Maundy Thursday Homily
Jerusalem, Holy Sepulchre, April 17, 2025
Gen 22:1-18; Ex 12:1-14; Prov 9:1-6. 10-11; Cor 11:23-26;
John 13:1-15
Dear brothers and sisters,
bishops, priests, seminarians, religious men and women religious, faithful and
pilgrims,
may the Lord give you peace!
We are gathered today for the annual commemoration of
Christ’s Passover, right here where it was fulfilled. In the mysteries of
Maundy Thursday, which we celebrate, it is like an anticipation and summary. Here
is revealed to us the deepest desire of Jesus, the intention that inspired Him
in the days of His passion, His way of being in the world in order to save
it.
As far as possible, I would like you to join me in putting
ourselves in His school, the school of the Upper Room, to learn from Jesus the
style of the disciple, to try to be, in this world of ours, instruments of
salvation. In fact, I am convinced that the mission of the Church and its
members, despite the diversity of ministries and charisms, is essentially one
and the same: to contribute, with the grace of the Holy Spirit, to the salvific
encounter of humanity with the Passover of Christ. Indeed, the sacrament of
baptism and ordination have made us co-workers with God.
- The
first thing one learns in the Upper Room is an awareness. In the Passion
narratives, it is striking that “Jesus knows...” (cf. Jn 13:3; 18:4;
19:28). The Lord is not distracted, he is not confused, he is not caught
up in a superficial or inadequate view of events. He knows the sin of the
people, He recognises the hour of darkness, He knows about the fear and
weakness of the disciples. But he also knows that the Father is with Him;
He does not forget the Kingdom; He is not resigned to the inevitable. He
lives his hour with great hope, which is not naïve optimism, but a deep
trust that the darkness cannot defeat the light.
Here I wish we could live our present, which is so dark and
complicated, in this way. The evil we experience is real, the pain of our
people is deep, the injustice that oppresses us is heavy. And we must not be
afraid to acknowledge and denounce it. But we know with Jesus that these are
not the last words about history and life. In this jubilee of hope, we
recognise with renewed certainty that God is with us and opens in the desert
mysterious paths to the coming Kingdom. I ask the Lord for myself and for you,
that the oil of the catechumens will awaken this prophetic capacity in our
Church. It is not about guessing the future or orienting ourselves to the
predictions of the world, which are punctually denied. It is about standing in
reality with the “more” of vision that comes to us from trust in God and
from hope in His kingdom.
- The
second thing we learn in the Upper Room is to stand up, to decide: “Jesus,
fully aware that... rose from...” (John 13:3). This
knowledge of Him will inspire the decisions he will make on the most
dramatic and painful night of His earthly life.
That night he decided to wash the feet of his disciples, to
institute the Eucharist, to choose the Apostles again as his friends. In other
words, he decided to open a path to the future and to do so, thanks to a deeper
act of giving. On that evening, the Master establishes a new alliance, which no
longer consists of the simple observance of the law, but of the “more” of
self-giving love.
This time of ours is hungry. Our Holy Land is hungry. In
some parts of our country, it is even hungry in the truest sense of the word.
It is not only deprived of its dignity but also of its daily bread, its earthly
bread. But more than that, we are hungry for the bread that Jesus gives us
today, which is Himself, who offers Himself for our redemption. Perhaps we are
more tired and exhausted today than ever before, perhaps even disappointed and
hurt by so much pain and violence, unable to look forward with confidence. But
can the earthly bread, the justice of men, the logic of power, of yesterday and
today, ever satisfy our hunger for freedom, justice and dignity? That is not
what our hope is based on.
We believe, and today in this solemn liturgy we affirm once
again that we want to build our lives on the rock of Christ, and make His
invitation to follow him our own, to make His same attitude our own (cf. Phil
2:5; 1 Pet 4:1). Earthly bread is not enough for us, we need the bread of life
so that it renews in us the longing for life, gives us the joy of continuing to
serve, to offer, to give our lives with love and without fear. We are hungry
for justice, that is true. But not for the justice of men, which is always
lacking, which always disappoints, and which will always make us hungry. We
long for the justice that flows from the heart of Jesus, from His self-giving
on the cross, which is an excess, a “more” of love and forgiveness. For it is
in the heart of the crucified Jesus that justice and forgiveness meet and
embrace each other. It is not in obedience to people, but in trusting obedience
to God the Father, even to the point of the cross, that Jesus preserves and
gives us true freedom, the freedom of the children of God. With justice alone,
with condemnation alone, one remains stuck in the past and does not build a
future. Only love builds.
This divine justice needs people today who, like Jesus, are
prepared to pay for it themselves. It needs our hearts, our self-giving, our
ability to lose everything, even our lives, so that the world can come to know
true life, encounter true justice and love, freedom from the logic of man and
power, which only originates in God.
Therefore, I ask the Lord that the chrism that makes us all
people of the new covenant and makes us, the ordained ministers, servants of a
greater love, may create in us a new capacity to love and serve, to give and
forgive, to cultivate the desert and make the justice of the Kingdom truly
flourish.
- The
third thing we learn in the Upper Room is to console. Jesus decided that
evening not to rebuke or defend Himself, but to accompany and console His
disciples. The consolation that the Lord offers the disciples is certainly
not a pat on the back. He promises them the Spirit. That is, He assures
them that He will always be there. Insults and injustice, betrayal and
abandonment will not destroy His friendship. To console means to decide to
stay together despite everything. The resurrection is nothing other than
this final, victorious decision. The joy of Easter is not the happy ending
of fairy tales but the faithfulness of love, that endures and thus
triumphs over evil and death. The sacraments that we celebrate and receive
make us servants of this consolation. For me too, in these years of
suffering, people have asked for affection, closeness and companionship
more than anything else. I almost have the feeling that those who are
suffering need not only bread, but also love. This time demands from us a
new capacity for closeness.
Therefore, I pray to the Lord for me and for you, that the
oil of the sick may comfort our wounds, make us overcome the fear of evil and
death, and encourage us to stand by our people and this land with a
faithfulness that is stronger than all difficulties.
Dear friends, let us go to the school of the cenacle. Let us
learn and ask the Lord for the “more” of prophecy, of gift and witness that
alone can give hope to our Church and to humanity. May the offered body and the
shed blood of our Saviour make us capable of always living and acting in that
love that conquers death and remains forever.
Therefore, let us not allow fear and resignation to slow
down or stop the course of the Gospel in our country! Let us continue to
distribute the bread of life to all with joy! Let us insist on building
fraternal relationships and bonds of communion with one another and with all
people! There is no night that love cannot illuminate, there is no failure that
the cross cannot transform, there is no wound that Easter cannot transfigure!
As the apostle says: “This saying is trustworthy: If we have died with
him we shall also live with him; if we persevere we shall also reign
with him” (2Tim 2, 11-12) and what today seem to us
to be signs of the end will become, by His grace and faith, a prophecy of new
beginnings!
Happy Easter, in the faith that believes all, in the hope
that sees all, in the love that gives all!
+Pierbattista
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