SFO International Council - Weekly edition
Volume: 5 - N. 14 - 1999 - April - I
From: http://Vatican.va
"Abba, Father!"
Dear Brothers in the priesthood, my Holy Thursday appointment
with you in this year which immediately precedes the Great Jubilee
of the Year 2000 focuses on this invocation in which, the exegetes
tell us, we hear the ipsissima vox Iesu. It is an
invocation which encloses the unfathomable mystery of the Word made
flesh, sent by the Father into the world for the salvation of
humanity.
The mission of the Son of God reaches its fulfilment when, offering
himself, he brings about our adoption as sons and daughters and, by
giving the Holy Spirit, makes it possible for human beings to share
in the very communion of the Trinity. In the Paschal Mystery,
through the Son and in the Holy Spirit, God the Father stoops down
to every man and woman, offering the possibility of redemption from
sin and liberation from death.
1. In the Eucharistic celebration we conclude the Opening Prayer
with the words: "Through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son, who lives
and reigns with you, and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and
ever". He lives and reigns with you, Father! This conclusion, we
may say, has the nature of an ascent: through Christ, in the Holy
Spirit, towards the Father. This is also the theological outline
behind the three-year period of preparation, 1997-1999: first the
year of the Son, then the year of the Holy Spirit and now the year
of the Father.
This ascending movement is rooted, as it were, in the
descent described by the Apostle Paul in the Letter to the
Galatians. We pondered this text with particular intensity in the
liturgy of the Christmas season: "When the fullness of time had
come, God sent forth his Son, born of a woman, born under the Law,
to redeem those who were under the Law, so that they might receive
adoption as sons and daughters" ( Gal 4:4-5).
Here we find expressed the descending movement: God the Father
sends the Son to make us, in him, his adopted children. In the
Paschal Mystery, Jesus accomplishes the Father's plan by giving his
life for us. The Father then sends the Spirit of the Son to
enlighten us with regard to this extraordinary privilege: "Because
you are sons and daughters, God has sent the Spirit of his Son into
our hearts, crying, Abba, Father! So through God you are
no longer slaves but sons and daughters, and if sons and daughters,
then heirs" (Gal 4:6-7).
How can we fail to notice the uniqueness of what the Apostle
writes? He declares that it is precisely the Spirit who cries out:
Abba, Father! Historically in fact, through the mystery of
the Incarnation and Redemption, the witness to the fatherhood of
God has been the Son of God: it was he who taught us to turn to God
and call him "Father". He himself invoked God as "my Father", and
he taught us to pray to God with the affectionate name of "our
Father". Yet Saint Paul tells us that it is through the inner
instruction of the Holy Spirit that the Son's teaching must, in a
certain sense, be brought to life in the soul of those who listen
to him. In fact, only through the work of the Spirit are we able to
adore God in truth, invoking him as " Abba, Father".
2. (...) Christ, "the Alpha and Omega... the One who is, who was
and who is to come" ( Rev 1:8), has given direction and
meaning to our human passage through time. He said of himself: "I
came from the Father and have come into the world; now I am leaving
the world and going to the Father" ( Jn 16:28). Thus the
Christ-event pervades the passage of each one of us. It is with
Christ that we pass through time, going in the same direction that
he has taken: towards the Father.
This becomes even more evident during the Sacred Triduum, the holy
days par excellence during which we share, through the
mystery, in Christ's return to the Father through his passion,
death and resurrection. Faith assures us that this journey of
Christ to the Father, his Passover, is not an event which involves
him alone. We too are called to be part of it. His Passover is our
Passover.
So then, together with Christ we journey towards the Father. We do
so through the Paschal Mystery, reliving those crucial hours when
Christ, dying on the Cross, cried out: "My God, my God, why have
you abandoned me?" ( Mk 15:34), and then: "All is
accomplished" ( Jn 19:30), "Father, into your hands I
commit my spirit" ( Lk 23:46). These expressions from the
Gospel are familiar to every Christian and in a particular way to
every priest. They speak of our living and of our dying. At the end
of each day, we say in the Liturgy of the Hours: "Into your hands,
Lord, I commend my spirit", to prepare ourselves for the great
mystery of our passage, our own personal Easter experience, when
Christ, by virtue of his death and resurrection, will take us to
himself in order to present us to the Heavenly Father.
3. "I thank you, Father, Lord of heaven and earth, that you have
hidden these things from the learned and clever and revealed them
to little children. Yes, Father, for this was your gracious will.
