TERTIO
MILLENNIO ADVENIENTE
To the Bishops,
Priests and Deacons,
Men and Women Religious
and all the Lay Faithful
1. As the third millennium of the new era draws near, our thoughts
turn spontaneously to the words of the Apostle Paul: "When
the fullness of time had come, God sent forth his Son, born of
woman" (Gal 4:4). The fullness of time coincides with the
mystery of the Incarnation of the Word, of the Son who is of one
being with the Father, and with the mystery of the Redemption
of the world. In this passage, Saint Paul emphasizes that the
Son of God was born of woman, born under the Law, and came into
the world in order to redeem all who were under the Law, so that
they might receive adoption as sons and daughters. And he adds:
"Because you are sons, God has sent the Spirit of his Son
into our hearts, crying 'Abba! Father!' " His conclusion
is truly comforting: "So through God you are no longer a
slave but a son, and if a son then an heir" (Gal 4:6-7).
Paul's presentation of the mystery of the Incarnation contains
the revelation of the mystery of the Trinity and the continuation
of the Son's mission in the mission of the Holy Spirit. The Incarnation
of the Son of God, his conception and birth, is the prerequisite
for the sending of the Holy Spirit. This text of Saint Paul thus
allows the fullness of the mystery of the Redemptive Incarnation
to shine forth.
I
"JESUS CHRIST IS THE SAME YESTERDAY AND TODAY"
(Heb 13:8)
2. In his Gospel Luke has handed down to us a concise narrative
of the circumstances of Jesus' birth: "In those days a decree
went out from Caesar Augustus that all the world should be enrolled
... And all went to be enrolled, each to his own city. And Joseph
also went up from Galilee, from the city of Nazareth, to Judea,
to the city of David, which is called Bethlehem, because he was
of the house and lineage of David, to be enrolled with Mary, his
betrothed, who was with child. And while they were there, the
time came for her to be delivered. And she gave birth to her first-born
son and wrapped him in swaddling cloths, and laid him in a manger,
because there was no place for them in the inn" (2:1, 3-7).
Thus was fulfilled what the Angel Gabriel foretold at the Annunciation,
when he spoke to the Virgin of Nazareth in these words: "Hail,
full of grace, the Lord is with you" (1:28). Mary was troubled
by these words, and so the divine messenger quickly added: "Do
not be afraid, Mary, for you have found favour with God. And behold,
you will conceive in your womb and bear a son, and you shall call
his name Jesus. He will be great and will be called the Son of
the Most High ... The Holy Spirit will come upon you and the power
of the Most High will overshadow you; therefore the child to be
born will be called holy, the Son of God" (1:32-33, 35).
Mary's reply to the angel was unhesitating: "Behold, I am
the handmaid of the Lord; let it be to me according to your word"
(1:38). Never in human history did so much depend, as it did then,
upon the consent of one human creature.(1)
3. John, in the Prologue of his Gospel, captures in one phrase
all the depth of the mystery of the Incarnation. He writes: "And
the Word became flesh and dwelt among us, full of grace and truth;
we have beheld his glory, glory as of the only Son from the Father"
(1:14). For John, the Incarnation of the Eternal Word, of one
being with the Father, took place in the conception and birth
of Jesus. The Evangelist speaks of the Word who in the beginning
was with God, and through whom everything which exists was made;
the Word in whom was life, the life which was the light of men
(cf. 1:1-4). Of the Only-Begotten Son, God from God, the Apostle
Paul writes that he is "the first-born of all creation"
(Col 1:15). God created the world through the Word. The Word is
Eternal Wisdom; the Thought and Substantial Image of God; "He
reflects the glory of God and bears the very stamp of his nature"
(Heb 1:3). Eternally begotten and eternally loved by the Father,
as God from God and Light from Light, he is the principle and
archetype of everything created by God in time.
The fact that in the fullness of time the Eternal Word took on
the condition of a creature gives a unique cosmic value to the
event which took place in Bethlehem two thousand years ago. Thanks
to the Word, the world of creatures appears as a "cosmos",
an ordered universe. And it is the same Word who, by taking flesh,
renews the cosmic order of creation. The Letter to the Ephesians
speaks of the purpose which God had set forth in Christ, "as
a plan for the fullness of time, to unite all things in him, things
in heaven and things on earth" (1:9-10).
4. Christ, the Redeemer of the world, is the one Mediator between
God and men, and there is no other name under heaven by which
we can be saved (cf. Acts 4:12). As we read in the Letter to the
Ephesians: "in him, we have redemption through his blood,
the forgiveness of our trespasses, according to the richness of
his grace, which he has lavished upon us. For he has made known
to us in all wisdom and insight ... his purpose which he set forth
in Christ as a plan for the fullness of time, to unite all things
in him, things in heaven and things on earth" (1:7-10). Christ,
the Son who is of one being with the Father, is therefore the
one who reveals God's plan for all creation, and for man in particular.
In the memorable phrase of the Second Vatican Council, Christ
"fully reveals man to man himself and makes his supreme calling
clear".(2) He shows us this calling by revealing the mystery
of the Father and his love. As the image of the invisible God,
Christ is the perfect man who has restored to the children of
Adam the divine likeness which had been deformed by sin. In his
human nature, free from all sin and assumed into the divine Person
of the Word, the nature shared by all human beings is raised to
a sublime dignity: "By his incarnation the Son of God united
himself in some sense with every man. He laboured with human hands,
thought with a human mind, acted with a human will, and loved
with a human heart. Born of Mary the Virgin he truly became one
of us and, sin apart, was like us in every way".(3)
5. This "becoming one of us" on the part of the Son
of God took place in the greatest humility, so it is no wonder
that secular historians, caught up by more stirring events and
by famous personages, first made only passing, albeit significant,
references to him. Such references to Christ are found for example
in The Antiquities of the Jews, a work compiled in Rome between
the years 93 and 94 by the historian Flavius Josephus,(4) and
especially in the Annals of Tacitus, written between the years
115 and 120, where, reporting the burning of Rome in the year
64, falsely attributed by Nero to the Christians, the historian
makes an explicit reference to Christ "executed by order
of the procurator Pontius Pilate during the reign of Tiberius".(5)
Suetonius too, in his biography of the Emperor Claudius, written
around 121, informs us that the Jews were expelled from Rome because
"under the instigation of a certain Chrestus they stirred
up frequent riots".(6) This passage is generally interpreted
as referring to Jesus Christ, who had become a source of contention
within Jewish circles in Rome. Also of importance as proof of
the rapid spread of Christianity is the testimony of Pliny the
Younger, the Governor of Bithynia, who reported to the Emperor
Trajan, between the years 111 and 113, that a large number of
people was accustomed to gather "on a designated day, before
dawn, to sing in alternating choirs a hymn to Christ as to a God".(7)
But the great event which non-Christian historians merely mention
in passing takes on its full significance in the writings of the
New Testament. These writings, although documents of faith, are
no less reliable as historical testimonies, if we consider their
references as a whole. Christ, true God and true man, the Lord
of the cosmos, is also the Lord of history, of which he is "the
Alpha and the Omega" (Rev 1:8; 21:6), "the beginning
and the end" (Rev 21:6). In him the Father has spoken the
definitive word about mankind and its history. This is expressed
in a concise and powerful way by the Letter to the Hebrews: "In
many and various ways God spoke of old to our fathers by the prophets;
but in these last days he has spoken to us by a Son" (1:1-2).
6. Jesus was born of the Chosen People, in fulfilment of the promise
made to Abraham and constantly recalled by the Prophets. The latter
spoke in God's name and in his place. The economy of the Old Testament,
in fact, was essentially ordered to preparing and proclaiming
the coming of Christ, the Redeemer of the universe, and of his
Messianic Kingdom. The books of the Old Covenant are thus a permanent
witness to a careful divine pedagogy.(8) In Christ this pedagogy
achieves its purpose: Jesus does not in fact merely speak "in
the name of God" like the Prophets, but he is God himself
speaking in his Eternal Word made flesh. Here we touch upon the
essential point by which Christianity differs from all the other
religions, by which man's search for God has been expressed from
earliest times. Christianity has its starting-point in the Incarnation
of the Word. Here, it is not simply a case of man seeking God,
but of God who comes in Person to speak to man of himself and
to show him the path by which he may be reached. This is what
is proclaimed in the Prologue of John's Gospel: "No one has
ever seen God; the only Son, who is in the bosom of the Father,
he has made him known" (1:18). The Incarnate Word is thus
the fulfilment of the yearning present in all the religions of
mankind: this fulfilment is brought about by God himself and transcends
all human expectations. It is the mystery of grace.
In Christ, religion is no longer a "blind search for God"
(cf. Acts 17:27) but the response of faith to God who reveals
himself. It is a response in which man speaks to God as his Creator
and Father, a response made possible by that one Man who is also
the consubstantial Word in whom God speaks to each individual
person and by whom each individual person is enabled to respond
to God. What is more, in this Man all creation responds to God.
Jesus Christ is the new beginning of everything. In him all things
come into their own; they are taken up and given back to the Creator
from whom they first came. Christ is thus the fulfilment of the
yearning of all the world's religions and, as such, he is their
sole and definitive completion. Just as God in Christ speaks to
humanity of himself, so in Christ all humanity and the whole of
creation speaks of itself to God—indeed, it gives itself
to God. Everything thus returns to its origin. Jesus Christ is
the recapitulation of everything (cf. Eph 1:10) and at the same
time the fulfilment of all things in God: a fulfilment which is
the glory of God. The religion founded upon Jesus Christ is a
religion of glory; it is a newness of life for the praise of the
glory of God (cf. Eph 1:12). All creation is in reality a manifestation
of his glory. In particular, man (vivens homo) is the epiphany
of God's glory, man who is called to live by the fullness of life
in God.
