Pope: "To abide in Christ means ... to abide in the Church as well."
Benedict XVI's homily given today at the Olympic Stadium in Berlin was a masterful exposition of Scripture meant to correct misunderstandings about the nature of the Church and to exhort Catholics to abide more deeply in Jesus Christ, the Head of the Church:
In the parable of the vine, Jesus does not say: "You are the vine", but: "I am the vine, you are the branches" (Jn 15:5). In other words: "As the branches are joined to the vine, so you belong to me!
But inasmuch as you belong to me, you also belong to one another." This belonging to each other and to him is not some ideal, imaginary, symbolic relationship, but – I would almost want to say – a biological, life-transmitting state of belonging to Jesus Christ. Such is the Church, this communion of life with him and for the sake of one another, a communion that is rooted in baptism and is deepened and given more and more vitality in the Eucharist. "I am the true vine" actually means: "I am you and you are I" – an unprecedented identification of the Lord with us, his Church.
On the road to Damascus, Christ himself asked Saul, the persecutor of the Church: "Why do you persecute me?" (Acts 9:4). With these words the Lord expresses the common destiny that arises from his Church's inner communion of life with himself, the risen Christ. He continues to live in his Church in this world. He is present among us, and we are with him. "Why do you persecute me?" It is Jesus, then, who is on the receiving end of the persecutions of his Church. At the same time, when we are oppressed for the sake of our faith, we are not alone: Jesus is with us.
Jesus says in the parable: "I am the true vine, and my Father is the vinedresser" (Jn 15:1), and he goes on to explain that the vinedresser reaches for his knife, cuts off the withered branches and prunes the fruit-bearing ones, so that they bring forth more fruit. Expressed in terms of the image from the prophet Ezekiel that we heard in the first reading, God wants to take the dead heart of stone out of our breast in order to give us a living heart of flesh (cf. Ez 36:26). He wants to bestow new life upon us, full of vitality. Christ came to call sinners. It is they who need the doctor, not the healthy (cf. Lk 5:31f.). Hence, as the Second Vatican Council expresses it, the Church is the "universal sacrament of salvation" (Lumen Gentium, 48), existing for sinners in order to open up to them the path of conversion, healing and life. That is the Church's true and great mission, entrusted to her by Christ.
Many people see only the outward form of the Church. This makes the Church appear as merely one of the many organizations within a democratic society, whose criteria and laws are then applied to the task of evaluating and dealing with such a complex entity as the "Church". If to this is added the sad experience that the Church contains both good and bad fish, wheat and darnel, and if only these negative aspects are taken into account, then the great and deep mystery of the Church is no longer seen.
It follows that belonging to this vine, the "Church", is no longer a source of joy. Dissatisfaction and discontent begin to spread, when people's superficial and mistaken notions of "Church", their "dream Church", fail to materialize! Then we no longer hear the glad song "Thanks be to God who in his grace has called me into his Church" that generations of Catholics have sung with conviction.
Read the entire homily on the Vatican Radio site. For more on the ecclesiology of Joseph Ratzinger/Pope Benedict XVI, see this excerpt from Fr. Maximilian Heinrich Heim's study, Joseph Ratzinger: Life in the Church and Living Theology—Fundamentals of Ecclesiology with Reference to Lumen Gentium:
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