Papal
preacher delivers first Advent Sermon
(Vatican
Radio) The first Advent homily for 2015 was preached by the Preacher of the
Pontifical Household, Fr Raniero Cantalamessa, O.F.M. Cap., at the Redemptoris
Mater Chapel in the Apostolic Palace.
Father
Cantalamessa dedicated his preaching for the Advent season to topics of the
principle documents of the Second Vatican Council, which concluded 50 years
ago. He said his Advent preaching would focus on the Constitution on the
Church, Lumen gentium, while saving the others for Lent of 2016. His first
Advent Sermon was entitle “Christ, the Light to the Nations: A Christological
Reading of Lumen gentium”.
Below,
please find the full text of Father Raniero Cantalamessa’s first Advent Sermon
for 2015:
Fr.
Raniero Cantalamessa, ofmcap
First Advent Sermon, 2015
First Advent Sermon, 2015
“CHRIST,
THE LIGHT TO THE NATIONS”
A Christological Reading of Lumen gentium
A Christological Reading of Lumen gentium
1.
A Christological Ecclesiology
The
fiftieth anniversary of the end of the Second Vatican Council prompted in me
the idea of dedicating the three Advent meditations to revisiting the principal
topics of the Council. Concretely, I would like to develop reflections on each
of the four main documents of the Council: the constitutions on the Church (Lumen
gentium), on the Liturgy (Sacrosanctum concilium), on the Word of
God (Dei Verbum), and on the Church in the Modern World (Gaudium et
spes).
One
observation has given me the courage, in the short time I have, to deal with
themes that are so vast and have already been so debated. There has been
non-stop writing and discussion about the Council, but it has almost always
concerned its doctrinal and pastoral applications; it has focused very few
times on its spiritual content strictly speaking. I would like, then, to
concentrate on that content by trying to see what the Council documents, as
texts of spirituality, still have to tell us that is useful for the building up
of faith.
We
will begin by dedicating these three Advent meditations to Lumen
gentium, saving the rest for the Lent coming up, God willing. The three
themes in this constitution I want to reflect on are the Church as the body and
bride of Christ, the universal call to holiness, and the doctrine on the
Blessed Virgin.
The
idea for this first meditation on the Church came to me in a rereading, by
chance, of the beginning of the constitution in its Latin text, which says, “Lumen
gentium cum sit Christus,” “Christ is the light of the nations.”[1] I must
say, to my embarrassment, that I had never paid attention to the enormous
implications contained in this beginning. Because the title of the constitution
has only the first part of the sentence (Lumen gentium), I thought (and
I do not think I am the only one) that the title “light of the nations”
referred to the Church while, as we see, it actually refers to Christ. It is
the title with which the elderly Simeon greeted the infant Messiah when he was
taken to the temple by Mary and Joseph: “a light to the nations and the glory
of his people Israel” (see Luke 2:32).
This
initial statement is the key to interpreting the whole ecclesiology of the
Second Vatican Council. It is a christological ecclesiology and is therefore
spiritual and mystical before being social and institutional. It is necessary
to bring this christological dimension of the Council’s ecclesiology back to
the forefront also in view of a more effective evangelization. People do not
accept Christ because of love for the Church but they accept the Church because
of love for Christ, even a Church disfigured by the sin of its many
representatives.
I
have to say immediately that I am certainly not the first one to highlight this
essentially christological dimension of the Second Vatican Council’s
ecclesiology. Rereading the numerous writings of the former Cardinal Ratzinger
on the Church, I became aware of the persistence with which he had tried to
keep this dimension of the doctrine on the Church in Lumen gentiumalive.
His reminder to us of the doctrinal implications of the first sentence — “Lumen
gentium cum sit Christus,” “Christ is the light of the nations” — can be
found in his writings followed by the affirmation, “If you want to understand
Vatican II correctly, you must begin again and again with this first
sentence.”[2]
We
need to immediately qualify this to avoid any misunderstanding: no one has ever
denied this inner spiritual vision of the Church. However, as often happens in
human affairs, the new risks overshadowing the old, the present makes us lose
sight of the eternal, and the urgent takes precedence over the important. This
explains how the concept of ecclesial communion and of the people of God was
often developed only in its horizontal and sociological sense, that is, in the
context of the contrast between koinonia and hierarchy, and
was thus focused more on the communion of the Church’s members with each other
than on the communion of all its members with Christ.
