My dear
young people!
1. It always gives me great
joy to address a special message to you on the occasion of World
Youth Day. It is also a way to show you the extent of my affection
for you. The vivid recollection of my experiences during our World
Youth Day meetings is impressed on my memory: young people and the
Pope together, and a large gathering of bishops and priests, all
with our gaze on Christ, light of the world, invoking him and
proclaiming him to the entire human family. While I give thanks to
God for the witness of faith that you have given once again recently
in Toronto, I renew the invitation I made to you on the banks of
Lake Ontario: "the Church today looks to you with confidence and
expects you to be the people of the Beatitudes!" (Exhibition
Place, 25 July 2002; ORE, 31
July 2002, p. 6).
For the 18th World Youth Day
that will be celebrated in dioceses all over the world, I have
chosen a theme related to the Year of the Rosary: "Behold, your
mother!" (Jn 19,27). Before his death, Jesus entrusted to the
apostle John what was most precious to him: his Mother, Mary. These
are the final words of the Redeemer, and therefore they take on a
solemn nature and could be regarded as his spiritual testimony.
2. The angel Gabriel's words
in Nazareth: "Hail, full of grace" (Lk 1,28) also cast light on the
scene at Calvary. The Annunciation comes at the beginning, the Cross
signals the fulfilment. At the Annunciation, Mary gives human nature
to the Son of God within her womb; at the foot of the Cross, she
welcomes the whole of humanity within her heart in the person of
John. She was Mother of God from the first moments of the
Incarnation, and she became the Mother of humanity during the final
moments of the life of her Son Jesus on earth. She, who was without
sin, on Calvary "experienced" within her own being the suffering of
sin that her Son had taken upon himself to save humankind. At the
foot of the Cross on which was dying the One whom she had conceived
at the moment of her "yes" at the Annunciation, Mary received, as it
were, a "second annunciation": "Woman, behold, your son!" (Jn
19,26).
The Son upon the Cross can
pour out his suffering into his Mother's heart. Every child who
suffers experiences that need. You too, my dear young people, are
faced with suffering: loneliness, failures and disappointments in
your personal lives; difficulties in inserting yourselves in the
adult world and in professional life: the separations and losses in
your families; the violence of war and the death of the innocent.
Know, however, that in difficult times, which everyone experiences,
you are not alone: like John at the foot of the Cross, Jesus also
gives his Mother to you so that she will comfort you with her
tenderness.
3. It says in the Gospel that
"from that hour the disciple took her to his own home (Jn 19,27).
This statement, the subject of many commentaries since early
Christian times, does not simply point out the place where John
lived. Beyond the material aspect, it evokes the spiritual dimension
of this welcome and of the new bond established between Mary and
John.
My dear young people, you are
more or less the same age as John and you have the same desire to be
with Jesus. Today, it is you whom Jesus expressly asks to receive
Mary "into your home" and to welcome her "as one of yours"; to learn
from her the one who "kept all these things, pondering them in her
heart" (Lk 2,19) that inner disposition to listen and the attitude
of humility and generosity that singled her out as God's first
collaborator in the work of salvation. She will discharge her
ministry as a mother and train you and mould you until Christ is
fully formed in you (cf.
Rosarium Virginis Mariae,
n. 15).
4. This is why I now wish to
repeat the motto of my episcopal and pontifical service: "Totus
tuus". Throughout my life I have experienced the loving and
forceful presence of the Mother of Our Lord. Mary accompanies me
every day in the fulfilment of my mission as Successor of Peter.
Mary is Mother of divine
grace, because she is the Mother of the Author of grace. Entrust
yourselves to her with complete confidence! You will be radiant with
the beauty of Christ. Open up to the breath of the Spirit, and you
will become courageous apostles, capable of spreading the fire of
charity and the light of truth all around you. In Mary's school, you
will discover the specific commitment that Christ expects of you,
and you will learn to put Christ first in your lives, and to direct
your thoughts and actions to him.
Dear young people, you know
that Christianity is not an opinion nor does it consist of empty
words. Christianity is Christ! It is a Person, a Living Person! To
meet Jesus, to love him and make him loved: this is the Christian
vocation. Mary was given to you to help you enter into a more
authentic and more personal relationship with Jesus. Through her
example, Mary teaches you to gaze on him with love, for He has loved
us first. Through her intercession, she forms in you a disciple's
heart able to listen to her Son, who reveals the face of his Father
and the true dignity of the human person.
