19.2.2008 Pope Benedict's 2008 Message
for Lent
POPE BENEDICT
XVI
Each year, Lent offers us a providential opportunity to deepen the meaning
and value of our Christian lives, and it stimulates us to rediscover the mercy
of God so that we, in turn, become more merciful toward our brothers and
sisters.
“Christ made Himself poor for you” (2 Cor 8,9)
Dear Brothers and Sisters!
Each year, Lent offers us a providential opportunity to
deepen the meaning and value of our Christian lives, and it stimulates us to
rediscover the mercy of God so that we, in turn, become more merciful toward our
brothers and sisters. In the Lenten period, the Church makes it her duty to
propose some specific tasks that accompany the faithful concretely in this
process of interior renewal: these are prayer, fasting and almsgiving.
For this year’s Lenten Message, I wish to spend some time
reflecting on the practice of almsgiving, which represents a specific way to
assist those in need and, at the same time, an exercise in self-denial to free
us from attachment to worldly goods. The force of attraction to material riches
and just how categorical our decision must be not to make of them an idol, Jesus
confirms in a resolute way: “You cannot serve God and mammon” (Lk 16,13).
Almsgiving helps us to overcome this constant temptation,
teaching us to respond to our neighbor’s needs and to share with others whatever
we possess through divine goodness. This is the aim of the special collections
in favor of the poor, which are promoted during Lent in many parts of the world.
In this way, inward cleansing is accompanied by a gesture of ecclesial
communion, mirroring what already took place in the early Church. In his
Letters, Saint Paul speaks of this in regard to the collection for the Jerusalem
community (cf. 2 Cor 8-9; Rm 15, 25-27).
According to the teaching of the Gospel, we are not owners
but rather administrators of the goods we possess: these, then, are not to be
considered as our exclusive possession, but means through which the Lord calls
each one of us to act as a steward of His providence for our neighbor. As the
Catechism of the Catholic Church reminds us, material goods bear a social value,
according to the principle of their universal destination (cf. n. 2404)
In the Gospel, Jesus explicitly admonishes the one who
possesses and uses earthly riches only for self. In the face of the multitudes,
who, lacking everything, suffer hunger, the words of Saint John acquire the tone
of a ringing rebuke: “How does God’s love abide in anyone who has the world’s
goods and sees a brother or sister in need and yet refuses to help?” (1 Jn
3,17). In those countries whose population is majority Christian, the call to
share is even more urgent, since their responsibility toward the many who suffer
poverty and abandonment is even greater. To come to their aid is a duty of
justice even prior to being an act of charity.
The Gospel highlights a typical feature of Christian
almsgiving: it must be hidden: “Do not let your left hand know what your right
hand is doing,” Jesus asserts, “so that your alms may be done in secret” (Mt
6,3-4). Just a short while before, He said not to boast of one’s own good works
so as not to risk being deprived of the heavenly reward (cf. Mt 6,1-2).
The disciple is to be concerned with God’s greater glory.
Jesus warns: “In this way, let your light shine before others, so that they may
see your good works and give glory to your Father in heaven” (Mt 5,16).
Everything, then, must be done for God’s glory and not our own. This
understanding, dear brothers and sisters, must accompany every gesture of help
to our neighbor, avoiding that it becomes a means to make ourselves the center
of attention. If, in accomplishing a good deed, we do not have as our goal God’s
glory and the real well being of our brothers and sisters, looking rather for a
return of personal interest or simply of applause, we place ourselves outside of
the Gospel vision. In today’s world of images, attentive vigilance is required,
since this temptation is great.
Almsgiving, according to the Gospel, is not mere
philanthropy: rather it is a concrete expression of charity, a theological
virtue that demands interior conversion to love of God and neighbor, in
imitation of Jesus Christ, who, dying on the cross, gave His entire self for us.
How could we not thank God for the many people who silently, far from the gaze
of the media world, fulfill, with this spirit, generous actions in support of
one’s neighbor in difficulty?
