26 November 2024
Pope Benedict XVI | The Year of Prayer
By Joey Belleza, PhD (Cantab.)
In a ten-part series of Wednesday catecheses beginning 4 May 2011, Pope Benedict XVI—with his characteristic intellectual depth and historical rigour—explained how prayer is common to every civilization; and then, passing through the entire span of salvation history, traced the growth of human beings in prayer from the Pentateuch unto consummation in Christ. These reflections, available on the Holy See website, constitute a most edifying distillation of Pope Benedict’s deeply biblical spirituality, reminding us that our own prayer should make recourse to sacred scripture as an ever-renewing source of inspiration.
However, in this brief reflection, let us focus on the humble simplicity which lay at the heart of Pope Benedict’s intellectual erudition. As one of the greatest theological minds ever to succeed Saint Peter, Benedict enjoyed a stellar university career and continued to publish important works as a cardinal and as pope. From completing his doctorate summa cum laude at the age of twenty-six despite the interruption of the Second World War, to writing his brilliant Jesus of Nazareth trilogy near the end of his life, Pope Benedict’s faith was marked by a loving and untiring quest for the truth made known in the person of Jesus Christ.
After taking the dramatic decision to resign the papacy, Pope Benedict humbly and dutifully made way for a successor while continuing to support the Church silently through his prayer. The frailty of old age took his mobility, his ability to write, and even his voice, but in his last months he remained steadfast with total trust in the Lord. What a wonderful paradox it is to know that, after nearly nine decades of life, thousands of pages written, hundreds of speeches and sermons delivered, that Pope Benedict’s final utterance was a simple, three-word prayer as though from the heart of a child: “Gesù, ti amo”—“Jesus, I love you.”
As Saint Paul wrote to Corinth, “If I speak with the tongues of men or of angels but have not love, then I am nothing but a clashing gong or a clanging cymbal.” This passage—which Joseph Ratzinger himself quoted in a famous homily to the cardinals on the eve of his election—seems to have been taken to heart by this pope himself. All his theological erudition and eloquence was rooted in an abiding love for Christ the Lord. His second encyclical, Caritas in Veritate is likewise a testimony to the inseparability of truth and love. Even if we cannot speak in the tongues of angels, or even with the eloquence of a younger Pope Benedict, let us also remain steadfast in the Lord, such that when our voices fail at the door of death, we still might say loudly in our hearts, “Jesus, I love you!”