Pope John Paul II - Homily at Giants Stadium - 5 October 1995
Dear Archbishop McCarrick and my other Brother Bishops, Dear Brothers and
Sisters in Christ,
1. Each day in the "Our Father" we pray: "Thy Kingdom come!" (cf. Mt 6:9-13).
And in today's Gospel we have heard about Jesus sending out his disciples to
proclaim that "the Kingdom of God is at hand" (cf. Lk 10:9).
Today we are celebrating the Good News of God's Kingdom here in Giants
Stadium, in the Archdiocese of Newark, in New Jersey - the Garden State. I greet
the whole Catholic community of Newark, in a special way your Pastor and my
faithful friend, Archbishop McCarrick, whom I thank for his warm words of
welcome. I greet God's beloved people from all of New Jersey - the Bishops,
priests, deacons, seminarians, women and men Religious, parents, children, the
young, the old, the sick; these greetings include our brothers and sisters of
Eastern Rite Dioceses, whose presence gives vibrant witness to the rich
diversity of God's Holy Church. I am also grateful to the civic leaders of City
and State and the representatives of the various religious denominations who
have wished to share this moment of prayer with us.
[In Castillan:] Quiero dar las gracias a las personas de lengua española que
participan en esta misar pues la Iglesia en los Estados Unidos tambien habla
español. ßeseo exhortarles a hacer que su fe se manifieste de una forma cada vez
visible en su vida diaria, en el cuidado de su familia, y en sus compromisos
profesionales y sociales. No pierdan nunca la alegria y la generosidad con que
han aprendido a seguir a nuestro Senor Jesucristo.
[I wish to greet all Spanish-speaking people present at this Mass, for the
Church in the United States also speaks Spanish. I wish to encourage you to let
your faith be ever more visible in your daily lives, in the care of your
families, in your professional and social commitments. Never lose the joy and
generosity with which you have learned to follow our Lord Jesus Christ!]
What is this Kingdom which Jesus announced and which the Church continues to
proclaim down the centuries? First, it is the affirmation of God's dominion over
all creation. As Creator, he reigns over the world he has made. But the Kingdom
means more. It means that God is present as Lord in this world. The Kingdom is
present above all in Jesus Christ, the Eternal Son, who became flesh and dwelt
among us (cf. Jn 1:14). Furthermore, the Kingdom embraces us all: by his Death
on the Cross and his Resurrection from the dead, Christ redeemed us from our
sins and gave us new life in the Spirit. Through the Paschal Mystery - as Saint
Paul writes - God "has rescued us from the power of darkness and brought us into
the Kingdom of his beloved Son" (Col 1:13).
2. Like the people of Israel spoken of in the first reading, who gathered
around the priest Ezra and listened to the word of God with profound emotion
(cf. Neh 8:5), we have stood to hear the message of God's presence and love
which the Liturgy presents to us this evening. Nehemiah is speaking of the time
after the Babylonian Captivity, when the Jewish people returned to their
homeland. At the end of the reading, "Ezra blessed the Lord, the great God, and
all the people, their hands raised high, answered: 'Amen, Amen"' (Neh 8:6). This
great "Amen" is echoed at every Mass when, at the end of the Eucharistic Prayer,
we offer glory and honor to the Father through the Son, in the Holy Spirit. With
this "Amen" the whole community acknowledges the real presence on the Altar of
Jesus Christ, the living and eternal Word of the Father. In the spirit of this
great "Amen", all of us gathered here in Giants Stadium praise Jesus Christ for
the newness of life (cf. Rom 6:4) which he gives us in the Holy Spirit! Praised
be our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ!
3. The Gospel shows us Jesus sending his disciples to proclaim the Good News
of the Kingdom of God (cf. Lk 10:1). He tells them openly that some people will
ignore or reject their message. But such human resistance will not prevent the
coming of the Kingdom (cf. Lk 10:10-11). The Kingdom is always present because
the Father himself has brought it into the world through the Passion, Death and
Resurrection of his Son Jesus Christ. From the day of Pentecost, the Holy Spirit
never ceases to communicate the power of Christ's Kingship, and to invite men
and women to find salvation in the One who is "the Way, and the Truth, and the
Life" (cf. Jn 14:6).
