Pope Benedict XVI- Angelus |
Angelus
Message
On Hope
"The World Needs God -- the True God"
H.H. Benedict XVI
November Dec 2, 2007
www.zenit.org
Dear Brothers and Sisters!
With this First Sunday of Advent a new liturgical year begins: The
people of God again takes up its journey to live the mystery of
Christ in history. Christ is the same yesterday, today and forever
(cf. Hebrews, 13:8); history, however, changes and requires constant
evangelization; it needs to be renewed from within and the one true
novelty is Christ: He is the fulfillment of history, the luminous
future of man and the world.
Risen from the dead, Jesus is the Lord to whom God will make all
enemies submit, including death itself (cf. 1 Corinthians 15:25-28).
Advent, therefore, is the propitious time to reawaken in our hearts
the expectation of him “who is, who was and who is coming”
(Revelation 1:8). The Son of God already came to Bethlehem 20
centuries ago, he is coming in every moment into the soul and the
community that is disposed to receive him, and he will come again at
the end of time, “to judge the living and the dead.” Thus, the
believer is always vigilant, animated by the intimate hope of
meeting the Lord, as the psalm says: “I hope in the Lord, my soul
hopes in his word. My soul waits for the Lord, more than the
watchmen for the dawn” (Psalm 129:5-6).
This Sunday is, therefore, a most appropriate day to offer to the
whole Church and all men of good will my second encyclical, which I
wanted to dedicate to the theme of Christian hope. It is entitled
“Spe Salvi” because it opens with the line of St. Paul, “Spe salvi
facti sumus,” that is, “In hope we have been saved” (Romans 8:24).
In this passage, as in others in the New Testament, the word “hope”
is closely connected with the word “faith.” It is a gift that
changes the life of those who receive it, as the experience of so
many saints demonstrates. In what does this hope consist that is so
great and so “trustworthy” as to make us say that “in it” we have
“salvation”?
In substance it consists in the knowledge of God, in the discovery
of his heart as a good and merciful Father. Jesus, with his death on
the cross and his resurrection, has revealed to us his countenance,
the countenance of a God so great in love as to communicate to us an
indestructible hope, a hope that not even death can crack, because
the life of those who entrust themselves to this Father always opens
up to the perspective of eternal beatitude.
The development of modern science has confined faith and hope more
and more to the private and individual sphere, so much so that today
it appears in an evident way, and sometimes dramatically, that the
world needs God -- the true God! -- otherwise it remains deprived of
hope. Science contributes much to the good of humanity -- without a
doubt -- but it is not able to redeem humanity.
Man is redeemed by love, which renders social life good and
beautiful. Because of this the great hope, that one that is full and
definitive, is guaranteed by God, by God who is love, who has
visited us in Jesus and given his life to us, and in Jesus he will
return at the end of time.
It is in Christ that we hope and it is him that we await! With Mary,
his Mother, the Church goes out to meet the Bridegroom: She does
this with works of charity, because hope, like faith, is
demonstrated in love. A good Advent to all!
[Translation by Joseph G. Trabbic]
[After the Angelus, the Holy Father greeted those present in several
languages. In English, he said:]
I welcome all the English-speaking pilgrims and visitors present for
our “Angelus” prayer. My special greeting goes to the pilgrims from
Brisbane in Australia. This Sunday marks the beginning of the
liturgical season of Advent. May this time of joyful expectation and
spiritual preparation for the Lord’s coming be one of genuine
conversion and interior renewal for Christians everywhere. Upon you
and your families I invoke God’s richest blessings!
© Copyright 2007 -- Libreria Editrice Vaticana
This page is the work of the Servants of the Pierced Hearts of Jesus and
Mary