5. On 16 October 2002 I
proclaimed the "Year of the Rosary", and I invited all the children
of the Church to make of this ancient Marian prayer a simple and
profound exercise in contemplation of the face of Christ. To recite
the Rosary means to learn to gaze on Jesus with his Mother's eyes,
and to love Jesus with his Mother's heart. Today, my dear young
people, I am also, in spirit, handing you the Rosary beads. Through
prayer and meditation on the mysteries, Mary leads you safely
towards her Son! Do not be ashamed to recite the Rosary alone, while
you walk along the streets to school, to the university or to work,
or as you commute by public transport. Adopt the habit of reciting
it among yourselves, in your groups, movements and associations. Do
not hesitate to suggest that it be recited at home by your parents
and brothers and sisters, because it rekindles and strengthens the
bonds between family members. This prayer will help you to be strong
in your faith, constant in charity, joyful and persevering in hope.
With Mary, the handmaiden of
the Lord, you will discover the joy and fruitfulness of the hidden
life. With her, disciple of the Master, you will follow Jesus along
the streets of Palestine, becoming witnesses of his preaching and
his miracles. With her, the sorrowful Mother, you will accompany
Jesus in his passion and death. With her, Virgin of hope, you will
welcome the festive Easter proclamation and the priceless gift of
the Holy Spirit.
6. My dear young people, only
Jesus knows what is in your hearts and your deepest desires. Only
He, who has loved you to the end (cf. Jn 13,1), can fulfil your
aspirations. His are words of eternal life, words that give meaning
to life. No one apart from Christ can give you true happiness. By
following the example of Mary, you should know how to give Him your
unconditional "yes". There is no place in your lives for selfishness
or laziness. Now more than ever it is crucial that you be "watchers
of the dawn", the lookouts who announce the light of dawn and the
new springtime of the Gospel of which the buds can already be seen.
Humanity is in urgent need of the witness of free and courageous
young people who dare to go against the tide and proclaim with
vigour and enthusiasm their personal faith in God, Lord and Saviour.
You are also aware, my dear
friends, that this mission is not easy. It becomes absolutely
impossible if one counts only on oneself. But "what is impossible
with men is possible for God" (Lk 18,27; 1,37).
True disciples of Christ are
conscious of their own weakness. For this reason they put all their
trust in the grace of God and they accept it with undivided hearts,
convinced that without Him they can do nothing (cf. Jn 15,5). What
characterises them and distinguishes them from others is not their
talents or natural gifts. It is their firm determination to proceed
as followers of Jesus. May you be imitators of them as they were of
Christ! "May the eyes of your heart be enlightened, that you may
know what is the hope that belongs to his call, what are the riches
of glory in his inheritance among the holy ones, and what is the
surpassing greatness of his power for us who believe, in accord with
the exercise of his great might" (Eph 1,18-19).
7. My dear young people, the
next World Meeting will be held, as you know, in Germany in 2005 in
the city and diocese of Cologne. The road is still long, but the two
years that separate us from that appointment can serve as a time of
intense preparation. To help you on this path, I have chosen the
following themes for you:
- 2004: 19th World Youth Day:
"We wish to see Jesus" (Jn 12,21);
- 2005: 20th World Youth Day: "We have come to worship him"
(Mt 2,2).
Meanwhile, you will meet in
your local Church on Palm Sunday: live this experience with
commitment, in prayer, in attentive listening and joyful sharing in
these opportunities for "ongoing learning", and showing your lively
devout faith! Like the Magi, you too should be pilgrims stimulated
by the desire to find the Messiah and to adore Him! Courageously
proclaim that Christ, who died and is risen, has vanquished evil and
death!
In these times threatened by
violence, hatred and war, you must witness that he and he alone can
give true peace to the heart of individuals, families and peoples on
this earth. Commit yourselves to seeking and promoting peace,
justice and fellowship. Do not forget the words of the Gospel:
"Blessed are the peacemakers, for they will be called children of
God" (Mt 5,9).
As I entrust you to the
Blessed Virgin Mary, Mother of Christ and Mother of the Church, I
accompany you with a special Apostolic Blessing, sign of my trust
and demonstration of my affection for you all.
From the Vatican, 8 March
2003.
This page is the work of the Servants of the Pierced Hearts of Jesus and
Mary