JUBILEE PILGRIMAGE
OF HIS HOLINESS JOHN PAUL II
TO THE HOLY LAND (MARCH 20-26, 2000)
HOMILY OF JOHN PAUL II
MASS
IN THE MANGER SQUARE
Palestinian Territories Bethlehem Wednesday, 22 March
2000
To us a Child is born, to us a Son is given. . . and his name will
be called 'Wonderful Counsellor, Mighty God. . . Prince of Peace' (Is
9:6)
Mr. President, thank you for your presence and for that of the other civil authorities.
Your Beatitude, Brother Bishops and Priests, Dear Brothers and Sisters,
1. The words of the Prophet Isaiah foreshadow the Saviours coming
into the world. And it was here in Bethlehem that the great promise was
fulfilled. For two thousand years, generation after generation of
Christians have pronounced the name of Bethlehem with deep emotion and
joyful gratitude. Like the shepherds and the wise men, we too have come to
find the Child, wrapped in swaddling clothes and lying in a manger
(Lk 2:12). Like so many pilgrims before us, we kneel in wonder and
adoration before the ineffable mystery which was accomplished here.
On the first Christmas of my ministry as Successor of the Apostle Peter
I mentioned publicly the great desire I had to celebrate the beginning of
my Pontificate in Bethlehem at the cave of the Nativity (cf. Homily at
Midnight Mass, 24 December 1978, No. 3). That was not possible then;
and has not been possible until now. But today, how can I fail to praise
the God of all mercies, whose ways are mysterious and whose love knows no
end, for bringing me, in this year of the Great Jubilee, to the place of
the Saviours birth? Bethlehem is the heart of my Jubilee Pilgrimage.
The paths that I have taken lead me to this place and to the mystery that
it proclaims.
I thank Patriarch Michel Sabbah for his kind words of welcome and I
cordially embrace all the members of the Assembly of the Catholic
Ordinaries of the Holy Land. Significant is the presence, in the place
which saw the birth of the Son of God in the flesh, of many of the Eastern
Catholic Communities which form the rich mosaic of our catholicity. With
affection in the Lord, I greet the Representatives of the Orthodox
Churches and of the Ecclesial Communities present in the Holy Land.
I am grateful to the officials of the Palestinian Authority who are
taking part in our celebration and joining us in praying for the
well-being of the Palestinian people.
2. Do not be afraid! Listen, I bring you news of great joy, a joy
to be shared by the whole people. Today in the town of David a Saviour has
been born to you: he is Christ the Lord (Lk 2:10-11).
The joy announced by the angel is not a thing of the past. It is a joy
of today the eternal today of Gods salvation which embraces
all time, past, present and future. At the dawn of the new millennium, we
are called to see more clearly that time has meaning because here Eternity
entered history and remains with us for ever. The words of the Venerable
Bede express the idea clearly: Still today, and every day until the
end of the ages, the Lord will be continually conceived in Nazareth and
born in Bethlehem (In Ev. S. Lucae, 2: PL 92, 330).
Because it is always Christmas in Bethlehem, every day is Christmas in the
hearts of Christians. And every day we are called to proclaim the message
of Bethlehem to the world good news of great joy: the
Eternal Word, God from God, Light from Light, has become flesh
and has made his dwelling among us (cf. Jn 1:14).
The newborn Child, defenceless and totally dependent on the care of Mary
and Joseph, entrusted to their love, is the worlds entire wealth. He
is our all!
In this Child the Son who is given to us we find rest for
our souls and the true bread that never fails the Eucharistic Bread
foreshadowed even in the name of this town: Beth-lehem, the house of
bread. God lies hidden in the Child; divinity lies hidden in the Bread of
Life. Adoro te devote latens Deitas! Quae sub his figuris vere latitas!
3. The great mystery of divine self-emptying, the work of our redemption
unfolding in weakness: this is no easy truth. The Saviour was born in the
night in the darkness, in the silence and poverty of the cave of
Bethlehem. The people who walked in darkness has seen a great light:
on those who live in a land of deep shadow a light has shone,
declares the Prophet Isaiah (9:2). This is a place that has known the
yoke and the rod of oppression. How often has the cry of
innocents been heard in these streets? Even the great church built over
the Saviours birth-place stands like a fortress battered by the
strife of the ages. The Crib of Jesus lies always in the shadow of the
Cross. The silence and poverty of the birth in Bethlehem are one with the
darkness and pain of the death on Calvary. The Crib and the Cross are the
same mystery of redemptive love; the body which Mary laid in the manger is
the same body offered up on the Cross.
4. Where then is the dominion of the Wonderful Counsellor, Mighty
God and Prince of Peace of which the Prophet Isaiah speaks? What is
the power to which Jesus himself refers when he says: All power has
been given to me in heaven and on earth (Mt 28:18)? Christs
kingdom is not of this world (Jn 18:36). His kingdom
is not the play of force and wealth and conquest which appears to shape
our human history. It is rather the power to vanquish the Evil One, the
ultimate victory over sin and death. It is the power to heal the wounds
which disfigure the image of the Creator in his creatures. Christs
is the power to transform our weak nature and make us capable, through the
grace of the Holy Spirit, of peace with one another and communion with God
himself. To all who received him, who believed in his name, he gave
power to become children of God (Jn 1:12). This is the
message of Bethlehem today and for ever. This is the extraordinary gift
which the Prince of Peace brought into the world two thousand years ago.
5. In that peace, I greet all the Palestinian people, aware as I am that
this is an especially important time in your history. I pray that the
recently concluded Pastoral Synod in which all the Catholic Churches took
part will encourage you and strengthen among you the bonds of unity and
peace. In this way you will bear ever more effective witness to the faith,
building up the Church and serving the common good. I offer the holy kiss
to the Christians of the other Churches and Ecclesial Communities. I greet
the Muslim Community of Bethlehem and pray for a new era of understanding
and cooperation among all the peoples of the Holy Land.
Today we look back to one moment two thousand years ago, but in spirit
we embrace all time. We gather in one place, but we encompass the whole
earth. We celebrate one newborn Child, but we embrace all men and women
everywhere. Today from Manger Square, we cry out to every time and place,
and to every person, Peace be with you! Do not be afraid!
These words resound through the pages of Scripture. They are divine words,
spoken by Jesus himself after he rose from the dead: Do not be
afraid! (Mt 28:10). They are the words of the Church to you
today. Do not be afraid to preserve your Christian presence and heritage
in the very place where the Saviour was born.
In the cave of Bethlehem, to use the words of Saint Paul in todays
Second Reading, Gods grace has been revealed (Titus
2:11). In the Child who is born, the world has received the mercy
promised to our fathers, to Abraham and his descendants for ever
(cf. Lk 1:54-55). Dazzled by the mystery of the Eternal Word made
flesh, we leave all fear behind and we become like the angels, glorifying
God who gives the world such gifts. With the heavenly choir, we sing
a new song (Ps 96:1):
Glory to God in the highest heaven, and peace on earth to those whom he loves (Lk 2:14).
O Child of Bethlehem, Son of Mary and Son of God, Lord of all time and
Prince of Peace, the same yesterday, today and for ever (Heb
13:8): as we set forth into the new millennium, heal all our wounds,
strengthen our steps, open our hearts and minds to the loving
kindness of the heart of our God who visits us like the dawn from on high
(Lk 1:78). Amen.
© Copyright 2000
- Libreria Editrice Vaticana
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