It
was a priority for that particular time, and as such St. John Paul II welcomed
and promoted it in his apostolic letter, Novo millennio ineunte.[3]
But fifty years after the end of the Council, it is perhaps useful to try to
reestablish the balance between this vision of the Church, shaped by the
debates of that time, and the spiritual and mystic vision found in the New
Testament and in the Fathers of the Church. The fundamental question is not
“What is the Church?” but “Who is the Church?”[4] That is the question that
will guide me in this current meditation.
2.
The Church as the Body and the Spouse of Christ
The
heart and the christological content of Lumen gentium emerge
particularly in the first chapter where the Church is presented as the spouse
of Christ and the body of Christ. Let us listen to some of its statements:
'The
church, which is called “that Jerusalem which is above,” and “our mother” (Gal
4:26; see Apoc 12:17) is described as the spotless spouse of the spotless Lamb
[see Apoc 19:7, 21:2 and 9; 22:17], whom Christ “loved . . . and for whom he
delivered himself up that he might sanctify her” (Eph 5:25-26). It is the
church which he unites to himself by an unbreakable alliance, and which he
constantly “nourishes and cherishes” (Eph 5:29). It is the church which, once
purified, he willed to be joined to himself, subject in love and fidelity (see
Eph 5:24).'[5]
This
is what it says about being the spouse, and concerning the “body of Christ” it
says,
'In
the human nature united to himself, the Son of God, by overcoming death through
his own death and resurrection, redeemed humanity and changed it into a new
creation (see Gal 6:15; 2 Cor 5:17). For by communicating his Spirit, Christ
mystically constituted as his body his brothers and sisters who are called
together from every nation. . . . Really sharing in the body of the Lord in the
breaking of the Eucharistic bread, we are taken up into communion with him and
with one another. “Because the bread is one, we, though many, are one body, all
of us who partake of the one bread” (1 Cor 10:17).'[6]
It
was the former Cardinal Ratzinger who also deserves credit for highlighting the
intrinsic relationship between these two images of the Church: the Church is the
body of Christ because she is the spouse of Christ! In other words, the Pauline
image of the Church as the body of Christ is not primarily based on the
metaphor of the harmony of the human body’s parts (even though he applies it at
times this way as in Romans 12:4ff and 1 Corinthians 12:12ff), but rather on
the spousal idea of the one flesh that a man and a woman form when they join
themselves in marriage (see Eph 5:29-32) and even more so on the eucharistic
idea of the one body that is formed by those who partake of the same bread:
“Because the bread is one, we, though many, are one body, all of us who partake
of the one bread” (1 Cor 10:17).[7]
We
hardly need to mention that this was at the heart of the Augustinian concept of
the Church, to such an extent that he at times gave the impression of
identifying the body of Christ, which is the Church, purely and simply with the
body of Christ, which is the Eucharist.[8] This is demonstrated by the
evolution of the expression “mystical body” of Christ. From initially
indicating the Eucharist, it slowly moved to mean, as it does today, the
Church.[9] This, as we know, is also a perspective that brings Catholic
ecclesiology closer to the eucharistic ecclesiology of the Orthodox Church.
Without the Church and without the Eucharist, Christ would not have a “body” in
the world.
3.
Going from the Church to the Soul
A
principle that is often repeated and applied by the Fathers of the Church is “Ecclesia vel
anima,” “the church or the soul.”[10] It means that what is said about the
Church in general can be applied, after the necessary
distinctions, to each person in particular in the Church. An
assertion attributed to St. Ambrose says, “It is within [its] souls that the
Church is beautiful.”[11] Wanting to be faithful to the intention I stated for
these meditations to focus on the more directly “edifying” aspects of the
Council’s ecclesiology, we can ask ourselves, “What does it mean for the
spiritual life of a Christian to live out and achieve this idea of the Church
as the body and spouse of Christ?”