7. In Jesus Christ God not only speaks to man but also seeks him
out. The Incarnation of the Son of God attests that God goes in
search of man. Jesus speaks of this search as the finding of a
lost sheep (cf. Lk 15:1-7). It is a search which begins in the
heart of God and culminates in the Incarnation of the Word. If
God goes in search of man, created in his own image and likeness,
he does so because he loves him eternally in the Word, and wishes
to raise him in Christ to the dignity of an adoptive son. God
therefore goes in search of man who is his special possession
in a way unlike any other creature. Man is God's possession by
virtue of a choice made in love: God seeks man out, moved by his
fatherly heart.
Why does God seek man out? Because man has turned away from him,
hiding himself as Adam did among the trees of the Garden of Eden
(cf. Gen 3:8-10). Man allowed himself to be led astray by the
enemy of God (cf. Gen 3:13). Satan deceived man, persuading him
that he too was a god, that he, like God, was capable of knowing
good and evil, ruling the world according to his own will without
having to take into account the divine will (cf. Gen 3:5). Going
in search of man through his Son, God wishes to persuade man to
abandon the paths of evil which lead him farther and farther afield.
"Making him abandon" those paths means making man understand
that he is taking the wrong path; it means overcoming the evil
which is everywhere found in human history. Overcoming evil: this
is the meaning of the Redemption. This is brought about in the
sacrifice of Christ, by which man redeems the debt of sin and
is reconciled to God. The Son of God became man, taking a body
and soul in the womb of the Virgin, precisely for this reason:
to become the perfect redeeming sacrifice. The religion of the
Incarnation is the religion of the world's Redemption through
the sacrifice of Christ, wherein lies victory over evil, over
sin and over death itself. Accepting death on the Cross, Christ
at the same time reveals and gives life, because he rises again
and death no longer has power over him.
8. The religion which originates in the mystery of the Redemptive
Incarnation, is the religion of "dwelling in the heart of
God", of sharing in God's very life. Saint Paul speaks of
this in the passage already quoted: "God has sent the Spirit
of his Son into our hearts, crying, 'Abba! Father!' " (Gal
4:6). Man cries out like Christ himself, who turned to God "with
loud cries and tears" (Heb 5:7), especially in Gethsemane
and on the Cross: man cries out to God just as Christ cried out
to him, and thus he bears witness that he shares in Christ's sonship
through the power of the Holy Spirit. The Holy Spirit, whom the
Father has sent in the name of the Son, enables man to share in
the inmost life of God. He also enables man to be a son, in the
likeness of Christ, and an heir of all that belongs to the Son
(cf. Gal 4:7). In this consists the religion of "dwelling
in the inmost life of God", which begins with the Incarnation
of the Son of God. The Holy Spirit, who searches the depths of
God (cf. 1 Cor 2:10), leads us, all mankind, into these depths
by virtue of the sacrifice of Christ.
II
THE JUBILEE OF THE YEAR 2000
9.
Speaking of the birth of the Son of God, Saint Paul places this
event in the "fullness of time" (cf. Gal 4:4). Time
is indeed fulfilled by the very fact that God, in the Incarnation,
came down into human history. Eternity entered into time: what
"fulfilment" could be greater than this? What other
"fulfilment" would be possible? Some have thought in
terms of certain mysterious cosmic cycles in which the history
of the universe, and of mankind in particular, would constantly
repeat itself. True, man rises from the earth and returns to it
(cf. Gen 3:19): this is an immediately evident fact. Yet in man
there is an irrepressible longing to live forever. How are we
to imagine a life beyond death? Some have considered various forms
of reincarnation: depending on one's previous life, one would
receive a new life in either a higher or lower form, until full
purification is attained. This belief, deeply rooted in some Eastern
religions, itself indicates that man rebels against the finality
of death. He is convinced that his nature is essentially spiritual
and immortal.
Christian revelation excludes reincarnation, and speaks of a fulfilment
which man is called to achieve in the course of a single earthly
existence. Man achieves this fulfilment of his destiny through
the sincere gift of self, a gift which is made possible only through
his encounter with God. It is in God that man finds full self-realization:
this is the truth revealed by Christ. Man fulfils himself in God,
who comes to meet him through his Eternal Son. Thanks to God's
coming on earth, human time, which began at Creation, has reached
its fullness. "The fullness of time" is in fact eternity,
indeed, it is the One who is eternal, God himself. Thus, to enter
into "the fullness of time" means to reach the end of
time and to transcend its limits, in order to find time's fulfilment
in the eternity of God.
10. In Christianity time has a fundamental importance. Within
the dimension of time the world was created; within it the history
of salvation unfolds, finding its culmination in the "fullness
of time" of the Incarnation, and its goal in the glorious
return of the Son of God at the end of time. In Jesus Christ,
the Word made flesh, time becomes a dimension of God, who is himself
eternal. With the coming of Christ there begin "the last
days" (cf. Heb 1:2), the "last hour" (cf. 1 Jn
2:18), and the time of the Church, which will last until the Parousia.
From this relationship of God with time there arises the duty
to sanctify time. This is done, for example, when individual times,
days or weeks, are dedicated to God, as once happened in the religion
of the Old Covenant, and as happens still, though in a new way,
in Christianity. In the liturgy of the Easter Vigil the celebrant,
as he blesses the candle which symbolizes the Risen Christ, proclaims:
"Christ yesterday and today, the beginning and the end, Alpha
and Omega, all time belongs to him, and all the ages, to him be
glory and power through every age for ever". He says these
words as he inscribes on the candle the numerals of the current
year. The meaning of this rite is clear: it emphasizes the fact
that Christ is the Lord of time; he is its beginning and its end;
every year, every day and every moment are embraced by his Incarnation
and Resurrection, and thus become part of the "fullness of
time". For this reason, the Church too lives and celebrates
the liturgy in the span of a year. The solar year is thus permeated
by the liturgical year, which in a certain way reproduces the
whole mystery of the Incarnation and Redemption, beginning from
the First Sunday of Advent and ending on the Solemnity of Christ
the King, Lord of the Universe and Lord of History. Every Sunday
commemorates the day of the Lord's Resurrection.
11. Against this background, we can understand the custom of Jubilees,
which began in the Old Testament and continues in the history
of the Church. Jesus of Nazareth, going back one day to the synagogue
of his home town, stood up to read (cf. Lk 4:16-30). Taking the
book of the Prophet Isaiah, he read this passage: "The Spirit
of the Lord God is upon me, because the Lord has anointed me to
bring good tidings to the afflicted; he has sent me to bind up
the brokenhearted, to proclaim liberty to the captives, and the
opening of the prison to those who are bound; to proclaim the
year of the Lord's favour" (61:1-2).
The Prophet was speaking of the Messiah. "Today", Jesus
added, "this scripture has been fulfilled in your hearing"
(Lk 4:21), thus indicating that he himself was the Messiah foretold
by the Prophet, and that the long-expected "time" was
beginning in him. The day of salvation had come, the "fullness
of time". All Jubilees point to this "time" and
refer to the Messianic mission of Christ, who came as the one
"anointed" by the Holy Spirit, the one "sent by
the Father". It is he who proclaims the good news to the
poor. It is he who brings liberty to those deprived of it, who
frees the oppressed and gives back sight to the blind (cf. Mt
11:4-5; Lk 7:22). In this way he ushers in "a year of the
Lord's favour", which he proclaims not only with his words
but above all by his actions. The Jubilee, "a year of the
Lord's favour", characterizes all the activity of Jesus;
it is not merely the recurrence of an anniversary in time.
12. The words and deeds of Jesus thus represent the fulfilment
of the whole tradition of Jubilees in the Old Testament. We know
that the Jubilee was a time dedicated in a special way to God.
It fell every seventh year, according to the Law of Moses: this
was the "sabbatical year", during which the earth was
left fallow and slaves were set free. The duty to free slaves
was regulated by detailed prescriptions contained in the Books
of Exodus (23:10-11), Leviticus (25:1-28) and Deuteronomy (15:1-6).
In other words, these prescriptions are found in practically the
whole of biblical legislation, which is thus marked by this very
specific characteristic. In the sabbatical year, in addition to
the freeing of slaves the Law also provided for the cancellation
of all debts in accordance with precise regulations. And all this
was to be done in honour of God. What was true for the sabbatical
year was also true for the jubilee year, which fell every fifty
years. In the jubilee year, however, the customs of the sabbatical
year were broadened and celebrated with even greater solemnity.
As we read in Leviticus: "You shall hallow the fiftieth year,
and proclaim liberty throughout the land to all its inhabitants;
it shall be a jubilee for you, when each of you shall return to
his property and each of you shall return to his family"
(25:10). One of the most significant consequences of the jubilee
year was the general "emancipation" of all the dwellers
on the land in need of being freed. On this occasion every Israelite
regained possession of his ancestral land, if he happened to have
sold it or lost it by falling into slavery. He could never be
completely deprived of the land, because it belonged to God; nor
could the Israelites remain for ever in a state of slavery, since
God had "redeemed" them for himself as his exclusive
possession by freeing them from slavery in Egypt.
13. The prescriptions for the jubilee year largely remained ideals—more
a hope than an actual fact. They thus became a prophetia futuri
insofar as they foretold the freedom which would be won by the
coming Messiah. Even so, on the basis of the juridical norms contained
in these prescriptions a kind of social doctrine began to emerge,
which would then more clearly develop beginning with the New Testament.
