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These
are Pope Benedict's answers given at a free Q and A session with young
people for World Youth Day 2006 in Rome.

The
Word of God
Your Holiness, I am Simon from St Bartholomew's
Parish. I am 21 years old and am studying chemical engineering at Holy
Wisdom University in Rome. ... In the face of anxieties and uncertainties
about the future, and even simply when I find myself grappling with the
daily routine, I also feel the need to be nourished by God's Word and to
know Christ better in order to find answers to my questions. ... How can I
understand that what I read is the Word of God which calls my life into
question? Thank you.
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To
begin, I shall answer by stressing a first point: it must first of all be
said that one must not read Sacred Scripture as one reads any kind of
historical book, such as, for example, Homer, Ovid or Horace; it is
necessary truly to read it as the Word of God, that is, entering into a
conversation with God.
One must start by praying and talking to the Lord; "Open the
door to me". And what St Augustine often says in his homilies:
"I knocked at the door of the Word to find out at last what the Lord
wants to say to me", seems to me to be a very important point. One
should not read Scripture in an academic way, but with prayer, saying to
the Lord: "Help me to understand your Word, what it is that you
want to tell me in this passage".
A second point is: Sacred Scripture introduces one into
communion with the family of God. Thus, one should not read Sacred
Scripture on one's own. Of course, it is always important to read the
Bible in a very personal way, in a personal conversation with God; but at
the same time, it is important to read it in the company of people with
whom one can advance, letting oneself be helped by the great masters of
"Lectio divina".
For example, we have many beautiful books by Cardinal Martini, a
true master of "Lectio divina", who helps us enter into the life
of Sacred Scripture. Nevertheless, one who is thoroughly familiar with all
the historical circumstances, all the characteristic elements of the past,
always seeks to open the door to show that the words which appear to
belong to the past are also words of the present. These teachers help us
to understand better and also to learn how to interpret Sacred Scripture
properly. Moreover, it is also appropriate in general to read it in the
company of friends who are journeying with me, who are seeking, together
with me, how to live with Christ, to find what life the Word of God brings
us.
A third point: if it is important to read Sacred Scripture
with the help of teachers and in the company of friends, travelling
companions, it is particularly important to read it in the great company
of the pilgrim People of God, that is, in the Church.
Sacred Scripture has two subjects. First and foremost, the divine
subject: it is God who is speaking. However, God wanted to involve
man in his Word. Whereas Muslims are convinced that the Koran was verbally
inspired by God, we believe that for Sacred Scripture it is
"synergy" - as the theologians say - that is characteristic, the
collaboration of God with man.
God involves his People with his Word, hence, the second subject -
the first subject, as I said, is God - is human. There are individual
writers, but there is the continuity of a permanent subject - the People
of God that journeys on with the Word of God and is in conversation with
God. By listening to God, one learns to listen to the Word of God and then
also to interpret it. Thus, the Word of God becomes present, because
individual persons die but the vital subject, the People of God, is always
alive and is identical in the course of the millenniums: it is
always the same living subject in which the Word lives.
This also explains many structures of Sacred Scripture, especially
the so-called "rereading". An ancient text is reread in another
book, let us say 100 years later, and what had been impossible to perceive
in that earlier moment, although it was already contained in the previous
text, is understood in-depth.
And it is read again, ages later, and once again other aspects,
other dimensions of the Word are grasped. So it was that Sacred Scripture
developed, in this permanent rereading and rewriting in the context of
profound continuity, in a continuous succession of the times of waiting.
At last, with the coming of Christ and the experience of the
Apostles, the Word became definitive. Thus, there can be no further
rewriting, but a further deepening of our understanding continues to be
necessary. The Lord said: "The Holy Spirit will guide you into
depths that you cannot fathom now".
Consequently, the communion of the Church is the living subject of
Scripture. However, here too the principal subject is the Lord himself,
who continues to speak through the Scriptures that we have in our hands.
