
LETTER
OF THE HOLY FATHER JOHN PAUL II CONCERNING THE PILGRIMAGE TO THE PLACES
LINKED TO THE HISTORY OF SALVATION
To all who are preparing to celebrate in faith the
Great Jubilee
1. After years of preparation, we find ourselves at the threshold of the Great Jubilee.
Much has been done during these years throughout the Church to plan for this event of
grace. But now, as in the last stage of preparation for a journey, the time has come for
the finishing touches. The Great Jubilee is not just a series of functions to be held, but
a great interior experience to be lived. External factors make sense only in so far as
they express a deeper commitment which touches people's hearts. It was in fact this inner
dimension that I wished to point out to everyone in my Apostolic Letter Tertio
Millennio Adveniente and the Jubilee Bull of Indiction Incarnationis Mysterium,
both of which were well received by a great many people. In them the Bishops found helpful
suggestions, and the themes proposed for the different years of preparation have been
amply meditated upon. For all of this I wish to thank the Lord and to express my sincere
appreciation to the Pastors and the entire People of God.
Now, the imminence of the Jubilee prompts me to offer some thoughts connected with my own
desire, God willing, to make a special Jubilee pilgrimage, to visit some of the places
which are closely linked to the Incarnation of the Word of God, the event which the Holy
Year of 2000 directly recalls.
My meditation therefore turns to the
places in which God has chosen to pitch his tent among us (Jn 1:14;
cf. Ex 40:34-35; 1 Kgs 8:10-13), thus enabling man to encounter him more
directly. In a sense, I am completing what I wrote in Tertio Millennio Adveniente,
in which the dominant perspective, against the background of the history of salvation, was
the fundamental relevance of time. In fact, the spatial dimension is no less
decisive than the temporal in the concrete accomplishment of the mystery of the
Incarnation.
2. At first sight, it may seem puzzling to
speak of precise spaces in connection with God. No less than time, is not
space completely subject to God's control? Everything has come from his hands and there is
no place where God cannot be found: The Lord's is the earth and its fullness, the
world and all its people. It is he who set it on the seas, on the waters he made it
firm (Ps 24:1-2). God is equally present in every corner of the earth, so
that the whole world may be considered the temple of his presence.
Yet this does not take away from the fact that,
just as time can be marked by kairoě, by special moments of grace, space too may
by analogy bear the stamp of particular saving actions of God. Moreover, this is an
intuition present in all religions, which not only have sacred times but also sacred
spaces, where the encounter with the divine may be experienced more intensely than it
would normally be in the vastness of the cosmos.
3. In relation to this common religious
tendency, the Bible offers its own specific message, setting the theme of sacred
space within the context of the history of salvation. On the one hand, Scripture
warns against the inherent risks of defining space of this kind, when this is done as a
way of divinizing nature: here we should recall the powerful anti-idolatrous polemic of
the Prophets in the name of fidelity to Yahweh, the God of the Exodus. On the other hand,
the Bible does not exclude a cultic use of space, in so far as this expresses fully the
particularity of God's intervention in the history of Israel. Sacred space is thus
gradually concentrated in the Jerusalem Temple, where the God of Israel wishes
to be honoured and, in a sense, encountered. The eyes of Israelite pilgrims turn to the
Temple and great is their joy when they reach the place where God has made his home:
I rejoiced when I heard them say, 'Let us go to God's house'. And now our feet are
standing within your gates, O Jerusalem! (Ps 122:1-2).
In the New Testament, this concentration of sacred space reaches its summit in
Christ, who is, in his person, the new temple (cf. Jn 2:21), in which
dwells the fullness of Godhead (Col 2:9). With his coming, worship was
destined radically to surpass material shrines in order to become worship in spirit
and truth (Jn 4:24). In Christ, then, the Church too is considered by the New
Testament to be a temple (cf. 1 Cor 3:17), as is the individual
disciple of Christ, since each is inhabited by the Holy Spirit (cf. 1 Cor 6:19; Rm
8:11). Clearly, this does not mean that Christians cannot have places of worship, as
the history of the Church well shows; but it must not be forgotten that these are intended
only to serve the liturgical and fraternal life of the community, at the same time knowing
that the presence of God by its nature cannot be restricted to any one place, since his
presence, which has its fullest expression and communication in Christ, pervades all
space.
