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"The Most Effective Response to Evil"
VATICAN CITY, MARCH 11, 2007 -
Here is a translation of the address Benedict XVI delivered today
before reciting the midday Angelus with several thousand people
gathered in St. Peter's Square.
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
The passage of Luke's Gospel proclaimed on this Third Sunday of
Lent refers to Jesus' comments on two current events of that time. The
first was the uprising of some Galileans, which was suppressed by
Pilate with the shedding of blood; the second was the collapse of a
tower in Jerusalem, which caused the death of 18 victims. They were two
tragic, yet very different, events. The first was caused by man, the
other was accidental.
According to the mentality of the time, the people tended to think that the
misfortune fell on the victims because of their grave fault. Jesus, on the
contrary, says: "Do you think that these Galileans were worse sinners than
all the other Galileans, because they suffered thus? ... Or those 18 upon whom
the tower in Siloam fell and killed them, do you think that they were worse
offenders than all the others who dwelt in
Jerusalem?" (Luke 13:2,4). In both
cases, he ends saying: "I tell you, no; but unless you repent you will
likewise perish" (13:3,5).
This is, therefore, the point to which Jesus wished to lead those who were
listening to him: the need for conversion. He does not present it in
moralistic, but rather in realistic terms, as the only appropriate response to
events that put human certainties in crisis.
In the face of certain misfortunes, he advises, it is no good to blame the
victims. What is truly wise, rather, consists in allowing oneself to be
questioned by the precariousness of existence and to adopt an attitude of
responsibility: to do penance and improve our lives.
This is wisdom, this is the most effective response to evil, at all levels,
interpersonal, social and international. Christ invites us to respond to evil
first of all through a serious examination of conscience and with the
commitment to purify our lives. Otherwise, we will perish, he says, we will
perish in the same way. In fact, people and societies that live without
questioning themselves have ruin as their only final end. Conversion, on the
contrary, despite the fact it does not preserve us from problems and
adversities, enables us to address them in a different "way."
Above all it helps to prevent evil, and to neutralize some of its threats. And,
in any case, it enables us to overcome evil with good, though not always at the
level of events, which at times are independent of our will, certainly always
at the spiritual level.
In short, conversion overcomes evil at its root, which is sin, though it cannot
always avoid its consequences.
Let us pray to Mary, who accompanies and supports us in our Lenten journey, to
help every Christians to rediscover the grandeur, I would even say the beauty,
of conversion. May she help us understand that to do penance and correct our
conduct is not simply moralism, but the most effective way to improve both
ourselves as well as society. An apt maxim explains it very well: It is better
to light a match than to curse the darkness.
[After praying the Angelus, the Holy Father greeted pilgrims in six languages.
In English, he said:]
To all the English-speaking visitors and pilgrims here today, I extend
affectionate greetings. In particular, I welcome the Board of Trustees and
administration of Saint John's University, New York, the students and teachers
from All Saints Catholic High School in Kanata, Ontario, and the young people
from Saint Patrick's Evangelization School in London. Upon all who are here
today, and upon your families and loved ones at home, I invoke God's abundant
blessings.
© Copyright 2007 -- Libreria Editrice
Vaticana, by Zenit
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