I think that we should learn to do three things: to read it in
a personal colloquium with the Lord; to read it with the guidance of
teachers who have the experience of faith, who have penetrated Sacred
Scripture: and to read it in the great company of the Church, in
whose liturgy these events never cease to become present anew and in which
the Lord speaks with us today.
Thus, we may gradually penetrate ever more deeply into Sacred Scripture,
in which God truly speaks to us today.
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Living
in love
Holy
Father, I am Anna. I am 19 years old, I am studying literature, and I
belong to the Parish of St Mary of Carmel.... It is easy to confuse love
with selfishness, especially today when most of the media almost impose on
us an individualistic, secularised vision of sexuality in which everything
seems licit and everything is permitted in the name of freedom and
individual conscience.... Knowing well that so many of us are striving to
live our emotional life responsibly, could you explain to us what the Word
of God has to tell us about this? Thank you.
This
is a vast question and it would certainly be impossible to answer it in a
few minutes, but I will try to say something.
Anna herself has already given us some of the answers. She said that
today love is often wrongly interpreted because it is presented as a
selfish experience, whereas it is actually an abandonment of self and thus
becomes a self-discovery.
She also said that a consumer culture falsifies our life with a
relativism that seems to grant us everything, but in fact completely
drains us.
So let us listen to the Word of God in this regard. Anna rightly
wanted to know what the Word of God says. For me it is a beautiful thing
to observe that already in the first pages of Sacred Scripture, subsequent
to the story of man's Creation, we immediately find the definition of love
and marriage.
The sacred author tells us: "A man will leave his father
and mother and will cleave to his wife, and they will become one
flesh", one life (cf. Gn 2: 24-25). We are at the beginning and
we are already given a prophecy of what marriage is; and this definition
also remains identical in the New Testament. Marriage is this following of
the other in love, thus becoming one existence, one flesh, therefore
inseparable; a new life that is born from this communion of love that
unites and thus also creates the future.
Medieval theologians, interpreting this affirmation which is found
at the beginning of Sacred Scripture, said that marriage is the first of
the seven sacraments to have been instituted by God already at the moment
of creation, in Paradise, at the beginning of history and before any human
history.
It is a sacrament of the Creator of the universe, hence, it is
engraved in the human being himself, who is oriented to this journey on
which man leaves his parents and is united to a woman in order to form
only one flesh, so that the two may be a single existence.
Thus, the sacrament of marriage is not an invention of the Church;
it is really "con-created" with man as such, as a fruit of the
dynamism of love in which the man and the woman find themselves and thus
also find the Creator who called them to love.
It is true that man fell and was expelled from Paradise, or, in
other words, more modern words, it is true that all cultures are polluted
by the sin, the errors of human beings in their history, and that the
initial plan engraved in our nature is thereby clouded. Indeed, in human
cultures we find this clouding of God's original plan.
At the same time, however, if we look at cultures, the whole
cultural history of humanity, we note that man was never able to forget
completely this plan that exists in the depths of his being. He has always
known, in a certain sense, that other forms of relationship between a man
and a woman do not truly correspond with the original design for his
being.
And thus, in cultures, especially in the great cultures, we see
again and again how they are oriented to this reality: monogamy, the man
and the woman becoming one flesh. This is how a new generation can grow in
fidelity, how a cultural tradition can endure, renew itself in continuity
and make authentic progress.
The Lord, who spoke of this in the language of the prophets of
Israel, said referring to Moses, who tolerated divorce: Moses
permitted you to divorce "because of the hardness of your
hearts". After sin, the heart became "hard", but this was
not what the Creator had intended, and the Prophets, with increasing
clarity, insisted on this original plan.
To renew man, the Lord - alluding to these prophetic voices which
always guided Israel towards the clarity of monogamy - recognised with
Ezekiel that, to live this vocation, we need a new heart; instead of a
heart of stone - as Ezekiel said - we need a heart of flesh, a heart that
is truly human.