The jubilee year was meant to restore equality among all the children
of Israel, offering new possibilities to families which had lost
their property and even their personal freedom. On the other hand,
the jubilee year was a reminder to the rich that a time would
come when their Israelite slaves would once again become their
equals and would be able to reclaim their rights. At the times
prescribed by Law, a jubilee year had to be proclaimed, to assist
those in need. This was required by just government. Justice,
according to the Law of Israel, consisted above all in the protection
of the weak, and a king was supposed to be outstanding in this
regard, as the Psalmist says: "He delivers the needy when
he calls, the poor and him who has no helper. He has pity on the
weak and the needy, and saves the lives of the needy" (Ps
72:12-13). The foundations of this tradition were strictly theological,
linked first of all with the theology of Creation and with that
of Divine Providence. It was a common conviction, in fact, that
to God alone, as Creator, belonged the "dominium altum"—lordship
over all Creation and over the earth in particular (cf. Lev 25:23).
If in his Providence God had given the earth to humanity, that
meant that he had given it to everyone. Therefore the riches of
Creation were to be considered as a common good of the whole of
humanity. Those who possessed these goods as personal property
were really only stewards, ministers charged with working in the
name of God, who remains the sole owner in the full sense, since
it is God's will that created goods should serve everyone in a
just way. The jubilee year was meant to restore this social justice.
The social doctrine of the Church, which has always been a part
of Church teaching and which has developed greatly in the last
century, particularly after the Encyclical Rerum Novarum, is rooted
in the tradition of the jubilee year.
14. What needs to be emphasized, however, is what Isaiah expresses
in the words "to proclaim the year of the Lord's favour".
For the Church, the Jubilee is precisely this "year of the
Lord's favour", a year of the remission of sins and of the
punishments due to them, a year of reconciliation between disputing
parties, a year of manifold conversions and of sacramental and
extra-sacramental penance. The tradition of jubilee years involves
the granting of indulgences on a larger scale than at other times.
Together with Jubilees recalling the mystery of the Incarnation,
at intervals of a hundred, fifty and twenty-five years, there
are also Jubilees which commemorate the event of the Redemption:
the Cross of Christ, his death on Golgotha and the Resurrection.
On these occasions, the Church proclaims "a year of the Lord's
favour", and she tries to ensure that all the faithful can
benefit from this grace. That is why Jubilees are celebrated not
only "in Urbe" but also "extra Urbem": traditionally
the latter took place the year after the celebration "in
Urbe".
15. In the lives of individuals, Jubilees are usually connected
with the date of birth; but other anniversaries are also celebrated,
such as those of Baptism, Confirmation, First Communion, Priestly
or Episcopal Ordination, and the Sacrament of Marriage. Some of
these anniversaries have parallels in the secular world, but Christians
always give them a religious character. In fact, in the Christian
view, every Jubilee—the twenty-fifth of Marriage or Priesthood,
known as "silver", the fiftieth, known as "golden",
or the sixtieth, known as "diamond"—is a particular
year of favour for the individual who has received one or other
of the Sacraments. What we have said about individuals with regard
to jubilees can also be applied to communities or institutions.
Thus we celebrate the centenary or the millennium of the foundation
of a town or city. In the Church, we celebrate the jubilees of
parishes and dioceses. All these personal and community Jubilees
have an important and significant role in the lives of individuals
and communities.
In view of this, the two thousand years which have passed since
the Birth of Christ (prescinding from the question of its precise
chronology) represent an extraordinarily great Jubilee, not only
for Christians but indirectly for the whole of humanity, given
the prominent role played by Christianity during these two millennia.
It is significant that the calculation of the passing years begins
almost everywhere with the year of Christ's coming into the world,
which is thus the centre of the calendar most widely used today.
Is this not another sign of the unparalleled effect of the Birth
of Jesus of Nazareth on the history of mankind?
16. The term "Jubilee" speaks of joy; not just an inner
joy but a jubilation which is manifested outwardly, for the coming
of God is also an outward, visible, audible and tangible event,
as Saint John makes clear (cf. 1 Jn 1:1). It is thus appropriate
that every sign of joy at this coming should have its own outward
expression. This will demonstrate that the Church rejoices in
salvation. She invites everyone to rejoice, and she tries to create
conditions to ensure that the power of salvation may be shared
by all. Hence the Year 2000 will be celebrated as the Great Jubilee.
With regard to its content, this Great Jubilee will be, in a certain
sense, like any other. But at the same time it will be different,
greater than any other. For the Church respects the measurements
of time: hours, days, years, centuries. She thus goes forward
with every individual, helping everyone to realize how each of
these measurements of time is imbued with the presence of God
and with his saving activity. In this spirit the Church rejoices,
gives thanks and asks forgiveness, presenting her petitions to
the Lord of history and of human consciences.
Among the most fervent petitions which the Church makes to the
Lord during this important time, as the eve of the new millennium
approaches, is that unity among all Christians of the various
confessions will increase until they reach full communion. I pray
that the Jubilee will be a promising opportunity for fruitful
cooperation in the many areas which unite us; these are unquestionably
more numerous than those which divide us. It would thus be quite
helpful if, with due respect for the programmes of the individual
Churches and Communities, ecumenical agreements could be reached
with regard to the preparation and celebration of the Jubilee.
In this way the Jubilee will bear witness even more forcefully
before the world that the disciples of Christ are fully resolved
to reach full unity as soon as possible in the certainty that
"nothing is impossible with God".
III
PREPARATION FOR THE GREAT JUBILEE
17.
In the Church's history every jubilee is prepared for by Divine
Providence. This is true also of the Great Jubilee of the Year
2000. With this conviction, we look today with a sense of gratitude
and yet with a sense of responsibility at all that has happened
in human history since the Birth of Christ, particularly the events
which have occurred between the years 1000 and 2000. But in a
very particular way, we look with the eyes of faith to our own
century, searching out whatever bears witness not only to man's
history but also to God's intervention in human affairs.
18. From this point of view we can affirm that the Second Vatican
Council was a providential event, whereby the Church began the
more immediate preparation for the Jubilee of the Second Millennium.
It was a Council similar to earlier ones, yet very different;
it was a Council focused on the mystery of Christ and his Church
and at the same time open to the world. This openness was an evangelical
response to recent changes in the world, including the profoundly
disturbing experiences of the Twentieth Century, a century scarred
by the First and Second World Wars, by the experience of concentration
camps and by horrendous massacres. All these events demonstrate
most vividly that the world needs purification; it needs to be
converted.
The Second Vatican Council is often considered as the beginning
of a new era in the life of the Church. This is true, but at the
same time it is difficult to overlook the fact that the Council
drew much from the experiences and reflections of the immediate
past, especially from the intellectual legacy left by Pius XII.
In the history of the Church, the "old" and the "new"
are always closely interwoven. The "new" grows out of
the "old", and the "old" finds a fuller expression
in the "new". Thus it was for the Second Vatican Council
and for the activity of the Popes connected with the Council,
starting with John XXIII, continuing with Paul VI and John Paul
I, up to the present Pope.
What these Popes have accomplished during and since the Council,
in their Magisterium no less than in their pastoral activity,
has certainly made a significant contribution to the preparation
of that new springtime of Christian life which will be revealed
by the Great Jubilee, if Christians are docile to the action of
the Holy Spirit.
19. The Council, while not imitating the sternness of John the
Baptist who called for repentance and conversion on the banks
of the Jordan (cf. Lk 3:1-7), did show something of the Prophet
of old, pointing out with fresh vigour to the men and women of
today that Jesus Christ is the "Lamb of God who takes away
the sin of the world" (Jn 1:29), the Redeemer of humanity
and the Lord of history. During the Council, precisely out of
a desire to be fully faithful to her Master, the Church questioned
herself about her own identity, and discovered anew the depth
of her mystery as the Body and the Bride of Christ. Humbly heeding
the word of God, she reaffirmed the universal call to holiness;
she made provision for the reform of the liturgy, the "origin
and summit" of her life; she gave impetus to the renewal
of many aspects of her life at the universal level and in the
local Churches; she strove to promote the various Christian vocations,
from those of the laity to those of Religious, from the ministry
of deacons to that of priests and Bishops; and in a particular
way she rediscovered episcopal collegiality, that privileged expression
of the pastoral service carried out by the Bishops in communion
with the Successor of Peter. On the basis of this profound renewal,
the Council opened itself to Christians of other denominations,
to the followers of other religions and to all the people of our
time. No Council had ever spoken so clearly about Christian unity,
about dialogue with non-Christian religions, about the specific
meaning of the Old Covenant and of Israel, about the dignity of
each person's conscience, about the principle of religious liberty,
about the different cultural traditions within which the Church
carries out her missionary mandate, and about the means of social
communication.
20. The Council's enormously rich body of teaching and the striking
new tone in the way it presented this content constitute as it
were a proclamation of new times. The Council Fathers spoke in
the language of the Gospel, the language of the Sermon on the
Mount and the Beatitudes. In the Council's message God is presented
in his absolute lordship over all things, but also as the One
who ensures the authentic autonomy of earthly realities.
The best preparation for the new millennium, therefore, can only
be expressed in a renewed commitment to apply, as faithfully as
possible, the teachings of Vatican II to the life of every individual
and of the whole Church. It was with the Second Vatican Council
that, in the broadest sense of the term, the immediate preparations
for the Great Jubilee of the Year 2000 were really begun. If we
look for an analogy in the liturgy, it could be said that the
yearly Advent liturgy is the season nearest to the spirit of the
Council. For Advent prepares us to meet the One who was, who is
and who is to come (cf. Rev 4:8).
