Dear Young People!
I have
vivid memories of the wonderful moments we shared in Rome during
the Jubilee of the Year 2000, when you came on pilgrimage to the
Tombs of the Apostles Peter and Paul. In long silent lines you
passed through the Holy Door and prepared to receive the Sacrament
of Reconciliation; then the Evening Vigil and Morning Mass at
Tor Vergata were moments of intense spirituality and a deep experience
of the Church; with renewed faith, you went home to undertake
the mission I entrusted to you: to become, at the dawn of the
new millennium, fearless witnesses to the Gospel.
By now World Youth Day has become an important part of your life
and of the life of the Church. I invite you therefore to get ready
for the seventeenth celebration of this great international event,
to be held in Toronto, Canada, in the summer of next year. It
will be another chance to meet Christ, to bear witness to his
presence in today's society, and to become builders of the "civilization
of love and truth".
"You are the salt of the earth... You are the light of the
world" (Mt 5:13-14): this is the theme I have chosen for
the next World Youth Day. The images of salt and light used by
Jesus are rich in meaning and complement each other. In ancient
times, salt and light were seen as essential elements of life.
"You are the salt of the earth..." One of the main functions
of salt is to season food, to give it taste and flavour. This
image reminds us that, through Baptism, our whole being has been
profoundly changed, because it has been "seasoned" with
the new life which comes from Christ (cf. Rom 6:4). The salt which
keeps our Christian identity intact even in a very secularized
world is the grace of Baptism. Through Baptism we are re-born.
We begin to live in Christ and become capable of responding to
his call to "offer [our] bodies as a living sacrifice, holy
and acceptable to God" (Rom 12:1). Writing to the Christians
of Rome, Saint Paul urges them to show clearly that their way
of living and thinking was different from that of their contemporaries:
"Do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by
the renewal of your mind, that you may discern what is the will
of God, what is good and pleasing and perfect" (Rom 12:2).
For a long time, salt was also used to preserve food. As the
salt of the earth, you are called to preserve the faith which
you have received and to pass it on intact to others. Your generation
is being challenged in a special way to keep safe the deposit
of faith (cf. 2 Th 2:15; 1 Tim 6:20; 2 Tim 1:14).
Discover your Christian roots, learn about the Church's history,
deepen your knowledge of the spiritual heritage which has been
passed on to you, follow in the footsteps of the witnesses and
teachers who have gone before you! Only by staying faithful to
God's commandments, to the Covenant which Christ sealed with his
blood poured out on the Cross, will you be the apostles and witnesses
of the new millennium.
It is the nature of human beings, and especially youth, to seek
the Absolute, the meaning and fullness of life. Dear young people,
do not be content with anything less than the highest ideals!
Do not let yourselves be dispirited by those who are disillusioned
with life and have grown deaf to the deepest and most authentic
desires of their heart. You are right to be disappointed with
hollow entertainment and passing fads, and with aiming at too
little in life. If you have an ardent desire for the Lord you
will steer clear of the mediocrity and conformism so widespread
in our society.
"You are the light of the world...". For those who first
heard Jesus, as for us, the symbol of light evokes the desire
for truth and the thirst for the fullness of knowledge which are
imprinted deep within every human being.
When the light fades or vanishes altogether, we no longer see
things as they really are. In the heart of the night we can feel
frightened and insecure, and we impatiently await the coming of
the light of dawn. Dear young people, it is up to you to be the
watchmen of the morning (cf. Is 21:11-12) who announce the coming
of the sun who is the Risen Christ!
The light which Jesus speaks of in the Gospel is the light of
faith, God's free gift, which enlightens the heart and clarifies
the mind. "It is the God who said, 'Let light shine out of
darkness', who has shone in our hearts to give the light of the
knowledge of the glory of God on the face of Christ" (2 Cor
4:6). That is why the words of Jesus explaining his identity and
his mission are so important: "I am the light of the world;
whoever follows me will not walk in darkness, but will have the
light of life" (Jn 8:12).
