Friday 27 May 2011

Reading The New Testament With Pope Benedict XVI

Reading the New Testament with Pope Benedict XVI - Archbishop's The Tidings Column [March 18, 2011]

by Archbishop José H. Gomez on Thursday, May 26, 2011 at 2:08pm
Published: Friday, March 18, 2011
Reading the New Testament with Pope Benedict XVI
By Archbishop José H. Gomez

I am starting to read Pope Benedict XVI's new book, "Jesus of Nazareth: Holy Week: From the Entrance into Jerusalem to the Resurrection" (Ignatius Press, $25).

This is the second volume of our Holy Father's proposed trilogy on the life and message of Jesus. It is a scholarly work that is beautifully written, deeply spiritual, and inspires meditation and prayer.
I recommend it highly, especially to theologians, Bible scholars, religious educators, pastors and seminarians. Along with the pope's 2010 exhortation Verbum Domini ("The Word of the Lord"), the two volumes of "Jesus of Nazareth" are essential for all of us. These works help us appreciate how important the Scriptures are for our work of the new evangelization.

The pope's method for reading the Scriptures is as important as the insights he draws from them.

His interpretations reflect what the best scholars have discovered about where the texts came from, their historical background, and the literary styles the biblical authors use.

But he does more than study the texts' historical and literary meaning.

He reads in light of the Church's teachings and tradition. He employs the spiritual interpretation methods found in the New Testament, the writings of the Church Fathers, and in the Church's liturgy.

The pope's method has rich possibilities for those of us who must prepare homilies or study theology.
But we all need to read the Bible with his same diligence and reverence.

The Scriptures are the Word of God. They are written, as St. Peter said, "by men moved by the Holy Spirit spoke by God" (1 Pet. 1:21).

The Church has always believed that the Bible is both divine and human - just as Jesus Christ is both true God and true man.

In Verbum Domini, the pope writes beautifully: "As the Word of God became flesh by the power of the Holy Spirit in the womb of the Virgin Mary, so sacred Scripture is born from the womb of the Church by the power of the same Spirit."
We can't speak about Jesus as if he is an ordinary man. And we can't read the Bible as we would read an ordinary book. Unfortunately, that has been the trend for at least two centuries now.
As Pope Benedict points out, most Bible scholars today take a "secularized" and "scientific" approach to the Bible. This leads them, for instance, to reject any biblical events that can't be explained by the laws of science, such as Jesus multiplying the loaves and fishes or raising Lazarus from the dead. Many scholars today simply presume these events could not have happened.

Also as the pope has noted, scholarship based on these kinds of assumptions has led to bad consequences for the Church's faith, worship and preaching.

Our Catholic faith is not mythology. It's based on true historical events. We believe that at a certain moment in history in a certain place in the world, a man named Jesus was born of a Virgin named Mary. We believe that this Jesus was the Son of God, that he worked miracles, and that he rose from the dead.

We believe that Jesus continues to live in the Church and that he changes the lives of we who believe in him. We believe that he continues to work miracles in the Eucharist and the sacraments.

We believe these things based on his first followers' testimony, handed down to us in the Church in the inspired Scriptures.
That's why Pope Benedict's project is so important.
For many years, beginning when he was a young theologian, he has quoted St. Jerome: "Ignorance of the Scriptures is ignorance of Christ."

The Church has always known that if we don't read the Scriptures right, we won't meet the living Jesus Christ in their pages.

This is the tragedy of our age. As the pope has noted, the crisis of faith in Christ is rooted in this "scientific" way of reading the Bible.

In "Jesus of Nazareth," he gives us a new way of reading that is a path into the heart of God's Word. This method is scholarly, but is at the same time guided by faith and prayer.

Reading the Bible this way, we can come to a sure knowledge of the historical Jesus. And we can come to a personal encounter with the Christ who is our Savior.

In a letter to the world's bishops in 2009, Pope Benedict said: "Leading men and women to God, to the God who speaks in the Bible: This is the supreme and fundamental priority of the Church and of the Successor of Peter at the present time."

This must be the priority of everyone in the Church. "Jesus of Nazareth" helps to show us the way.
Let us pray for one another this week. And let us ask Our Lady of Guadalupe for the grace to allow ourselves be shaped by the Word of God - through our listening, reading, study and prayer.

