Dear Priests!
1. In this Year of the Eucharist, I particularly welcome our
annual spiritual encounter for Holy Thursday, the day when Christ's
love was manifested "to the end" (cf. Jn 13:1), the
day of the Eucharist, the day of our priesthood.
My thoughts turn to you, dear priests, as I spend this time recuperating
in hospital, a patient alongside other patients, uniting in the
Eucharist my own sufferings with those of Christ. In this spirit
I want to reflect with you on some aspects of our priestly spirituality.
I will take as my inspiration the words of Eucharistic consecration,
which we say every day in persona Christi in order to make present
on our altars the sacrifice made once and for all on Calvary.
These words provide us with illuminating insights for priestly
spirituality: if the whole Church draws life from the Eucharist,
all the more then must the life of a priest be "shaped"
by the Eucharist. So for us, the words of institution must be
more than a formula of consecration: they must be a "formula
of life".
A life of profound "gratitude''
2. "Tibi gratias agens benedixit". At every Mass we
remember and relive the first sentiment
expressed by Jesus as he broke the bread: that of thanksgiving.
Gratitude is the disposition which lies at the root of the very
word "Eucharist". This expression of thanksgiving contains
the whole Biblical spirituality of praise for the mirabilia Dei.
God loves us, he goes before us in his Providence, he accompanies
us with his continuous saving acts.
In the Eucharist Jesus thanks the Father with us and for us.
How could this thanksgiving of Jesus fail to shape the life of
a priest? He knows that he must cultivate a constant sense of
gratitude for the many gifts he has received in the course of
his life: in particular, for the gift of faith, which it is his
task to proclaim, and for the gift of the priesthood, which consecrates
him totally to the service of the Kingdom of God. We have our
crosses to bear — and we are certainly not the only ones!
— but the gifts we have received are so great that we cannot
fail to sing from the depths of our hearts our own Magnificat.
A life that is "given''
3. "Accipite et manducate. Accipite et bibite". Christ's
self-giving, which has its origin in the Trinitarian life of the
God who is Love, reaches its culmination in the sacrifice of the
Cross, sacramentally anticipated in the Last Supper. It is impossible
to repeat the words of consecration without feeling oneself caught
up in this spiritual movement. In a certain sense, when he says
the words: "take and eat", the priest must learn to
apply them also to himself, and to speak them with truth and generosity.
If he is able to offer himself as a gift, placing himself at the
disposal of the community and at the service of anyone in need,
his life takes on its true meaning.
This is exactly what Jesus expected of his apostles, as the Evangelist
John emphasizes in his account of the washing of the feet. It
is also what the People of God expect of a priest. If we think
about it more fully, the priest's promise of obedience, which
he made on the day of Ordination and is asked to renew at the
Chrism Mass, is illuminated by this relationship with the Eucharist.
Obeying out of love, sacrificing even a certain legitimate freedom
when the authoritative discernment of the Bishop so requires,
the priest lives out in his own flesh that "take and eat"
with which Christ, in the Last Supper, gave himself to the Church.
A life that is "saved'' in order to save
4. "Hoc est enim corpus meum quod pro vobis tradetur."
The body and the blood of Christ are given for the salvation of
man, of the whole man and of all men. This salvation is integral
and at the same time universal, because no one, unless he freely
chooses, is excluded from the saving power of Christ's blood:
"qui pro vobis et pro multis effundetur". It is a sacrifice
offered for "many'', as the Biblical text says (Mk 14:24;
Mt 26:28; cf. Is 53:11-12); this typical Semitic expression refers
to the multitude who are saved by Christ, the one Redeemer, yet
at the same time it implies the totality of human beings to whom
salvation is offered: the Lord's blood is "shed for you and
for all", as some translations legitimately make explicit.
Christ's flesh is truly given "for the life of the world"
(Jn 6:51; cf. 1 Jn 2:2).
Repeating Christ's venerable words in the recollected silence
of the liturgical assembly, we priests become privileged heralds
of this mystery of salvation. Yet unless we sense that we ourselves
are saved, how can we be convincing heralds? We are the first
to be touched inwardly by the grace which raises us from our frailty
and makes us cry "Abba, Father" with the confidence
of God's children (cf. Gal 4:6; Rom 8:15). This in turn commits
us to advance along the path of perfection. Holiness, in fact,
is the full expression of salvation. Only if our lives manifest
the fact that we are saved do we become credible heralds of salvation.
Moreover, a constant awareness of Christ's will to offer salvation
to all cannot fail to inspire us with fresh missionary fervour,
spurring each of us on to become "all things to all men,
in order to save at least some of them" (1 Cor 9:22).
A life that "remembers''
5. "Hoc facite in meam commemorationem." These words
of Jesus have been preserved for us not only by Luke (22:19) but
also by Paul (1 Cor 11:24). We should keep in mind that they were
spoken in the context of the Paschal meal, which for the Jews
was indeed a "memorial" (in Hebrew, zikkarôn).
On that occasion the Israelites relived the Exodus first and foremost,
but also the other important events of their history: the call
of Abraham, the sacrifice of Isaac, the Covenant of Sinai, the
many acts of God in defence of his people. For Christians too,
the Eucharist is a "memorial", but of a unique kind:
it not only commemorates, but sacramentally makes present the
death and resurrection of the Lord.
