1. "Bless you, O Father, Lord of heaven and earth, for you have kept these things hidden from the wise and the learned and revealed them to babes" (Mt 11:25).
We come here, dear brothers, to repeat with Christ the Lord these words, to "bless the Father".
- We come to bless him because of what he revealed, eight centuries ago, to a "Little One", to the Poverello of Assisi;
- the things in heaven and on earth, which the philosophers "had not even dreamed of";
- the things hidden from those who are only humanly "wise", and only humanly "intelligent";
- these "things" the Father, the Lord of heaven and earth, has revealed to Francis and through Francis.
Through Francis of Pietro di Bernardone, that is, the son of a rich merchant of Assisi, who abandoned all the inheritance of his earthly father and married "Lady Poverty", the inheritance of the heavenly Father offered to him in Christ crucified and risen.
The primary purpose of our pilgrimage to Assisi this year is to give glory to God.
In a spirit of veneration, let us also celebrate the Eucharist together, all of us, Pastors of the Church in Italy with the Bishop of Rome, successor of Peter.
2. "Yes, O Father, for it pleased thee" (Mt 11:26).
After eight centuries, relics and memories remain. The whole of Assisi is a living relic and a testimony of man. Of man alone? Of the unusual man alone?
- It is the testimony of a particular delight that the Heavenly Father, through his Only-Begotten Son, had in this man, in this "little one", in the "Poverello", in Francis who - like very few throughout the history of the Church and of humanity - learned from Christ to be meek and humble of heart.
Yes, Father, such was your contentment. So many men come here to follow in the footsteps of your complacency. Today we come, Bishops of Italy.
We have come to close and, at the same time, crown in this Jubilee Year of St Francis of Assisi the work carried out during the entire year of the visit "ad limina Apostolorum" to which the tradition and the law of the Church have invited our episcopate at this time.
3. We find ourselves in the presence of the Saint, who at the same time is the patron saint of Italy, hence the one who, among the many canonised and beatified sons and daughters of this land, unites Italy with the Church in a special way. In fact, the Church's task is to proclaim and realise in every nation that vocation to holiness that we have from the Father in the Holy Spirit through the work of Christ crucified and risen; of this Christ, whose wounds St Francis of Assisi bore in his body: 'For I bear the stigmata of Jesus in my body' (Gal 6:17).
So we stand in his presence and meditate on the words of the Gospel, sentence after sentence:
"Everything has been given to me by my Father; no one knows the Son except the Father, and no one knows the Father except the Son and he to whom the Son wishes to reveal him" (Mt 11:27).
Here, we find ourselves before a man, to whom the Son of God wished to reveal, in a particular measure and with particular abundance, what has been given to him by the Father for all men, for all times. Certainly, Francis was sent with the Gospel of Christ especially in his own time, in the transition from the 12th to the 13th century, in the midst of the Italian Middle Ages, which was a splendid and at the same time difficult period: but every age has retained something of it. However, the Franciscan mission did not end then; it continues to this day.
And here we, Bishops and Pastors of the Church, to whom are entrusted the Gospel and the Church of our times - how apparently splendid, how far removed from the Middle Ages according to the measure of earthly progress! and at the same time how, how difficult! - we Bishops and Pastors of the Church in this same Italy, pray above all for one thing. Let us pray that the same words of our Master, which were fulfilled on Saint Francis, be fulfilled upon us; that we be the sure depositories of the Revelation of the Son! That we be the faithful stewards of what the Father Himself handed down to the Only-Begotten Son, born of the Virgin Mary by the power of the Holy Spirit. That we are stewards of this truth and this love, of this word and this salvation, which all mankind and every man and every nation have in him and from him; for "no one knows the Son except the Father, and no one knows the Father except the Son and he to whom the Son wills to reveal him" (Matthew 11: 27).
Such is the pastoral and apostolic purpose of our pilgrimage today.
4. And behold, Francis seems to address us and speak to us with the accents of Paul the Apostle: "The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with your spirit, brothers" (Gal 6:18)!
Thank you, holy Poverello, for these good wishes with which you are receiving us!Looking with the eyes of the spirit
your figure
and meditating on the words of the letter to the Galatians
with which today's liturgy speaks to us,
we wish to learn from you
this 'belonging to Jesus
of which your whole life constitutes
such a perfect example and model.
"As for me...
let there be no other boast than in the cross
of our Lord Jesus Christ,
through whom the world for me
was crucified as I for the world" (Gal 6:14).
Let us hear Paul's words,
which are also, Francis,
your words.
Your spirit is expressed in them.
Jesus Christ has allowed you,
just as he once
had allowed that Apostle
who became a "chosen instrument" (Acts 9:15),
to "boast", solely and exclusively,
in the Cross of our Redemption.
In this way you have arrived at the very heart
of the knowledge of the truth about God
about the world and man;
truth that can only be seen
only with the eyes of love.