The mystery of the Incarnation therefore
reshapes the universal experience of sacred space, on the one hand
relativizing it, and on the other hand underlining its importance in new terms. The very
taking of flesh by the Word (Jn 1:14) is in fact a reference to space.
In Jesus of Nazareth, God has assumed the features typical of human nature, including a
person's belonging to a particular people and a particular land. Hic de Virgine
Maria Iesus Christus natus est these words take on a peculiar eloquence
in Bethlehem, inscribed over the place where, according to tradition, Jesus was born:
Here Jesus Christ was born of the Virgin Mary. The physical particularity of
the land and its geographical determination are inseparable from the truth of the human
flesh assumed by the Word.
4. For this reason, in the perspective of the
two thousandth anniversary of the Incarnation, I have a strong desire to go personally to
pray in the most important places which, from the Old to the New Testament, have seen
God's interventions, which culminate in the mysteries of the Incarnation and of the
Passion, Death and Resurrection of Christ. These places are already indelibly etched in my
memory, from the time when in 1965 I had the opportunity to visit the Holy Land. It was an
unforgettable experience. Today I still gladly go back to what I wrote then, pages full of
emotion. I come across these places which you have filled with yourself once and for
all. ... Oh place ... You were transformed so many times before you, His place, became
mine. When for the first time He filled you, you were not yet an outer place; you were but
His Mother's womb. How I long to know that the stones I am treading in Nazareth are the
same which her feet touched when she was Your only place on earth. Meeting You through the
stone touched by the feet of Your Mother. Oh, corner of the earth, place in the holy land
what kind of place are you in me? My steps cannot tread on you; I must kneel. Thus
I confirm today you were indeed a place of meeting. Kneeling down I imprint a seal on you.
You will remain here with my seal you will remain and I will take you and
transform you within me into the place of new testimony. I will walk away as a witness who
testifies across the millennia (Karol Wojtyla, Poezje. Poems, Wydawnictwo
Literackie, Kraków 1998, p. 168).
When I wrote those words, more than thirty
years ago, I could not have imagined that the witness to which I pledged myself then I
would render today as the Successor of Peter, at the service of the whole Church. It is a
witness which sets me in a long procession of people, who for two thousand years have gone
in search of the footprints of God in that land, rightly called
holy, pursuing them as it were in the stones, the hills, the waters which
provided the setting for the earthly life of the Son of God. Since ancient times the
travel diary of the pilgrim woman Egeria has been well known. How many pilgrims, how many
saints, have followed her path down the centuries! Even when events in history disturbed
the essentially peaceful nature of pilgrimage to the Holy Land, giving it an aspect which,
whatever the intentions involved, was hard to reconcile with the image of the Crucified
One, more sensitive Christian souls sought only to find the living memory of Christ on
that soil. And Providence decreed that, alongside the brethren of the Eastern Churches,
for Western Christianity it would be the sons of Francis of Assisi, the saint of poverty,
gentleness and peace, who in truly evangelical style would give expression to the
legitimate Christian desire to protect the places where our spiritual roots are found.
5. It is in this spirit, God willing, that I
intend on the occasion of the Great Jubilee of the Year 2000 to follow the traces of the
history of salvation in the land in which it took place.
The starting-point will be certain key places of the Old Testament. In this way I wish to
express the Church's awareness of her irrevocable links with the ancient people of the
Covenant. For us too Abraham is our father in faith par excellence (cf.
Rom 4; Gal 3:6-9; Heb 11:8-19). In the Gospel of John we read the
words which one day Christ said of him: Abraham rejoiced that he was to see my day;
he saw it and was glad (8:56).
