Holy Father's Message
"We have come to worship him" (Mt 2:2)
My dear young people!
1. This year we have celebrated the 19th World Youth Day, meditating on the desire
expressed by some Greeks who had gone to Jerusalem for the Passover: "We wish to see
Jesus" (Jn 12:21). And here we are now, making our way to Cologne where, in August
2005, the 20th World Youth Day is to be celebrated.
"We have come to worship him" (Mt 2:2): this is the theme of the next World Youth Day.
It is a theme that enables young people from every continent to follow in spirit the path
taken by the Magi whose relics, according to a pious tradition, are venerated in this very
city, and to meet, as they did, the Messiah of all nations.
It is true to say that the light of Christ had already opened the minds and the hearts of the
Magi. "They went their way" (Mt 2:9), says the Evangelist, setting out boldly along
unknown paths on a long, and by no means easy, journey. They did not hesitate to leave
everything behind in order to follow the star that they had seen in the East (cf Mt 2:2).
Imitating the Magi, you young people are also making preparations to set out on a
"journey" from every region of the world to go to Cologne. It is important for you not
only to concern yourselves with the practical arrangements for World Youth Day, but
first of all you must carefully prepare yourselves spiritually, in an atmosphere of faith and
listening to the Word of God.
2. "And the star... went before them, till it came to rest over the place where the child
was" (Mt 2:9). The Magi reached Bethlehem because they had obediently allowed
themselves to be guided by the star. Indeed, "When they saw the star, they rejoiced
exceedingly with great joy" (Mt 2:10). It is important, my dear friends, to learn to
observe the signs with which God is calling us and guiding us. When we are conscious of
being led by Him, our heart experiences authentic and deep joy as well as a powerful
desire to meet Him and a persevering strength to follow Him obediently.
"And going into the house they saw the child with Mary his mother" (Mt 2:11). There is
nothing extraordinary about this at first sight. Yet that Child was different from any
other: He is the only Son of God, yet He emptied Himself of His glory (cf Phil 2:7) and
came to earth to die on the Cross. He came down among us and became poor in order to
reveal to us His divine glory, which we shall contemplate fully in heaven, our blessed
home.
Who could have invented a greater sign of love? We are left in awe before the mystery of
a God who lowered himself to take on our human condition, to the point of giving His
life for us on the Cross (cf Phil 2:6-8). In His poverty, - as Saint Paul reminds us -
"though he was rich, yet for your sake he became poor, so that by his poverty you might
become rich" (2 Cor 8:9), and came to offer salvation to sinners. How can we give thanks
to God for such magnanimous goodness?
3. The Magi found Jesus at "Bêêth-lehem" which means "house of bread". In the humble stable
in Bethlehem on some straw lay the "grain of wheat" who, by dying, would bring
forth "much fruit" (cf Jn 12:24). When speaking of Himself and His saving mission in the
course of His public life, Jesus would later use the image of bread. He would say "I am
the bread of life", "I am the bread which came down from heaven", "the bread that I shall
give for the life of the world is my flesh". (Jn 6: 35.41.51).
Faithfully pursuing the path of our Redeemer from the poverty of the Crib to His
abandonment on the Cross we can better understand the mystery of His love which
redeems humanity. The Child, laid by Mary in the manger, is the Man-God we shall see
nailed to the Cross. The same Redeemer is present in the sacrament of the Eucharist. In
the stable at Bethlehem He allowed himself to be worshipped under the humble outward
appearances of a newborn baby, by Mary, by Joseph and by the shepherds; in the
consecrated Host we adore Him sacramentally present in his body, blood, soul and
godhead, and He offers himself to us as the food of eternal life. The Mass then becomes a
truly loving encounter with the One who gave himself wholly for us. Do not hesitate, my
dear young friends, to respond to Him when He invites you "to the wedding feast of the
Lamb" (cf Rev 19:9). Listen to him, prepare yourselves properly and draw close to the
Sacrament of the Altar, particularly in this Year of the Eucharist (October 2004-2005)
which I have proclaimed for the whole Church.
4. "They fell down and worshipped Him" (Mt 2:11). While the Magi acknowledged and
worshipped the baby that Mary cradled in her arms as the One awaited by the nations and
foretold by prophets, today we can also worship Him in the Eucharist, and acknowledge
Him as our Creator, our only Lord and Savior.
