 |
APOSTOLIC JOURNEY OF HIS HOLINESS BENEDICT XVI
TO MÜNCHEN, ALTÖTTING AND REGENSBURG
(SEPTEMBER 9-14, 2006)
GREETING OF THE HOLY FATHER
BEFORE THE MARIENSÄULE
Marienplatz, München
Saturday, 9
September 2006
Madam Chancellor and Mr Prime Minister, My Brother Cardinals, Bishops and Priests, Distinguished Ladies and Gentlemen, Dear Brothers and Sisters!
It is very moving for me to stand once more in this beautiful square
at the foot of the Mariensäule – in a place which, as was already pointed
out, has witnessed two other decisive turning-points in my life. Here, as it
was said, thirty years ago the faithful gave me a very warm welcome, and I
entrusted to the Virgin Mary the path that lay ahead of me, since the move from
a university chair to the ministry of Archbishop of Munich and Freising was a
big step, and only with such protection and the palpable affection of the people
of Munich and Bavaria could I hope to take up that ministry as the successor of
Cardinal Döpfner. Then, again in 1982, I bade farewell here. Archbishop, later
Cardinal, Hamer, the Archbishop of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the
Faith was present, and he remarked: “The people of Munich are like the people of
Naples: they want to touch their Archbishop and they love him”. He was amazed
to see such warmth here in Munich, and to encounter the Bavarian heart in this
place, where once more I entrusted myself to the Virgin.
I thank your, distinguished and dear Mr Minister President, for your
cordial words of welcome in the name of the Bavarian government and people. I
also offer a heartfelt thanks to my dear successor as Pastor of the Archdiocese
of Munich and Freising, Cardinal Friedrich Wetter, for his warm words of
greeting. I greet Madam Chancellor, Dr Angela Merkel, and all the political,
civil and military authorities taking part in this ceremony of welcome and
prayer. I would like to offer a special greeting to the priests, especially
those with whom I was able to work in my home Diocese of Munich and Freising.
But I wish to greet all of you, my dear compatriots assembled in this square,
with great heartfelt gratitude and affection. I thank you for your warm
Bavarian welcome, and I thank, as I have already done at the airport, all those
who helped to prepare this visit are now working so that everything will go so
smoothly.
I hope you will allow me to recall on this occasion a few thoughts
which I set down in my brief memoirs with regard to my appointment as Archbishop
of Munich and Freising. I was to become, and did become, the successor of Saint
Corbinian. From my childhood I was very much taken with the story that a bear
had attacked and killed the horse on the saint was riding across the Alps.
Corbinian severely scolded the bear and he punished him by loading him down with
all his baggage and making him carry it all the way to Rome. So the bear,
carrying the baggage of the saint, had to go to Rome, and only there was he
allowed by the saint to go free.
In 1977, when I had to face the difficult choice of whether or not to accept my
appointment as Archbishop of Munich and Freising, knowing that it would take me
away from my usual work at the university and mean new work and new
responsibilities, I had to do a lot of reflecting. And precisely then I
remembered this bear and the interpretation of verses 22 and 23 of Psalm 73 that
Saint Augustine, in a situation much like my own and in the context of his own
priestly and episcopal ordination, had come up with and later set down in his
sermons on the Psalms. In Psalm 73, the Psalmist asks why in this world good
things often happen to bad people, while bad things happen to many good people. And he goes on to say: “I was foolish in my thinking, I stood in your presence
like a dumb beast. But then I entered the sanctuary and I understood how even
amid my troubles I was close to you and that you were always with me”.
Augustine loved this Psalm and often made reference to it, seeing in the words
“I stood in your presence like a dumb beast” (in Latin, iumentum) a
reference to the beasts of burden used in North Africa to work the land. In
this iumentum he saw an image of himself as a beast of burden for God,
someone burdened by his responsibility, the sarcina episcopalis. He had
chosen the life of a scholar and God had called him to become a “beast of
burden”, a sturdy ox drawing the plough in God’s field, doing the heavy labour
assigned to him. But he came to realize: just as the beast of burden is very
close to the farmer, working under his direction, so I am very close to God,
because thus I serve him directly for the building up of his Kingdom, the the
building up of his Church.
With these words of the Bishop of Hippo in mind, I have found in
Saint Corbinian’s bear a constant encouragement to carry out my ministry with
confidence and joy – thirty years ago, and again now in my new task – and to say
my daily “yes” to God: I have become for you a beast of burden, but as such “I
am always with you” (Ps 73:23). Saint Corbinian’s bear was set free in
Rome. In my case, the Lord decided otherwise. And so I find myself once more
at the foot of the Mariensäule, imploring the intercession and blessing
of the Mother of God, not only for the city of Munich and for my beloved
Bavaria, but for the universal Church and for all people of good will.
© Copyright 2006 - Libreria Editrice Vaticana
|