Thursday, December 29, 2005

JPII on Christmas 1997

THE TIME OF THE GOSPEL OPENS THE DOOR TO A DEEP KNOWLEDGE OF CHRIST

At the General Audience of Wednesday 17 December 1997.

The entrance of eternity into time through the mystery of the Incarnation makes Christ's whole life on earth an exceptional period. The span of this life is a unique time, a time for the fullness of Revelation, in which the eternal God speaks to us in his incarnate Word through the veil of his human existence. It is the time that will remain for ever as a normative point of reference: the time of the Gospel. All Christians recognise it as the time from which their faith begins.

It is the time of a human life that changed all human lives. Christ's live was rather short; but its intensity and value are beyond compare. We stand before the greatest wealth for human history. An inexhaustible richness, because it is the wealth of eternity and divinity. Those who lived in Jesus' time and had the joy of being close to him, seeing him and hearing him were particularly fortunate. Jesus himself calls thm blessed: «Blessed as the eyes which see what you see! For I tell you that many prophets and kings desired to see what you see, and did not see it, and to hear what you hear, and did not hear it» (Lk 10:23-24).

The formula «I tell you» makes it clear that the affirmation goes beyond mere observation of a historical fact. What Jesus says is a word of revelation which sheds light on the profound meaning of history. In the past that precedes him, Jesus does not only see the external events that prepare his coming; he looks at the deep aspirations of hearts which underlie those events and anticipate their final outcome. The majority of Jesus' contemporaries are unaware of their privilege. They see and hear the Messiah without recognising him as the Saviour for whom they hoped. They address him without realising they are speaking to God's Anointed foretold by the prophets.

In saying: «what you see», «what you hear», Jesus invites them to perceive the mystery, going beyond the veil of the senses. He helps his disciples especially to penetrate it: «To you has been given the secret of the kingdom of God» (Mk 4:11). Our faith, based precisely on the disciples' witness, is rooted in their gradual discovery of the mystery. We do not have the privilege of seeing and hearing Jesus, as was possible during the time of his earthly life, but with faith we receive the immeasurable grace of entering into the mystery of Christ and his kingdom. The time of the Gospel opens the door to a deep knowledge of Christ's person. In this regard, we can recall Jesus' sad rebuke to Philip: «Have I been with you so long and yet you do not know me, Philip?» (Jn 14:9). Jesus expected a penetrating knowledge full of love from the one who, as an Apostle, lived in a very close relationship with the Teacher and, precisely because of this intimacy, should have understood that the Father's face was revealed in him: «He who has seen me has seen the Father» (ibid.). With the eyes of faith the disciple is called to discover the invisible face of the Father in Christ's face.
Pope John Paul II

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