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EASTER VIGIL
HOMILY OF HIS HOLINESS
BENEDICT XVI
Saint Peter's Basilica Holy Saturday,
23 April 2011
(Video)
Photo gallery
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
The liturgical celebration of the Easter Vigil makes use of two
eloquent signs. First there is the fire that becomes light. As the procession
makes its way through the church, shrouded in the darkness of the night, the
light of the Paschal Candle becomes a wave of lights, and it speaks to us of
Christ as the true morning star that never sets – the Risen Lord in whom light
has conquered darkness. The second sign is water. On the one hand, it recalls
the waters of the Red Sea, decline and death, the mystery of the Cross. But now
it is presented to us as spring water, a life-giving element amid the dryness.
Thus it becomes the image of the sacrament of baptism, through which we become
sharers in the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ.
Yet these great signs of creation, light and water, are not the only
constituent elements of the liturgy of the Easter Vigil. Another essential
feature is the ample encounter with the words of sacred Scripture that it
provides. Before the liturgical reform there were twelve Old Testament readings
and two from the New Testament. The New Testament readings have been retained.
The number of Old Testament readings has been fixed at seven, but depending upon
the local situation, they may be reduced to three. The Church wishes to offer
us a panoramic view of whole trajectory of salvation history, starting with
creation, passing through the election and the liberation of Israel to the
testimony of the prophets by which this entire history is directed ever more
clearly towards Jesus Christ. In the liturgical tradition all these readings
were called prophecies. Even when they are not directly foretelling future
events, they have a prophetic character, they show us the inner foundation and
orientation of history. They cause creation and history to become transparent
to what is essential. In this way they take us by the hand and lead us towards
Christ, they show us the true Light.
At the Easter Vigil, the journey along the paths of sacred Scripture
begins with the account of creation. This is the liturgy’s way of telling us
that the creation story is itself a prophecy. It is not information about the
external processes by which the cosmos and man himself came into being. The
Fathers of the Church were well aware of this. They did not interpret the story
as an account of the process of the origins of things, but rather as a pointer
towards the essential, towards the true beginning and end of our being. Now,
one might ask: is it really important to speak also of creation during the
Easter Vigil? Could we not begin with the events in which God calls man, forms
a people for himself and creates his history with men upon the earth? The
answer has to be: no. To omit the creation would be to misunderstand the very
history of God with men, to diminish it, to lose sight of its true order of
greatness. The sweep of history established by God reaches back to the origins,
back to creation. Our profession of faith begins with the words: “We believe in
God, the Father Almighty, Creator of heaven and earth”. If we omit the
beginning of the Credo, the whole history of salvation becomes too
limited and too small. The Church is not some kind of association that concerns
itself with man’s religious needs but is limited to that objective. No, she
brings man into contact with God and thus with the source of all things.
Therefore we relate to God as Creator, and so we have a responsibility for
creation. Our responsibility extends as far as creation because it comes from
the Creator. Only because God created everything can he give us life and direct
our lives. Life in the Church’s faith involves more than a set of feelings and
sentiments and perhaps moral obligations. It embraces man in his entirety, from
his origins to his eternal destiny. Only because creation belongs to God can we
place ourselves completely in his hands. And only because he is the Creator can
he give us life for ever. Joy over creation, thanksgiving for creation and
responsibility for it all belong together.
The central message of the creation account can be defined more
precisely still. In the opening words of his Gospel, Saint John sums up the
essential meaning of that account in this single statement: “In the beginning
was the Word”. In effect, the creation account that we listened to earlier is
characterized by the regularly recurring phrase: “And God said ...” The world
is a product of the Word, of the Logos, as Saint John expresses it, using
a key term from the Greek language. “Logos” means “reason”, “sense”,
“word”. It is not reason pure and simple, but creative Reason, that speaks and
communicates itself. It is Reason that both is and creates sense. The creation
account tells us, then, that the world is a product of creative Reason. Hence
it tells us that, far from there being an absence of reason and freedom at the
origin of all things, the source of everything is creative Reason, love, and
freedom. Here we are faced with the ultimate alternative that is at stake in
the dispute between faith and unbelief: are irrationality, lack of freedom and
pure chance the origin of everything, or are reason, freedom and love at the
origin of being? Does the primacy belong to unreason or to reason? This is
what everything hinges upon in the final analysis. As believers we answer, with
the creation account and with Saint John, that in the beginning is reason. In the
beginning is freedom. Hence it is good to be a human person. It is not the
case that in the expanding universe, at a late stage, in some tiny corner of the
cosmos, there evolved randomly some species of living being capable of reasoning
and of trying to find rationality within creation, or to bring rationality into
it. If man were merely a random product of evolution in some place on the
margins of the universe, then his life would make no sense or might even be a
chance of nature. But no, Reason is there at the beginning: creative, divine
Reason. And because it is Reason, it also created freedom; and because freedom
can be abused, there also exist forces harmful to creation. Hence a thick black
line, so to speak, has been drawn across the structure of the universe and
across the nature of man. But despite this contradiction, creation itself
remains good, life remains good, because at the beginning is good Reason, God’s
creative love. Hence the world can be saved. Hence we can and must place
ourselves on the side of reason, freedom and love – on the side of God who loves
us so much that he suffered for us, that from his death there might emerge a
new, definitive and healed life.