There is little use in giving one’s personal goods to others
if it leads to a heart puffed up in vainglory: for this reason, the one, who
knows that God “sees in secret” and in secret will reward, does not seek human
recognition for works of mercy.
In inviting us to consider almsgiving with a more profound
gaze that transcends the purely material dimension, Scripture teaches us that
there is more joy in giving than in receiving (cf. Acts 20,35). When we do
things out of love, we express the truth of our being; indeed, we have been
created not for ourselves but for God and our brothers and sisters (cf. 2 Cor
5,15). Every time when, for love of God, we share our goods with our neighbor in
need, we discover that the fullness of life comes from love and all is returned
to us as a blessing in the form of peace, inner satisfaction and joy. Our Father
in heaven rewards our almsgiving with His joy. What is more: Saint Peter
includes among the spiritual fruits of almsgiving the forgiveness of sins:
“Charity,” he writes, “covers a multitude of sins” (1 Pt 4,8). As the Lenten
liturgy frequently repeats, God offers to us sinners the possibility of being
forgiven. The fact of sharing with the poor what we possess disposes us to
receive such a gift. In this moment, my thought turns to those who realize the
weight of the evil they have committed and, precisely for this reason, feel far
from God, fearful and almost incapable of turning to Him. By drawing close to
others through almsgiving, we draw close to God; it can become an instrument for
authentic conversion and reconciliation with Him and our brothers.
Almsgiving teaches us the generosity of love. Saint Joseph
Benedict Cottolengo forthrightly recommends: “Never keep an account of the coins
you give, since this is what I always say: if, in giving alms, the left hand is
not to know what the right hand is doing, then the right hand, too, should not
know what it does itself” (Detti e pensieri, Edilibri, n. 201). In this regard,
all the more significant is the Gospel story of the widow who, out of her
poverty, cast into the Temple treasury “all she had to live on” (Mk 12,44). Her
tiny and insignificant coin becomes an eloquent symbol: this widow gives to God
not out of her abundance, not so much what she has, but what she is. Her entire
self.
We find this moving passage inserted in the description of
the days that immediately precede Jesus’ passion and death, who, as Saint Paul
writes, made Himself poor to enrich us out of His poverty (cf. 2 Cor 8,9); He
gave His entire self for us. Lent, also through the practice of almsgiving,
inspires us to follow His example. In His school, we can learn to make of our
lives a total gift; imitating Him, we are able to make ourselves available, not
so much in giving a part of what we possess, but our very selves. Cannot the
entire Gospel be summarized perhaps in the one commandment of love? The Lenten
practice of almsgiving thus becomes a means to deepen our Christian vocation. In
gratuitously offering himself, the Christian bears witness that it is love and
not material richness that determines the laws of his existence. Love, then,
gives almsgiving its value; it inspires various forms of giving, according to
the possibilities and conditions of each person.
Dear brothers and sisters, Lent invites us to “train
ourselves” spiritually, also through the practice of almsgiving, in order to
grow in charity and recognize in the poor Christ Himself. In the Acts of the
Apostles, we read that the Apostle Peter said to the cripple who was begging
alms at the Temple gate: “I have no silver or gold, but what I have I give you;
in the name of Jesus Christ the Nazarene, walk” (Acts 3,6). In giving alms, we
offer something material, a sign of the greater gift that we can impart to
others through the announcement and witness of Christ, in whose name is found
true life. Let this time, then, be marked by a personal and community effort of
attachment to Christ in order that we may be witnesses of His love. May Mary,
Mother and faithful Servant of the Lord, help believers to enter the “spiritual
battle” of Lent, armed with prayer, fasting and the practice of almsgiving, so
as to arrive at the celebration of the Easter Feasts, renewed in spirit. With
these wishes, I willingly impart to all my Apostolic Blessing.
From the Vatican, 30 October 2007
Benedictus PP XVI
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