Dear Brothers and Sisters,
1. Among the themes especially suggested to the People of God for
their reflection in this third year of preparation for the Great
Jubilee of the Year 2000, we find conversion, which includes
deliverance from evil (cf. Tertio millennio adveniente, n. 50). This
theme has a profound effect on our experience. Our entire personal
and community history, in fact, is a struggle against evil. The
petition: “Deliver us from evil” or from the “Evil One” which is
contained in the Our Father, punctuates our prayer to overcome sin
and be liberated from all connivance with evil. It reminds us of our
daily struggle, but above all, of the secret for overcoming it: the
strength of God, revealed and offered to us in Jesus (cf. Catechism
of the Catholic Church, n. 2853).
2. Moral evil causes suffering which is presented, especially in the
Old Testament, as a punishment connected with conduct that is
contrary to God’s law. Moreover, Sacred Scripture reveals that after
sinning, one can ask God for mercy, that is, for his pardon for the
fault and the end of the pain it has brought. A sincere return to
God and deliverance from evil are two aspects of one process. Thus,
for example, Jeremiah urges the people: “Return, O faithless sons, I
will heal your faithlessness” (Jer 3:22). In the Book of
Lamentations, the prospect of returning to the Lord (cf. 5:21) and
the experience of his mercy is underlined: “The steadfast love of
the Lord never ceases, his mercies never come to an end; they are
new every morning; great is your faithfulness” (3:22, cf. v. 32).
Israel’s whole history is read in the light of the dialectic: “sin,
punishment, repentance — mercy” (cf. eg., Jgs 3:7-10): this is the
nucleus central to the tradition of Deuteronomy. Indeed, the
historical defeat of the kingdom and city of Jerusalem is
interpreted as divine punishment for the lack of fidelity to the
Covenant.
3. In the Bible, the lamentations people raised to God when they
fell prey to suffering are accompanied by recognition of the sin
committed and trust in his liberating intervention. The confession
of sin is one of the elements through which this trust emerges. In
this regard, certain psalms which forcefully express the confession
of sin and the individual’s repentance for it are very revealing
(cf. Ps 38:18; 41:4). The admission of guilt, effectively described
in Psalm 51, is indispensable to start life anew. The confession of
one's sin highlights God’s justice as a reflection: “Against you,
you only, have I sinned, and done that which is evil in your sight,
so that you are justified in your sentence and blameless in your
judgement” (v. 4). In the Psalms we continuously see the prayer for
help and the trusting expectation of liberation for Israel (cf. Ps
88; 130). On the Cross, Jesus himself prayed with the words of Psalm
22 to obtain the Father’s loving intervention in his last hour.
4. In expressing these words to the Father, Jesus gives a voice to
that expectation of deliverance from evil which, in the biblical
perspective, occurs through a person who accepts suffering together
with its expiatory value: this is the case of the mysterious figure
of the Servant of the Lord in Isaiah (42:1-9; 49:1-6; 50:4-9;
52:13-53:12). Other figures also assume this role, like the prophet
who suffers for and expiates the iniquities of Israel (cf. Ez
4:4-5), he whom they have pierced, on whom they will turn their eyes
(cf. Zec 12:10-11; Jn 19:37; cf. also Rv 1:7), the martyrs who
accept their suffering in expiation for their people’s sins (cf. 2
Mc 7:37-38).
Jesus is the synthesis of all these figures and reinterprets them.
It is only in and through him that we become aware of evil and call
on the Father to deliver us from it.
In the prayer of the Our Father, the reference to evil becomes
explicit; here, the term ponerós (Mt 6:13), which in itself is an
adjectival form, can indicate a personification of evil. In the
world, this is provoked by that spiritual being, called by biblical
revelation the devil or Satan, who deliberately set himself against
God (cf. CCC, n. 2851f.). Human “evil” constituted by the Evil One
or instigated by him is also presented in our time in an attractive
form that seduces minds and hearts so as to cause the very sense of
evil and sin to be lost. It is a question of that “mystery of evil”
of which St Paul speaks (cf. 2 Thes 2:7). This is certainly linked
to human freedom, “but deep within its human reality there are
factors at work which place it beyond the merely human, in the
border-area where man’s conscience, will and sensitivity are in
contact with the dark forces which, according to St Paul, are active
in the world almost to the point of ruling it” (Reconciliatio et
paenitentia, n. 14).
Unfortunately, human beings can become the protagonists of evil,
that is, of “an evil and adulterous generation” (Mt 12:39).
5. We believe that Jesus conquered Satan once and for all, thereby
removing our fear of him. To every generation the Church represents,
as the Apostle Peter did in his discourse to Cornelius, the
liberating image of Jesus of Nazareth who “went about doing good and
healing all that were oppressed by the devil, for God was with him”
(Acts 10:38).
If, in Jesus, the devil was defeated, the Lord’s victory must still
be freely accepted by each of us, until evil is completely
eliminated. The struggle against evil therefore requires
determination and constant vigilance. Ultimate deliverance from it
can only be seen in an eschatological perspective (cf. Rv 21:4).
Over and above our efforts and even our failures, these comforting
words of Christ endure: “In the world you have tribulation; but be
of good cheer, I have overcome the world” (Jn 16:33).
To the English-speaking pilgrims and visitors the Holy Father said:
I warmly welcome the English-speaking pilgrims and visitors present
at today’s audience, especially those from England, Taiwan and the
United States of America. Wishing you a pleasant visit to Christian
Rome, I invoke upon you and your families the abundant blessings of
almighty God.