21. Part of the preparation for the approach of the Year 2000
is the series of Synods begun after the Second Vatican Council:
general Synods together with continental, regional, national and
diocesan Synods. The theme underlying them all is evangelization,
or rather the new evangelization, the foundations of which were
laid down in the Apostolic Exhortation Evangelii Nuntiandi of
Pope Paul VI, issued in 1975 following the Third General Assembly
of the Synod of Bishops. These Synods themselves are part of the
new evangelization: they were born of the Second Vatican Council's
vision of the Church. They open up broad areas for the participation
of the laity, whose specific responsibilities in the Church they
define. They are an expression of the strength which Christ has
given to the entire People of God, making it a sharer in his own
Messianic mission as Prophet, Priest and King. Very eloquent in
this regard are the statements of the Dogmatic Constitution Lumen
Gentium. The preparation for the Jubilee Year 2000 is thus taking
place throughout the whole Church, on the universal and local
levels, giving her a new awareness of the salvific mission she
has received from Christ. This awareness is particularly evident
in the Post-Synodal Exhortations devoted to the mission of the
laity, the formation of priests, catechesis, the family, the value
of penance and reconciliation in the life of the Church and of
humanity in general, as well as in the forth coming one to be
devoted to the consecrated life.
22. Special tasks and responsibilities with regard to the Great
Jubilee of the Year 2000 belong to the ministry of the Bishop
of Rome. In a certain sense, all the Popes of the past century
have prepared for this Jubilee. With his programme to renew all
things in Christ, Saint Pius X tried to forestall the tragic developments
which arose from the international situation at the beginning
of this century. The Church was aware of her duty to act decisively
to promote and defend the basic values of peace and justice in
the face of contrary tendencies in our time. The Popes of the
period before the Council acted with firm commitment, each in
his own way: Benedict XV found himself faced with the tragedy
of the First World War; Pius XI had to contend with the threats
of totalitarian systems or systems which did not respect human
freedom in Germany, in Russia, in Italy, in Spain, and even earlier
still in Mexico. Pius XII took steps to counter the very grave
injustice brought about by a total contempt for human dignity
at the time of the Second World War. He also provided enlightened
guidelines for the birth of a new world order after the fall of
the previous political systems.
Furthermore, in the course of this century the Popes, following
in the footsteps of Leo XIII, systematically developed the themes
of Catholic social doctrine, expounding the characteristics of
a just system in the area of relations between labour and capital.
We may recall the Encyclical Quadragesimo Anno of Pius XI, the
numerous interventions of Pius XII, the Encyclicals Mater et Magistra
and Pacem in Terris of John XXIII, the Encyclical Populorum Progressio
and the Apostolic Letter Octogesima Adveniens of Paul VI. I too
have frequently dealt with this subject: I specifically devoted
the Encyclical Laborem Exercens to the importance of human labour,
while in Centesimus Annus I wished to reaffirm the relevance,
one hundred years later, of the doctrine presented in Rerum Novarum.
In my Encyclical Sollicitudo Rei Socialis I had earlier offered
a systematic reformulation of the Church's entire social doctrine
against the background of the East-West confrontation and the
danger of nuclear war. The two elements of the Church's social
doctrine—the safeguarding of human dignity and rights in
the sphere of a just relation between labour and capital and the
promotion of peace—were closely joined in this text. The
Papal Messages of 1 January each year, begun in 1968 in the pontificate
of Paul VI, are also meant to serve the cause of peace.
23. Since the publication of the very first document of my Pontificate,
I have spoken explicitly of the Great Jubilee, suggesting that
the time leading up to it be lived as "a new Advent".(9)
This theme has since reappeared many times, and was dwelt upon
at length in the Encyclical Dominum et Vivificantem.(10) In fact,
preparing for the Year 2000 has become as it were a hermeneutical
key of my Pontificate. It is certainly not a matter of indulging
in a new millenarianism, as occurred in some quarters at the end
of the first millennium; rather, it is aimed at an increased sensitivity
to all that the Spirit is saying to the Church and to the Churches
(cf. Rev 2:7 ff.), as well as to individuals through charisms
meant to serve the whole community. The purpose is to emphasize
what the Spirit is suggesting to the different communities, from
the smallest ones, such as the family, to the largest ones, such
as nations and international organizations, taking into account
cultures, societies and sound traditions. Despite appearances,
humanity continues to await the revelation of the children of
God, and lives by this hope, like a mother in labour, to use the
image employed so powerfully by Saint Paul in his Letter to the
Romans (cf. 8:19-22).
24. Papal Journeys have become an important element in the work
of implementing the Second Vatican Council. Begun by John XXIII
on the eve of the Council with a memorable pilgrimage to Loreto
and Assisi (1962), they notably increased under Paul VI who, after
first visiting the Holy Land (1964), undertook nine other great
apostolic journeys which brought him into direct contact with
the peoples of the different continents.
The current Pontificate has widened this programme of travels
even further, starting with Mexico, on the occasion of the Third
General Conference of the Latin American Episcopate held in Puebla
in 1979. In that same year, there was also the trip to Poland
for the Jubilee of the nine hundredth anniversary of the death
of Saint Stanislaus, Bishop and Martyr.
The successive stages of these travels are well known. Papal journeys
have become a regular occurrence, taking in the particular Churches
in every continent and showing concern for the development of
ecumenical relationships with Christians of various denominations.
Particularly important in this regard were the visits to Turkey
(1979), Germany (1980), England, Scotland and Wales (1982), Switzerland
(1984), the Scandinavian countries (1989), and most recently the
Baltic countries (1993).
At present, it is my fervent wish to visit Sarajevo in Bosnia-Hercegovina
and the Middle East: Lebanon, Jerusalem and the Holy Land. It
would be very significant if in the Year 2000 it were possible
to visit the places on the road taken by the People of God of
the Old Covenant, starting from the places associated with Abraham
and Moses, through Egypt and Mount Sinai, as far as Damascus,
the city which witnessed the conversion of Saint Paul.
25. In preparing for the Year 2000, the individual Churches have
their own role to play, as they celebrate with their own Jubilees
significant stages in the salvation history of the various peoples.
Among these regional or local Jubilees, events of great importance
have included the millennium of the Baptism of Rus' in 1988 (11)
as also the five hundredth anniversary of the beginning of evangelization
in America (1492). Besides events of such wide-ranging impact,
we may recall others which, although not of universal importance,
are no less significant: for example, the millennium of the Baptism
of Poland in 1966 and of the Baptism of Hungary in 1968, together
with the six hundredth anniversary of the Baptism of Lithuania
in 1987. There will soon also be celebrated the 1500th anniversary
of the Baptism of Clovis (496), king of the Franks, and the 1400th
anniversary of the arrival of Saint Augustine in Canterbury (597),
marking the beginning of the evangelization of the Anglo-Saxon
world.
As far as Asia is concerned, the Jubilee will remind us of the
Apostle Thomas, who, according to tradition, brought the proclamation
of the Gospel at the very beginning of the Christian era to India,
where missionaries from Portugal would not arrive until about
the year 1500. The current year also marks the seventh centenary
of the evangelization of China (1294), and we are preparing to
commemorate the spread of missionary work in the Philippines with
the erection of the Metropolitan See of Manila (1595). We likewise
look forward to the fourth centenary of the first martyrs in Japan
(1597).
In Africa, where the first proclamation of the Gospel also dates
back to Apostolic times, together with the 1650th anniversary
of the episcopal consecration of the first Bishop of the Ethiopians,
Saint Frumentius (c. 340), and the five hundredth anniversary
of the beginning of the evangelization of Angola in the ancient
Kingdom of the Congo (1491), nations such as Cameroon, Côte
d'Ivoire, the Central African Republic, Burundi and Burkina Faso
are celebrating the centenaries of the arrival of the first missionaries
in their respective territories. Other African nations have recently
celebrated such centenaries.
And how can we fail to mention the Eastern Churches, whose ancient
Patriarchates are so closely linked to the apostolic heritage
and whose venerable theological, liturgical and spiritual traditions
constitute a tremendous wealth which is the common patrimony of
the whole of Christianity? The many jubilee celebrations in these
Churches, and in the Communities which acknowledge them as the
origin of their own apostolicity, recall the journey of Christ
down the centuries, leading to the Great Jubilee at the end of
the second millennium.
Seen in this light, the whole of Christian history appears to
us as a single river, into which many tributaries pour their waters.
The Year 2000 invites us to gather with renewed fidelity and ever
deeper communion along the banks of this great river: the river
of Revelation, of Christianity and of the Church, a river which
flows through human history starting from the event which took
place at Nazareth and then at Bethlehem two thousand years ago.
This is truly the "river" which with its "streams",
in the expression of the Psalm, "make glad the city of God"
(46:4).
26. The Holy Years celebrated in the latter part of this century
have also prepared for the Year 2000. The Holy Year proclaimed
by Paul VI in 1975 is still fresh in our memory. The celebration
of 1983 as the Year of Redemption followed along the same lines.
The Marian Year 1986/87 perhaps struck a more resounding chord;
it was eagerly awaited and profoundly experienced in the individual
local Churches, especially at the Marian Shrines around the world.
The Encyclical Redemptoris Mater, issued on that occasion, drew
attention to the Council's teaching on the presence of the Mother
of God in the mystery of Christ and the Church: two thousand years
ago the Son of God was made man by the power of the Holy Spirit
and was born of the Immaculate Virgin Mary. The Marian Year was
as it were an anticipation of the Jubilee, and contained much
of what will find fuller expression in the Year 2000.