The first stage of the journey which I hope to make is linked to Abraham. In fact, if it
be God's will, I would like to go to Ur of the Chaldees, the present-day Tell el-Muqayyar
in southern Iraq, the city where, according to the biblical account, Abraham heard the
word of the Lord which took him away from his own land, from his people, from himself in a
sense, to make him the instrument of a plan of salvation which embraced the future people
of the Covenant and indeed all the peoples of the world: The Lord said to Abram, 'Go
from your country and your kindred and your father's house to the land that I will show
you. And I will make of you a great nation and I will bless you, and make your name great,
so that you will be a blessing. ... By you all the families of the earth shall bless
themselves' (Gn 12:1-3). With these words, the great journey of the People of
God began. It is not only those who boast physical descent from him who look to Abraham,
but also all those, and they are countless, who regard themselves as his
spiritual offspring, because they share his faith and unreserved abandonment
to the saving initiative of the Almighty.
6. The experience of the people of Abraham
unfolded over hundreds of years, touching many places in the Near East. At the heart of
this experience there are the events of the Exodus, when the people of Israel, after the
hard trial of slavery, went forth under the leadership of Moses towards the Land of
freedom. Three moments mark that journey, each of them linked to mountainous places
charged with mystery. There rises first of all, in the early stage, Mount Horeb, as Sinai
is sometimes called in the Bible, where Moses received the revelation of God's name, the
sign of his mystery and of his powerful saving presence: I am who I am (Ex
3:14). No less than Abraham, Moses was asked to entrust himself to God's plan, and to
put himself at the head of his people. Thus began the dramatic event of the liberation,
which Israel would always remember as the founding experience of its faith.
On the journey through the desert, it was again
Sinai which was the setting for the sealing of the Covenant between Yahweh and his people,
thus linking the mountain to the gift of the Ten Commandments, the ten words
which commit Israel to a life fully obedient to the will of God. In reality, these
words are indicative of the pillars of the universal moral law written in
every human heart, but they were given to Israel within the context of a mutual pact of
fidelity, whereby the people undertook to love God, recalling the wonders he had done in
the Exodus, and God guaranteed his enduring kindness: I am the Lord your God who
brought you out of the land of Egypt, from the house of slavery (Ex 20:2).
God and the people pledged themselves to each other. If, in the vision of the burning
bush, the place of the name and of the plan of God, Horeb, was
above all the mountain of faith, now for the pilgrim people in the desert it
became the place of encounter and of the mutual pact, in a sense therefore the
mountain of love. How often down the centuries, in denouncing the faithlessness of
the Covenant people, did the Prophets see it as a kind of marital infidelity,
a genuine betrayal of God the bridegroom by the people, his bride (cf. Jer 2:2; Ezek
16:1-43).
At the end of the Exodus journey, there rises another peak, Mount Nebo, from which Moses
could see the Promised Land (cf. Dt 32:49), without the joy of setting foot there
but certain in the knowledge of having reached it. His gaze from Nebo is the very symbol
of hope. From that mountain he could see that God had kept his promises. Once more,
however, he had to abandon himself trustingly to the divine omnipotence for the sake of
the final accomplishment of the plan that had been foretold.
It will probably not be possible for me on my pilgrimage to visit all these places. But I
would like at least, please God, to visit Ur, the place of Abraham's origins, and then go
to the famous Monastery of Saint Catherine, on Sinai, near the mountain of the Covenant,
which in a way speaks of the entire mystery of the Exodus, the enduring paradigm of the
new Exodus which was to be fully accomplished on Golgotha.
7. These and other itineraries of the Old
Testament are full of meaning for us, but clearly the Jubilee Year, the solemn
commemoration of the Incarnation of the Word, draws us above all to the places where Jesus
lived his life.
First of all, I very much want to visit Nazareth, the town linked to the actual moment of
the Incarnation and the place where Jesus grew in wisdom, age and grace before God
and men (Lk 2:52). Here Mary heard the Angel's greeting: Hail, O full
of grace, the Lord is with you! (Lk 1:28). Here Mary spoke her fiat to
the message that called her to be mother of the Saviour and, overshadowed by the Holy
Spirit, to become the womb that would welcome the Son of God.