And the Lord "implants" this new heart in us at Baptism,
through faith. It is not a physical transplant, but perhaps we can make
this comparison. After a transplant, the organism needs treatment,
requires the necessary medicines to be able to live with the new heart, so
that it becomes "one's own heart" and not the "heart of
another".
This is especially so in this "spiritual transplant" when
the Lord implants within us a new heart, a heart open to the Creator, to
God's call. To be able to live with this new heart, adequate treatment is
necessary; one must have recourse to the appropriate medicines so that it
can really become "our heart".
Thus, by living in communion with Christ, with his Church, the new
heart truly becomes "our own heart" and makes marriage possible.
The exclusive love between a man and a woman, their life as a couple
planned by the Creator, becomes possible, even if the atmosphere of our
world makes it difficult to the point that it appears impossible.
The Lord gives us a new heart and we must live with this new heart,
using the appropriate therapies to ensure that it is really "our
own". In this way we live with all that the Creator has given us and
this creates a truly happy life.
Indeed, we can also see it in this world, despite the numerous other
models of life: there are so many Christian families who live with
faithfulness and joy the life and love pointed out to us by the Creator,
so that a new humanity develops.
And lastly, I would add: we all know that to reach a goal in a sport
or in one's profession, discipline and sacrifices are required; but then,
by reaching a desired goal, it is all crowned with success.
Life itself is like this. In other words, becoming men and women according
to Jesus' plan demands sacrifices, but these are by no means
negative; on the contrary, they are a help in living as people with new
hearts, in living a truly human and happy life.
Since
a consumer culture exists that wants to prevent us from living in
accordance with the Creator's plan, we must have the courage to create
islands, oases, and then great stretches of land of Catholic culture where
the Creator's design is lived out.
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Life
for the world
Most Holy Father, I am Inelida. I am 17 years
old, an assistant to the Scout Cub Master in the Parish of St Gregory
Barberigo, and I am studying at the "Mario Mafai" senior
secondary art school. In your Message for the 21st World Youth Day
you said: "There is an urgent need for the emergence of a new
generation of apostles anchored firmly in the Word of Christ" ...what
in your opinion are the greatest challenges to face in our time; what does
the Lord expect of us, Your Holiness?
We
all ask ourselves what the Lord expects of us. It seems to me that the
great challenge of our time - this is what the Bishops on their ad limina
visits tell me, those from Africa, for example - is secularization: that
is, a way of living and presenting the world as "si Deus non daretur",
in other words, as if God did not exist.
There is a desire to reduce God to the private sphere, to a
sentiment, as if he were not an objective reality. As a result, everyone
makes his or her own plan of life. But this vision, presented as though it
were scientific, accepts as valid only what can be proven.
With a God who is not available for immediate experimentation, this
vision ends by also injuring society. The result is in fact that each one
makes his own plan and in the end finds himself opposed to the other. As
can be seen, this is definitely an unliveable situation.
We must make God present again in our society. This seems to me to
be the first essential element: that God be once again present in
our lives, that we do not live as though we were autonomous, authorised to
invent what freedom and life are. We must realize that we are creatures,
aware that there is a God who has created us and that living in accordance
with his will is not dependence but a gift of love that makes us alive.
Therefore, the first point is to know God, to know him better and
better, to recognize that God is in my life, and that God has a place.
The second point - if we recognize that there is a God, that our
freedom is a freedom shared with others and that there must consequently
be a common parameter for building a common reality - the second point, I
was saying, presents the question: what God? Indeed, there are so
many false images of God, a violent God, etc.
The second point, therefore, is recognizing God who has shown us his
face in Jesus, who suffered for us, who loved us to the point of dying,
and thus overcame violence. It is necessary to make the living God present
in our "own" lives first of all, the God who is not a stranger,
a fictitious God, a God only thought of, but a God who has shown himself,
who has shown his being and his face.
