Pope
Benedict XVI's Lenten Message
"The Christian Life Consists in Continuously
Scaling the Mountain to Meet God"
VATICAN CITY, February 1, 2013 (Zenit.org).
Here is the translation of Pope Benedict XVI's Lenten
Message for 2013.
* * *
Believing in charity calls forth charity
“We have come to know and to believe in the love God
has for us” (1 Jn 4:16)
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
The celebration of Lent, in the context of the Year of
Faith, offers us a valuable opportunity to meditate on the relationship between
faith and charity: between believing in God – the God of Jesus Christ – and
love, which is the fruit of the Holy Spirit and which guides us on the path of
devotion to God and others.
1. Faith as a response to the love of God
In my first Encyclical, I offered some thoughts on the
close relationship between the theological virtues of faith and charity.
Setting out from Saint John’s fundamental assertion: “We have come to know and
to believe in the love God has for us” (1 Jn 4:16), I observed that
“being Christian is not the result of an ethical choice or a lofty idea, but
the encounter with an event, a person, which gives life a new horizon and a
decisive direction … Since God has first loved us (cf. 1 Jn 4:10), love
is now no longer a mere ‘command’; it is the response to the gift of love with
which God draws near to us” (Deus Caritas Est, 1). Faith is this
personal adherence – which involves all our faculties – to the revelation of
God’s gratuitous and “passionate” love for us, fully revealed in Jesus Christ.
The encounter with God who is Love engages not only the heart but also the
intellect: “Acknowledgement of the living God is one path towards love, and the
‘yes’ of our will to his will unites our intellect, will and sentiments in the
all-embracing act of love. But this process is always open-ended; love is never
‘finished’ and complete” (ibid., 17). Hence, for all Christians, and
especially for “charity workers”, there is a need for faith, for “that encounter
with God in Christ which awakens their love and opens their spirits to others.
As a result, love of neighbour will no longer be for them a commandment
imposed, so to speak, from without, but a consequence deriving from their
faith, a faith which becomes active through love” (ibid., 31a).
Christians are people who have been conquered by Christ’s love and accordingly,
under the influence of that love – “Caritas Christi urget nos” (2 Cor
5:14) – they are profoundly open to loving their neighbour in concrete
ways (cf. ibid., 33). This attitude arises primarily from the
consciousness of being loved, forgiven, and even served by the Lord, who bends
down to wash the feet of the Apostles and offers himself on the Cross to draw
humanity into God’s love.
“Faith tells us that God has given his Son for our
sakes and gives us the victorious certainty that it is really true: God is
love! … Faith, which sees the love of God revealed in the pierced heart of
Jesus on the Cross, gives rise to love. Love is the light – and in the end, the
only light – that can always illuminate a world grown dim and give us the
courage needed to keep living and working” (ibid., 39). All this helps
us to understand that the principal distinguishing mark of Christians is
precisely “love grounded in and shaped by faith” (ibid., 7).
2. Charity as life in faith
The entire Christian life is a response to God’s love.
The first response is precisely faith as the acceptance, filled with wonder and
gratitude, of the unprecedented divine initiative that precedes us and summons
us. And the “yes” of faith marks the beginning of a radiant story of friendship
with the Lord, which fills and gives full meaning to our whole life. But it is
not enough for God that we simply accept his gratuitous love. Not only does he
love us, but he wants to draw us to himself, to transform us in such a profound
way as to bring us to say with Saint Paul: “it is no longer I who live, but
Christ who lives in me” (cf. Gal 2:20).
When we make room for the love of God, then we become
like him, sharing in his own charity. If we open ourselves to his love, we
allow him to live in us and to bring us to love with him, in him and like him;
only then does our faith become truly “active through love” (Gal 5:6);
only then does he abide in us (cf. 1 Jn 4:12).
Faith is knowing the truth and adhering to it (cf. 1
Tim 2:4); charity is “walking” in the truth (cf. Eph 4:15). Through
faith we enter into friendship with the Lord, through charity this friendship
is lived and cultivated (cf. Jn 15:14ff). Faith causes us to embrace the
commandment of our Lord and Master; charity gives us the happiness of putting
it into practice (cf. Jn 13:13-17). In faith we are begotten as children
of God (cf. Jn 1:12ff); charity causes us to persevere concretely in our
divine sonship, bearing the fruit of the Holy Spirit (cf. Gal
5:22). Faith enables us to recognize the gifts that the good and generous God
has entrusted to us; charity makes them fruitful (cf. Mt 25:14-30).
3. The indissoluble interrelation of faith
and charity
In light of the above, it is clear that we can never
separate, let alone oppose, faith and charity. These two theological virtues
are intimately linked, and it is misleading to posit a contrast or “dialectic”
between them. On the one hand, it would be too one-sided to place a strong
emphasis on the priority and decisiveness of faith and to undervalue and almost
despise concrete works of charity, reducing them to a vague humanitarianism. On
the other hand, though, it is equally unhelpful to overstate the primacy of
charity and the activity it generates, as if works could take the place of
faith. For a healthy spiritual life, it is necessary to avoid both fideism and
moral activism.
