Vatican
City, 13 January 2013 (VIS) – This morning in the Sistine Chapel
the Holy Father baptised 20 children born in the past few months and
children of employees of the Vatican City State.
In
his homily the Pope recalled that, once an adult, Jesus began his
public ministry by going to the River Jordan to receive a baptism of
penitence and conversion from John. "Was Jesus in need of
penitence and conversion?" the pontiff asked. "Certainly
not. And yet … he wanted to place himself alongside the sinners …
expressing God's nearness. … He demonstrates solidarity with us,
with the weariness we feel in trying to convert, trying to leave
aside our selfishness, trying to tear ourselves away from our sins,
in order to tell us that, if we accept Him in our lives, He is
capable of lifting us back up and leading us to the height of God the
Father. … Jesus truly immersed himself in our human condition …
and is capable of understanding our weakness and fragility. This is
why He is moved to compassion. He chooses to suffer with human
beings, to be penitent along with us. This is God's plan that Jesus
wants to accomplish: the divine mission of healing the wounded and
tending the sick, of taking upon himself the sin of the world."
Afterwards
he explained that, at the moment that Jesus lets himself be baptised
by John, "the heavens open and the Holy Spirit is visibly
manifest in the form of a dove while a voice from above expresses the
Father's pleasure, recognizing His Son, the Only Begotten, the
Beloved. … Thus the prophecy of Isaiah is fulfilled … the Lord
God comes with power to destroy the works of sin and his arm
exercises dominion to disarm the Evil One. However, we realize that
this arm is the arm extended on the cross and that the power of
Christ is the power of He who suffers for us. This is the power of
God, which is different from the world's power. This is how God
comes, with the power to destroy sin."
Through
Baptism, the children baptised today "will be united profoundly
and for all time with Jesus, immersed in the mystery of His power …
in the mystery of his death, which is the source of life, in order to
participate in His resurrection, to be reborn to new life … The
heavens have also opened over your children and God says: these are
my children with whom I am well pleased. Included in this
relationship and freed from original sin they become living members
of the one body that is the Church and become capable of fully living
their call to holiness so that they might inherit the eternal life
obtained for us through Jesus' resurrection."
Addressing
the parents who had asked for Baptism for their children, the Holy
Father highlighted that they show their "faith, the joy of being
Christians and of belonging to the Church. It is a joy that springs
from the awareness of having received a great gift from God: faith, a
gift that none of us could have merited but which has been freely
given to us and to which we have responded with our 'yes'. ... The
path of faith that begins today for these children is based,
therefore, on a certainty, on the experience that there is nothing
greater than knowing Christ and communicating friendship with Him to
others. Only in this friendship are the great potentialities of the
human condition truly revealed and what is beautiful and liberating
can be experienced."
He
reminded the godparents that to them falls "the important duty
of sustaining and helping the parents in their task of educating. …
May you always know how to set a good example for them through
exercising the Christian virtues. It is not easy to openly and
uncompromisingly express that which you believe in, especially in the
climate we are living in, faced with a society that often considers
those who live their faith in Jesus as old-fashioned and out of date.
In the wake of this mentality, even Christians run the risk of seeing
their relationship with Jesus as limiting, as something that inhibits
self-realization. … But that is not so! It is precisely through
proceeding along the path of faith that we come to understand how
Jesus exercises the liberating activity of God's love in us, which
allows us to overcome our selfishness …. in order to lead us to a
full life in communion with God and openness to others. 'God is love,
and whoever remains in love remains in God and God in him.' These
words from the First Letter of John express with remarkable clarity
the heart of the Christian faith: the Christian image of God as well
as the resulting image of mankind and its path."
"The
water with which these children will be baptised in the name of the
Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, will immerse them in the
'source' of life that is God himself and will make them into His
children. The seed of the theological virtues, inspired by God―faith,
hope, and love―the
seed that is today planted in their hearts by the power of the Holy
Spirit, must always be nourished with the Word of God and the
Sacraments, so that these Christian virtues might grow and arrive at
their full maturity, until they make of each one of these a true
witness of the Lord," he concluded.
No comments:
Post a Comment