GENERAL AUDIENCE POPE FRANCIS
Wednesday, 19 April 2017
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
Good Morning!
Good Morning!
We are meeting today in the light of Easter which we have
celebrated and we are continuing to celebrate in the Liturgy. For this reason,
in our series of catecheses on Christian hope, I would like to speak to you
today about the Risen Christ, our hope, as he is portrayed by Saint Paul in the
First Letter to the Corinthians. (cf. 1 Cor 15).
The Apostle wants to solve a problem which was surely at
the centre of discussions in the community of Corinth. The Resurrection is the
last topic discussed in the Letter, but it is probably the first in order of
importance. In fact, everything rests on this premise.
Speaking to his fellow Christians, Paul begins with an
irrefutable fact that is not the result of the reflection of a knowledgeable
man, but a fact, a simple fact which occurred in the lives of some people.
Christianity started from here. It is not an ideology; it is not a
philosophical system; rather it is a path of faith which begins with an event
witnessed by Jesus’ first disciples. Paul summarises it like this: Jesus died
for our sins, he was buried, and on the third day He rose and appeared to Peter
and to the twelve [apostles]. (cf. 1 Cor 15:3-5). This is the fact: He died, He
was buried, He rose and He appeared. That is, Jesus is alive! This is the heart
of the Christian message.
In announcing this event, which is the central nucleus of
faith, Paul insists, above all, on the last element of the Easter mystery, that
is, on the fact that Jesus is Risen. If in fact everything had ended with his
death, we would have in Him, an example of supreme self-denial, but this would
not be able to generate our faith. He was a hero! He died, but He is Risen
because faith arises from the Resurrection. Accepting that Christ is dead and
that He died crucified is not an act of faith. It is a historical fact.
Believing he is Risen, on the other hand, is. Our faith begins on Easter
morning. Paul makes a list of the people to whom the Risen Jesus appeared (cf.
vv. 6-7). We have here a short summary of all the Easter narratives and of all
the people who came into contact with the Risen One. At the top of the list
are: Cephas, that is Peter, the group of 12 [Apostles] and then “500 brethren”
many of whom could still have borne witness. Then James is cited. The last on
the list — as the least worthy of all — is himself. Paul says of himself: “as
to one untimely born” (v 8).
Paul uses this expression because his personal history is
dramatic. He was not an altar boy, but a persecutor of the Church, proud of his
convictions. He felt he was a successful man with a very clear idea of what
life was about and its duties. But, in this perfect picture, — everything was
perfect for Paul, he knew everything — in this perfect view of life, one day
something absolutely unexpected happens: the meeting with the Risen Jesus on
the way to Damascus. There was not just a man who fell to the ground. There was
a person seized by an event that would overturn the meaning of [his life]. And
the persecutor becomes an apostle. Why? Because I saw Jesus alive! I saw the
Risen Jesus Christ! This is the foundation of Paul’s faith, as well as of the
faith of the other apostles, as well as the faith of the Church, as well as of
our faith.
How beautiful it is to think that Christianity is
essentially this! It is not so much our search for God — a search which in
truth is tenuous —, but rather God’s search for us. Jesus took us, grasped us,
won us over, never more to leave us. Christianity is grace. It is surprise and,
for this reason, it implies a heart that is capable of amazement. A closed
heart, a rationalist heart is incapable of amazement and cannot understand what
Christianity is because Christianity is grace, and grace can only be perceived,
and furthermore, it happens in the amazement of the encounter.
So, even if we are sinners — we all are —, if our good
intentions are only “on paper”, or if on appraising our life we realize we have
accumulated many failures..., on Easter morning, we can be like those people of
whom the Gospel speaks: going to the Sepulchre of Christ, seeing the large
overturned stone and thinking that God is preparing an unexpected future for
them and for all of us; going to our sepulchre: we all have some of this inside
us. To go there and see how God is capable of rising again from there. Here,
there is happiness; there is joy and life, where everyone thought there was
only sadness, defeat and darkness. God makes His most beautiful flowers grow in
the midst of the most arid of stones.
To be Christian means not starting from death, but
rather, from God’s love for us which has defeated our most bitter enemy. God is
greater than nothingness, and a lit candle is enough to overcome the darkest of
nights. Echoing the prophets, Paul cries, “O death, where is thy victory? O
death, where is thy sting?”(v. 55). We carry this cry in our heart in these
days of Easter. And if they should ask the reason for the smile we give and our
patient readiness to share, then we will be able to answer that Jesus is still
here, that he continues to be alive among us, that Jesus is here, in the
Square, with us: Alive and Risen.
Special greetings:
I greet the English-speaking pilgrims and visitors taking
part in today’s Audience, particularly the groups from England, Sweden,
Switzerland, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Canada and the United States of America. I
offer a particular greeting to the newly-ordained deacons from the Pontifical
Irish College, together with families and friends. In the joy of the Risen
Christ, I invoke upon you and your families the loving mercy of God our Father.
May the Lord bless you all!
Lastly, I greet the young people, the sick and
the newlyweds. Dear young people, especially you from the Professione
di fede of the Dioceses of Milan and Cremona, may you experience fully
the Easter message, bearing witness everywhere to the Risen Christ’s gift of
peace. Dear sick people, look constantly to the One who has
overcome death and helps us to accept suffering as a privileged moment of
redemption and salvation. Dear newlyweds, may you live your daily
family experience in the awareness of the life giving presence of Jesus in your
home.
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Copyright - Libreria Editrice Vaticana
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