Dear Brothers and Sisters in Rome and throughout the world! Surrexit Christus, spes mea – Christ, my
hope, has risen" (Easter Sequence). May the jubilant voice of the Church
reach all of you with the words which the ancient hymn puts on the lips of Mary
Magdalene, the first to encounter the risen Jesus on Easter morning. She ran to
the other disciples and breathlessly announced: "I have seen the
Lord!" (Jn 20:18). We too, who have journeyed through the desert of Lent
and the sorrowful days of the Passion, today raise the cry of victory: "He
has risen! He has truly risen!" Every Christian relives the experience of
Mary Magdalene. It involves an encounter which changes our lives: the encounter
with a unique Man who lets us experience all God’s goodness and truth, who
frees us from evil not in a superficial and fleeting way, but sets us free
radically, heals us completely and restores our dignity. This is why Mary
Magdalene calls Jesus "my hope": he was the one who allowed her to be
reborn, who gave her a new future, a life of goodness and freedom from evil.
"Christ my hope" means that all my yearnings for goodness find in him
a real possibility of fulfilment: with him I can hope for a life that is good,
full and eternal, for God himself has drawn near to us, even sharing our
humanity. But Mary Magdalene, like the other disciples, was to see Jesus
rejected by the leaders of the people, arrested, scourged, condemned to death
and crucified. It must have been unbearable to see Goodness in person subjected
to human malice, truth derided by falsehood, mercy abused by vengeance. With
Jesus’ death, the hope of all those who had put their trust in him seemed
doomed. But that faith never completely failed: especially in the heart of the
Virgin Mary, Jesus’ Mother, its flame burned even in the dark of night. In this
world, hope can not avoid confronting the harshness of evil. It is not thwarted
by the wall of death alone, but even more by the barbs of envy and pride,
falsehood and violence. Jesus passed through this mortal mesh in order to open
a path to the kingdom of life. For a moment Jesus seemed vanquished: darkness
had invaded the land, the silence of God was complete, hope a seemingly empty
word ■ Benedict XVI, message Urbi et orbi (to the city [of Rome] and
the world).
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