The Christian life consists in continuously scaling
the mountain to meet God and then coming back down, bearing the love and
strength drawn from him, so as to serve our brothers and sisters with God’s own
love. In sacred Scripture, we see how the zeal of the Apostles to proclaim the
Gospel and awaken people’s faith is closely related to their charitable concern
to be of service to the poor (cf. Acts 6:1-4). In the Church,
contemplation and action, symbolized in some way by the Gospel figures of Mary
and Martha, have to coexist and complement each other (cf. Lk 10:38-42).
The relationship with God must always be the priority, and any true sharing of
goods, in the spirit of the Gospel, must be rooted in faith (cf. General
Audience, 25 April 2012). Sometimes we tend, in fact, to reduce the term
“charity”to solidarity or simply humanitarian aid. It is important, however, to
remember that the greatest work of charity is evangelization, which is the
“ministry of the word”. There is no action more beneficial – and therefore more
charitable – towards one’s neighbour than to break the bread of the word of
God, to share with him the Good News of the Gospel, to introduce him to a
relationship with God: evangelization is the highest and the most integral
promotion of the human person. As the Servant of God Pope Paul VI wrote in the
Encyclical Populorum Progressio, the proclamation of Christ is the first
and principal contributor todevelopment (cf. n. 16). It is the primordial truth
of the love of God for us, lived and proclaimed, that opens our lives to
receive this love and makes possible the integral development of humanity and
of every man (cf. Caritas in Veritate, 8).
Essentially, everything proceeds from Love and tends
towards Love. God’s gratuitous love is made known to us through the
proclamation of the Gospel. If we welcome it with faith, we receive the first
and indispensable contact with the Divine, capable of making us “fall in love
with Love”, and then we dwell within this Love, we grow in it and we joyfully
communicate it to others.
Concerning the relationship between faith and works of
charity, there is a passage in the Letter to the Ephesians which
provides perhaps the best account of the link between the two: “For by grace
you have been saved through faith; and this is not your own doing; it is the
gift of God; not because of works, lest anyone should boast. For we are his
workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared
beforehand, that we should walk in them” (2:8-10). It can be seen here that the
entire redemptive initiative comes from God, from his grace, from his
forgiveness received in faith; but this initiative, far from limiting our
freedom and our responsibility, is actually what makes them authentic and
directs them towards works of charity. These are not primarily the result of
human effort, in which to take pride, but they are born of faith and they flow
from the grace that God gives in abundance. Faith without works is like a tree
without fruit: the two virtues imply one another. Lent invites us, through the
traditional practices of the Christian life, to nourish our faith by careful
and extended listening to the word of God and by receiving the sacraments, and
at the same time to grow in charity and in love for God and neighbour, not
least through the specific practices of fasting, penance and almsgiving.
4. Priority of faith, primacy of charity
Like any gift of God, faith and charity have their
origin in the action of one and the same Holy Spirit (cf. 1 Cor 13), the
Spirit within us that cries out “Abba, Father” (Gal 4:6), and makes us
say: “Jesus is Lord!” (1 Cor 12:3) and “Maranatha!” (1 Cor 16:22;
Rev 22:20).
Faith, as gift and response, causes us to know the
truth of Christ as Love incarnate and crucified, as full and perfect obedience
to the Father’s will and infinite divine mercy towards neighbour; faith
implants in hearts and minds the firm conviction that only this Love is able
to conquer evil and death. Faith invites us to look towards the future
with the virtue of hope, in the confident expectation that the victory of Christ’s
love will come to its fullness. For its part, charity ushers us into the love
of God manifested in Christ and joins us in a personal and existential way to
the total and unconditional self-giving of Jesus to the Father and to his
brothers and sisters. By filling our hearts with his love, the Holy Spirit
makes us sharers in Jesus’ filial devotion to God and fraternal devotion to
every man (cf. Rom 5:5).
The relationship between these two virtues resembles
that between the two fundamental sacraments of the Church: Baptism and
Eucharist. Baptism (sacramentum fidei) precedes the Eucharist (sacramentum
caritatis), but is ordered to it, the Eucharist being the fullness of the
Christian journey. In a similar way, faith precedes charity, but faith is
genuine only if crowned by charity. Everything begins from the humble
acceptance of faith (“knowing that one is loved by God”), but has to arrive at
the truth of charity (“knowing how to love God and neighbour”), which remains
for ever, as the fulfilment of all the virtues (cf. 1 Cor 13:13).
Dear brothers and sisters, in this season of Lent, as
we prepare to celebrate the event of the Cross and Resurrection – in which the
love of God redeemed the world and shone its light upon history – I express my
wish that all of you may spend this precious time rekindling your faith in
Jesus Christ, so as to enter with him into the dynamic of love for the Father
and for every brother and sister that we encounter in our lives. For this
intention, I raise my prayer to God, and I invoke the Lord’s blessing upon each
individual and upon every community!
From the Vatican, 15 October 2012
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