Our personal encounter with Christ bathes life in new light,
sets us on the right path, and sends us out to be his witnesses.
This new way of looking at the world and at people, which comes
to us from him, leads us more deeply into the mystery of faith,
which is not just a collection of theoretical assertions to be
accepted and approved by the mind, but an experience to be had,
a truth to be lived, the salt and light of all reality (cf. Veritatis
Splendor, 88).
In this secularized age, when many of our contemporaries think
and act as if God did not exist or are attracted to irrational
forms of religion, it is you, dear young people, who must show
that faith is a personal decision which involves your whole life.
Let the Gospel be the measure and guide of life's decisions and
plans! Then you will be missionaries in all that you do and say,
and wherever you work and live you will be signs of God's love,
credible witnesses to the loving presence of Jesus Christ. Never
forget: "No one lights a lamp and then puts it under a bushel"
(Mt 5:15)!
Just as salt gives flavour to food and light illumines the darkness,
so too holiness gives full meaning to life and makes it reflect
God's glory. How many saints, especially young saints, can we
count in the Church's history! In their love for God their heroic
virtues shone before the world, and so they became models of life
which the Church has held up for imitation by all. Let us remember
only a few of them: Agnes of Rome, Andrew of Phú Yen, Pedro Calungsod,
Josephine Bakhita, Thérese of Lisieux, Pier Giorgio Frassati,
Marcel Callo, Francisco Castelló Aleu or again Kateri Tekakwitha,
the young Iroquois called "the Lily of the Mohawks".
Through the intercession of this great host of witnesses, may
God make you too, dear young people, the saints of the third millennium!
Dear friends, it is time to get ready for the Seventeenth World
Youth Day. I invite you to read and study the Apostolic Letter
Novo Millennio Ineunte, which I wrote at the beginning of the
year to accompany all Christians on this new stage of the life
of the Church and humanity: "A new century, a new millennium
are opening in the light of Christ. But not everyone can see this
light. Ours is the wonderful and demanding task of becoming its
reflection" (No. 54).
Yes, now is the time for mission! In your Dioceses and parishes,
in your movements, associations and communities, Christ is calling
you. The Church welcomes you and wishes to be your home and your
school of communion and prayer. Study the Word of God and let
it enlighten your minds and hearts. Draw strength from the sacramental
grace of Reconciliation and the Eucharist. Visit the Lord in that
"heart to heart" contact that is Eucharistic Adoration.
Day after day, you will receive new energy to help you to bring
comfort to the suffering and peace to the world. Many people are
wounded by life: they are excluded from economic progress, and
are without a home, a family, a job; there are people who are
lost in a world of false illusions, or have abandoned all hope.
By contemplating the light radiant on the face of the Risen Christ,
you will learn to live as "children of the light and children
of the day" (1 Th 5:5), and in this way you will show that
"the fruit of light is found in all that is good and right
and true" (Eph 5:9).
Dear young friends, Toronto is waiting for all of you who can
make it! In the heart of a multi-cultural and multi-faith city,
we shall speak of Christ as the one Saviour and proclaim the universal
salvation of which the Church is the sacrament. In response to
the pressing invitation of the Lord who ardently desires "that
all may be one" (Jn 17:11), we shall pray for full communion
among Christians in truth and charity.
Come, and make the great avenues of Toronto resound with the joyful
tidings that Christ loves every person and brings to fulfilment
every trace of goodness, beauty and truth found in the city of
man. Come, and tell the world of the happiness you have found
in meeting Jesus Christ, of your desire to know him better, of
how you are committed to proclaiming the Gospel of salvation to
the ends of the earth!
The young people of Canada, together with their Bishops and the
civil authorities, are already preparing to welcome you with great
warmth and hospitality. For this I thank them all from my heart.
May this first World Youth Day of the new millennium bring to
everyone a message of faith, hope and love!
My blessing goes with you. And to Mary Mother of the Church I
entrust each one of you, your vocation and your mission.
From Castel Gandolfo, 25 July 2001
IOANNES PAULUS II
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