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The Mystery of His Prayer
Angelus Address of Pope John Paul II
Second Sunday of Lent, 7 March 2004
1. "Jesus took Peter, John and James, and went
up onto a mountain to pray" (Lk 9:28): this is how
the Gospel of the Transfiguration of Christ begins, characterizing
the Second Sunday of Lent. Luke the Evangelist stresses
that Jesus is transfigured on the high mountain while praying,
immersed in intimate and profound dialogue with God the Father.
A dazzling light radiates from Him, a foretaste of the glory
of the Resurrection.
2. Each year in preparation for Easter, Lent invites us
to follow Christ in the mystery of His prayer, source
of light and strength in time of trial. In reality, to
pray means to be spiritually immersed in God, in an attitude
of humble cohesion to His will. The interior light that
transfigures the human person comes from this trusting
abandonment to God, making the person a witness of the Resurrection.
However, it is only in listening to Christ, in following Him
with docility even to the passion and Cross, that this can
become a reality. We must look towards Him "because there
is salvation in no one else but Him, the Son of God".
3. Twenty-five years ago, precisely at the beginning of Lent,
I wanted to extend to the entire world this message in the
Encyclical Letter Redemptor
Hominis (cf. n. 7). If human beings want to know themselves
thoroughly, I wrote at the time, they must draw near to Christ,
enter into Him, "appropriate" and assimilate the
entire reality of the Redemption (cf. n. 10). How true this
truth still remains today!
May the Virgin Mother of the Redeemer help us to start afresh
from Christ to build a world according to the true dimension
of the human being.
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