Following is an unofficial translation of the Holy Father, Benedict XVIs address to the crowds who gathered in Saint Peter's Square this morning for the weekly General Audience. This was the final public appearance of the Pontiff before he renounces the Office of Bishop of Rome tomorrow evening (at 8:00pm local time in Rome).
At that time, the period of Sede Vacante will begin.
Address of His Holiness, Benedict XVI
Distinguished authorities!
Dear brothers and sisters!
I feel that I am being carried in
prayer, in the presence of God, where I can recall every encounter, every
voyage, every pastoral visit. I remember
each and every one of you in prayer and commend you to the Lord, for we are fully
award of His will, with all wisdom and spiritual intellect, and why we can live
in a manner worthy of Him, of his love, which bears fruit in every good work
(cf Col 1:9-10).
I express a special greeting and my gratitude to everyone: the heart of a Pope reaches out to the entire world. I wish to express my gratitude to the members of the Diplomatic corps accredited to the Holy See, who make present here the great family of Nations. I think also of all those who work to ensure good communications, and I thank them for their important service.
At this time, I wish to express my heartfelt thanks to all the numerous persons throughout the world who during these last weeks have sent me moving messages of their affection, of friendship and of prayer. Yes, the Pope is never alone; I have witnessed this truth once again in such a heartfelt way. The Pope belongs to everyone and many people feel close to him. It is true that I have received letters from the important people of the world – from Heads of State, from Religious leaders, from representatives of the world of culture etc. but I have also received countless letters from simple people who have written in simple words, from their hearts and told me of their affection, born out of the union we share in Christ in the Church. These people do not write as they might write to a prince or someone who they do not know. They write as brothers and sisters or as sons and daughters, with a sense of familiar and affectionate connection. Here I can see and even touch the heart of the Church – not a religious or humanitarian organization or an association but a living body, a communion of brothers and sisters in the Body of Jesus Christ, who together are one. To test the Church in this way and to see in this the strength of her truth and of her love is cause for great joy, in a time when so many speak of her decline. See how the Church is alive today!
I thank each and everyone also
for the respect and understanding with which you have welcomed this very
important decision. I will continue to
accompany the Church with the same prayer, reflection and dedication to the
Lord and to His Spouse as I have tried to live daily until the present, and
which I pray I may continue always. I
ask that you remember me before the Lord, and above all that you pray for the
Cardinals, called to accomplish such an important task, and for the new
Successor of the Apostle Peter: that the Lord may accompany them with the light
and strength of his Spirit.
At that time, the period of Sede Vacante will begin.
Address of His Holiness, Benedict XVI
For the General Audience held in Saint Peter’s Square
Wednesday, February 27, 2013
Venerable Brothers in the Episcopacy and the Presbyterate!Wednesday, February 27, 2013
Distinguished authorities!
Dear brothers and sisters!
I thank you for having come in
such great numbers to this, my last General Audience.
Thank you from the bottom of my
heart! I am truly touched! I see in you the Church alive! And I think that I must also say thank you to
the Creator for the beautiful weather that we are enjoying in this Wintertime.
Like the Apostle Paul in the
biblical text which we have just heard, I also feel in my heart that I must
above all thank God who guides the Church and calls us to believe, who sows his
Word and with it, feeds his people. In
this moment, my soul reaches out and embraces all the Church in all parts of
the world; and I give thanks to God for the news
which throughout these years of the Petrine ministry I have received about the
faith in the Lord Jesus Christ, and about the charity that is truly evident
throughout the Body of the Church which makes her live by love, and about the
hope which keeps her always open to and focused on life in all its fullness, as
we journey toward the Heavenly homeland.
At this moment, I have within me
great trust because I know, we all know that the word of truth which we read in
the Gospel is the power of the Church, the source of her life. The Gospel purifies and renews, bears
fruit. In it, the community of believers
hears about and draws the grace of God, the source of truth and of
charity. This is my trust, this is my
joy.
When, on April 19, almost eight
years ago, I accepted and assumed the Petrine ministry, I was filled with a
firm conviction which has always accompanied me: belief in the life of the Church and in the
word of God. Now, as I have expressed
many times before, the words that resonate in my heart are: Lord, why are you asking this of me and what
are you asking? The weight that you place on my shoulders is great, but if you
have asked it of me, at your request I will put out the nets, knowing that You
will always guide me, even with all my faults. Eight years afterwards, I can say that the
Lord has guided me, has always been close to me. I have been aware of his presence with me
every day. Throughout these past years,
there have been moments of joy and light, but also some difficult moments; I
felt like Saint Peter with the Apostles in the boat on the Sea of Galilee: the
Lord has provided many days of sun and of light breezes, days in which the fishing
was abundant; there were also moments in which the waters were rough and the
winds were contrary. As it has been
throughout the history of the Church, it seemed at such moments that the Lord
was sleeping. But I have always known
that in this boat the Lord is present and I have always known that the Barque
of the Church is not mine; it does not belong to us, it is His. And the Lord will not allow it to fail, he
guides it, certainly He does so through the men that he has chosen, because
this is how he wants it to be. This was
and is a certainty that nothing can obscure. And this is why today my heart is
filled with gratitude to the Lord because he has never left the Church or me
without the gift of his consolation, his light and his love.
We are in the midst of the Year
of Faith, which I called in order to strengthen our faith in God, in the midst
of a world that often puts Him in second place.
