
The Church Cannot Forget Her Roots 
IT CAUGHT EVERYONE by surprise. A return
to the Holy Land has become John Paul II's
greatest dream for the Jubilee of the Year
2000. He admits this fact in a letter published
June 29, the Feast of Saint Peter and Paul,
"On the Pilgrimage to Places Linked
to Salvation History."
"Abandoning myself entirely to
the divine
will, I would be very happy if this
plan
materializes." He has already
been to
the Holy Land in 1965 as the then Cardinal
of Cracow. Now he wants to return as
the
Pope.
A Very Resourceful Pope
His plan is very ambitious. He would like
to visit the main sites that witnessed Biblical
scenes like the promise to Abraham, the handing
of the Ten Commandments to Moses, the Gabriel's
Annunciation to Mary, Jesus' birth in a stable,
the Crucifixion, and St. Paul's shattering
conversion.
This means going to Iraq, Israel and
Greece.
"It is, undoubtedly, an emblematic
pilgrimage",
commented Msgr. Gianfranco Ravasi,
one of
the most prolific Bible scholars of
our times.
"The Christian pilgrimage is by
definition
a trip into history and into space.
It consists
of earth, stone, water, air. Christian
Revelation
is not private or disembodied, but
takes
place in history."
The Pope hopes to start in Ur of the
Chaldeans,
the root of faith of Judaism, Christianity
and Islam. Today this town, Tal al
Muqayyar,
lies in the "no fly zone"
imposed
by the international community on the
skies
of Iraq. Here Abraham heard the word
of God,
which drew him out of his land, away
from
his people and, in a certain sense,
out of
himself, to make him an instrument
of the
plan for salvation.
Then the Pope hopes to go on Mount
Sinai,
the place of the Covenant, of communion
between
God and the people. Hopefully, he will
also
visit Mount Nebo, from where Moses
saw the
Promised Land. "His gaze from
Nebo is
the very symbol of hope. From that
mountain
he could see that God had kept his
promises."
Meeting With Youth
Especially charged with meaning will be the
second stage of the journey which will be
concentrated in Bethlehem, Nazareth and Jerusalem.
These are the places "where the Word
is made flesh; where the meeting between
God and man is total." An existential
philosopher, Kierkegaard once said: 'the
two worlds man's and God's - collide in Jesus,
but they do not cause an explosion but an
embrace.'
These are lands still wounded by war
and
tension. "Here, God willing, I
hope
to immerse myself in prayer, taking
in my
heart the entire Church."
Once the news was out, the Apostolic
Nuncio
in Israel, at the suggestion of the
Neocatechumenal
Way, approached the Pope and suggested
the
possibility of his meeting the youth
coming
from all over the world on the Mount
of Beatitudes.
On this exceptional hill, the Pope
can entrust
the torch of faith to the youth of
the new
millennium. The Pope was visibly enthusiastic
with this idea and told the Nuncio,
"Yes,
I want it to happen!"
Hopefully youth from Guam will be able
to
be present for this terrific milestone
in
the history of the Church.
The visit to the Holy Places of the
Redeemer's
earthly life leads logically to the
places
which were important for the infant
Church
and which saw the missionary outreach
of
the first Christian community. The
Pope writes
specifically about two of them, linked
to
the Apostle St. Paul: Damascus, the
place
of his conversion; and Athens, the
place
of his address to the pagans.
This journey, the Pope notes, will
be a pilgrimage
of dialogue, characterized by a strong
ecumenical
thrust. "More than any other pilgrimage
which I have made, the one I am about
to
undertake in the Holy Land during the
Jubilee
event will be marked by the desire
expressed
in Christ's prayer to the Father that
his
disciples "may all be one"
(Jn
17:21), a prayer which challenges us
more
vigorously at the exceptional time
which
opens the Third Millennium." Iraq
and
Israel are predominantly Muslim and
Jewish.
A Personal Note
Cardinal Fulton Sheen writing in the
sixties
said that when one goes to the Holy
Land,
one has to carry three luggages. All
of them
vitally important - eyes, memory, faith.
Eyes to see the stones, memory to peel
off
the layers of history, and faith to
X-ray
the surface and see the meaning of
it all.
I have just returned from the Holy
Land.
This pilgrimage was one of the biggest
gifts
in my life. We were 150 of us - itinerant
catechists and families in mission
of the
Neocatechumenal Way working in the
United
States. We visited many places and
in every
place we went, we celebrated. These
celebrations
- morning prayers, Eucharists, celebration
of reconciliation - were amazing. They
made
the stones alive. We could taste the
real
spirit behind these monuments. It was
not
a tour through ancient historical places
but a NOW event.
The Pope puts it very nicely, "To
go
in a spirit of prayer from one place
to another,
from one city to another, in the area
marked
especially by God's intervention, helps
us
not only to live our life as a journey,
but
also gives us a vivid sense of a God
who
has gone before us and leads us on,
who himself
set out on man's path, a God who does
not
look down on us from on high, but who
became
our traveling companion."
"In the Gospel, Jesus seems always
to
be traveling about. He seems to be
in a hurry
to move from one place to another in
order
to proclaim the imminent coming of
God's
Kingdom. He proclaims and He calls.
His "Follow
me" prompted the Apostles' ready
response
(cf. Mk 1:16-20). Let us all feel touched
by his voice, his call, his summons
to a
new life."
Let is all undertake this interior
pilgrimage.
Let us all set out in the footsteps
of Christ!
See you in Israel in March 2000!
(c) Fr. Pius Sammut, OCD. Permission
is
hereby granted for any non-commercial
use,
provided that the content is unaltered
from
its original state, if this copyright
notice
is included.
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