In order to bring us this salvation, Jesus established the Church to be "a
kind of sacrament - a sign and instrument - of intimate union with God and of
the unity of all mankind" (Lumen Gentium, 1). Among the many magnificent images
which the Bible uses to describe the Church, one of the most beautiful is that
of the house in which God dwells with his people (cf. Eph 2:19-22; 1 Tim 3:15).
The Lord wants his Church to "make a home" in the midst of every people,
grafting the gifts of salvation on to the history and culture of each nation. In
today's Gospel, Jesus sends his disciples into people's houses, to bring them
his peace (cf. Lk 10:5). In every place where people make their homes and live
their lives, a disciple of Jesus must arrive to say: "The Kingdom of God is at
hand" (cf. Lk 10:9).
4. Tonight we give thanks to God for the way in which the Church has "made a
home" in America. From the beginning, in this new land the Church grew out of
the faith of peoples from many cultural and ethnic backgrounds, embracing the
indigenous people and settlers alike. Everywhere we see the results of the
labors of countless priests, Religious sisters and brothers, Christian families
and individual lay men and women who made the Church present in American society
through a great network of parishes, schools, hospitals and charitable
institutions. This proud heritage should serve as an inspiration and an
incentive for you as you seek to meet the challenges of our own times.
The Church must continue to build God's spiritual house in America! Here in
the Church in Newark, last year's Archdiocesan Synod put the whole Catholic
community in a state of mission. In particular, the Synod appealed to the laity
to work for God's Kingdom by their efforts to shape society in accordance with
God's designs. No aspect of life - whether in the family, in the workplace, in
schools, in economic, political or social activities - can be withdrawn from
God's dominion (cf. Lumen Gentium, 36). As we prepare to celebrate the two
thousandth anniversary of Christ's Birth, your Synod, like the whole Church,
recognized the need for a new evangelization, a new and vital proclamation of
the Gospel aimed at integrating your faith ever more fully into the fabric of
your daily lives. In the words of the Second Vatican Council, wherever there is
little concern for seeking what is true and good, and wherever conscience is
blinded by being accustomed to sin (cf. Gaudium et Spes, 15), there the Church
must make a supreme effort to teach the objective truths of the moral order,
form consciences, call people to conversion and make present the inexhaustible
riches of God's mercy in the Sacraments, and especially in the Sacrament of
penance.
5. The Christian life is a dynamic reality: the seed of faith sown in our
hearts through Baptism must ripen and mature into a rich harvest of union with
God and good works in the service of others. Jesus uses the image of the harvest
to describe the Church's role in the world. From generation to generation, in
every time and place, the seed sown by God in human history through the Death
and Resurrection of Christ continues to mature and awaits the harvest.
Jesus reminds us that more workers for the harvest are urgently needed, and
he commands us to pray for them: "The harvest is rich but the workers are few;
therefore ask the harvest-master to send workers to his harvest" (Lk 10:2). The
question of vocations is vital to the Church. Everyone has a vocation: parents,
teachers, students, workers, professional people, people who are retired.
Everyone has something to do for God. We must pray that young people especially
will listen to the Lord's call to serve as priests, as Religious sisters and
brothers, as missionaries at home and in other lands. Young people of Newark and
New Jersey, young Americans, the Lord needs you! The Church needs you!
6. Compared to many other parts of the world, the United States is a
privileged land. Yet, even here there is much poverty and human suffering. There
is much need for love and the works of love; there is need for social
solidarity. Early Americans were proud of their strong sense of individual
responsibility, but that did not lead them to build a radically
"individualistic" society. They built a community-based society, with a great
openness and sensitivity to the needs of their neighbors.
Quite close to the shores of New Jersey there rises a universally known
landmark which stands as an enduring witness to the American tradition of
welcoming the stranger, and which tells us something important about the kind of
nation America has aspired to be. It is the Statue of Liberty, with its
celebrated poem: "Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to
breathe free ... Send these, the homeless, tempest-tossed to me". Is present-day
America becoming less sensitive, less caring towards the poor, the weak, the
stranger, the needy? It must not! Today, as before, the United States is called
to be a hospitable society, a welcoming culture. If America were to turn in on
itself, would this not be the beginning of the end of what constitutes the very
essence of the "American experience"?