If
the Church in its innermost and truest meaning is the body of Christ, then I
actualize the Church in myself, I am an “ecclesial being,”[12] to the extent
that I allow Christ to make me his body, not just in theory but also in
practice. What counts is not the position I occupy in the Church but the
position that Christ occupies in my heart!
This
occurs objectively through the sacraments, and especially two of them: baptism
and the Eucharist. We receive baptism only once, but we can receive the
Eucharist every day. This is why it is important to celebrate it and receive it
in such a way that we can carry out the task of making ourselves the Church.
The famous maxim by Henri de Lubac that “the Eucharist makes the Church”[13]
applies not only on the community level but also on the personal level. The
Eucharist makes each of us a body of Christ, that is, the Church. Here too I
would like to quote the profound words of the former Cardinal Ratzinger:
'Communion
means that the seemingly uncrossable frontier of my “I” is left wide open. . .
. [It] means the fusion of two existences; just as in the taking of nourishment
the body assimilates foreign matter to itself, and is thereby enabled to live,
in the same way my “I” is assimilated to that of Jesus, it is made similar to
him in an exchange that increasingly breaks through the lines of division.'[14]
Two
lives, mine and Christ’s, become one “without confusion and without division,”
not hypostatically as in the Incarnation but mystically and really. From two
“I’s” there ends up being only one: not my insignificant “I” as a creature but
that of Christ, to the point that after receiving the Eucharist each of us can
dare to say with Paul, “It is no longer I who live, but Christ who lives in me”
(Gal 2:20). Nicholas Cabasilas writes that through the Eucharist,
'Christ
infuses Himself into us and mingles Himself with us. He changes and transforms
us into Himself, as a small drop of water is changed by being poured into an
immense sea of ointment.'[15]
The
image of the Church as body of Christ is intrinsically linked, as we said, to
that of the Church as the spouse of Christ, and this too can be a great help
for us to experience the Eucharist in a profoundly mystagogical way. The Letter
to the Ephesians says that marriage is a symbol of the union of Christ and the
Church: “‘For this reason a man shall leave his father and mother and be joined
to his wife, and the two shall become one flesh.’ This mystery is a profound
one, and I am saying that it refers to Christ and the church!” (Eph 5:31-32).
According to St. Paul, the immediate consequence of marriage is that the body
of the husband now belongs to the wife and, conversely, the body of the wife
belongs to the husband (see 1 Cor 7:4).
When
applied to the Eucharist, this means that the incorruptible flesh of the
incarnate Word that gives life becomes “mine,” but it also means that my flesh,
my humanity, becomes Christ’s and belongs to him. In the Eucharist we receive
the body and blood of Christ, but Christ also “receives” our body and blood!
St. Hilary of Poitiers writes that Jesus assumes the flesh only of the person
who assumes his.[16] Christ says to us, “Take this; it is my body,” but we too
can say to him, “Take this; it is my body.”
In
the collection of eucharistic poetry called The Place Within, the
future pope Karol Wojtyla called this new person whose life is made of Christ
“the eucharistic I”:
Then
a miracle will be,
a transformation:
You will become me,
and I—eucharistic—You.[17]
a transformation:
You will become me,
and I—eucharistic—You.[17]
There
is nothing in my life that does not belong to Christ. No one should say, “Oh,
Jesus does not know what it means to be married, to be a woman, to have lost a
son, to be sick, to be elderly, or to be a person of color!” If you experience
something, he experiences it too, thanks to you and through you. Whatever
Christ himself was not able to experience “in the flesh”—since his earthly
existence, like everyone else’s, was limited to certain experiences—is now
lived and “experienced ” by the Risen One “in the Spirit” thanks to the spousal
communion at Mass. He experiences what it is like to be a woman in women, what
it is like to be elderly in the elderly, what it is like to be sick in a sick
person. All that was “lacking” in the complete “incarnation” of the Word is now
accomplished through the Eucharist.
The
Blessed Elizabeth of the Trinity wrote in a letter to her mother: “The Bride
belongs to the bridegroom; mine has taken me; he wants me to be an extended
humanity for him.”[18] It is as if Jesus is saying to us, “I hunger for you, I
want to live in you, so I need to live in all your thoughts, in all your
affection; I need to live through your flesh, through your blood, through your
daily weariness; I need to feed off you the way you feed off me!”