Only in this way do our lives become true, authentically human;
hence, the criteria of true humanism emerge in society.
Here too, as I said in my first answer, it is true that we cannot be
alone in building this just and righteous life but must journey on in the
company of good and upright friends, companions with whom we can
experience that God exists and that it is beautiful to walk with God; and
to walk in the great company of the Church, which presents to us down the
centuries God who speaks, who acts, who accompanies us.
Therefore, I would say: to find God, to find God revealed in
Jesus Christ, to walk in company with his great family, with our brothers
and sisters who are God's family, this seems to me to be the essential
content of this apostolate of which I spoke.
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How I,
your Father, came to follow Jesus
Your Holiness, I am Vittorio, I am from the
Parish of St John Bosco in Cinecittą. I am 20 years old and am studying
educational sciences at the University of Tor Vergata.... You invite us
not to be afraid to respond to the Lord with generosity, especially when
he suggests following him in the consecrated or priestly life.... Can you
tell us how you yourself came to understand your vocation? Can you give us
some advice so that we can really understand whether the Lord is calling
us to follow him in the consecrated or priestly life? Thank you.
As
for me, I grew up in a world very different from the world today, but in
the end situations are similar.
On the one hand, the situation of "Christianity" still
existed, where it was normal to go to church and to accept the faith as
the revelation of God, and to try to live in accordance with his
revelation; on the other, there was the Nazi regime which loudly stated:
"In the new Germany there will be no more priests, there will be no
more consecrated life, we do not need these people; look for another
career". However, it was precisely in hearing these "loud"
voices, in facing the brutality of that system with an inhuman face, that
I realised that there was instead a great need for priests.
This contrast, the sight of that anti-human culture, confirmed my
conviction that the Lord, the Gospel and the faith were pointing out the
right path, and that we were bound to commit ourselves to ensuring that
this path survives. In this situation, my vocation to the priesthood grew
with me, almost naturally, without any dramatic events of conversion.
Two
other things also helped me on this journey: already as a boy,
helped by my parents and by the parish priest, I had discovered the beauty
of the Liturgy, and I came to love it more and more because I felt that
divine beauty appears in it and that Heaven unfolds before us.
The second element was the discovery of the beauty of knowledge, of
knowing God and Sacred Scripture, thanks to which it is possible to enter
into that great adventure of dialogue with God which is theology. Thus, it
was a joy to enter into this 1,000-year-old work of theology, this
celebration of the Liturgy in which God is with us and celebrates with us.
Of course, problems were not lacking. I wondered if I would really
be able to live celibacy all my life. Being a man of theoretical and not
practical training, I also knew that it was not enough to love theology in
order to be a good priest, but that it was also necessary to be always
available to young people, the elderly, the sick and the poor: the
need to be simple with the simple. Theology is beautiful, but the
simplicity of words and Christian life is indispensable. And so I asked
myself: will I be able to live all this and not be one-sided, merely
a theologian, etc.?
However, the Lord helped me and the company of friends, of good
priests and teachers especially helped me.
To return to the question, I think it is important to be attentive
to the Lord's gestures on our journey. He speaks to us through events,
through people, through encounters: it is necessary to be attentive
to all of this.
Then, a second point, it is necessary to enter into real friendship
with Jesus in a personal relationship with him and not to know who Jesus
is only from others or from books, but to live an ever deeper personal
relationship with Jesus, where we can begin to understand what he is
asking of us.
And then, the awareness of what I am, of my possibilities: on
the one hand, courage, and on the other, humility, trust and openness,
with the help also of friends, of Church authority and also of priests, of
families: what does the Lord want of me?
Of course, this is always a great adventure, but life can be
successful only if we have the courage to be adventurous, trusting that
the Lord will never leave me alone, that the Lord will go with me and help
me.