I wish to invite everyone to renew your trust in God, to trust him like
children in the arms of God, confident that his arms will always support us and
allow us to walk every day, even when we are tired. I wish that everyone should know that he or
she is loved by God who has given his Son for us and has demonstrated his boundless
love. I wish that everyone should know
the joy of being Christian. In a
beautiful prayer which is repeated every morning, it says: I adore you O God, and I love you with all my heart. I thank you for having created me and for
having made me Christian … Yes, we
are thankful for the gift of faith; it is the most precious gift, which no one
can take from us! Let us give thanks to
the Lord every day for this gift with prayer and with a Christian life
consistent with this belief. God loves
us, but He waits for us also to love Him!
I wish not only to thank God
at this time. A Pope is not alone in his
responsibility of guiding the Barque of Peter, even if this is his primary
responsibility I have never felt alone in carrying the joy and the weight of
the Petrine ministry. The Lord has
placed me near to many people who with generosity and love for God and for the
Church, have helped me and have always been close to me. And so to all of you, dear Brother Cardinals,
your wisdom, your counsel and your friendship have been precious to me; my
Collaborators, including my Secretary of State who has accompanied me
faithfully throughout these years; the Secreatriat of State and the entire
Roman Curia, likewise all those who in various ways have served the Holy See:
so many times you gave of yourselves so generously, working in the shadows, tuly
in silence with daily dedication, with a spirit of faith and humility. You have been for me a constant source of
secure and reliable support. A special thought
is reserved for the Church of Rome, my Diocese!
I can never forget my Brothers in the Episcopate and in the
Presbyterate, consecrated persons and the entire People of God: through
pastoral visits, through gatherings, though audiences and travels, I have
always known and appreciated your attentiveness and your profound affection;
but also I have loved you all, without distinction, with the pastoral care that
is at the heart of every Shepherd, above all that of the Bishop of Rome, the
Successor of the Apostle Peter. Every
day I have carried you in prayer, with a father’s love.I express a special greeting and my gratitude to everyone: the heart of a Pope reaches out to the entire world. I wish to express my gratitude to the members of the Diplomatic corps accredited to the Holy See, who make present here the great family of Nations. I think also of all those who work to ensure good communications, and I thank them for their important service.
At this time, I wish to express my heartfelt thanks to all the numerous persons throughout the world who during these last weeks have sent me moving messages of their affection, of friendship and of prayer. Yes, the Pope is never alone; I have witnessed this truth once again in such a heartfelt way. The Pope belongs to everyone and many people feel close to him. It is true that I have received letters from the important people of the world – from Heads of State, from Religious leaders, from representatives of the world of culture etc. but I have also received countless letters from simple people who have written in simple words, from their hearts and told me of their affection, born out of the union we share in Christ in the Church. These people do not write as they might write to a prince or someone who they do not know. They write as brothers and sisters or as sons and daughters, with a sense of familiar and affectionate connection. Here I can see and even touch the heart of the Church – not a religious or humanitarian organization or an association but a living body, a communion of brothers and sisters in the Body of Jesus Christ, who together are one. To test the Church in this way and to see in this the strength of her truth and of her love is cause for great joy, in a time when so many speak of her decline. See how the Church is alive today!
For the last few months, I have
felt my physical strength diminish, and I asked the Lord insistently in prayer to
guide me with His light so that I might make the decision that is right, not
for my own good, but for the good of the Church. I have made this decision with full knowledge
of the gravity which it carries, but with a profound serenity of heart. To love the Church means also to have the courage
to make difficult choices, to suffer, to hold before us always the good of the
Church and not our own interests.
Allow me now to return once more
to April 19, 2005. The serious nature of
that decision was evident in the fact that from that moment onward I have been
pledged always and forever to the Lord.
Always – the one who assumes the Petrine ministry never has any more
privacy. He belongs always and entirely
to everyone, to the entire Church. From
that moment on, all semblance of privacy is forever and always removed. I have tested this theory, and I learn from this
experience even now that one receives life precisely when it is given. As I said before, many people who love the
Lord love also the Successor of Peter and are kind to him; that the Pope truly has
brothers and sisters, sons and daughters throughout the entire world, and that
he is aware of their communal embrace; because he no longer belongs to himself,
he belongs to all and all belong to him.
The always is also a forever – there
is no more return to the private. My decision
to renounce the active exercise of the ministry doesn’t revoke it. I do not return to a private life, to a life
of travels, meetings, receptions, conferences etc. I am not abandoning the cross, but staying in
a new way close to the Crucified Lord. I
will no longer carry the power of Office to govern the Church, but in the
service of prayer, I will remain, so to speak, within the walls of St. Peter’s. Saint Benedict, whose name I bear as Pope,
will provide for me a great example of this.
He himself showed the way to live a life which, active or passive,
belongs totally to the work of God.
Let us invoke the maternal
intercession of the Virgin Mary, Mother of God and of the Church, that she may
accompany every one of us and the entire ecclesial community; to Whom we
entrust ourselves with profound faith.
Dear friends! God guides His Church and sustains her
always, particularly in difficult moments.
Don’t ever lose this vision of faith, which is the only true vision of
the pilgrimage of the Church and of the world.
In our heart, in the heart of each one here, rests the joyous certitude
that the Lord is near and will never abandon us. He is close to us and envelops us with his
love. Thank you!
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