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HOMILY OF HIS HOLINESS JOHN PAUL II TO THE YOUTH ON THE MOUNT OF BEATITUDES
March 24, 2000
"Consider
your calling, brothers and sisters" (1 Cor 1:26).
1. Today these
words of Saint Paul are addressed to all of us who have come here to the
Mount of the Beatitudes. We sit on this hill like the first disciples, and
we listen to Jesus. In the stillness, we hear his gentle and urgent voice,
as gentle as this land itself and as urgent as a call to choose between life
and death.
How many
generations before us have been deeply moved by the Sermon on the Mount! How
many young people down the centuries have gathered around Jesus to learn the
words of eternal life, as you are gathered here today! How many young hearts
have been inspired by the power of his personality and the compelling truth
of his message! It is wonderful that you are here!
Thank you,
Archbishop Boutros Mouallem, for your kind welcome. Please take my prayerful
greeting to the whole Greek-Melkite community over which you preside. I
extend my fraternal good wishes to the many Cardinals, to Patriarch Sabbah,
and to many Bishops present and all the priests. I greet the members of the
Latin community, including the Hebrew-speaking faithful, the Maronite
community, the Syrian community, the Armenian community, the Chaldean
community, and all our brothers and sisters of the other Christian Churches
and Ecclesial Communities. I extend a special word of thanks to our Muslim
friends, to the members of the Jewish faith and to the Druse community.
This great
gathering is like a rehearsal for the World Youth Day to be held in August
in Rome! The young man who spoke promised that you will come. Young people
of Israel, of the Palestinian Territories, of Jordan and Cyprus; young
people of the Middle East, of Africa and Asia, of Europe, America and
Oceania! With love and affection I greet each one of you!
2. The first
to hear the Beatitudes of Jesus bore in their hearts the memory of another
mountain – Mount Sinai. Just a month ago, I had the grace of going there,
where God spoke to Moses and gave the Law, "written with the finger of
God" (Ex 31:18) on the tablets of stone. These two mountains – Sinai
and the Mount of the Beatitudes – offer us the roadmap of our Christian
life and a summary of our responsibilities to God and neighbour. The Law and
the Beatitudes together mark the path of the following of Christ and the
royal road to spiritual maturity and freedom.
The Ten
Commandments of Sinai may seem negative: "You will have no false gods
before me; . . . do not kill; do not commit adultery; do not steal; do not
bear false witness..." (Ex 20:3, 13-16). But in fact they are supremely
positive. Moving beyond the evil they name, they point the way to the law of
love which is the first and greatest of the commandments: "You will
love the Lord your God with all your heart, all your soul and all your mind.
. . You will love your neighbour as yourself" (Mt 22:37, 39). Jesus
himself says that he came not to abolish but to fulfil the Law (cf. Mt
5:17). His message is new but it does not destroy what went before; it leads
what went before to its fullest potential. Jesus teaches that the way of
love brings the Law to fulfilment (cf. Gal 5:14). And he taught this
enormously important truth on this hill here in Galilee.
3.
"Blessed are you!", he says, "all you who are poor in spirit,
gentle and merciful, you who mourn, who care for what is right, who are pure
in heart, who make peace, you who are persecuted! Blessed are you!" But
the words of Jesus may seem strange. It is strange that Jesus exalts those
whom the world generally regards as weak. He says to them, "Blessed are
you who seem to be losers, because you are the true winners: the kingdom of
heaven is yours!" Spoken by him who is "gentle and humble in
heart" (Mt 11:29), these words present a challenge which demands a deep
and abiding metanoia of the spirit, a great change of heart.
You young
people will understand why this change of heart is necessary! Because you
are aware of another voice within you and all around you, a contradictory
voice. It is a voice which says, "Blessed are the proud and violent,
those who prosper at any cost, who are unscrupulous, pitiless, devious, who
make war not peace, and persecute those who stand in their way". And
this voice seems to make sense in a world where the violent often triumph
and the devious seem to succeed. "Yes", says the voice of evil,
"they are the ones who win. Happy are they!"
4. Jesus
offers a very different message. Not far from this very place Jesus called
his first disciples, as he calls you now. His call has always demanded a
choice between the two voices competing for your hearts even now on this
hill, the choice between good and evil, between life and death. Which voice
will the young people of the twenty-first century choose to follow? To put
your faith in Jesus means choosing to believe what he says, no matter how
strange it may seem, and choosing to reject the claims of evil, no matter
how sensible or attractive they may seem.
In the end,
Jesus does not merely speak the Beatitudes. He lives the Beatitudes. He is
the Beatitudes. Looking at him you will see what it means to be poor in
spirit, gentle and merciful, to mourn, to care for what is right, to be pure
in heart, to make peace, to be persecuted. This is why he has the right to
say, "Come, follow me!" He does not say simply, "Do what I
say". He says, "Come, follow me!"
You hear his
voice on this hill, and you believe what he says. But like the first
disciples at the Sea of Galilee, you must leave your boats and nets behind,
and that is never easy – especially when you face an uncertain future and
are tempted to lose faith in your Christian heritage. To be good Christians
may seem beyond your strength in today's world. But Jesus does not stand by
and leave you alone to face the challenge. He is always with you to
transform your weakness into strength. Trust him when he says: "My
grace is enough for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness" (2
Cor 12:9)!
5. The
disciples spent time with the Lord. They came to know and love him deeply.
They discovered the meaning of what the Apostle Peter once said to Jesus:
"Lord, to whom shall we go? You have the words of eternal life" (Jn
6:68). They discovered that the words of eternal life are the words of Sinai
and the words of the Beatitudes. And this is the message which they spread
everywhere.
At the moment
of his Ascension Jesus gave his disciples a mission and this reassurance:
"All power in heaven and on earth has been given to me. Go, therefore,
and make disciples of all nations . . . and behold I am with you always,
until the end of the age" (Mt 28:18-20). For two thousand years
Christ's followers have carried out this mission. Now, at the dawn of the
Third Millennium, it is your turn. It is your turn to go out into the world
to preach the message of the Ten Commandments and the Beatitudes. When God
speaks, he speaks of things which have the greatest importance for each
person, for the people of the twenty-first century no less than those of the
first century. The Ten Commandments and the Beatitudes speak of truth and
goodness, of grace and freedom: of all that is necessary to enter into
Christ's Kingdom. Now it is your turn to be courageous apostles of that
Kingdom!
Young people
of the Holy Land, Young people of the world: answer the Lord with a heart
that is willing and open! Willing and open, like the heart of the greatest
daughter of Galilee, Mary, the Mother of Jesus. How did she respond? She
said: "I am the servant of the Lord, let it be done to me according to
your word" (Lk 1:38).
O Lord Jesus
Christ, in this place that you knew and loved so well, listen to these
generous young hearts! Continue to teach these young people the truth of the
Commandments and the Beatitudes! Make them joyful witnesses to your truth
and convinced apostles of your Kingdom! Be with them always, especially when
following you and the Gospel becomes difficult and demanding! You will be
their strength; you will be their victory!
O Lord Jesus,
you have made these young people your friends: keep them for ever close to
you! Amen.
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