To a great extent, the story of America has been the story of long and
difficult struggles to overcome the prejudices which excluded certain categories
of people from a full share in the country's life: first, the struggle against
religious intolerance, then the struggle against racial discrimination and in
favor of civil rights for everyone. Sadly, today a new class of people is being
excluded. When the unborn child - the "stranger in the womb" - is declared to be
beyond the protection of society, not only are America's deepest traditions
radically undermined and endangered, but a moral blight is brought upon society.
I am also thinking of threats to the elderly, the severely handicapped and all
those who do not seem to have any social usefulness. When innocent human beings
are declared inconvenient or burdensome, and thus unworthy of legal and social
protection, grievous damage is done to the moral foundations of the democratic
community. The right to life is the first of all rights. It is the foundation of
democratic liberties and the keystone of the edifice of civil society. Both as
Americans and as followers of Christ, American Catholics must be committed to
the defense of life in all its stages and in every condition.
7. Dear Sisters and Brothers: Christ pointed the Church and the whole human
family toward the future when he rolled away the stone from the entrance to the
tomb and unveiled the mystery of new life. In his Resurrection, the Lord
revealed the new creation, the promise of new heavens and a new earth (cf. 2 Pt
3:13). As Christians, we live by faith and in hope. We wait for the return of
the Lord as the judge of the living and the dead. We await his return in glory,
the coming of God's Kingdom in its fullness. That is the constant invitation of
the psalms: "Wait for the Lord with courage; be stouthearted, and wait for the
Lord" (Ps 27:14).
Our confidence in the future which God has opened before us enables us to see
this earthly life in its proper light. In the perspective of God's Kingdom we
discern the true value of all the accomplishments of human civilization and
culture, of all our achievements our struggles and our sufferings. As Americans,
you are rightly proud of your country's great achievements. As Christians, you
know that all things human are the soil in which the Kingdom of God is meant to
take root and mature! To the Church in the United States, to you, the Church in
Newark, I make this appeal: Do not make an idol of any temporal reality! "Know
that the Kingdom of God is at hand" (cf. Lk 10:11). "Wait for the Lord with
courage; be stouthearted" (Ps 27:14). Hope in the Lord! Amen.
Dear Archbishop McCarrick and my other Brother Bishops, Dear
Brothers and Sisters in Christ,
1. Each day in the "Our Father" we pray: "Thy Kingdom come!" (cf. Mt 6:9-13).
And in today's Gospel we have heard about Jesus sending out his disciples to
proclaim that "the Kingdom of God is at hand" (cf. Lk 10:9).
Today we are celebrating the Good News of God's Kingdom here in Giants
Stadium, in the Archdiocese of Newark, in New Jersey - the Garden State. I greet
the whole Catholic community of Newark, in a special way your Pastor and my
faithful friend, Archbishop McCarrick, whom I thank for his warm words of
welcome. I greet God's beloved people from all of New Jersey - the Bishops,
priests, deacons, seminarians, women and men Religious, parents, children, the
young, the old, the sick; these greetings include our brothers and sisters of
Eastern Rite Dioceses, whose presence gives vibrant witness to the rich
diversity of God's Holy Church. I am also grateful to the civic leaders of City
and State and the representatives of the various religious denominations who
have wished to share this moment of prayer with us.
[In Castillan:] Quiero dar las gracias a las personas de lengua española que
participan en esta misar pues la Iglesia en los Estados Unidos tambien habla
español. ßeseo exhortarles a hacer que su fe se manifieste de una forma cada vez
visible en su vida diaria, en el cuidado de su familia, y en sus compromisos
profesionales y sociales. No pierdan nunca la alegria y la generosidad con que
han aprendido a seguir a nuestro Senor Jesucristo.
[I wish to greet all Spanish-speaking people present at this Mass, for the
Church in the United States also speaks Spanish. I wish to encourage you to let
your faith be ever more visible in your daily lives, in the care of your
families, in your professional and social commitments. Never lose the joy and
generosity with which you have learned to follow our Lord Jesus Christ!]
