POPE BENEDICT
XVI'S HOMILY AT ST. PAUL'S OUTSIDE THE WALLS
25 APRIL 2005
Benedict XVI's Homily at St. Paul Outside the
Walls
"I Am Here to Revive in Faith This 'Grace of
Apostleship'"
VATICAN CITY, APRIL 25, 2005 (Zenit.org).- Here
is the homily Benedict XVI delivered when
visiting the sepulcher of the Apostle to the
Gentiles in the Basilica of St. Paul Outside the
Walls.
* * *
Lord Cardinals
Venerated Brothers in the Episcopate and in the
Priesthood
Dear Brothers and Sisters:
I thank God because at the beginning of my
ministry as Successor of Peter he grants me to
pause in prayer before the sepulcher of the
Apostle Paul. For me, this is a much longed for
pilgrimage, a gesture of faith that I make in my
name, but also in the name of the beloved
Diocese of Rome, of which the Lord has
constituted me Bishop and Pastor, and of the
universal Church entrusted to my pastoral care.
A pilgrimage so to speak to the roots of the
mission, of that mission that the risen Christ
entrusted to Peter, to the Apostles and, in
particular also to Paul, leading him to proclaim
the Gospel to the Gentiles, until he reached
this city where, after having preached the
Kingdom of God for a long time (Acts 28:31), he
rendered with blood the last testimony of his
Lord, who had "made him his own" (Philippians
3:12) and sent him.
Already before Providence led him to Rome, the
Apostle wrote to the Christians of this city,
capital of the Empire, his most important letter
from the doctrinal point of view. Its beginning
has just been proclaimed, a profound preamble in
which the Apostle greets the community of Rome
introducing himself as "servant of Jesus Christ,
called to be an Apostle" (Romans 1:1). And later
he adds: "through [Jesus Christ] we have
received grace and apostleship to bring about
the obedience of faith for the sake of his name
among all the nations" (Romans 1:5).
Dear Friends, as Successor of Peter, I am here
to revive in faith this "grace of apostleship,"
as God, according to another expression of the
Apostle to the Gentiles, has entrusted to me
"anxiety for all the churches" (2 Corinthians
11:28). Before our eyes is the example of my
beloved and venerated predecessor John Paul II,
a missionary Pope whose activity, understood in
this way, witnessed in more than 100 apostolic
trips beyond the confines of Italy, is truly
inimitable. What was it that drove him to such
dynamism if not the very love of Christ that
transformed St. Paul's life (cf. 2 Corinthians
5:14)? May the Lord infuse such a love also in
me so that I will not remain calm in face of the
urgencies of the proclamation of the Gospel in
today's world. The Church by her nature is
missionary; her primary task is evangelization.
The ecumenical Second Vatican Council dedicated
to missionary activity the decree called
precisely, "Ad Gentes," in which we are reminded
that "[t]he Apostles themselves, on whom the
Church was founded, following in the footsteps
of Christ, 'preached the word of truth and begot
churches.' It is the duty of their successors to
make this task endure 'so that the word of God
may run and be glorified (2 Thessalonians 3:1)
and the kingdom of God be proclaimed and
established throughout the world."
At the beginning of the third millennium, the
Church feels with renewed force that Christ's
missionary mandate is of more current importance
than ever. The Great Jubilee of the Year 2000
has led her to "start afresh from Christ,"
contemplated in prayer, so that the light of his
truth is irradiated to all men, above all with
the testimony of holiness. I like to recall the
motto that St. Benedict proposed in his Rule,
when exhorting his monks to "prefer nothing to
the love of Christ" (Chapter 4). In fact, the
call on the road to Damascus led Paul precisely
to this: to make Christ the center of his life,
leaving everything for the sublime knowledge of
him and of his ministry of love, committing
himself later to proclaim him to all, especially
pagans "to the glory of his name" (Romans 1:5).
Christ's passion led him to preach the Gospel
not only with the word, but also with his very
life, which was ever more conformed to that of
his Lord. In the end, Paul proclaimed Christ
with martyrdom, and his blood, together with
that of Peter and of witnesses of the Gospel,
watered this land and made fruitful the Church
of Rome, which presides over the communion of
charity (cf. St. Ignatius of Antioch, "Letter to
the Romans," 1,1).
The 20th century was a time of martyrdom. Pope
John Paul II highlighted it clearly, asking the
Church to "actualize the Martyrology" and
canonized and beatified numerous martyrs of
recent history. Therefore, the blood of martyrs
is the seed of new Christians, especially there
where it has suffered most for the faith and the
testimony of the Gospel.
We entrust this desire to the intercession of
St. Paul. May he obtain for the Church of Rome,
in particular for her Bishop, and for all the
people of God, the joy of proclaiming and
witnessing to all the Good News of Christ the
Savior.
[Translation by ZENIT]

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