All things have been given to me by my Father; and no one knows the
Son except the Father, and no one knows the Father except the Son
and those to whom the Son chooses to reveal him" ( Mt
11:25-27). Yes, the Son alone knows the Father. He who "is in the
bosom of the Father" – as Saint John writes in his Gospel
(1:18) – has brought the Father close to us, has spoken to us
of him, has revealed to us his face and heart. At the Last Supper,
when the Apostle Philip asks, "Show us the Father" ( Jn
14:8), Christ replies: "Have I been with you so long and yet you do
not know me, Philip?... Do you not believe that I am in the Father
and the Father in me?" ( Jn 14:9-10). With these words,
Jesus bears witness to the Trinitarian mystery of his own eternal
generation from the Father as Son, the mystery which is the deepest
secret of his divine Person.
The Gospel is a continuous revelation of the Father. When the
twelve-year-old Jesus is found by Joseph and Mary among the
teachers in the Temple, he replies to his Mother's words, "My son,
why have you done this to us?" ( Lk 2:48), by referring to
the Father: "Did you not know that I must be about the things of my
Father?" ( Lk 2:49). Even at the age of twelve he already
has a clear awareness of the meaning of his own life, of his
mission, which, from the first moment to the last, is wholly
dedicated to "the things of the Father". This mission reaches its
high point on Calvary, with the sacrifice of the Cross, accepted by
Christ in a spirit of obedience and filial devotion: "My Father, if
it be possible, let this cup pass from me! Yet not as I will, but
as you will... Your will be done!" ( Mt 26:39, 42). And
the Father in turn accepts the sacrifice of the Son, for he so
loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son, that man might
not die but have eternal life (cf. Jn 3:16). Yes, the Son
alone knows the Father and therefore he alone can reveal him to
us.
4. "Per ipsum, et cum ipso, et in ipso...". "Through
him, with him and in him, in the unity of the Holy Spirit, all
glory and honour is yours, Almighty Father, for ever and ever".
(...)
The doxology with which the Canon ends has a fundamental importance
in every Eucharistic celebration. In a certain sense it expresses
the crowning moment of the Mysterium Fidei, of the central
core of the Eucharistic sacrifice, realized at the moment when, by
the power of the Holy Spirit, we effect the changing of the bread
and wine into the Body and Blood of Christ, just as he himself did
for the first time in the Upper Room. When the great Eucharistic
Prayer reaches its climax, the Church, at that precise moment, in
the person of the ordained minister, addresses these words to the
Father: "Through him, with him and in him, in the unity of the Holy
Spirit, all glory and honour is yours, Almighty Father".
Sacrificium laudis !
5. After the assembly has responded with the solemn acclamation
"Amen", the celebrant intones the "Our Father", the Lord's Prayer.
The succession of these two moments is very significant. The Gospel
relates that the Apostles, marvelling at the Master's inner
recollection in his dialogue with the Father, asked him: "Lord,
teach us to pray" ( Lk 11:1). Then, for the first time, he
spoke the words which would become the principal and most
frequently used prayer of the Church and of individual Christians:
the "Our Father". When we, as the liturgical assembly, make these
words our own during the Eucharistic celebration, they take on a
particular eloquence. It is as though we were professing at that
moment that Christ taught us his own prayer to the Father in the
fullest and most definitive way by explaining it through his
sacrifice on the Cross.
It is in the context of the Eucharistic Sacrifice that the "Our
Father", recited by the Church, discloses its whole meaning. Each
of its invocations acquires a special ray of truth. On the Cross
the name of the Father is supremely "hallowed", and his Kingdom
irrevocably comes; in the "consummatum est" his will is
definitively done. And is not the petition "Forgive us our
trespasses, as we forgive those..." perfectly reflected in the
words of the Crucified Jesus: "Father, forgive them; for they know
not what they do" ( Lk 23:34)? Asking for our daily bread
becomes more meaningful than ever when, under the species of
"broken bread", we receive the Body of Christ in Eucharistic
Communion. And does not the prayer, "Lead us not into temptation,
but deliver us from evil", attain its greatest efficacy at the very
moment when the Church offers to the Father the ultimate price of
our redemption and our deliverance from evil?
6. (...) The Eucharistic liturgy is a pre-eminent school of Christian prayer for the community. The Mass opens up a wide variety of possibilities for a sound pedagogy of the spirit. One of these is Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament, which is a natural prolongation of the Eucharistic celebration. Through Adoration, the faithful can enjoy a particular experience of "abiding" in the love of Christ (cf. Jn 15:9), entering ever more deeply into his filial relationship with the Father. (...)
7. On Holy Thursday (...) we desire that Christ may somehow enfold us once more in his holy priesthood, in his sacrifice, in his agony in Gethsemane and his death on Golgotha, and in his glorious resurrection. Retracing, as it were, the footsteps of Christ in all these saving events, we discover his profound openness to the Father. And it is for this reason that every Eucharist in a way repeats the request of the Apostle Philip in the Upper Room: "Lord, show us the Father", and, in the Mysterium Fidei, Christ seems to reply each time: "Have I been with you so long, and yet you do not know me?... Do you not believe that I am in the Father and the Father in me?" ( Jn 14:9-10).