What is this Kingdom which Jesus announced and which the Church continues to
proclaim down the centuries? First, it is the affirmation of God's dominion over
all creation. As Creator, he reigns over the world he has made. But the Kingdom
means more. It means that God is present as Lord in this world. The Kingdom is
present above all in Jesus Christ, the Eternal Son, who became flesh and dwelt
among us (cf. Jn 1:14). Furthermore, the Kingdom embraces us all: by his Death
on the Cross and his Resurrection from the dead, Christ redeemed us from our
sins and gave us new life in the Spirit. Through the Paschal Mystery - as Saint
Paul writes - God "has rescued us from the power of darkness and brought us into
the Kingdom of his beloved Son" (Col 1:13).
2. Like the people of Israel spoken of in the first reading, who gathered
around the priest Ezra and listened to the word of God with profound emotion
(cf. Neh 8:5), we have stood to hear the message of God's presence and love
which the Liturgy presents to us this evening. Nehemiah is speaking of the time
after the Babylonian Captivity, when the Jewish people returned to their
homeland. At the end of the reading, "Ezra blessed the Lord, the great God, and
all the people, their hands raised high, answered: 'Amen, Amen"' (Neh 8:6). This
great "Amen" is echoed at every Mass when, at the end of the Eucharistic Prayer,
we offer glory and honor to the Father through the Son, in the Holy Spirit. With
this "Amen" the whole community acknowledges the real presence on the Altar of
Jesus Christ, the living and eternal Word of the Father. In the spirit of this
great "Amen", all of us gathered here in Giants Stadium praise Jesus Christ for
the newness of life (cf. Rom 6:4) which he gives us in the Holy Spirit! Praised
be our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ!
3. The Gospel shows us Jesus sending his disciples to proclaim the Good News
of the Kingdom of God (cf. Lk 10:1). He tells them openly that some people will
ignore or reject their message. But such human resistance will not prevent the
coming of the Kingdom (cf. Lk 10:10-11). The Kingdom is always present because
the Father himself has brought it into the world through the Passion, Death and
Resurrection of his Son Jesus Christ. From the day of Pentecost, the Holy Spirit
never ceases to communicate the power of Christ's Kingship, and to invite men
and women to find salvation in the One who is "the Way, and the Truth, and the
Life" (cf. Jn 14:6).
In order to bring us this salvation, Jesus established the Church to be "a
kind of sacrament - a sign and instrument - of intimate union with God and of
the unity of all mankind" (Lumen Gentium, 1). Among the many magnificent images
which the Bible uses to describe the Church, one of the most beautiful is that
of the house in which God dwells with his people (cf. Eph 2:19-22; 1 Tim 3:15).
The Lord wants his Church to "make a home" in the midst of every people,
grafting the gifts of salvation on to the history and culture of each nation. In
today's Gospel, Jesus sends his disciples into people's houses, to bring them
his peace (cf. Lk 10:5). In every place where people make their homes and live
their lives, a disciple of Jesus must arrive to say: "The Kingdom of God is at
hand" (cf. Lk 10:9).
4. Tonight we give thanks to God for the way in which the Church has "made a
home" in America. From the beginning, in this new land the Church grew out of
the faith of peoples from many cultural and ethnic backgrounds, embracing the
indigenous people and settlers alike. Everywhere we see the results of the
labors of countless priests, Religious sisters and brothers, Christian families
and individual lay men and women who made the Church present in American society
through a great network of parishes, schools, hospitals and charitable
institutions. This proud heritage should serve as an inspiration and an
incentive for you as you seek to meet the challenges of our own times.
The Church must continue to build God's spiritual house in America! Here in
the Church in Newark, last year's Archdiocesan Synod put the whole Catholic
community in a state of mission. In particular, the Synod appealed to the laity
to work for God's Kingdom by their efforts to shape society in accordance with
God's designs. No aspect of life - whether in the family, in the workplace, in
schools, in economic, political or social activities - can be withdrawn from
God's dominion (cf. Lumen Gentium, 36). As we prepare to celebrate the two
thousandth anniversary of Christ's Birth, your Synod, like the whole Church,
recognized the need for a new evangelization, a new and vital proclamation of
the Gospel aimed at integrating your faith ever more fully into the fabric of
your daily lives. In the words of the Second Vatican Council, wherever there is
little concern for seeking what is true and good, and wherever conscience is
blinded by being accustomed to sin (cf. Gaudium et Spes, 15), there the Church
must make a supreme effort to teach the objective truths of the moral order,
form consciences, call people to conversion and make present the inexhaustible
riches of God's mercy in the Sacraments, and especially in the Sacrament of
penance.
