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September 2-8, 2007 Issue |
Posted 8/29/07 at 11:58 AM
Nowadays, everything seems to be going wrong with Western —
especially European — youth.
Among them we find few marriages and much rebellion, lots of
drugs and alcohol, religious indifference and moral relativism.
Yet we see hundreds of thousands of young people from all
over Europe and the Americas cheering the Vicar of Christ at every World Youth
Day.
On Aug. 9, I took part in a sort of a small-scale World
Youth Day. The Archdiocese of Madrid, Spain, brought 5,000 young men and women
to meet Pope Benedict XVI at his summer residence in Castel Gandolfo.
The pilgrimage was the result of a youth mission organized
by the three dioceses in the state of Madrid. For months, young people visited
homes and schools to speak about the faith and invite them to the 10-day bus
pilgrimage to Gerona, Spain, and to Genoa, Pisa, Assisi and Rome.
Every summer, the Pope stays in the little town of Castel
Gandolfo, located on top of a hill about 30 miles south of Rome. He returns to
the Vatican only on Wednesdays for his weekly general audience.
The Spanish youth didn’t mind waking up at 5 a.m. to take a
bus ride to get to Castel Gandolfo. They weren’t bothered by having to walk up
the slope toward the town center for a couple of miles and line up for three
hours in the sun before the orange, Renaissance-style facade of the papal
palace.
They sang and talked enthusiastically. They expressed joy as
if they were graduating from high school or college, and behaved as if they
were in a sacred place.
They came from Spain to see the Pope — their pope.
“Esta es la juventud del Papa” (“This is the Pope’s youth”)
they chanted as soon as Benedict appeared on the courtyard balcony of the
palace at 11 a.m. With a big smile, the Holy Father waved at them
energetically.
“Muchas gracias (Many thanks),” he said repeatedly. “In this
way, you show your love for the Pope, successor of the Apostle Peter, and your
commitment to give yourselves and to serve the Church of Jesus Christ.”
Mission Possible
About 3,000 youth fit in the courtyard of the palace. The
remaining 2,000 stayed outside in the town’s square and followed the event on a
large screen. Two Swiss Guards faced them from the arched bronze door.
At the end of the 40-minute audience, Benedict went to the
outside balcony of the papal palace to greet the pilgrims that could not fit in
the courtyard.
After the greeting from Archbishop of Madrid Cardinal
Antonio María Rouco, the Holy Father and the youth listened to four
testimonies. One of them came from Jesús, a 25-year-old man who, working on the
youth mission, decided to become a priest.
“Never stop cultivating your personal encounter with
Christ,” the Pope said. “Hold Christ in the center of your heart. In this way,
all your life will become a mission. You will be able to show the Christ that
lives within you.”
The youth listened attentively. Italian police and
carabinieri were at ease — an unusual calm reigned over the crowded courtyard
and square.
“Being young, you will soon discern about your future,” the
Holy Father said. “Discern it in the light of Christ. Ask him, ‘What do you
want of me?’ Generously and trustfully, follow the path he will show you,
knowing that by baptism each of us — with no exception — is called to be holy
and a living member of the Church in whatever way of life we are called to.”
At these words, the youth clapped cheerfully, as if they
enjoyed being challenged to reach holiness.
The words were counter-cultural, indeed. Young people are
usually invited to enjoy themselves, rebel against authority and do whatever
they want without taking any responsibility.
By their numbers and behavior, the pilgrims from Madrid
demonstrated that “the Gospel deeply draws the youth,” as Benedict said in his
address.
Yes, it is possible to pass on the faith to Generation Y.
They, like all youth from all ages, thirst for love and truth. They look for
high, noble and lasting ideals.
They want Christ.
The Holy Father knows this well. That’s why he teaches them
about Christ and encourages them to join “the fascinating adventure of bringing
to others the ineffable joy of finding oneself being loved by God — the only
love that never fails and never ends.”
A deep crisis of faith and values lingers over the West. But
the Pope’s youth in Castel Gandolfo proved once more that the West is far from
dying.
Legionary of Christ Father Alfonso Aguilar
teaches philosophy at Regina Apostolorum University in Rome.
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