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Faith
and Knowledge
Holy
Father, I am Giovanni, I am 17 years old, I am studying at "Giovanni
Giorgi" technological and scientific secondary school in Rome, and I
belong to Holy Mary Mother of Mercy Parish. I ask you to help us to
understand better how biblical revelation and scientific theory can
converge in the search for truth.
We
are often led to believe that knowledge and faith are each other's
enemies; that knowledge and technology are the same thing; that it was
through mathematical logic that everything was discovered; that the world
is the result of an accident, and that if mathematics did not discover the
theorem-God, it is because God simply does not exist.
In short, especially when we are studying, it is not always easy to
trace everything back to a divine plan inherent in the nature and history
of human beings. Thus, faith at times vacillates or is reduced to a simple
sentimental act.
Holy Father, like all young people, I too am thirsting for the
truth: but what can I do to harmonise knowledge and faith?
The great Galileo said that God wrote the book of nature in the form
of the language of mathematics. He was convinced that God has given us two
books: the book of Sacred Scripture and the book of nature. And the
language of nature - this was his conviction - is mathematics, so it is a
language of God, a language of the Creator.
Let us now reflect on what mathematics is: in itself, it is an
abstract system, an invention of the human spirit which as such in its
purity does not exist. It is always approximated, but as such is an
intellectual system, a great, ingenious invention of the human spirit.
The surprising thing is that this invention of our human intellect
is truly the key to understanding nature, that nature is truly structured
in a mathematical way, and that our mathematics, invented by our human
mind, is truly the instrument for working with nature, to put it at our
service, to use it through technology.
It seems to me almost incredible that an invention of the human mind
and the structure of the universe coincide. Mathematics, which we
invented, really gives us access to the nature of the universe and makes
it possible for us to use it.
Therefore, the intellectual structure of the human subject and the
objective structure of reality coincide: the subjective reason and
the objective reason of nature are identical. I think that this
coincidence between what we thought up and how nature is fulfilled and
behaves is a great enigma and a great challenge, for we see that, in the
end, it is "one" reason that links them both.
Our reason could not discover this other reason were there not an
identical antecedent reason for both.
In this sense it really seems to me that mathematics - in which as
such God cannot appear - shows us the intelligent structure of the
universe. Now, there are also theories of chaos, but they are limited
because if chaos had the upper hand, all technology would become
impossible. Only because our mathematics is reliable, is technology
reliable.
Our knowledge, which is at last making it possible to work with the
energies of nature, supposes the reliable and intelligent structure of
matter. Thus, we see that there is a subjective rationality and an
objectified rationality in matter which coincide.
Of course, no one can now prove - as is proven in an experiment, in
technical laws - that they both really originated in a single
intelligence, but it seems to me that this unity of intelligence, behind
the two intelligences, really appears in our world. And the more we can
delve into the world with our intelligence, the more clearly the plan of
Creation appears.
In the end, to reach the definitive question I would say: God
exists or he does not exist. There are only two options. Either one
recognizes the priority of reason, of creative Reason that is at the
beginning of all things and is the principle of all things - the priority
of reason is also the priority of freedom -, or one holds the priority of
the irrational, inasmuch as everything that functions on our earth and in
our lives would be only accidental, marginal, an irrational result -
reason would be a product of irrationality.
One cannot ultimately "prove" either project, but the
great option of Christianity is the option for rationality and for the
priority of reason. This seems to me to be an excellent option, which
shows us that behind everything is a great Intelligence to which we can
entrust ourselves.
However, the true problem challenging faith today seems to me to be
the evil in the world: we ask ourselves how it can be compatible with the
Creator's rationality. And here we truly need God, who was made flesh and
shows us that he is not only a mathematical reason but that this original
Reason is also Love. If we look at the great options, the Christian option
today is the one that is the most rational and the most human.
Therefore, we can confidently work out a philosophy, a vision of the
world based on this priority of reason, on this trust that the creating
Reason is love and that this love is God.
Q & A session with Young people. Saint
Peter's Square. 6 April 2006
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