5. The Christian life is a dynamic reality: the seed of faith sown in our
hearts through Baptism must ripen and mature into a rich harvest of union with
God and good works in the service of others. Jesus uses the image of the harvest
to describe the Church's role in the world. From generation to generation, in
every time and place, the seed sown by God in human history through the Death
and Resurrection of Christ continues to mature and awaits the harvest.
Jesus reminds us that more workers for the harvest are urgently needed, and
he commands us to pray for them: "The harvest is rich but the workers are few;
therefore ask the harvest-master to send workers to his harvest" (Lk 10:2). The
question of vocations is vital to the Church. Everyone has a vocation: parents,
teachers, students, workers, professional people, people who are retired.
Everyone has something to do for God. We must pray that young people especially
will listen to the Lord's call to serve as priests, as Religious sisters and
brothers, as missionaries at home and in other lands. Young people of Newark and
New Jersey, young Americans, the Lord needs you! The Church needs you!
6. Compared to many other parts of the world, the United States is a
privileged land. Yet, even here there is much poverty and human suffering. There
is much need for love and the works of love; there is need for social
solidarity. Early Americans were proud of their strong sense of individual
responsibility, but that did not lead them to build a radically
"individualistic" society. They built a community-based society, with a great
openness and sensitivity to the needs of their neighbors.
Quite close to the shores of New Jersey there rises a universally known
landmark which stands as an enduring witness to the American tradition of
welcoming the stranger, and which tells us something important about the kind of
nation America has aspired to be. It is the Statue of Liberty, with its
celebrated poem: "Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to
breathe free ... Send these, the homeless, tempest-tossed to me". Is present-day
America becoming less sensitive, less caring towards the poor, the weak, the
stranger, the needy? It must not! Today, as before, the United States is called
to be a hospitable society, a welcoming culture. If America were to turn in on
itself, would this not be the beginning of the end of what constitutes the very
essence of the "American experience"?
To a great extent, the story of America has been the story of long and
difficult struggles to overcome the prejudices which excluded certain categories
of people from a full share in the country's life: first, the struggle against
religious intolerance, then the struggle against racial discrimination and in
favor of civil rights for everyone. Sadly, today a new class of people is being
excluded. When the unborn child - the "stranger in the womb" - is declared to be
beyond the protection of society, not only are America's deepest traditions
radically undermined and endangered, but a moral blight is brought upon society.
I am also thinking of threats to the elderly, the severely handicapped and all
those who do not seem to have any social usefulness. When innocent human beings
are declared inconvenient or burdensome, and thus unworthy of legal and social
protection, grievous damage is done to the moral foundations of the democratic
community. The right to life is the first of all rights. It is the foundation of
democratic liberties and the keystone of the edifice of civil society. Both as
Americans and as followers of Christ, American Catholics must be committed to
the defense of life in all its stages and in every condition.
7. Dear Sisters and Brothers: Christ pointed the Church and the whole human
family toward the future when he rolled away the stone from the entrance to the
tomb and unveiled the mystery of new life. In his Resurrection, the Lord
revealed the new creation, the promise of new heavens and a new earth (cf. 2 Pt
3:13). As Christians, we live by faith and in hope. We wait for the return of
the Lord as the judge of the living and the dead. We await his return in glory,
the coming of God's Kingdom in its fullness. That is the constant invitation of
the psalms: "Wait for the Lord with courage; be stouthearted, and wait for the
Lord" (Ps 27:14).
Our confidence in the future which God has opened before us enables us to see
this earthly life in its proper light. In the perspective of God's Kingdom we
discern the true value of all the accomplishments of human civilization and
culture, of all our achievements our struggles and our sufferings. As Americans,
you are rightly proud of your country's great achievements. As Christians, you
know that all things human are the soil in which the Kingdom of God is meant to
take root and mature! To the Church in the United States, to you, the Church in
Newark, I make this appeal: Do not make an idol of any temporal reality! "Know
that the Kingdom of God is at hand" (cf. Lk 10:11). "Wait for the Lord with
courage; be stouthearted" (Ps 27:14). Hope in the Lord! Amen.