Dear brothers and sisters!
1. “Lord, you have searched me and you know me . . . You know all my ways” (Ps 139 [138]:1–2).
This is how we pray together with the psalmist in today's liturgy. His words express what unites us here deeply, invisibly, it is true, but truly and essentially: we are gathered here in our common faith in God who is present, in God who searches and knows us. God has always known everything about us, he knows each one of us, we are all inscribed in his loving heart, his Providence embraces the whole of creation. "For in him we live and move and have our being" (Acts 17:28): this is how the Apostle Paul explains to the Athenians, who questioned him in the Areopagus, God's closeness to us human beings.
We are gathered here before him – before the invisible God. In his eternal word, the incarnate Son, he has called us by name, so that we may have life through him and have it in abundance (Jn 10:10).
This is why we celebrate the Eucharist. We come to receive from the Father in Jesus Christ everything that can serve our salvation. And we bring everything: our joy, our gratitude, our prayers, ourselves, to give ourselves entirely to the Father in Christ: in him, who is the firstborn of all creation (cf. Col 1:15). In and through Christ, we want to pray to our creator and Father together with the psalmist: "I praise you, for you have made me as a wonder; your works are marvellous" (Ps 139 [138]:14).
3. "Lord, you search me and you know me." The Church repeats these words of the psalmist in today's festive liturgy, on the anniversary of the birth of John the Baptist, son of Zechariah and Elizabeth. "From his mother's womb" God called him to preach "the baptism of conversion" in the Jordan and to prepare for the coming of his Son (cf. Mk 1:4).
The particular circumstances of John's birth have been handed down to us by the evangelist Luke. According to an ancient tradition, it took place at Ain Karim, outside the gates of Jerusalem. The circumstances surrounding this birth were so unusual that even at that time people wondered, "What will this child be?" (Lk 1:66). For his believing parents, neighbours and relatives, it was clear that his birth was a sign from God. They saw clearly that the "hand of the Lord" was upon him. This was already evident in the announcement of his birth to his father Zechariah while he was serving as a priest in the temple in Jerusalem. His mother, Elizabeth, was advanced in years and was considered barren. Even the name "John" that was given to him was unusual for his environment. His father himself had to give orders that he be called "John" and not, as everyone else wanted, "Zachariah" (cf. Lk 1:59-63).
The name John means "God is merciful" in Hebrew. Thus, the name itself expresses the fact that the newborn would one day announce God's plan of salvation.
The future would fully confirm the predictions and events surrounding his birth: John, son of Zachariah and Elizabeth, became the "voice of one crying in the wilderness" (Matthew 3:3), who on the banks of the Jordan called the people to repentance and prepared the way for Christ.
Christ himself said of John the Baptist that "among those born of women there has arisen no one greater" (cf. Mt 11:11). For this reason, the Church has also reserved a special veneration for this great messenger of God from the very beginning. Today's feast is an expression of this veneration.
4. Dear brothers and sisters! This celebration, with its liturgical texts, invites us to reflect on the question of the becoming of man, his origins and his destiny. It is true that we seem to know a great deal about this subject, both from the long experience of humanity and from increasingly in-depth biomedical research. But it is the word of God that always re-establishes the essential dimension of the truth about man: man is created by God and wanted by God in his image and likeness. No purely human science can prove this truth. At most, it can approach this truth or intuitively suppose the truth about this 'unknown being' that is man from the moment of his conception in his mother's womb.
At the same time, however, we find ourselves witnessing how, in the name of a supposed science, man is "reduced" in a dramatic process and represented in a sad simplification; and so it happens that even those rights that are based on the dignity of his person, which distinguishes him from all other creatures in the visible world, are overshadowed. Those words in the book of Genesis, which speak of man as a creature made in the image and likeness of God, highlight, in a concise and at the same time profound way, the full truth about him.
5. We can also learn this truth about man from today's liturgy, in which the Church prays to God, the creator, with the words of the psalmist:
"Lord, you have searched me and you know me . . .
You created my inmost being
and knit me together in my mother's womb . . .
You know me through and through.
When I was being formed in secret . . .
my bones were not hidden from you . . .
I praise you, for I am fearfully and wonderfully made" (Ps 139 [138], 1, 13-15).
Man is therefore aware of what he is - of what he has been from the beginning, from his mother's womb. He knows that he is a creature whom God wants to meet and with whom he wants to dialogue. Moreover, in man he wants to meet the whole of creation.
For God, man is “someone”: unique and unrepeatable. He, as the Second Vatican Council says, “is the only creature on earth that God willed for its own sake” (cf. Gaudium et Spes, 24).
"The Lord called me from my mother's womb; from my mother's womb he named me" (Is 49:1); like the name of the child born in Ain-Karim: "John". Man is that being whom God calls by name. For God, he is the created “you.” Among all creatures, he is that personal “I” who can turn to God and call him by name. God wants man to be that partner who turns to him as his creator and Father: “You, my Lord and my God.” To the divine “you.”
6. Dear brothers and sisters! How do we human beings respond to this call from God? How does man today understand his life? In no other age have so many efforts been made through technology and medicine to protect human life against disease, to prolong it ever more and to save it from death. At the same time, however, no other era has produced so many places and methods of contempt and destruction of man as our own. The bitter experiences of our century with the death machines of two world wars, the persecution and destruction of entire groups of people because of their ethnic or religious affiliation, the arms race to the extreme limit, and the powerlessness of men in the face of great misery in many parts of the world could lead us to doubt, if not deny, God's affection and love for man and for the whole of creation.