"Opening their treasures they offered Him gifts, gold and frankincense and myrrh" (Mt
2:11). The gifts that the Magi offered the Messiah symbolized true worship. With gold,
they emphasized His Royal Godhead; with incense, they acknowledged Him as the priest
of the New Covenant; by offering Him myrrh, they celebrated the prophet who would
shed His own blood to reconcile humanity with the Father.
My dear young people, you too offer to the Lord the gold of your lives, namely, your
freedom to follow Him out of love, responding faithfully to His call; let the incense of
your fervent prayer rise up to him, in praise of His glory; offer Him your myrrh, that is
your affection of total gratitude to Him, true Man, who loved us to the point of dying as a
criminal on Golgotha.
5. Be worshippers of the only true God, giving Him pride of place in your lives! Idolatry
is an ever-present temptation. Sadly, there are those who seek the solution to their
problems in religious practices that are incompatible with the Christian faith. There is a
strong urge to believe in the facile myths of success and power; it is dangerous to accept
the fleeting ideas of the sacred which present God in the form of cosmic energy, or in any
other manner that is inconsistent with Catholic teaching.
My dear young people, do not yield to false illusions and passing fads which so
frequently leave behind a tragic spiritual vacuum! Reject the seduction of wealth,
and the subtle violence sometimes used by the mass media.
Worshipping the true God is an authentic act of resistance to all forms of idolatry.
Worship Christ: He is the Rock on which to build your future and a world of greater
justice and solidarity. Jesus is the Prince of peace: the source of forgiveness and
reconciliation, who can make brothers and sisters of all the members of the human
family.
6. "And they departed to their own country by another way" (Mt 2:12). The Gospel tells
us that after their meeting with Christ, the Magi returned home "by another way". This
change of route can symbolize the conversion to which all those who encounter Jesus are
called, in order to become the true worshippers that He desires (cf Jn 4: 23-24). This
entails imitating the way He acted by becoming, as the apostle Paul writes, "a living
sacrifice, holy and acceptable to God". The apostle then adds that we must not be
conformed to the mentality of this world, but be transformed by the renewal of our
minds, to "prove what is the will of God, what is good and acceptable and perfect" (cf
Rm 12: 1-2).
Listening to Christ and worshipping Him leads us to make courageous choices, to take
what are sometimes heroic decisions. Jesus is demanding, because He wishes our genuine
happiness. He calls some to give up everything to follow Him in the priestly or
consecrated life. Those who hear this invitation must not be afraid to say "yes" and to
generously set about following Him as His disciples. But in addition to vocations to
special forms of consecration there is also the specific vocation of all baptized Christians:
that is also a vocation to that "high standard" of ordinary Christian living which is
expressed in holiness (cf Novo Millennio Ineunte, 31). When we meet Christ and accept
His Gospel, life changes and we are driven to communicate our experience to others.
There are so many of our contemporaries who do not yet know the love of God or who
are seeking to fill their hearts with trifling substitutes. It is therefore urgently necessary
for us to be witnesses to love contemplated in Christ. The invitation to take part in World
Youth Day is also extended to you, dear friends, who are not baptized or who do not
identify with the Church. Are you not perhaps yearning for the Absolute and in search of
"something" to give a meaning to your lives? Turn to Christ and you will not be let down.
7. Dear young people, the Church needs genuine witnesses for the new evangelization:
men and women whose lives have been transformed by meeting with Jesus, men and
women who are capable of communicating this experience to others. The Church needs
saints. All are called to holiness, and holy people alone can renew humanity. Many have
gone before us along this path of Gospel heroism, and I urge you to turn often to them to
pray for their intercession. By meeting in Cologne you will learn to become better
acquainted with some of them, such as St Boniface, the apostle of Germany, the Saints of
Cologne, and in particular Ursula, Albert the Great, Teresa Benedicta of the Cross (Edith
Stein) and Blessed Adolph Kolping. Of these I would like to specifically mention St
Albert and Teresa Benedicta of the Cross who, with the same interior attitude as the
Magi, were passionate seekers after the truth. They had no hesitation in placing their
intellectual abilities at the service of the faith, thereby demonstrating that faith and reason
are linked and seek each other.
My dear young people as you move forward in spirit towards Cologne, the Pope will
accompany you with his prayers. May Mary, "Eucharistic woman" and Mother of
Wisdom, support you along the way, enlighten your decisions, and teach you to love
what is true, good and beautiful. May she lead you all to her Son, who alone can satisfy
the innermost yearnings of the human mind and heart.
Go with my blessing!
From Castel Gandolfo, August 6, 2004
IOANNES PAULUS II