27. It would be difficult not to recall that the Marian Year took
place only shortly before the events of 1989. Those events remain
surprising for their vastness and especially for the speed with
which they occurred. The Eighties were years marked by a growing
danger from the "Cold War". 1989 ushered in a peaceful
resolution which took the form, as it were, of an "organic"
development. In the light of this fact, we are led to recognize
a truly prophetic significance in the Encyclical Rerum Novarum:
everything that Pope Leo XIII wrote there about Communism was
borne out by these events, as I emphasized in the Encyclical Centesimus
Annus.(12) In the unfolding of those events one could already
discern the invisible hand of Providence at work with maternal
care: "Can a woman forget her infant ...?" (Is 49:15).
After 1989 however there arose new dangers and threats. In the
countries of the former Eastern bloc, after the fall of Communism,
there appeared the serious threat of exaggerated nationalism,
as is evident from events in the Balkans and other neighbouring
areas. This obliges the European nations to make a serious examination
of conscience, and to acknowledge faults and errors, both economic
and political, resulting from imperialist policies carried out
in the previous and present centuries vis-à-vis nations
whose rights have been systematically violated.
28. In the wake of the Marian Year, we are now observing the Year
of the Family, a celebration which is closely connected with the
mystery of the Incarnation and with the very history of humanity.
Thus there is good cause to hope that the Year of the Family,
inaugurated at Nazareth, will become, like the Marian Year, another
significant stage in preparation for the Great Jubilee.
With this in view, I wrote a Letter to Families, the purpose of
which was to restate the substance of the Church's teaching on
the family, and to bring this teaching, so to speak, into every
home. At the Second Vatican Council, the Church recognized her
duty to promote the dignity of marriage and the family.(13) The
Year of the Family is meant to help make the Council's teaching
in this regard a reality. Each family, in some way, should be
involved in the preparation for the Great Jubilee. Was it not
through a family, the family of Nazareth, that the Son of God
chose to enter into human history?
IV
IMMEDIATE PREPARATION
29.
Against the background of this sweeping panorama a question arises:
can we draw up a specific programme of initiatives for the immediate
preparation of the Great Jubilee? In fact, what has been said
above already includes some elements of such a programme.
A more detailed plan of specific events will call for widespread
consultation, in order for it not to be artificial and difficult
to implement in the particular Churches, which live in such different
conditions. For this reason, I wished to consult the Presidents
of the Episcopal Conferences and especially the Cardinals.
I am grateful to the members of the College of Cardinals who met
in Extraordinary Consistory on 13-14 June 1994, considered numerous
proposals and suggested helpful guidelines. I also thank my Brothers
in the Episcopate who in various ways communicated valuable ideas,
which I have kept carefully in mind while writing this Apostolic
Letter.
30. The first recommendation which clearly emerged from the consultation
regards the period of preparation. Only a few years now separate
us from the Year 2000: it seemed fitting to divide this period
into two phases, reserving the strictly preparatory phase for
the last three years. It was thought that the accumulation of
many activities over the course of a longer period of preparation
would detract from its spiritual intensity.
It was therefore considered appropriate to approach the historic
date with a first phase, which would make the faithful aware of
general themes, and then to concentrate the direct and immediate
preparation into a second phase consisting of a three-year period
wholly directed to the celebration of the mystery of Christ the
Saviour.
a) First Phase
31. The first phase will therefore be of an ante- preparatory
character; it is meant to revive in the Christian people an awareness
of the value and meaning of the Jubilee of the Year 2000 in human
history. As a commemoration of the Birth of Christ, the Jubilee
is deeply charged with Christological significance.
In keeping with the unfolding of the Christian faith in word and
Sacrament, it seems important, even in this special anniversary,
to link the structure of memorial with that of celebration, not
limiting commemoration of the event only to ideas but also making
its saving significance present through the celebration of the
Sacraments. The Jubilee celebration should confirm the Christians
of today in their faith in God who has revealed himself in Christ,
sustain their hope which reaches out in expectation of eternal
life, and rekindle their charity in active service to their brothers
and sisters.
During the first stage (1994 to 1996) the Holy See, through a
special Committee established for this purpose, will suggest courses
of reflection and action at the universal level. A similar commitment
to promoting awareness will be carried out in a more detailed
way by corresponding Commissions in the local Churches. In a way,
it is a question of continuing what was done in the period of
remote preparation and at the same time of coming to a deeper
appreciation of the most significant aspects of the Jubilee celebration.
32. A Jubilee is always an occasion of special grace, "a
day blessed by the Lord". As has already been noted, it is
thus a time of joy. The Jubilee of the Year 2000 is meant to be
a great prayer of praise and thanksgiving, especially for the
gift of the Incarnation of the Son of God and of the Redemption
which he accomplished. In the Jubilee Year Christians will stand
with the renewed wonder of faith before the love of the Father,
who gave his Son, "that whoever believes in him should not
perish but have eternal life" (Jn 3:16). With a profound
sense of commitment, they will likewise express their gratitude
for the gift of the Church, established by Christ as "a kind
of sacrament or sign of intimate union with God, and of the unity
of all mankind".(14) Their thanksgiving will embrace the
fruits of holiness which have matured in the life of all those
many men and women who in every generation and every period of
history have fully welcomed the gift of Redemption.
Nevertheless, the joy of every Jubilee is above all a joy based
upon the forgiveness of sins, the joy of conversion. It therefore
seems appropriate to emphasize once more the theme of the Synod
of Bishops in 1984: penance and reconciliation.(15) That Synod
was an event of extraordinary significance in the life of the
post-conciliar Church. It took up the ever topical question of
conversion ("metanoia"), which is the pre-condition
for reconciliation with God on the part of both individuals and
communities.
33. Hence it is appropriate that, as the Second Millennium of
Christianity draws to a close, the Church should become more fully
conscious of the sinfulness of her children, recalling all those
times in history when they departed from the spirit of Christ
and his Gospel and, instead of offering to the world the witness
of a life inspired by the values of faith, indulged in ways of
thinking and acting which were truly forms of counter-witness
and scandal.
Although she is holy because of her incorporation into Christ,
the Church does not tire of doing penance: before God and man
she always acknowledges as her own her sinful sons and daughters.
As Lumen Gentium affirms: "The Church, embracing sinners
to her bosom, is at the same time holy and always in need of being
purified, and incessantly pursues the path of penance and renewal".(16)
The Holy Door of the Jubilee of the Year 2000 should be symbolically
wider than those of previous Jubilees, because humanity, upon
reaching this goal, will leave behind not just a century but a
millennium. It is fitting that the Church should make this passage
with a clear awareness of what has happened to her during the
last ten centuries. She cannot cross the threshold of the new
millennium without encouraging her children to purify themselves,
through repentance, of past errors and instances of infidelity,
inconsistency, and slowness to act. Acknowledging the weaknesses
of the past is an act of honesty and courage which helps us to
strengthen our faith, which alerts us to face today's temptations
and challenges and prepares us to meet them.
34. Among the sins which require a greater commitment to repentance
and conversion should certainly be counted those which have been
detrimental to the unity willed by God for his People. In the
course of the thousand years now drawing to a close, even more
than in the first millennium, ecclesial communion has been painfully
wounded, a fact "for which, at times, men of both sides were
to blame".(17) Such wounds openly contradict the will of
Christ and are a cause of scandal to the world.(18) These sins
of the past unfortunately still burden us and remain ever present
temptations. It is necessary to make amends for them, and earnestly
to beseech Christ's forgiveness.
In these last years of the millennium, the Church should invoke
the Holy Spirit with ever greater insistence, imploring from him
the grace of Christian unity. This is a crucial matter for our
testimony to the Gospel before the world. Especially since the
Second Vatican Council many ecumenical initiatives have been undertaken
with generosity and commitment: it can be said that the whole
activity of the local Churches and of the Apostolic See has taken
on an ecumenical dimension in recent years. The Pontifical Council
for the Promotion of Christian Unity has become an important catalyst
in the movement towards full unity.
We are all however aware that the attainment of this goal cannot
be the fruit of human efforts alone, vital though they are. Unity,
after all, is a gift of the Holy Spirit. We are asked to respond
to this gift responsibly, without compromise in our witness to
the truth, generously implementing the guidelines laid down by
the Council and in subsequent documents of the Holy See, which
are also highly regarded by many Christians not in full communion
with the Catholic Church.
This then is one of the tasks of Christians as we make our way
to the Year 2000. The approaching end of the second millennium
demands of everyone an examination of conscience and the promotion
of fitting ecumenical initiatives, so that we can celebrate the
Great Jubilee, if not completely united, at least much closer
to overcoming the divisions of the second millennium. As everyone
recognizes, an enormous effort is needed in this regard. It is
essential not only to continue along the path of dialogue on doctrinal
matters, but above all to be more committed to prayer for Christian
unity. Such prayer has become much more intense after the Council,
but it must increase still more, involving an ever greater number
of Christians, in unison with the great petition of Christ before
his Passion: "Father ... that they also may all be one in
us" (Jn 17:21).
35. Another painful chapter of history to which the sons and daughters
of the Church must return with a spirit of repentance is that
of the acquiescence given, especially in certain centuries, to
intolerance and even the use of violence in the service of truth.
It is true that an accurate historical judgment cannot prescind
from careful study of the cultural conditioning of the times,
as a result of which many people may have held in good faith that
an authentic witness to the truth could include suppressing the
opinions of others or at least paying no attention to them. Many
factors frequently converged to create assumptions which justified
intolerance and fostered an emotional climate from which only
great spirits, truly free and filled with God, were in some way
able to break free. Yet the consideration of mitigating factors
does not exonerate the Church from the obligation to express profound
regret for the weaknesses of so many of her sons and daughters
who sullied her face, preventing her from fully mirroring the
image of her crucified Lord, the supreme witness of patient love
and of humble meekness. From these painful moments of the past
a lesson can be drawn for the future, leading all Christians to
adhere fully to the sublime principle stated by the Council: "The
truth cannot impose itself except by virtue of its own truth,
as it wins over the mind with both gentleness and power".(19)
36. Many Cardinals and Bishops expressed the desire for a serious
examination of conscience above all on the part of the Church
of today. On the threshold of the new Millennium Christians need
to place themselves humbly before the Lord and examine themselves
on the responsibility which they too have for the evils of our
day. The present age in fact, together with much light, also presents
not a few shadows.
