SACRAMENTUM
CARITATIS
CONCLUSION
94.
Dear brothers and sisters, the Eucharist is at the root of every form of
holiness, and each of us is called to the fullness of life in the Holy
Spirit. How many saints have advanced along the way of perfection thanks
to their eucharistic devotion! From Saint Ignatius of Antioch to Saint
Augustine, from Saint Anthony Abbot to Saint Benedict, from Saint
Francis of Assisi to Saint Thomas Aquinas, from Saint Clare of Assisi to
Saint Catherine of Siena, from Saint Paschal Baylon to Saint Peter
Julian Eymard, from Saint Alphonsus Liguori to Blessed Charles de
Foucauld, from Saint John Mary Vianney to Saint Thérèse of Lisieux,
from Saint Pius of Pietrelcina to Blessed Teresa of Calcutta, from
Blessed Piergiorgio Frassati to Blessed Ivan Merz, to name only a few,
holiness has always found its centre in the sacrament of the Eucharist.
This
most holy mystery thus needs to be firmly believed, devoutly celebrated
and intensely lived in the Church. Jesus' gift of himself in the
sacrament which is the memorial of his passion tells us that the success
of our lives is found in our participation in the trinitarian life
offered to us truly and definitively in him. The celebration and worship
of the Eucharist enable us to draw near to God's love and to persevere
in that love until we are united with the Lord whom we love. The
offering of our lives, our fellowship with the whole community of
believers and our solidarity with all men and women are essential
aspects of that logiké latreía, spiritual worship, holy and pleasing
to God (cf. Rom 12:1), which transforms every aspect of our human
existence, to the glory of God. I therefore ask all pastors to spare no
effort in promoting an authentically eucharistic Christian spirituality.
Priests, deacons and all those who carry out a eucharistic ministry
should always be able to find in this service, exercised with care and
constant preparation, the strength and inspiration needed for their
personal and communal path of sanctification. I exhort the lay faithful,
and families in particular, to find ever anew in the sacrament of
Christ's love the energy needed to make their lives an authentic sign of
the presence of the risen Lord. I ask all consecrated men and women to
show by their eucharistic lives the splendour and the beauty of
belonging totally to the Lord.
95.
At the beginning of the fourth century, Christian worship was still
forbidden by the imperial authorities. Some Christians in North Africa,
who felt bound to celebrate the Lord's Day, defied the prohibition. They
were martyred after declaring that it was not possible for them to live
without the Eucharist, the food of the Lord: sine dominico non possumus.
(252) May these martyrs of Abitinae, in union with all those saints and
beati who made the Eucharist the centre of their lives, intercede for us
and teach us to be faithful to our encounter with the risen Christ. We
too cannot live without partaking of the sacrament of our salvation; we
too desire to be iuxta dominicam viventes, to reflect in our lives what
we celebrate on the Lord's Day. That day is the day of our definitive
deliverance. Is it surprising, then, that we should wish to live every
day in that newness of life which Christ has brought us in the mystery
of the Eucharist?
96.
May Mary Most Holy, the Immaculate Virgin, ark of the new and eternal
covenant, accompany us on our way to meet the Lord who comes. In her we
find realized most perfectly the essence of the Church. The Church sees
in Mary – "Woman of the Eucharist," as she was called by the
Servant of God John Paul II (253) – her finest icon, and she
contemplates Mary as a singular model of the eucharistic life. For this
reason, as the priest prepares to receive on the altar the verum Corpus
natum de Maria Virgine, speaking on behalf of the liturgical assembly,
he says in the words of the canon: "We honour Mary, the ever-virgin
mother of Jesus Christ our Lord and God" (254). Her holy name is
also invoked and venerated in the canons of the Eastern Christian
traditions. The faithful, for their part, "commend to Mary, Mother
of the Church, their lives and the work of their hands. Striving to have
the same sentiments as Mary, they help the whole community to become a
living offering pleasing to the Father" (255). She is the tota
pulchra, the all-beautiful, for in her the radiance of God's glory
shines forth. The beauty of the heavenly liturgy, which must be
reflected in our own assemblies, is faithfully mirrored in her. From
Mary we must learn to become men and women of the Eucharist and of the
Church, and thus to present ourselves, in the words of Saint Paul,
"holy and blameless" before the Lord, even as he wished us to
be from the beginning (cf. Col 1:22; Eph 1:4) (256).
97.
Through the intercession of the Blessed Virgin Mary, may the Holy Spirit
kindle within us the same ardour experienced by the disciples on the way
to Emmaus (cf. Lk 24:13-35) and renew our "eucharistic wonder"
through the splendour and beauty radiating from the liturgical rite, the
efficacious sign of the infinite beauty of the holy mystery of God.
Those disciples arose and returned in haste to Jerusalem in order to
share their joy with their brothers and sisters in the faith. True joy
is found in recognizing that the Lord is still with us, our faithful
companion along the way. The Eucharist makes us discover that Christ,
risen from the dead, is our contemporary in the mystery of the Church,
his body. Of this mystery of love we have become witnesses. Let us
encourage one another to walk joyfully, our hearts filled with wonder,
towards our encounter with the Holy Eucharist, so that we may experience
and proclaim to others the truth of the words with which Jesus took
leave of his disciples: "Lo, I am with you always, until the end of
the world" (Mt 28:20).
Given
in Rome, at Saint Peter's, on 22 February, the Feast of the Chair of
Peter, in the year 2007, the second of my Pontificate.
BENEDICTUS
PP. XVI
© Copyright 2007 - Libreria Editrice
Vaticana