And how could I not then visit Bethlehem, where Christ was born, and the shepherds and the
wise men gave voice to the adoration of all humanity? At Bethlehem too there rang forth
for the first time that greeting of peace which, spoken by the Angels, would continue to
echo from generation to generation until our own day.
Especially charged with meaning will be the visit to Jerusalem, the place of the death on
the Cross and of the Resurrection of the Lord Jesus.
Certainly, there are many other places
associated with the earthly life of the Saviour and so many of them deserve to be visited.
How can we forget, for instance, the Mount of the Beatitudes, or the Mount of the
Transfiguration, or Caesarea Philippi, where Jesus entrusted the keys of the Kingdom of
Heaven to Peter, establishing him as the foundation of his Church (cf. Mt 16:13-19)?
In the Holy Land, from north to south, we may say that everything recalls Christ. But I
will have to be satisfied with the more important places, and Jerusalem in a sense sums
them them all up. There, please God, I intend to immerse myself in prayer, bearing in my
heart the whole Church. There I shall contemplate the places where Christ gave his life
and took it up again in the Resurrection, imparting to us the gift of his Spirit. There my
wish would be to cry out once more the great consoling certainty that God so loved
the world that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but
have eternal life (Jn 3:16).
8. Among the places in Jerusalem most closely
tied to the earthly life of Christ, I will have to visit the Upper Room, where Jesus
instituted the Eucharist, the source and summit of the Church's life. Here too, according
to tradition, the Apostles were gathered in prayer with Mary, the Mother of Christ, when
on the day of Pentecost the Holy Spirit was poured out upon them. Then began the final
stage of the journey of the history of salvation, the time of the Church, Body and Bride
of Christ, a people making its pilgrim way through time, called to be the sign and
instrument of intimate union with God and of the unity of the entire human race (cf. Lumen
Gentium, 1).
The visit to the Upper Room is thus meant to be
a return to the very origins of the Church. The Successor of Peter, who in Rome lives at
the place where the Prince of the Apostles faced martyrdom, cannot but constantly retrace
the steps to the place where Peter, on the day of Pentecost, began to proclaim in a loud
voice with the inebriating power of the Spirit, the good news that Jesus
Christ is Lord (cf. Acts 2:36).
9. The visit to the Holy Places of the
Redeemer's earthly life leads logically to the places which were important for the infant
Church and which saw the missionary outreach of the first Christian community. There are
many of them, if we follow the account of Luke in the Acts of the Apostles. But in
particular I would also like to be able to pause in meditation in two cities linked
especially to the story of Paul, the Apostle of the Gentiles. I am thinking first of all
of Damascus, the place which recalls his conversion. The future Apostle was in fact on his
way to that city in the role of persecutor, when Christ himself crossed his path:
Saul, Saul, why are you persecuting me? (Acts 9:4). From there, the
zeal of Paul, now conquered by Christ, spread with unstoppable force to affect a large
part of the then known world. The cities evangelized by him were many. It would be nice to
be able to visit Athens, where Paul gave his magnificent speech in the Areopagus (cf. Acts
17:22-31). If we consider the role played by Greece in shaping the culture of the
ancient world, we understand how that speech of Paul's can in a sense be considered the
very symbol of the Gospel's encounter with human culture.
10. Abandoning myself completely to the divine
will, I would be happy if this plan could be put into effect at least in its main points.
It would be an exclusively religious pilgrimage in its nature and purpose, and I would be
saddened if anyone were to attach other meanings to this plan of mine. Indeed, spiritually
I am already on this journey, since even to go just in thought to those places means in a
way to read anew the Gospel itself; it means to follow the roads which Revelation itself
has taken.
To go in a spirit of prayer from one place to another, from one city to another, in the
area marked especially by God's intervention, helps us not only to live our life as a
journey, but also gives us a vivid sense of a God who has gone before us and leads us on,
who himself set out on man's path, a God who does not look down on us from on high, but
who became our travelling companion.