Jesus said: "Do this in memory of me". The Eucharist
does not simply commemorate a fact; it commemorates Him! Through
his daily repetition in persona Christi of the words of the "memorial",
the priest is invited to develop a "spirituality of remembrance".
At a time when rapid social and cultural changes are weakening
the sense of tradition and leading the younger generation especially
to risk losing touch with their roots, the priest is called to
be, within the community entrusted to him, the man who faithfully
remembers the entire mystery of Christ: prefigured in the Old
Testament, fulfilled in the New, and understood ever more deeply,
under the guidance of the Spirit, as Jesus explicitly promised:
"He will teach you all things and bring to your remembrance
all that I have said to you" (Jn 14:26).
A "consecrated'' life
6. "Mysterium fidei!" Every time he proclaims these
words after consecrating the bread and wine, the priest expresses
his ever-renewed amazement at the extraordinary miracle worked
at his hands. It is a miracle which only the eyes of faith can
perceive. The natural elements do not lose their external characteristics,
since the "species" remain those of bread and wine;
but their "substance", through the power of Christ's
word and the action of the Holy Spirit, is changed into the substance
of the body and blood of Christ. On the altar, then, Christ crucified
and risen is "truly, really and substantially" present
in the fullness of his humanity and divinity. What an eminently
sacred reality! That is why the Church treats this mystery with
such great reverence, and takes such care to ensure the observance
of the liturgical norms intended to safeguard the sanctity of
so great a sacrament.
We priests are the celebrants, but also the guardians of this
most sacred mystery. It is our relationship to the Eucharist that
most clearly challenges us to lead a "sacred'' life. This
must shine forth from our whole way of being, but above all from
the way we celebrate. Let us sit at the school of the saints!
The Year of the Eucharist invites us to rediscover those saints
who were vigorous proponents of Eucharistic devotion (cf. Mane
Nobiscum Domine, 31). Many beatified and canonized priests have
given exemplary testimony in this regard, enkindling fervour among
the faithful present at their celebrations of Mass. Many of them
were known for their prolonged Eucharistic adoration. To place
ourselves before Jesus in the Eucharist, to take advantage of
our ``moments of solitude'' and to fill them with this Presence,
is to enliven our consecration by our personal relationship with
Christ, from whom our life derives its joy and its meaning.
A life centred on Christ
7. “Mortem tuam annuntiamus, Domine, et tuam resurrectionem
confitemur, donec venias.'' Every time we celebrate the Eucharist,
the remembrance of Christ in his Paschal Mystery leads to the
desire for a full and definitive encounter with Him. We live in
expectation of his coming! In priestly spirituality, this expectation
must be lived out through pastoral charity, which impels us to
live in the midst of God's People, so as to direct their path
and to nourish their hope. This task requires from the priest
an interior attitude similar to that of the Apostle Paul: "Forgetting
what lies behind and straining forward to what lies ahead, I press
on towards the goal'' (Phil 3:13-14). The priest is someone who,
despite the passing of years, continues to radiate youthfulness,
spreading it almost "contagiously" among those he meets
along the way. His secret lies in his ``passion'' for Christ.
As Saint Paul said: "For me, to live is Christ" (Phil
1:21).
Particularly in the context of the new evangelization, the people
have a right to turn to priests in the hope of "seeing''
Christ in them (cf. Jn 12:21). The young feel the need for this
especially; Christ continues to call them, to make them his friends
and to challenge some to give themselves completely for the sake
of the Kingdom. Vocations will certainly not be lacking if our
manner of life is truly priestly, if we become more holy, more
joyful, more impassioned in the exercise of our ministry. A priest
"won'' by Christ (cf. Phil 3:12) more easily "wins"
others, so that they too decide to set out on the same adventure.
A "Eucharistic'' life at the school of Mary
8. The relationship between the Blessed Virgin Mary and the Eucharist
is a very close one, as I pointed out in the Encyclical Ecclesia
de Eucharistia (cf. Nos. 53-58). In its own sober liturgical language,
every Eucharistic Prayer brings this out. Thus in the Roman Canon
we say: "In union with the whole Church we honour Mary, the
ever-virgin Mother of Jesus Christ our Lord and God". In
the other Eucharistic Prayers, honour leads to petition, as for
example in Prayer II: "Make us worthy to share eternal life
with Mary, the virgin Mother of God."
In recent years, I have warmly recommended the contemplation
of the face of Christ, especially in my Letters Novo Millennio
Ineunte (cf. Nos. 23ff.) and in Rosarium Virginis Mariae (cf.
Nos. 9ff.), and I have pointed to Mary as our great teacher. In
the Encyclical on the Eucharist I then spoke of her as the "Woman
of the Eucharist" (cf. No. 53). Who more than Mary can help
us taste the greatness of the Eucharistic mystery? She more than
anyone can teach us how to celebrate the sacred mysteries with
due fervour and to commune with her Son, hidden in the Eucharist.
I pray to her, then, for all of you, and I entrust to her especially
the elderly, the sick, and those in difficulty. This Easter, in
the Year of the Eucharist, I gladly repeat to each of you the
gentle and consoling words of Jesus: "Behold your Mother"
(Jn 19:27).
With these sentiments, I send you my heartfelt blessing, and
I wish you the profound joy of Easter.
From Gemelli Hospital in Rome, on 13 March, the Fifth Sunday
of Lent, in the year 2005, the twenty-seventh of my Pontificate.
JOHN PAUL II
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