Or should we rather ask ourselves the opposite question, when we consider the terrible events that have befallen the world because of human beings and in the face of the many threats of our time: is it not human beings who have distanced themselves from God, who is their origin, have they not strayed from him, and have they not elevated themselves to the centre and measure of their own lives? Do you not think that in the experiments conducted on human beings, experiments that contradict their dignity, in the mental attitude of many towards abortion and euthanasia, there is a worrying loss of respect for life? Is it not evident, even in your society, when you look at the lives of many - characterised by inner emptiness, fear and escape - that man himself has cut off his roots? Shouldn't sex, alcohol and drugs be seen as warning signs? Don't they indicate the great loneliness of modern man, a desire for care, a hunger for love that a world turned in on itself cannot satisfy?
In fact, when man is no longer connected to his roots, which is God, he becomes impoverished of inner values and gradually falls prey to various threats. History teaches us that men and peoples who believe they can exist without God are inevitably destined for the catastrophe of self-destruction. The poet Ernst Wiechert expressed this in the following sentence: "Be assured that no one will fall out of this world who has not first fallen out of God."
On the contrary, through a living relationship with God, man acquires an awareness of the uniqueness and value of his own life and personal conscience. In his concrete life, he knows that he is called, supported and encouraged by God. Despite injustices and personal suffering, he understands that his life is a gift; he is grateful for it and knows that he is responsible for it before God. In this way, God becomes a source of strength and trust for man, and from this source man can make his life worthy and also know how to put it generously at the service of his brothers and sisters.
7. God called John the Baptist already “in his mother’s womb” to be “the voice of one crying in the wilderness” and thus to prepare the way for his Son. In a very similar way, God has also “laid his hand” on each one of us. He has a special calling for each of us, and he entrusts each of us with a task that he has designed for us.
In each call, which can come to us in many different ways, we hear that divine voice which spoke through John: "Prepare the way of the Lord!" (Mt 3:3).
Every person should ask themselves how they can contribute, in their own work and in their own position, to opening the way for God in this world. Every time we open ourselves to God's call, we prepare, like John, the way of the Lord among people. Among all those men and women who throughout history have opened themselves in an exemplary way to God's work, I would like to mention St Martin. Even though centuries separate us from him, he is close to us in following Christ through his example and his ageless greatness. He is your diocesan and regional patron saint. He is venerated as the great saint of the entire region of Pannonia: 'Martinus natus Savariae in Pannonia'.
Martin stands before us as a man who trusted God, who understood and practised his 'yes to faith' as a 'yes to life'. He fulfilled what he felt called to do to the very end. Even before he became a Christian, he shared his cloak with the poor. Military life certainly gave him satisfaction, but it was not enough for him. Like every man, he was searching for lasting joy, a joy that nothing could destroy. Only in his later years did he encounter Jesus Christ in faith, and in him he found the fullness of joy and happiness. Through faith, Martin did not become poorer, but richer: he grew in his humanity, he grew in grace before God and men.
8. In order that this truth – that man finds his fulfilment and his true salvation only in God – may always be proclaimed, priests and religious are necessary. Therefore, be aware of your shared responsibility in awakening spiritual vocations. I was delighted to learn that in a few days six priests will be ordained in your diocese. This is a great gift for the Church and for your country. Never cease to pray that the Lord will send labourers into his harvest!
I address myself in a special way to young people, who are the future of your country and of the Church. Try to understand, dear young friends, what God wants from you. Be open to his call! Listen carefully, for he may be inviting you to follow Christ as priests or religious here in your homeland or in mission lands.
I pray to all of you: whatever path you decide to take, let the seed of God's Word fall into the furrows of your heart; once there, do not let it dry up, but nurture it so that it may sprout and bear rich fruit.
Say “yes to faith”, say “yes to life”, because God lives it together with you! Together with him, your life will become an adventure: it will be beautiful, rich and full!
10. “Prepare the way of the Lord . . . that he may bring my salvation to the ends of the earth” (cf. Is 49:6). When we, dear brothers and sisters, look at our vocation as Christians, who through Baptism have become one body with Christ, then these words of the Lord, spoken through the prophet Isaiah – from the advent of salvation history before the first coming of Christ – take on a special meaning for us at the end of the second millennium since the birth of Christ. We find ourselves, especially here in the old continent, in a “new advent” of universal history. Must we not ensure that the “salvation” given to us by Christ reaches once again the furthest frontiers of Europe?
We all feel a great need for renewal, for a new encounter with God. Renewal, conversion and encounter with God, at the sources of faith, meditation on integral faith: this is the appeal that today's feast of the birth of John the Baptist makes to us, and this is the spur that the example of St Martin also gives us.
We all know the need for renewal in our society, for the re-evangelisation of our continent: so that Europeans do not lose their sense of fundamental dignity; so that they do not become victims of the destructive forces of spiritual death, but rather have life, and have it in abundance (cf. Jn 10:10)!
Praised be Jesus and Mary!
[Pope John Paul II, homily at Eisenstadt-Trausdorf Airport, 24 June 1988]