice shows that, in one's heart, one is part of the
rich. One wishes to reverse the distribution of goods, but only so
that oneself will be in the situation that the rich occupied before.
Poverty in Jesus' sense -- in the prophets' sense -- presupposes
above all interior freedom from avarice and the will to power.
It is about a much greater reality than a different distribution of
goods, which would be limited to the material realm, and which make
hearts even harder. Above all, it is about the purification of the
heart, thanks to which one recognizes that possession is
responsibility before others which, in the sight of God, allows
itself to be guided by Jesus who, being rich, became poor for us
(cf. 2 Corinthians 8:9).
Interior freedom presupposes the surmounting of corruption and
avarice which at this point devastate the world; this freedom may be
found only if God becomes our wealth, it may be found only in the
patience of daily renunciations, in which it develops as authentic
freedom. On Palm Sunday we acclaim Jesus, the king who points out to
us the way to this goal, and we ask him to take us with him on his
path.
Second, the prophet shows us that this king will be a king of peace:
He will make the chariots of battle and war horses disappear, will
cut off the bow and command peace. In the figure of Jesus, this is
concretized with the sign of the cross. It is the broken bow, in a
certain sense the new, authentic rainbow of God, which unites heaven
and earth and builds bridges between continents over the abysses.
The new weapon Jesus puts in our hands is the cross, sign of
reconciliation, of love that is stronger than death. Every time we
make the sign of the cross, we must remember not to respond to an
injustice with more injustice, to violence with more violence; we
must remember that we can only overcome evil with good, without
returning evil for evil.
The prophet's third affirmation is the pre-announcement of
universality: The kingdom of the king of peace extends "from sea to
sea ... to the ends of the earth." The former promise of land is
replaced with a new vision: The space of the messianic king is no
longer a specific country, which would be separated from others, and
which inevitably would take a position against other countries. His
country is the earth, the whole world. Surmounting all limitations,
in the multiplicity of cultures, he creates unity.
Penetrating with a glance the clouds of history, we see emerge from
afar in the prophecy the network of Eucharistic communities that
embraces the whole world, a network of communities that constitute
Jesus' "Kingdom of peace" from sea to sea to the ends of the earth.
He comes to all cultures and to all parts of the world, everywhere,
to the miserable huts and poor peoples, as well as to the splendor
of cathedrals. Everywhere, he is the same, the Only One, and in this
way, all those gathered in prayer, in communion with him, are also
united among themselves in one body. Christ rules making himself our
bread and giving himself to us. Thus he builds his Kingdom.
This nexus is made totally clear in another phrase of the Old
Testament which characterizes and explains what occurred on Palm
Sunday. The crowd acclaimed Jesus: "Hosanna! Blessed is he who comes
in the name of the Lord!" (Mark 11:9; Psalm 117 [118]:25f.). This
phrase forms part of the rite of the feast of tents, during which
the faithful moved in a circle around the altar, holding in their
hands branches of palm, myrtle and willow.
Then the people cried out before Jesus, in whom they saw he who
comes in the name of the Lord. In fact, the expression: "He who
comes in the name of the Lord," had become the way to designate the
Messiah. In Jesus they recognize him who truly comes in the name of
the Lord and brings God's presence among them. This cry of hope of
Israel, this acclamation to Jesus during his entry into Jerusalem,
has with reason become in the Church the acclamation of him, in the
Eucharist, who always comes among us in the name of the Lord,
uniting the ends of the earth in the peace of God. Given that the
Lord is coming, we come out of our exclusivist realities and become
part of the great community of all who celebrate this holy
sacrament. We enter into his kingdom of peace and acclaim in him, in
a certain sense, our brothers and sisters, for whom he comes to
create a kingdom of peace in this lacerated world.
The three characteristics proclaimed by the prophet -- poverty,
peace, universality -- are summarized in the sign of the cross.
Because of this, and rightly so, the cross has become the center of
World Youth Day. There was a time -- and it is not totally
surmounted -- in which Christianity was rejected precisely because
of the cross.
The cross speaks of sacrifice, it was said, the cross is a sign of
the negation of life. We, however, want a full life, without
restrictions and renunciations. We want to live, we just want to
live. We do not let ourselves be limited by precepts and
prohibitions -- it was said, and continues to be said -- we want
wealth and plentitude. All this seems convincing and attractive; it
is the language of the serpent that says to us: "Do not be fearful.
Eat calmly from all the trees of the garden!"
Palm Sunday, however, tells us that the authentic great "yes" is, in
fact, the cross, that the cross is the authentic tree of life. We do
not attain to life by seizing it, but by giving it. Love is the
giving of ourselves and, for this reason, is the way of authentic
life symbolized by the cross. Today the cross is handed over, which
was the center of World Youth Day in Cologne, to a delegation to
begin its journey to Sydney, where in the year 2008 the youth of the
world want to meet again around Jesus to build with him the kingdom
of peace.
From Cologne to Sydney, a journey across continents and cultures, a
journey across a world lacerated and tormented by violence!
Symbolically, it is like the journey from sea to sea, from the river
to the ends of the earth. It is the journey of him who, with the
sign of the cross, gives us peace and makes us bearers of his peace.
I thank the youths who will take this cross, in which we can almost
touch the mystery of Jesus, on the paths of the world. Let us pray
that at the same time he will open our hearts so that, following the
cross, we become messengers of his love and peace. Amen.
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