The pilgrimage to the Holy Places thus becomes
a highly meaningful experience and in a sense is evoked by every other Jubilee pilgrimage.
The Church cannot forget her roots. Indeed, she must return to them again and again if she
is to remain completely faithful to God's plan. This is why I wrote in the Bull Incarnationis
Mysterium that the Jubilee, celebrated at the same time in the Holy Land, in Rome and
in all the local Churches throughout the world, will have, as it were, two centres:
on the one hand, the City where Providence chose to place the See of the Successor of
Peter, and on the other hand, the Holy Land, where the Son of God was born as a man,
taking our flesh from a Virgin whose name was Mary (No. 2).
While this focus on the Holy Land expresses the Christian duty to remember, it also seeks
to honour the deep bond which Christians continue to have with the Jewish people from whom
Christ came according to the flesh (cf. Rom 9:5). Much ground has been covered in
recent years, especially since the Second Vatican Council, in opening a fruitful dialogue
with the people whom God chose as the first recipients of his promises and of the
Covenant. The Jubilee must be another opportunity to deepen the sense of the bonds that
unite us, helping to remove once and for all the misunderstandings which, sad to say, have
so often through the centuries marked with bitterness the relationship between Christians
and Jews.
Nor can we forget that the Holy Land is also
dear to the followers of Islam, who look to it with special veneration. I dearly hope that
my visit to the Holy Places will provide an opportunity to meet them as well, so that,
without compromising clarity of witness, there may be a strengthening of the grounds for
mutual understanding and esteem, as well as for cooperation in the effort to witness to
the value of religious commitment and the longing for a society more attuned to God's
designs, a society which respects every human being and all creation.
11. In this journey through the places where
God chose to pitch his tent among us, great is my desire to be welcomed as a
pilgrim and brother not only by the Catholic communities, whom I shall meet with special
joy, but also by the other Churches which have lived uninterruptedly in the Holy Places
and have been their custodians with fidelity and love of the Lord.
More than any other pilgrimage which I have made, the one I am about to undertake in the
Holy Land during the Jubilee event will be marked by the desire expressed in Christ's
prayer to the Father that his disciples may all be one (Jn 17:21), a
prayer which challenges us more vigorously at the exceptional time which opens the Third
Millennium. For this reason, I trust that all our brothers and sisters in faith, in a
spirit of openness to the Holy Spirit, will see in my pilgrim steps in the land travelled
by Christ a doxology for the salvation which we have all received, and I would
be happy if we could gather together in the places of our common origin, to bear witness
to Christ our unity (cf. Ut Unum Sint, 23) and to confirm our mutual commitment to
the restoration of full communion.
12. It therefore only remains for me to extend
a warm invitation to the entire Christian community to set out spiritually upon the path
of the Jubilee pilgrimage. This can be done in the many ways that I suggested in the Bull
of Indiction. But it is certain that many will also do so by actually journeying to the
places that have been particularly important in the history of salvation. In any event, we
must all make that inward journey which seeks to move us away from whatever, in us and
around us, is contrary to God's law, so as to be able to encounter Christ fully,
professing our faith in him and receiving the abundance of his mercy.
In the Gospel, Jesus seems always to be travelling about. He seems to be in a hurry to
move from one place to another in order to proclaim the imminent coming of God's Kingdom.
He proclaims and he calls. His Follow me prompted the Apostles' ready response
(cf. Mk 1:16-20). Let us all feel touched by his voice, his call, his summons to a
new life.
I say this especially to young people, before
whom life is opening up like a journey full of surprises and promises.
I say it to everyone: let us set out in the
footsteps of Christ!
May the journey that I intend to make in the
Jubilee Year be an image of the journey of the whole Church in her desire to be ever more
ready to respond to the voice of the Spirit, in order to go more quickly to meet Christ,
the Bridegroom: The Spirit and the Bride say, 'Come!' (Rev 22:17).
From the Vatican, on 29 June, the Solemnity of Saints Peter and Paul,
in the year 1999, the twenty-first of my Pontificate.
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