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Friday 6 May 2011

Pope Benedict XVI: Message to Pontifical Biblical Commission

Pope's Message to Biblical Commission

"Inspiration and Truth as Two Key Concepts"

VATICAN CITY, MAY 6, 2011 (Zenit.org).- Here is a translation of the message Benedict XVI sent to Cardinal William Levada, president of the Pontifical Biblical Commission, for the group's annual plenary assembly.
The message is dated Monday and deals with inspiration and truth in the Bible.
* * *
To Venerable Brother
Lord Cardinal William Levada
President of the Pontifical Biblical Commission
I am pleased to send you, the secretary and all the members of the Pontifical Biblical Commission my cordial greeting on the occasion of this annual plenary assembly. The commission gathers for the third time to reflect on the topic entrusted to it: "Inspiration and Truth of the Bible."
This topic constitutes one of the main points of my postsynodal apostolic exhortation "Verbum Domini," which treats it in the first part (cf. No. 19). I wrote in this document: "A key concept for understanding the sacred text as the word of God in human words is certainly that of inspiration." It is precisely inspiration, as the action of God that makes it possible to express the Word of God in human words. Consequently, the subject of inspiration is "decisive for an adequate approach to the Scriptures and their correct interpretation" (ibid.). In fact, an interpretation of the sacred writings that neglects or forgets their inspiration does not take into account their most important and valuable characteristic, their provenance from God.
Such an interpretation does not allow one to access the Word of God, and loses, therefore, the inestimable treasure that sacred Scripture contains for us. This kind of approach is concerned with merely human words, although they might be, in various ways according to diverse writings, words of extraordinary depth and beauty. The discussion on inspiration deals with the profound nature and decisive and distinctive meaning of sacred Scripture, namely, its quality as Word of God.
In the same apostolic exhortation, moreover, I reminded that "the Synod Fathers also stressed the link between the theme of inspiration and that of the truth of the Scriptures. A deeper study of the process of inspiration will doubtless lead to a greater understanding of the truth contained in the sacred books" (ibid.).
According to the conciliar constitution "Dei Verbum," God addresses his word to us to "to reveal Himself and to make known to us the hidden purpose of His will (cf. Ephesians 1:9)" (No. 2). Through his Word, God wills to communicate to us all the truth about himself and about the plan of salvation for humanity. The commitment to discover ever more the truth of the Sacred Books is equivalent therefore to seeking to know God more and more, and the mystery of his salvific will.
"Theological reflection has always considered inspiration and truth as two key concepts for an ecclesial hermeneutic of the sacred Scriptures. Nonetheless, one must acknowledge the need today for a fuller and more adequate study of these realities, in order better to respond to the need to interpret the sacred texts in accordance with their nature" (Verbum Domini, No. 19.).
In addressing the subject "Inspiration and Truth of the Bible," the Pontifical Biblical Commission is called to offer its specific and qualified contribution to this necessary study. In fact, it is essential and fundamental for the life and mission of the Church that the Sacred Texts be interpreted according to their nature: Inspiration and Truth are constitutive characteristics of this nature. That is why your commitment will have real usefulness for the life and mission of the Church.
Finally, I would like to refer to the fact that for a good interpretation, it is not possible to apply in a mechanical way the criterion of inspiration, nor that of absolute truth, extrapolating a single phrase or expression. The context in which it is possible to perceive holy Scripture as the Word of God is that of the unity of the history of God, in a totality in which individual elements are mutually illumined and opened to understanding.
In wishing each one of you a fruitful pursuit of your works, I would like finally to manifest my heartfelt appreciation for the work carried out by the Biblical Commission to promote the knowledge, study, and reception of the Word of God in the world. With these sentiments I entrust each one of you to the maternal protection of the Virgin Mary, who with all the Church we invoke as Sedes Sapientiae, and from my heart I impart to you, Venerable Brother, and to all the members of the Pontifical Biblical Commission, a special Apostolic Blessing.
From the Vatican, May 2, 2011
BENEDICTUS PP. XVI
[Translation by ZENIT]

ZE11050602 - 2011-05-06
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