How can we remain silent, for example, about the religious indifference
which causes many people today to live as if God did not exist,
or to be content with a vague religiosity, incapable of coming
to grips with the question of truth and the requirement of consistency?
To this must also be added the widespread loss of the transcendent
sense of human life, and confusion in the ethical sphere, even
about the fundamental values of respect for life and the family.
The sons and daughters of the Church too need to examine themselves
in this regard. To what extent have they been shaped by the climate
of secularism and ethical relativism? And what responsibility
do they bear, in view of the increasing lack of religion, for
not having shown the true face of God, by having "failed
in their religious, moral, or social life"? (20)
It cannot be denied that, for many Christians, the spiritual life
is passing through a time of uncertainty which affects not only
their moral life but also their life of prayer and the theological
correctness of their faith. Faith, already put to the test by
the challenges of our times, is sometimes disoriented by erroneous
theological views, the spread of which is abetted by the crisis
of obedience vis-à-vis the Church's Magisterium.
And with respect to the Church of our time, how can we not lament
the lack of discernment, which at times became even acquiescence,
shown by many Christians concerning the violation of fundamental
human rights by totalitarian regimes? And should we not also regret,
among the shadows of our own day, the responsibility shared by
so many Christians for grave forms of injustice and exclusion?
It must be asked how many Christians really know and put into
practice the principles of the Church's social doctrine.
An examination of conscience must also consider the reception
given to the Council, this great gift of the Spirit to the Church
at the end of the second millennium. To what extent has the word
of God become more fully the soul of theology and the inspiration
of the whole of Christian living, as Dei Verbum sought? Is the
liturgy lived as the "origin and summit" of ecclesial
life, in accordance with the teaching of Sacrosanctum Concilium?
In the universal Church and in the particular Churches, is the
ecclesiology of communion described in Lumen Gentium being strengthened?
Does it leave room for charisms, ministries, and different forms
of participation by the People of God, without adopting notions
borrowed from democracy and sociology which do not reflect the
Catholic vision of the Church and the authentic spirit of Vatican
II? Another serious question is raised by the nature of relations
between the Church and the world. The Council's guidelines—set
forth in Gaudium et Spes and other documents—of open, respectful
and cordial dialogue, yet accompanied by careful discernment and
courageous witness to the truth, remain valid and call us to a
greater commitment.
37. The Church of the first millennium was born of the blood of
the martyrs: "Sanguis martyrum - semen christianorum".(21)
The historical events linked to the figure of Constantine the
Great could never have ensured the development of the Church as
it occurred during the first millennium if it had not been for
the seeds sown by the martyrs and the heritage of sanctity which
marked the first Christian generations. At the end of the second
millennium, the Church has once again become a Church of martyrs.
The persecutions of believers —priests, Religious and laity—has
caused a great sowing of martyrdom in different parts of the world.
The witness to Christ borne even to the shedding of blood has
become a common inheritance of Catholics, Orthodox, Anglicans
and Protestants, as Pope Paul VI pointed out in his Homily for
the Canonization of the Ugandan Martyrs.(22)
This witness must not be forgotten. The Church of the first centuries,
although facing considerable organizational difficulties, took
care to write down in special martyrologies the witness of the
martyrs. These martyrologies have been constantly updated through
the centuries, and the register of the saints and the blessed
bears the names not only of those who have shed their blood for
Christ but also of teachers of the faith, missionaries, confessors,
bishops, priests, virgins, married couples, widows and children.
In our own century the martyrs have returned, many of them nameless,
"unknown soldiers" as it were of God's great cause.
As far as possible, their witness should not be lost to the Church.
As was recommended in the Consistory, the local Churches should
do everything possible to ensure that the memory of those who
have suffered martyrdom should be safeguarded, gathering the necessary
documentation. This gesture cannot fail to have an ecumenical
character and expression. Perhaps the most convincing form of
ecumenism is the ecumenism of the saints and of the martyrs. The
communio sanctorum speaks louder than the things which divide
us. The martyrologium of the first centuries was the basis of
the veneration of the Saints. By proclaiming and venerating the
holiness of her sons and daughters, the Church gave supreme honour
to God himself; in the martyrs she venerated Christ, who was at
the origin of their martyrdom and of their holiness. In later
times there developed the practice of canonization, a practice
which still continues in the Catholic Church and in the Orthodox
Churches. In recent years the number of canonizations and beatifications
has increased. These show the vitality of the local Churches,
which are much more numerous today than in the first centuries
and in the first millennium. The greatest homage which all the
Churches can give to Christ on the threshold of the third millennium
will be to manifest the Redeemer's all-powerful presence through
the fruits of faith, hope and charity present in men and women
of many different tongues and races who have followed Christ in
the various forms of the Christian vocation.
It will be the task of the Apostolic See, in preparation for the
Year 2000, to update the martyrologies for the universal Church,
paying careful attention to the holiness of those who in our own
time lived fully by the truth of Christ. In particular, there
is a need to foster the recognition of the heroic virtues of men
and women who have lived their Christian vocation in marriage.
Precisely because we are convinced of the abundant fruits of holiness
in the married state, we need to find the most appropriate means
for discerning them and proposing them to the whole Church as
a model and encouragement for other Christian spouses.
38. A further need emphasized by the Cardinals and Bishops is
that of Continental Synods, following the example of those already
held for Europe and Africa. The last General Conference of the
Latin American Episcopate accepted, in agreement with the Bishops
of North America, the proposal for a Synod for the Americas on
the problems of the new evangelization in both parts of the same
continent, so different in origin and history, and on issues of
justice and of international economic relations, in view of the
enormous gap between North and South.
Another plan for a continent-wide Synod will concern Asia, where
the issue of the encounter of Christianity with ancient local
cultures and religions is a pressing one. This is a great challenge
for evangelization, since religious systems such as Buddhism or
Hinduism have a clearly soteriological character. There is also
an urgent need for a Synod on the occasion of the Great Jubilee
in order to illustrate and explain more fully the truth that Christ
is the one Mediator between God and man and the sole Redeemer
of the world, to be clearly distinguished from the founders of
other great religions. With sincere esteem, the Church regards
the elements of truth found in those religions as a reflection
of the Truth which enlightens all men and women.(23) "Ecce
natus est nobis Salvator mundi": in the Year 2000 the proclamation
of this truth should resound with renewed power.
Also for Oceania a Regional Synod could be useful. In this region
there arises the question, among others, of the Aboriginal People,
who in a unique way evoke aspects of human prehistory. In this
Synod a matter not to be overlooked, together with other problems
of the region, would be the encounter of Christianity with the
most ancient forms of religion, profoundly marked by a monotheistic
orientation.
b) Second Phase
39. On the basis of this vast programme aimed at creating awareness,
it will then be possible to begin the second phase, the strictly
preparatory phase. This will take place over the span of three
years, from 1997 to 1999. The thematic structure of this three-year
period, centred on Christ, the Son of God made man, must necessarily
be theological, and therefore Trinitarian.
Year One: Jesus Christ
40. The first year, 1997, will thus be devoted to reflection on
Christ, the Word of God, made man by the power of the Holy Spirit.
The distinctly Christological character of the Jubilee needs to
be emphasized, for it will celebrate the Incarnation and coming
into the world of the Son of God, the mystery of salvation for
all mankind. The general theme proposed by many Cardinals and
Bishops for this year is: "Jesus Christ, the one Saviour
of the world, yesterday, today and for ever" (cf. Heb 13:8).
Among the Christological themes suggested in the Consistory the
following stand out: a renewed appreciation of Christ, Saviour
and Proclaimer of the Gospel, with special reference to the fourth
chapter of the Gospel of Luke, where the theme of Christ's mission
of preaching the Good News and the theme of the Jubilee are interwoven;
a deeper understanding of the mystery of the Incarnation and of
Jesus' birth from the Virgin Mary; the necessity of faith in Christ
for salvation. In order to recognize who Christ truly is, Christians,
especially in the course of this year, should turn with renewed
interest to the Bible, "whether it be through the liturgy,
rich in the divine word, or through devotional reading, or through
instructions suitable for the purpose and other aids".(24)
In the revealed text it is the Heavenly Father himself who comes
to us in love and who dwells with us, disclosing to us the nature
of his only-begotten Son and his plan of salvation for humanity.(25)
41. The commitment, mentioned earlier, to make the mystery of
salvation sacramentally present can lead, in the course of the
year, to a renewed appreciation of Baptism as the basis of Christian
living, according to the words of the Apostle: "As many of
you as were baptized into Christ have put on Christ" (Gal
3:27). The Catechism of the Catholic Church, for its part, recalls
that Baptism constitutes "the foundation of communion among
all Christians, including those who are not yet in full communion
with the Catholic Church".(26) From an ecumenical point of
view, this will certainly be a very important year for Christians
to look together to Christ the one Lord, deepening our commitment
to become one in him, in accordance with his prayer to the Father.
This emphasis on the centrality of Christ, of the word of God
and of faith ought to inspire interest among Christians of other
denominations and meet with a favourable response from them.
42. Everything ought to focus on the primary objective of the
Jubilee: the strengthening of faith and of the witness of Christians.