What
an inexhaustible reason for amazement and comfort at the thought that our
humanity becomes Christ’s humanity! However, what responsibility comes along
with all this! If my eyes have become Christ’s eyes and my mouth has become
Christ’s mouth, what a reason not to allow my gaze to indulge in lustful
images, or allow my tongue to speak against a brother, or allow my body to
serve as an instrument of sin! The apostle asks, “Shall I therefore take the
members of Christ and make them members of a prostitute?” (1 Cor 6:15). These
words apply to every baptized person. But then what can be said about
consecrated people, the ministers of God who should be “examples to the flock”
(1 Pet 5:3)? One can only shudder at the thought of the terrible damage that is
done to the body of Christ that is the Church.
4.
A Personal Encounter with Jesus
Up
to this point I have spoken of the objective or sacramental benefits to our
becoming the Church, the body of Christ. However, there is also a subjective
and existential dimension that consists in what Pope Francis defined in
Evangelii gaudium as a “personal encounter with Jesus of Nazareth.” Let us hear
his words again:
'I
invite all Christians, everywhere, at this very moment, to a renewed personal
encounter with Jesus Christ, or at least an openness to letting him encounter
them; I ask all of you to do this unfailingly each day. No one should think
that this invitation is not meant for him or her.'[19]
Perhaps
we need to take a step forward here even with respect to the Council’s
ecclesiology. In Catholic language, “a personal encounter with Jesus” has never
been a very familiar concept. Instead of a “personal” encounter people prefer
the idea of an ecclesial encounter that occurs through the Church’s sacraments.
The phrase had a vaguely Protestant resonance to our Catholic ears. What is
being proposed here is clearly not a personal encounter with Christ that
substitutes for the sacramental encounter but one that makes the sacramental encounter
a freely chosen and welcomed encounter rather than a purely nominal, legal, or
habitually routine one. If the Church is the body of Christ, a free and
personal adherence to Christ is the only way to enter it and be part of it from
the existential point of view.
To
understand what having a personal encounter with Jesus means, we need to take a
brief look at history. How did people become members of the Church in the first
three centuries? Despite the differences from individual to individual and from
place to place, they became members after a long initiation, the catechumenate;
it was the result of a personal decision, and a risky one as well because of
the possibility of martyrdom.
Things
changed when Christianity became, first, a tolerated religion and then, in a
short time, the preferred religion and at times even directly imposed. In this
situation, the focus was no longer on the precise moment and the way in which a
person became a Christian, that is, how he or she came to faith, but on the moral
requirements of the faith itself, on the change in a person’s habits—in other
words, on morality.
The
situation, despite everything, was less negative than it might seem to us today
because even with all the inconsistencies that we are aware of, the family,
education, culture, and little by little even society helped people to absorb
faith almost naturally. In addition to this, new ways of life emerged from the
beginning of this new state of affairs, like monastic life and then the life in
various religious orders, in which baptism was radically lived out and
Christian life was the result of a personal decision that was often heroically
courageous.
This
so called “regime of Christianity” has now radically changed. Therefore, there
is an urgency for a new evangelization that takes the new situation into
account. On the practical level, it means creating opportunities for people
today that allow them, in a new context, to make that free, personal, and
mature decision that Christians initially used to make when they received
baptism and that made them true Christians rather than just nominal ones.
Since
1972 the “Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults” has offered a kind of
catechumenal path for the baptism of adults. In some countries where many
people come to baptism as adults, this program has proven to be very effective.
But what are we going to do for the massive number of Christians already
baptized who live like Christians just in name only, and not in actual fact,
and are not at all involved in the Church and sacramental life?
One
answer to this problem has been the numerous ecclesial movements, lay
associations and renewed parish communities, which appeared after the Council.
The common contribution of these groups—which vary greatly in style and in
membership numbers—is that they provide the context and the means that allow so
many adults to make a personal choice for Christ, to take their baptism
seriously, and to become active participants in the Church.
But
I will not linger on the pastoral aspects of this issue. What I want to
underscore at the end of this meditation is once again the spiritual and
existential aspect that concerns us individually. What does it mean to have a
personal encounter with Jesus? It means saying, “Jesus is Lord!”, the way
that Paul and the early Christians said it, which determines a person’s whole
life forever because of it.
