ZE08102908 - 2008-10-29
Permalink: http://www.zenit.org/article-24105?l=english


Nothing Wiser Than Love, Says Pope


Explains Why Paul Put Cross at Center of Preaching

VATICAN CITY, OCT. 29, 2008 
(<http://www.zenit.org>Zenit.org).- St. Paul put 
the cross at the center of his preaching because 
he understood that true wisdom is the wisdom of love, says Benedict XVI.

The Pope affirmed this today during the general 
audience in St. Peter's Square, which he 
dedicated to another reflection on the life and teaching of St. Paul.

"In Paul's encounter with Jesus," the Holy Father 
said, "he had understood the central significance 
of the cross: He had understood that Jesus had 
died and risen for all and also for [Paul], 
himself. Both elements were important -- the 
universality: Jesus had truly died for everyone; 
and the subjectivity: He had died also for me."

The Pontiff said that the cross thus reveals the 
"gratuitous and merciful love of God."

He added, "For St. Paul, the cross has a 
fundamental priority in the history of humanity; 
it represents the principal point of his 
theology, because to say cross means to say 
salvation as grace given to every creature. The 
theme of the cross of Christ becomes an essential 
and primary element in the preaching of the Apostle."

Benedict XVI said that Paul wanted to remind all 
of us, not just the Christians of Corinth and 
Galatia, that "the Risen One is always the One who has been crucified."

"The 'scandal' and the 'foolishness' of the cross 
are precisely in the fact that there, where there 
seems to be only failure, sorrow and defeat, 
precisely there, is all the power of the 
limitless love of God, because the cross is the 
expression of love and love is the true power 
that is revealed precisely in this apparent weakness," he added.

Rejecting foolishness

Nevertheless, both today and in Paul's time, 
there are those who cannot accept the 
"foolishness" of the cross, the Pope noted.

"For the Jews, the cross contradicts the very 
essence of God, who has manifested himself with 
prodigious signs. Therefore, to accept the cross 
of Christ means to undergo a profound conversion 
in the way of relating with God," he said. "[F]or 
the Greeks, that is, the pagans, the criteria for 
judgment in opposing the cross is reason. […] For 
those who, like the Greeks, sought perfection in 
the spirit, in pure thought, it was already 
unacceptable that God became man, submerging 
himself in all the limits of space and time.

"Therefore it was decidedly inconceivable to 
believe that a God could end up on the cross! And 
we see how this Greek logic is also the common logic of our time."

Why then, the Holy Father asked, did Paul make of 
the cross the "fundamental point of his preaching?"

"The answer is not difficult," he said. "The 
cross reveals 'the power of God' which is 
different than human power. It reveals in fact 
his love: 'For the foolishness of God is wiser 
than human wisdom, and the weakness of God is stronger than human strength.'

"Centuries after Paul, we see that the cross, and 
not the wisdom that opposes the cross, has 
triumphed. The Crucified is wisdom, because he 
manifests in truth who God is, that is, the power 
of love that goes to the point of the cross to 
save man. […] The Crucified reveals, on one hand, 
the weakness of man, and on the other, the true 
power of God, that is, the gratuitousness of 
love: Precisely this gratuitousness of love is true wisdom."

Reconciliation

The Pontiff said an "admirable synthesis" of this 
theology of the cross can be found in the Second Letter to the Corinthians.

There, there are two "fundamental affirmations," 
he noted. "On one hand, Christ, whom God has 
treated as sin on our behalf, has died for us; on 
the other hand, God has reconciled us with 
himself, not attributing to us our sins. By this 
'ministry of reconciliation' all slavery has been purchased."

It is here, the Holy Father said, that we can see 
"how all of this is relevant for our lives."

He explained: "We also should enter into this 
'ministry of reconciliation,' which always 
implies renouncing one's own superiority and choosing the foolishness of love.

"St. Paul has renounced his own life, giving 
himself totally for the ministry of 
reconciliation, of the cross that is salvation 
for all of us. And this is what we should also 
know how to do: We can find our strength 
precisely in the humility of love and our wisdom 
in the weakness of renunciation to thus enter into the strength of God.

"We should build our lives on this true wisdom: 
To not live for ourselves, but to live in the 
faith in this God, about whom all of us can say: 
'He loved me and gave himself up for me.'"



<*}}}>< 
<http://www.fathercorapi.com/election.aspx>An 
Important Message from Fr. Corapi <*}}}><
<*}}}><<http://www.halfthekingdom.org/>Half the Kingdom!<*}}}><

Prayer for Unborn Life:
O GOD OF LIFE AND LOVE, You have given us the 
gift to participate with You to bring new life 
into the world.  But, all too often, the mother's 
womb, which should be a nursery of life, becomes 
instead a place of it's destruction.

Help us to remove this evil and ensure respect 
for all life made in Your image and likeness, 
called to fulfill its promise on this earth,
and destined to find a home with you for all eternity.

We ask this through Jesus Christ, Our Lord, Our God, Our Savior, and Our ALL.
Amen.

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