CATECHETICAL MEETING OF THE HOLY FATHER
WITH CHILDREN WHO HAD RECEIVED
THEIR FIRST COMMUNION DURING THE YEAR
St Peter's Square
Saturday, 15 October 2005
CATECHESES OF HIS HOLINESS BENEDICT XVI
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1. Andrea
Dear Pope, what are your memories of your First Communion
day?
I would first like to say thank you for this celebration of faith
that you are offering to me, for your presence and for your joy.
I greet you and thank you for the hug I have received from some
of you, a hug that, of course, symbolically stand for you all.
As for the question, of course I remember my First Communion
day very well. It was a lovely Sunday in March 1936, 69 years
ago. It was a sunny day, the church looked very beautiful, there
was music.... There were so many beautiful things that I remember.
There were about 30 of us, boys and girls from my little village
of no more than 500 inhabitants.
But at the heart of my joyful and beautiful memories is this
one - and your spokesperson said the same thing: I understood
that Jesus had entered my heart, he had actually visited me. And
with Jesus, God himself was with me. And I realized that this
is a gift of love that is truly worth more than all the other
things that life can give.
So on that day I was really filled with great joy, because Jesus
came to me and I realized that a new stage in my life was beginning,
I was 9 years old, and that it was henceforth important to stay
faithful to that encounter, to that communion. I promised the
Lord as best I could: "I always want to stay with you",
and I prayed to him, "but above all, stay with me".
So I went on living my life like that; thanks be to God, the Lord
has always taken me by the hand and guided me, even in difficult
situations.
Thus, that day of my First Communion was the beginning of a journey
made together. I hope that for all of you too, the First Communion
you have received in this Year of the Eucharist will be the beginning
of a lifelong friendship with Jesus, the beginning of a journey
together, because in walking with Jesus we do well and life becomes
good.
2. Livia
Holy Father, before the day of my First Communion I went
to confession. I have also been to confession on other occasions.
I wanted to ask you: do I have to go to confession every time
I receive Communion, even when I have committed the same sins?
Because I realize that they are always the same.
I will tell you two things. The first, of course, is that you
do not always have to go to confession before you receive Communion
unless you have committed such serious sins that they need to
be confessed. Therefore, it is not necessary to make one's confession
before every Eucharistic Communion. This is the first point. It
is only necessary when you have committed a really serious sin,
when you have deeply offended Jesus, so that your friendship is
destroyed and you have to start again. Only in that case, when
you are in a state of "mortal" sin, in other words,
grave (sin), is it necessary to go to confession before Communion.
This is my first point.
My second point: even if, as I said, it is not necessary to go
to confession before each Communion, it is very helpful to confess
with certain regularity. It is true: our sins are always the same,
but we clean our homes, our rooms, at least once a week, even
if the dirt is always the same; in order to live in cleanliness,
in order to start again. Otherwise, the dirt might not be seen
but it builds up. Something similar can be said about the soul,
for me myself: if I never go to confession, my soul is neglected
and in the end I am always pleased with myself and no longer understand
that I must always work hard to improve, that I must make progress.
And this cleansing of the soul which Jesus gives us in the Sacrament
of Confession helps us to make our consciences more alert, more
open, and hence, it also helps us to mature spiritually and as
human persons. Therefore, two things: confession is only necessary
in the case of a serious sin, but it is very helpful to confess
regularly in order to foster the cleanliness and beauty of the
soul and to mature day by day in life.
3. Andrea
In preparing me for my First Communion day, my catechist
told me that Jesus is present in the Eucharist. But how? I can't
see him!
No, we cannot see him, but there are many things that we do not
see but they exist and are essential. For example: we do not see
our reason, yet we have reason. We do not see our intelligence
and we have it. In a word: we do not see our soul and yet it exists
and we see its effects, because we can speak, think and make decisions,
etc. Nor do we see an electric current, for example, yet we see
that it exists; we see this microphone, that it is working, and
we see lights. Therefore, we do not see the very deepest things,
those that really sustain life and the world, but we can see and
feel their effects. This is also true for electricity; we do not
see the electric current but we see the light.
So it is with the Risen Lord: we do not see him with our eyes
but we see that wherever Jesus is, people change, they improve.
A greater capacity for peace, for reconciliation, etc., is created.
Therefore, we do not see the Lord himself but we see the effects
of the Lord: so we can understand that Jesus is present. And as
I said, it is precisely the invisible things that are the most
profound, the most important. So let us go to meet this invisible
but powerful Lord who helps us to live well.