When
this happens Jesus is no longer a personage but a person. He is no longer
someone who is only talked about but someone to whom and with whom we can speak
because he is risen and alive; he is no longer just a memory, although alive
and operative liturgically, but an actual presence. It also means not making
any important decisions without having submitted them to him in prayer.
I
said at the beginning that people do not accept Christ out of love for the
Church but they accept the Church out of love for Christ. Let us seek to love
Christ and to make him loved, and we will have rendered our best service to the
Church. If the Church is the spouse of Christ, then like every spouse she will
generate new children only in uniting herself to her Spouse through love. The
fruitfulness of the Church depends on her love for Christ. The best service
anyone of us can do for the Church is therefore to love Jesus and grow in
intimacy with him.
NOTES
[1]
Lumen gentium, 1, in Vatican Council II: Constitutions, Decrees, Declarations,
gen. ed. Austin Flannery (Northport, NY: Costello, 1996), p. 1.
[2]
Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger, “The Ecclesiology of Second Vatican Council,” in
Church, Ecumenism, and Politics: New Endeavors in Ecclesiology (San Francisco:
Ignatius Press, 2008), p. 15.
[3]
See St. John Paul II, Novo millennnio ineunte, 42 and 45.
[4]
See Hans Urs von Balthasar, Explorations in Theology, Vol. 2: Spouse of the
Word, trans. John Saward (San Francisco: Ignatius Press, 1991), pp. 143-192.
[5]
Lumen gentium, 6, p. 6.
[6]
Ibid., 7, pp. 6-7.
[7]
See Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger, “The Origin and Essence of the Church,” in
Called to Communion: Understanding the Church Today (San Francisco: Ignatius
Press, 1996), pp. 13-40.
[8]
See St. Augustine, “Sermon 272,” in The Works of Saint Augustine, Part 3, vol.
7, trans. Edmund Hill, ed. John E. Rotelle (Hyde Park, NY: New City Press,
1993), pp. 300-301. See also (PL 38, 1247f.).
[9]
See Henri de Lubac, Corpus Mysticum: The Eucharist and the Church in the Middle
Ages, trans. Gemma Simmonds (Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame Press,
2007).
[10]
See Origen, On the “Song of Songs,” III (GCS 33, pp. 185, 190); St. Ambrose,
Expositions of Psalm 118, 6, 18 (CSEL 62, p. 117).
[11]
St. Ambrose, On the Mysteries, 7, 39, quoted in Henri de Lubac, Medieval
Exegesis, Volume 2: The Four Senses of Scripture, trans. E. M. Macierowski
(London: A & C Black, 2000), p. 135.
[12]
See John Zizioulas [L’être ecclésiale, 1981], Being as Communion: Studies in
Personhood and the Church (Crestwood, NY: St. Vladimir’s Seminary Press, 1997).
[13]
De Lubac, Corpus Mysticum, p. 88.
[14]
Ratzinger, “The Origin and Essence of the Church,” p. 25.
[15]
Nicholas Cabasilas, Life in Christ, 4, 6, trans. Carmino J. deCatanzaro
(Crestwood, NY: St Vladimir’s Seminary Press, 1974), p. 123; see also PG 150,
593.
[16]
St. Hilary of Poitiers, The Trinity, 8, 6: “Eius tantum in se adsumptam habens
carnem, qui suam sumpserit”: “He has assumed and taken upon himself the flesh
of him only who has received His own.” English trans., Stephen McKenna, in vol.
25, The Fathers of the Church (Washington, DC: Catholic University of America
Press, 2010), p. 287; see also PL 10, p. 248.
[17]
Karol Wojtyla, “Song of the Inexhaustible Sun,” in The Place Within: The Poetry
of John Paul II, trans. Jerzy Peterkiewicz (New York: Random House, 1994), p.
23.
[18]
Blessed Elizabeth of the Trinity, in Jean Lafrance, Learning to Pray According
to Sister Elizabeth of the Trinity, trans. Florestine Audette (Sherbook, QC:
Médiaspaul, 2003), p. 124.
[19]
Pope Francis, Evangelii gaudium, 1, 3.
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