Now that we stand before you
as successors of the Apostles
sent to the men of our time
with the same Gospel of the Cross of Christ,
we ask: teach us, just as the Apostle Paul
taught you
to have "no other boast than
in the Cross of our Lord Jesus Christ".
May each one of us,
with all the insight of the gift of fear,
of wisdom and fortitude
know how to penetrate the truth
of these words about the Cross
in which the "new creature" begins,
about the Cross that constantly brings
to humanity "peace and mercy".
Through the Cross, God has expressed himself to the end in human history; God who is "rich in mercy" (Eph 2:4). In the Cross, the glory of Love willing to do everything is revealed. Only with the Cross in his hand - like an open book - can man learn to the full about himself and his dignity.
He must finally, fixing his eyes on the Cross, ask himself: 'who am I', man, in the eyes of God, if he pays such a price for me and my love!
"The Cross on Calvary," I wrote in the encyclical "Redemptor Hominis", "by which Jesus Christ - man, son of the Virgin Mary, putative son of Joseph of Nazareth - 'leaves' this world, is at the same time a new manifestation of the eternal fatherhood of God, who in him draws near once again to humanity, to every man, giving him the thrice holy 'Spirit of Truth' (cf. Jn 16:13)... His is love that does not recoil from anything that in Himself demands justice.
And for this reason the Son
"who had known no sin,
God treated him as sin for our sake" (2 Cor 5:21; cf. Gal 3:13).
If he "dealt from sin"
He who was absolutely
without any sin,
he did so to reveal the love
which is always greater
than all creation,
the love that is himself,
for 'God is love' (1 Jn 4:8, 16)" (John Paul II, Redemptor Hominis, 9).
This is exactly how you looked at things
you, Francis.
They called you the "Poor Man of Assisi",
and you were and remained
one of the men who gave
most generously to others.
You had therefore an enormous wealth,
a great treasure.
And the secret of your wealth
was hidden in the Cross of Christ.
Teach us,
Bishops and Pastors of the 20th century
which is drawing to an end,
to boast similarly in the Cross,
teach us this wealth in poverty
and this giving in abundance.
5. The first reading from the book of Sirach recalls the words about the high priest Simon, son of Onias, who "in his life repaired the temple and in his days strengthened the sanctuary" (Sir 50:1).
The liturgy refers these words to Francis of Assisi. He remained in tradition, literature and art as the one who 'repaired the temple... and fortified the sanctuary'. As the one who "caring to prevent the fall of his people, fortified the city against a siege (Sir 50:4).
The reading goes on to speak of Simon, son of Onias, and we relate these words to Francis, son of Peter of Bernardone. We also apply these comparisons to him:
"Like a morning star among the clouds, / like the moon in the days when it is full, / like the sun blazing over the temple of the Most High, / like the shining rainbow among clouds of glory" (Sir 50, 6-7).
6. We gladly borrow these words from the book of Sirach to venerate, after eight hundred years, Francis of Assisi, the patron saint of Italy.
That is why we have all come here, Bishops and Pastors of the Church that is in all of Italy together with the Bishop of Rome, the successor of Peter.
However, the purpose of our pilgrimage is particularly apostolic and pastoral.
When we hear Christ's words about the yoke that is sweet and the burden that is light, (cf. Mt 11:30) we think of our mission as Bishops and pastoral service.
And let us repeat with confidence and joy the words of the Responsorial Psalm: "I said to God: 'You are my Lord, /Without you I have no good. / The Lord is my inheritance and my cup: / in your hands is my life. / I bless the Lord who has given me counsel.... / I always place before me the Lord, / he stands at my right hand, I cannot waver" (Ps 15 [16]).
With joy we have accepted the invitation to come here to Assisi, heard in a certain way in the words of our Lord and Master: "Come to me, all you who labour and are overburdened, and I will give you rest" (Mt 11:28). Let us hope that they will be fulfilled on us all, as well as the further words: "Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, who am meek and humble of heart, and you will find rest for your souls" (Mt 11:29).
So we wish, Christ! Thus we desire! With such a thought we have come to Assisi today. We thank you for the holy "burden" of priesthood and episcopacy. We thank you for Saint Francis, who did not feel worthy to accept priestly ordination. Yet to him you entrusted, in such an exceptional way, your Church.
7. And behold, as we look towards Francis, who "poor and humble, enters richly into heaven, honoured with heavenly hymns" (Cant. ad Evang.), we would still like to apply to him the words of the book of Sirach, which summarise his famous vision so well: "Francis, take care to prevent the fall of your people"!
Francis! As in your life, so also now, repair the temple! Fortify the sanctuary!
For this we pray, we Pastors of the Church, who at the school of the Second Vatican Council have learned anew to surround the Church, Italy and the contemporary world with a common solicitude.
And with our beloved people we repeat:
"The Lord is my inheritance and my cup: / in your hands is my life; / I bless the Lord who has given me counsel;... / I always place before me the Lord'.
Yes, brothers and sisters, always! And so be it.
[Pope John Paul II, homily Assisi 12 March 1982]