It is therefore necessary to inspire in all the faithful a true
longing for holiness, a deep desire for conversion and personal
renewal in a context of ever more intense prayer and of solidarity
with one's neighbour, especially the most needy.
The first year therefore will be the opportune moment for a renewed
appreciation of catechesis in its original meaning as "the
Apostles' teaching" (Acts 2:42) about the person of Jesus
Christ and his mystery of salvation. In this regard, a detailed
study of the Catechism of the Catholic Church will prove of great
benefit, for the Catechism presents "faithfully and systematically
... the teaching of Sacred Scripture, the living Tradition of
the Church and the authentic Magisterium, as well as the spiritual
heritage of the Fathers, Doctors and Saints of the Church, to
allow for a better knowledge of the Christian mystery and for
enlivening the faith of the People of God".(27) To be realistic,
we need to enlighten the consciences of the faithful concerning
errors regarding the person of Christ, clarifying objections against
him and against the Church.
43. The Blessed Virgin who will be as it were "indirectly"
present in the whole preparatory phase, will be contemplated in
this first year especially in the mystery of her Divine Motherhood.
It was in her womb that the Word became flesh! The affirmation
of the central place of Christ cannot therefore be separated from
the recognition of the role played by his Most Holy Mother. Veneration
of her, when properly understood, can in no way take away from
"the dignity and efficacy of Christ the one Mediator".(28)
Mary in fact constantly points to her Divine Son and she is proposed
to all believers as the model of faith which is put into practice.
"Devotedly meditating on her and contemplating her in the
light of the Word made man, the Church with reverence enters more
intimately into the supreme mystery of the Incarnation and becomes
ever increasingly like her Spouse".(29)
Year Two: the Holy Spirit
44. 1998, the second year of the preparatory phase, will be dedicated
in a particular way to the Holy Spirit and to his sanctifying
presence within the Community of Christ's disciples. "The
great Jubilee at the close of the second Millennium ...",
I wrote in the Encyclical Dominum et Vivificantem, "has a
pneumatological aspect, since the mystery of the Incarnation was
accomplished 'by the power of the Holy Spirit'. It was ?brought
about' by that Spirit—consubstantial with the Father and
the Son—who, in the absolute mystery of the Triune God,
is the Person-love, the uncreated gift, who is the eternal source
of every gift that comes from God in the order of creation, the
direct principle and, in a certain sense, the subject of God's
self- communication in the order of grace. The mystery of the
Incarnation constitutes the climax of this giving, this divine
self-communication".(30)
The Church cannot prepare for the new millennium "in any
other way than in the Holy Spirit. What was accomplished by the
power of the Holy Spirit 'in the fullness of time' can only through
the Spirit's power now emerge from the memory of the Church".(31)
The Spirit, in fact, makes present in the Church of every time
and place the unique Revelation brought by Christ to humanity,
making it alive and active in the soul of each individual: "The
Counsellor, the Holy Spirit, whom the Father will send in my name,
he will teach you all things, and bring to your remembrance all
that I have said to you" (Jn 14:26).
45. The primary tasks of the preparation for the Jubilee thus
include a renewed appreciation of the presence and activity of
the Spirit, who acts within the Church both in the Sacraments,
especially in Confirmation, and in the variety of charisms, roles
and ministries which he inspires for the good of the Church: "There
is only one Spirit who, according to his own richness and the
needs of the ministries, distributes his different gift for the
welfare of the Church (cf. 1 Cor 12:1-11). Among these gifts stands
out the grace given to the Apostles. To their authority, the Spirit
himself subjected even those who were endowed with charisms (cf.
1 Cor 14). Giving the body unity through himself and through his
power and through the internal cohesion of its members, this same
Spirit produces and urges love among the believers".(32)
In our own day too, the Spirit is the principal agent of the new
evangelization. Hence it will be important to gain a renewed appreciation
of the Spirit as the One who builds the Kingdom of God within
the course of history and prepares its full manifestation in Jesus
Christ, stirring people's hearts and quickening in our world the
seeds of the full salvation which will come at the end of time.
46. In this eschatological perspective, believers should be called
to a renewed appreciation of the theological virtue of hope, which
they have already heard proclaimed "in the word of the truth,
the Gospel" (Col 1:5). The basic attitude of hope, on the
one hand encourages the Christian not to lose sight of the final
goal which gives meaning and value to life, and on the other,
offers solid and profound reasons for a daily commitment to transform
reality in order to make it correspond to God's plan.
As the Apostle Paul reminds us: "We know that the whole creation
has been groaning in travail together until now; and not only
the creation, but we ourselves, who have the first fruits of the
Spirit, groan inwardly as we wait for adoption as sons, the redemption
of our bodies. For in this hope we were saved" (Rom 8:22-24).
Christians are called to prepare for the Great Jubilee of the
beginning of the Third Millennium by renewing their hope in the
definitive coming of the Kingdom of God, preparing for it daily
in their hearts, in the Christian community to which they belong,
in their particular social context, and in world history itself.
There is also need for a better appreciation and understanding
of the signs of hope present in the last part of this century,
even though they often remain hidden from our eyes. In society
in general, such signs of hope include: scientific, technological
and especially medical progress in the service of human life,
a greater awareness of our responsibility for the environment,
efforts to restore peace and justice wherever they have been violated,
a desire for reconciliation and solidarity among different peoples,
particularly in the complex relationship between the North and
the South of the world. In the Church, they include a greater
attention to the voice of the Spirit through the acceptance of
charisms and the promotion of the laity, a deeper commitment to
the cause of Christian unity and the increased interest in dialogue
with other religions and with contemporary culture.
47. The reflection of the faithful in the second year of preparation
ought to focus particularly on the value of unity within the Church,
to which the various gifts and charisms bestowed upon her by the
Spirit are directed. In this regard, it will be opportune to promote
a deeper understanding of the ecclesiological doctrine of the
Second Vatican Council as contained primarily in the Dogmatic
Constitution Lumen Gentium. This important document has expressly
emphasized that the unity of the Body of Christ is founded on
the activity of the Spirit, guaranteed by the Apostolic Ministry
and sustained by mutual love (cf. 1 Cor 13:1-8). This catechetical
enrichment of the faith cannot fail to bring the members of the
People of God to a more mature awareness of their own responsibilities,
as well as to a more lively sense of the importance of ecclesial
obedience.(33)
48. Mary, who conceived the Incarnate Word by the power of the
Holy Spirit and then in the whole of her life allowed herself
to be guided by his interior activity, will be contemplated and
imitated during this year above all as the woman who was docile
to the voice of the Spirit, a woman of silence and attentiveness,
a woman of hope who, like Abraham, accepted God's will "hoping
against hope" (cf. Rom 4:18). Mary gave full expression to
the longing of the poor of Yahweh and is a radiant model for those
who entrust themselves with all their hearts to the promises of
God.
Year Three: God the Father
49. 1999, the third and final year of preparation, will be aimed
at broadening the horizons of believers, so that they will see
things in the perspective of Christ: in the perspective of the
"Father who is in heaven" (cf. Mt 5:45), from whom the
Lord was sent and to whom he has returned (cf. Jn 16:28).
"This is eternal life, that they know you the only true God,
and Jesus Christ whom you have sent" (Jn 17:3). The whole
of the Christian life is like a great pilgrimage to the house
of the Father, whose unconditional love for every human creature,
and in particular for the "prodigal son" (cf. Lk 15:11-32),
we discover anew each day. This pilgrimage takes place in the
heart of each person, extends to the believing community and then
reaches to the whole of humanity.
The Jubilee, centred on the person of Christ, thus becomes a great
act of praise to the Father: "Blessed be the God and Father
of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us in Christ with every
spiritual blessing in the heavenly places, even as he chose us
in him before the foundation of the world, that we should be holy
and blameless before him" (Eph 1:3-4).
50. In this third year the sense of being on a "journey to
the Father" should encourage everyone to undertake, by holding
fast to Christ the Redeemer of man, a journey of authentic conversion.
This includes both a "negative" aspect, that of liberation
from sin, and a "positive" aspect, that of choosing
good, accepting the ethical values expressed in the natural law,
which is confirmed and deepened by the Gospel. This is the proper
context for a renewed appreciation and more intense celebration
of the Sacrament of Penance in its most profound meaning. The
call to conversion as the indispensable condition of Christian
love is particularly important in contemporary society, where
the very foundations of an ethically correct vision of human existence
often seem to have been lost.
It will therefore be necessary, especially during this year, to
emphasize the theological virtue of charity, recalling the significant
and lapidary words of the First Letter of John: "God is love"
(4:8,16). Charity, in its twofold reality as love of God and neighbour
is the summing up of the moral life of the believer. It has in
God its source and its goal.
51. From this point of view, if we recall that Jesus came to "preach
the good news to the poor" (Mt 11:5; Lk 7:22), how can we
fail to lay greater emphasis on the Church's preferential option
for the poor and the outcast? Indeed, it has to be said that a
commitment to justice and peace in a world like ours, marked by
so many conflicts and intolerable social and economic inequalities,
is a necessary condition for the preparation and celebration of
the Jubilee. Thus, in the spirit of the Book of Leviticus (25:8-12),
Christians will have to raise their voice on behalf of all the
poor of the world, proposing the Jubilee as an appropriate time
to give thought, among other things, to reducing substantially,
if not cancelling outright, the international debt which seriously
threatens the future of many nations. The Jubilee can also offer
an opportunity for reflecting on other challenges of our time,
such as the difficulties of dialogue between different cultures
and the problems connected with respect for women's rights and
the promotion of the family and marriage.