The Old Testament account of creation that we listened to clearly
indicates this order of realities. But it leads us a further step forward. It
has structured the process of creation within the framework of a week leading up
to the Sabbath, in which it finds its completion. For Israel, the Sabbath was
the day on which all could participate in God’s rest, in which man and animal,
master and slave, great and small were united in God’s freedom. Thus the
Sabbath was an expression of the Covenant between God and man and creation. In
this way, communion between God and man does not appear as something extra,
something added later to a world already fully created. The Covenant, communion
between God and man, is inbuilt at the deepest level of creation. Yes, the
Covenant is the inner ground of creation, just as creation is the external
presupposition of the Covenant. God made the world so that there could be a
space where he might communicate his love, and from which the response of love
might come back to him. From God’s perspective, the heart of the man who
responds to him is greater and more important than the whole immense material
cosmos, for all that the latter allows us to glimpse something of God’s
grandeur.
Easter and the paschal experience of Christians, however, now require
us to take a further step. The Sabbath is the seventh day of the week. After
six days in which man in some sense participates in God’s work of creation, the
Sabbath is the day of rest. But something quite unprecedented happened in the
nascent Church: the place of the Sabbath, the seventh day, was taken by the
first day. As the day of the liturgical assembly, it is the day for encounter
with God through Jesus Christ who as the Risen Lord encountered his followers on
the first day, Sunday, after they had found the tomb empty. The structure of
the week is overturned. No longer does it point towards the seventh day, as the
time to participate in God’s rest. It sets out from the first day as the day of
encounter with the Risen Lord. This encounter happens afresh at every
celebration of the Eucharist, when the Lord enters anew into the midst of his
disciples and gives himself to them, allows himself, so to speak, to be touched
by them, sits down at table with them. This change is utterly extraordinary,
considering that the Sabbath, the seventh day seen as the day of encounter with
God, is so profoundly rooted in the Old Testament. If we also bear in mind how
much the movement from work towards the rest-day corresponds to a natural
rhythm, the dramatic nature of this change is even more striking. This
revolutionary development that occurred at the very the beginning of the
Church’s history can be explained only by the fact that something utterly new
happened that day. The first day of the week was the third day after Jesus’
death. It was the day when he showed himself to his disciples as the Risen
Lord. In truth, this encounter had something unsettling about it. The world
had changed. This man who had died was now living with a life that was no
longer threatened by any death. A new form of life had been inaugurated, a new
dimension of creation. The first day, according to the Genesis account, is the
day on which creation begins. Now it was the day of creation in a new way, it
had become the day of the new creation. We celebrate the first day. And in so
doing we celebrate God the Creator and his creation. Yes, we believe in God,
the Creator of heaven and earth. And we celebrate the God who was made man, who
suffered, died, was buried and rose again. We celebrate the definitive victory
of the Creator and of his creation. We celebrate this day as the origin and the
goal of our existence. We celebrate it because now, thanks to the risen Lord,
it is definitively established that reason is stronger than unreason, truth
stronger than lies, love stronger than death. We celebrate the first day
because we know that the black line drawn across creation does not last for
ever. We celebrate it because we know that those words from the end of the
creation account have now been definitively fulfilled: “God saw everything that
he had made, and behold, it was very good” (Gen 1:31). Amen.
© Copyright 2011 - Libreria
Editrice Vaticana
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