MESSAGE
OF HIS HOLINESS BENEDICT XVI ![]()
FOR
LENT 2010
“The
justice of God has been manifested
through faith in Jesus Christ”
(cf.
Rm 3, 21-22)
Dear Brothers and
Sisters!
Each
year, on the occasion of Lent, the Church invites us to a sincere review of our
life in light of the teachings of the Gospel. This year, I would like to offer
you some reflections on the great theme of justice, beginning from the Pauline
affirmation: “The justice of God has been manifested through faith in Jesus
Christ” (cf. Rm 3, 21-22).
Justice:
“dare cuique suum”
First of all, I want to
consider the meaning of the term “justice,” which in common usage implies
“to render to every man his due,” according to the famous expression of
Ulpian, a Roman jurist of the third century. In reality, however, this classical
definition does not specify what “due” is to be rendered to each
person. What man needs most cannot be guaranteed to him by law. In order to live
life to the full, something more intimate is necessary that can be granted only
as a gift: we could say that man lives by that love which only God can
communicate since He created the human person in His image and likeness.
Material goods are certainly useful and required – indeed Jesus Himself was
concerned to heal the sick, feed the crowds that followed Him and surely
condemns the indifference that even today forces hundreds of millions into death
through lack of food, water and medicine – yet “distributive” justice does
not render to the human being the totality of his “due.” Just as man
needs bread, so does man have even more need of God. Saint Augustine notes: if
“justice is that virtue which gives every one his due ... where, then, is the
justice of man, when he deserts the true God?” (De civitate Dei, XIX,
21).
What is the Cause of
Injustice?
The Evangelist Mark
reports the following words of Jesus, which are inserted within the debate at
that time regarding what is pure and impure: “There is nothing outside a man
which by going into him can defile him; but the things which come out of a man
are what defile him … What comes out of a man is what defiles a man. For from
within, out of the heart of man, come evil thoughts” (Mk 7, 14-15, 20-21).
Beyond the immediate question concerning food, we can detect in the reaction of
the Pharisees a permanent temptation within man: to situate the origin of evil
in an exterior cause. Many modern ideologies deep down have this presupposition:
since injustice comes “from outside,” in order for justice to reign, it is
sufficient to remove the exterior causes that prevent it being achieved. This
way of thinking – Jesus warns – is ingenuous and shortsighted. Injustice,
the fruit of evil, does not have exclusively external roots; its origin lies in
the human heart, where the seeds are found of a mysterious cooperation with evil.
With bitterness the Psalmist recognises this: “Behold, I was brought forth in
iniquity, and in sin did my mother conceive me” (Ps 51,7). Indeed, man
is weakened by an intense influence, which wounds his capacity to enter into
communion with the other. By nature, he is open to sharing freely, but he finds
in his being a strange force of gravity that makes him turn in and affirm
himself above and against others: this is egoism, the result of
original sin. Adam and Eve, seduced by Satan’s lie, snatching the mysterious
fruit against the divine command, replaced the logic of trusting in Love with
that of suspicion and competition; the logic of receiving and trustfully
expecting from the Other with anxiously seizing and doing on one’s own (cf. Gn
3, 1-6), experiencing, as a consequence, a sense of disquiet and uncertainty.
How can man free himself from this selfish influence and open himself to love?
Justice and Sedaqah
At the heart of the wisdom
of Israel, we find a profound link between faith in God who “lifts the needy
from the ash heap” (Ps 113,7) and justice towards one’s neighbor. The
Hebrew word itself that indicates the virtue of justice, sedaqah,
expresses this well. Sedaqah, in fact, signifies on the one hand full
acceptance of the will of the God of Israel; on the other hand, equity in
relation to one’s neighbour (cf. Ex 20, 12-17), especially the poor, the
stranger, the orphan and the widow (cf. Dt 10, 18-19). But the two meanings are
linked because giving to the poor for the Israelite is none other than restoring
what is owed to God, who had pity on the misery of His people. It was not by
chance that the gift to Moses of the tablets of the Law on Mount Sinai took
place after the crossing of the Red Sea. Listening to the Law presupposes faith
in God who first “heard the cry” of His people and “came down to deliver
them out of hand of the Egyptians” (cf. Ex 3,8). God is attentive to the cry
of the poor and in return asks to be listened to: He asks for justice towards
the poor (cf. Sir 4,4-5, 8-9), the stranger (cf. Ex 22,20), the slave (cf. Dt
15, 12-18). In order to enter into justice, it is thus necessary to leave that
illusion of self-sufficiency, the profound state of closure, which is the very
origin of injustice. In other words, what is needed is an even deeper
“exodus” than that accomplished by God with Moses, a liberation of the heart,
which the Law on its own is powerless to realize. Does man have any hope of
justice then?
Christ, the Justice
of God
The Christian Good News
responds positively to man’s thirst for justice, as Saint Paul affirms in the
Letter to the Romans: “But now the justice of God has been manifested apart
from law … the justice of God through faith in Jesus Christ for all who
believe. For there is no distinction; since all have sinned and fall short of
the glory of God, they are justified by His grace as a gift, through the
redemption which is in Christ Jesus, whom God put forward as an expiation by his
blood, to be received by faith” (3, 21-25). What then is the justice of
Christ? Above all, it is the justice that comes from grace, where it is not man
who makes amends, heals himself and others. The fact that “expiation” flows
from the “blood” of Christ signifies that it is not man’s sacrifices that
free him from the weight of his faults, but the loving act of God who opens
Himself in the extreme, even to the point of bearing in Himself the “curse”
due to man so as to give in return the “blessing” due to God (cf. Gal 3,
13-14). But this raises an immediate objection: what kind of justice is this
where the just man dies for the guilty and the guilty receives in return the
blessing due to the just one? Would this not mean that each one receives the
contrary of his “due”? In reality, here we discover divine justice, which is
so profoundly different from its human counterpart. God has paid for us the
price of the exchange in His Son, a price that is truly exorbitant. Before the
justice of the Cross, man may rebel for this reveals how man is not a
self-sufficient being, but in need of Another in order to realize himself fully.
Conversion to Christ, believing in the Gospel, ultimately means this: to exit
the illusion of self-sufficiency in order to discover and accept one’s own
need – the need of others and God, the need of His forgiveness and His
friendship. So we understand how faith is altogether different from a natural,
good-feeling, obvious fact: humility is required to accept that I need Another
to free me from “what is mine,” to give me gratuitously “what is His.”
This happens especially in the sacraments of Reconciliation and the Eucharist.
Thanks to Christ’s action, we may enter into the “greatest” justice, which
is that of love (cf. Rm 13, 8-10), the justice that recognises itself in every
case more a debtor than a creditor, because it has received more than could ever
have been expected. Strengthened by this very experience, the Christian is moved
to contribute to creating just societies, where all receive what is necessary to
live according to the dignity proper to the human person and where justice is
enlivened by love.
Dear brothers and sisters,
Lent culminates in the Paschal Triduum, in which this year, too, we shall
celebrate divine justice – the fullness of charity, gift, salvation. May this
penitential season be for every Christian a time of authentic conversion and
intense knowledge of the mystery of Christ, who came to fulfill every justice.
With these sentiments, I cordially impart to all of you my Apostolic Blessing.
From the Vatican, 30
October 2009
BENEDICTUS PP. XVI
© Copyright 2009 - Libreria Editrice Vaticana