52. Recalling that "Christ ... by the revelation of the mystery
of the Father and his love, fully reveals man to man himself and
makes his supreme calling clear",(34) two commitments should
characterize in a special way the third preparatory year: meeting
the challenge of secularism and dialogue with the great religions.
With regard to the former, it will be fitting to broach the vast
subject of the crisis of civilization, which has become apparent
especially in the West, which is highly developed from the standpoint
of technology but is interiorly impoverished by its tendency to
forget God or to keep him at a distance. This crisis of civilization
must be countered by the civilization of love, founded on the
universal values of peace, solidarity, justice and liberty, which
find their full attainment in Christ.
53. On the other hand, as far as the field of religious awareness
is concerned, the eve of the Year 2000 will provide a great opportunity,
especially in view of the events of recent decades, for interreligious
dialogue, in accordance with the specific guidelines set down
by the Second Vatican Council in its Declaration Nostra Aetate
on the relationship of the Church to non-Christian religions.
In this dialogue the Jews and the Muslims ought to have a pre-eminent
place. God grant that as a confirmation of these intentions it
may also be possible to hold joint meetings in places of significance
for the great monotheistic religions.
In this regard, attention is being given to finding ways of arranging
historic meetings in places of exceptional symbolic importance
like Bethlehem, Jerusalem and Mount Sinai as a means of furthering
dialogue with Jews and the followers of Islam, and to arranging
similar meetings elsewhere with the leaders of the great world
religions. However, care will always have be taken not to cause
harmful misunderstandings, avoiding the risk of syncretism and
of a facile and deceptive irenicism.
54. In this broad perspective of commitments, Mary Most Holy,
the highly favoured daughter of the Father, will appear before
the eyes of believers as the perfect model of love towards both
God and neighbour. As she herself says in the Canticle of the
Magnificat, great things were done for her by the Almighty, whose
name is holy (cf. Lk 1:49). The Father chose her for a unique
mission in the history of salvation: that of being the Mother
of the long-awaited Saviour. The Virgin Mary responded to God's
call with complete openness: "Behold, I am the handmaid of
the Lord" (Lk 1:38). Her motherhood, which began in Nazareth
and was lived most intensely in Jerusalem at the foot of the Cross,
will be felt during this year as a loving and urgent invitation
addressed to all the children of God, so that they will return
to the house of the Father when they hear her maternal voice:
"Do whatever Christ tells you" (cf. Jn 2:5).
c) Approaching the Celebration
55. A separate chapter will be the actual celebration of the Great
Jubilee, which will take place simultaneously in the Holy Land,
in Rome and in the local Churches throughout the world. Especially
in this phase, the phase of celebration, the aim will be to give
glory to the Trinity, from whom everything in the world and in
history comes and to whom everything returns. This mystery is
the focus of the three years of immediate preparation: from Christ
and through Christ, in the Holy Spirit, to the Father. In this
sense the Jubilee celebration makes present in an anticipatory
way the goal and fulfilment of the life of each Christian and
of the whole Church in the Triune God.
But since Christ is the only way to the Father, in order to highlight
his living and saving presence in the Church and the world, the
International Eucharistic Congress will take place in Rome, on
the occasion of the Great Jubilee. The Year 2000 will be intensely
Eucharistic: in the Sacrament of the Eucharist the Saviour, who
took flesh in Mary's womb twenty centuries ago, continues to offer
himself to humanity as the source of divine life.
The ecumenical and universal character of the Sacred Jubilee can
be fittingly reflected by a meeting of all Christians. This would
be an event of great significance, and so, in order to avoid misunderstandings,
it should be properly presented and carefully prepared, in an
attitude of fraternal cooperation with Christians of other denominations
and traditions, as well as of grateful openness to those religions
whose representatives might wish to acknowledge the joy shared
by all the disciples of Christ.
One thing is certain: everyone is asked to do as much as possible
to ensure that the great challenge of the Year 2000 is not overlooked,
for this challenge certainly involves a special grace of the Lord
for the Church and for the whole of humanity.
V
"JESUS CHRIST IS THE SAME ... FOR EVER"
(Heb 13:8)
56.
The Church has endured for 2000 years. Like the mustard seed in
the Gospel, she has grown and become a great tree, able to cover
the whole of humanity with her branches (cf. Mt 13:31-32). The
Second Vatican Council, in its Dogmatic Constitution on the Church,
thus addresses the question of membership in the Church and the
call of all people to belong to the People of God: "All are
called to be part of this Catholic unity of the new People of
God ... And there belong to it or are related to it in various
ways, the Catholic faithful as well as all who believe in Christ,
and indeed the whole of mankind, which by the grace of God is
called to salvation".(35) Pope Paul VI, in the Encyclical
Ecclesiam Suam illustrates how all mankind is involved in the
plan of God, and emphasizes the various circles of the dialogue
of salvation.(36)
Continuing this approach, we can also appreciate more clearly
the Gospel parable of the leaven (cf. Mt 13:33): Christ, like
a divine leaven, always and ever more fully penetrates the life
of humanity, spreading the work of salvation accomplished in the
Paschal Mystery. What is more, he embraces within his redemptive
power the whole past history of the human race, beginning with
the first Adam.(37) The future also belongs to him: "Jesus
Christ is the same yesterday and today and for ever" (Heb
13:8). For her part the Church "seeks but a solitary goal:
to carry forward the work of Christ himself under the lead of
the Holy Spirit, the Paraclete. And Christ entered this world
to give witness to the truth, to rescue and not to sit in judgment,
to serve and not to be served".(38)
57. Therefore, ever since the apostolic age, the Church's mission
has continued without interruption within the whole human family.
The first evangelization took place above all in the region of
the Mediterranean. In the course of the first millennium, missions
setting out from Rome and Constantinople brought Christianity
to the whole continent of Europe. At the same time they made their
way to the heart of Asia, as far as India and China. The end of
the fifteenth century marked both the discovery of America and
the beginning of the evangelization of that great continent, North
and South. Simultaneously, while the sub-Saharan coasts of Africa
welcomed the light of Christ, Saint Francis Xavier, Patron of
the Missions, reached Japan. At the end of the eighteenth century
and the beginning of the nineteenth, a layman, Andrew Kim, brought
Christianity to Korea. In the same period the proclamation of
the Gospel reached Indochina, as well as Australia and the Islands
of the Pacific.
The nineteenth century witnessed vast missionary activity among
the peoples of Africa. All these efforts bore fruit which has
lasted up to the present day. The Second Vatican Council gives
an account of this in the Decree Ad Gentes on Missionary Activity.
After the Council the question of missionary work was dealt with
in the Encyclical Redemptoris Missio, in the light of the problems
of the missions in these final years of our century. In the future
too, the Church must continue to be missionary: indeed missionary
outreach is part of her very nature. With the fall of the great
anti-Christian systems in Europe, first of Nazism and then of
Communism, there is urgent need to bring once more the liberating
message of the Gospel to the men and women of Europe.(39) Furthermore,
as the Encyclical Redemptoris Missio affirms, the modern world
reflects the situation of the Areopagus of Athens, where Saint
Paul spoke(40). Today there are many "areopagi", and
very different ones: these are the vast sectors of contemporary
civilization and culture, of politics and economics. The more
the West is becoming estranged from its Christian roots, the more
it is becoming missionary territory, taking the form of many different
"areopagi".
58. The future of the world and the Church belongs to the younger
generation, to those who, born in this century, will reach maturity
in the next, the first century of the new millennium. Christ expects
great things from young people, as he did from the young man who
asked him: "What good deed must I do, to have eternal life?"
(Mt 19:16). I have referred to the remarkable answer which Jesus
gave to him, in the recent Encyclical Veritatis Splendor, as I
did earlier, in 1985, in my Apostolic Letter to the Youth of the
World. Young people, in every situation, in every region of the
world, do not cease to put questions to Christ: they meet him
and they keep searching for him in order to question him further.
If they succeed in following the road which he points out to them,
they will have the joy of making their own contribution to his
presence in the next century and in the centuries to come, until
the end of time: "Jesus is the same yesterday, today and
for ever".
59. In conclusion, it is helpful to recall the words of the Pastoral
Constitution Gaudium et Spes: "The Church believes that Christ,
who died and was raised up for all, can through his Spirit offer
man the light and the strength to measure up to his supreme destiny.
Nor has any other name under heaven been given to man by which
it is fitting for him to be saved. She likewise holds that in
her most benign Lord and Master can be found the key, the focal
point, and the goal of all human history. The Church also maintains
that beneath all changes there are so many realities which do
not change and which have their ultimate foundation in Christ,
who is the same yesterday and today and for ever. Hence in the
light of Christ, the image of the unseen God, the firstborn of
every creature, the Council wishes to speak to all men in order
to illuminate the mystery of man and to cooperate in finding the
solution to the outstanding problems of our time".(41)
While I invite the faithful to raise to the Lord fervent prayers
to obtain the light and assistance necessary for the preparation
and celebration of the forthcoming Jubilee, I exhort my Venerable
Brothers in the Episcopate and the ecclesial communities entrusted
to them to open their hearts to the promptings of the Spirit.
He will not fail to arouse enthusiasm and lead people to celebrate
the Jubilee with renewed faith and generous participation.
I entrust this responsibility of the whole Church to the maternal
intercession of Mary, Mother of the Redeemer. She, the Mother
of Fairest Love, will be for Christians on the way to the Great
Jubilee of the Third Millennium the Star which safely guides their
steps to the Lord. May the unassuming Young Woman of Nazareth,
who two thousand years ago offered to the world the Incarnate
Word, lead the men and women of the new millennium towards the
One who is "the true light that enlightens every man"
(Jn 1:9).
With these sentiments I impart to all my Blessing.