4. Giulia
Your Holiness, everyone tells us that it is important to
go to Mass on Sunday. We would gladly go to it, but often our
parents do not take us because on Sundays they sleep. The parents
of a friend of mine work in a shop, and we often go to the country
to visit our grandparents. Could you say something to them, to
make them understand that it is important to go to Mass together
on Sundays?
I would think so, of course, with great love and great respect
for your parents, because they certainly have a lot to do. However,
with a daughter's respect and love, you could say to them: "Dear
Mommy, dear Daddy, it is so important for us all, even for you,
to meet Jesus. This encounter enriches us. It is an important
element in our lives. Let's find a little time together, we can
find an opportunity. Perhaps there is also a possibility where
Grandmom lives". In brief, I would say, with great love and
respect for your parents, I would tell them: "Please understand
that this is not only important for me, it is not only catechists
who say it, it is important for us all. And it will be the light
of Sunday for all our family".
5. Alessandro
What good does it do for our everyday life to go to Holy
Mass and receive Communion?
It centre’s life. We live amid so many things. And the
people who do not go to church, do not know that it is precisely
Jesus they lack. But they feel that something is missing in their
lives. If God is absent from my life, if Jesus is absent from
my life, a guide, an essential friend is missing, even an important
joy for life, the strength to grow as a man, to overcome my vices
and mature as a human being.
Therefore, we cannot immediately see the effects of being with
Jesus and of going to Communion. But with the passing of the weeks
and years, we feel more and more keenly the absence of God, the
absence of Jesus. It is a fundamental and destructive incompleteness.
I could easily speak of countries where atheism has prevailed
for years: how souls are destroyed, but also the earth. In this
way we can see that it is important, and I would say fundamental,
to be nourished by Jesus in Communion. It is he who gives us enlightenment,
offers us guidance for our lives, a guidance that we need.
6. Anna
Dear Pope, can you explain to us what Jesus meant when he
said to the people who were following him: "I am the bread
of life?".
First of all, perhaps we should explain clearly what bread is.
Today, we have a refined cuisine, rich in very different foods,
but in simpler situations bread is the basic source of nourishment;
and when Jesus called himself the bread of life, the bread is,
shall we say, the initial, an abbreviation that stands for all
nourishment. And as we need to nourish our bodies in order to
live, so we also need to nourish our spirits, our souls and our
wills. As human persons, we do not only have bodies but also souls;
we are thinking beings with minds and wills. We must also nourish
our spirits and our souls, so that they can develop and truly
attain their fulfillment.
And therefore, if Jesus says: "I am the bread of life",
it means that Jesus himself is the nourishment we need for our
soul, for our inner self, because the soul also needs food. And
technical things do not suffice, although they are so important.
We really need God's friendship, which helps us to make the right
decisions. We need to mature as human beings. In other words:
Jesus nourishes us so that we can truly become mature people and
our lives become good.
7. Adriano
Holy Father, they've told us that today we will have Eucharistic
Adoration. What is it? How is it done? Can you explain it to us?
Thank you.
We will see straightaway what adoration is and how it is done,
because everything has been properly prepared for it: we will
say prayers, we will sing, kneel, and in this way we will be in
Jesus' presence.
But of course, your question requires a deeper answer: not only
how you do adoration but what adoration is. I would say: adoration
is recognizing that Jesus is my Lord, that Jesus shows me the
way to take, and that I will live well only if I know the road
that Jesus points out and follow the path he shows me.
Therefore, adoration means saying: "Jesus, I am yours. I
will follow you in my life, I never want to lose this friendship,
this communion with you". I could also say that adoration
is essentially an embrace with Jesus in which I say to him: "I
am yours, and I ask you, please stay with me always".
ADDRESS OF THE HOLY FATHER
AT THE CONCLUSION OF MEETING
Dear boys and girls, brothers and sisters, at the end of this
very beautiful Meeting I can find one word only: thank you.
Thank you for this feast of faith.
Thank you for this meeting with each other and with Jesus.
And thank you, it goes without saying, to all those who made
this celebration possible: to the catechists, the priests, the
Sisters; to you all.
I repeat at the end the words of the beginning of every liturgy
and I say to you: "Peace be with you"; that is, may
the Lord be with you, may joy be with you, and thus, may life
be good.
Have a good Sunday, good night and goodbye all together with
the Lord. Thank you very much! |