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Carry Christ to the Campus and the World
Message of John
Paul II to Youth at the Eighth International
Youth Forum
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March
25, 2004
-
Rocca
de Papa, Italy
1. I should
like, first of all, to extend my cordial
greetings to all the students who have come
together at this time in Rocca di Papa for
the eighth "International Youth Forum" on
the theme "Young people and the university:
witnessing to Christ in the university
world". Your presence is a source of great
joy to me, because it is a shining example
of the ever-young universal face of the
Church. For you have come from five
continents, representing over 80 countries
and 30 international Movements, Associations
and Communities.
And I should
also like to greet the Rectors, professors
and lecturers attending the Forum, as well
as the bishops, priests and the laity
engaged in the pastoral care of
universities, who will be accompanying the
students as they reflect over the coming
days.
I would like to
express my most sincere thanks to the
President of the Pontifical Council for the
Laity, Monsignor Stanislaw Rylko, and all
his co-workers, for convening this welcome
event. I vividly recall previous years'
Forums organized to coincide with the
international celebrations of World Youth
Day. For this year it was decided to renew
the format, to give the Forum a more clearly
defined scope, emphasizing its educational
dimension by choosing a specific theme
around which to debate one concrete aspect
of young people's lives. The theme for this
meeting is certainly highly topical and
meets a real need. I am delighted that so
many young people, coming from such rich and
diverse cultures have gathered at Rocca di
Papa to reflect together, to share their
experiences, and to embolden one another to
bear witness to Christ in the world of
higher education.
The Church and
higher education
2. It is
important in our age to rediscover the bond
that unites the Church to the world of
higher education. For the Church not only
played a decisive role in founding the first
universities, but throughout the centuries
she has been a workshop of culture, and
continues in the same direction today
through the Catholic Universities and
various forms of presence in the vast world
of higher education. The Church sees the
University as one of those "workplaces in
which man's vocation to acquire knowledge,
and the constituent bond of humanity with
truth as the purpose of knowledge, become a
daily reality" for so many professors, young
researchers and generations of students
(address to UNESCO, 1980).
Dear students,
in the University you are not only
recipients of services, but you are the true
protagonists of the activities performed
there. It is no coincidence that the period
spent in higher education is a vital stage
in your existence, in which you prepare
yourselves to take on the responsibility for
decisive choices that will direct the whole
of your future life. It is for this reason
that you must approach higher education with
a searching spirit, to seek the right
answers to the essential questions about the
meaning of life, happiness and complete
self-fulfillment, and beauty as the splendor
of truth.
Fortunately,
the influence of ideologies and Utopias
fomented by the messianic atheism that had
such an impact in the past on many
University environments has waned
considerably today. But there are also new
schools of thought, which reduce reason to
the horizon of experimental science alone,
and hence to technical and instrumental
knowledge, sometimes enclosing it within a
skeptical and nihilistic vision. These
attempts to evade the issue of the deepest
meaning of existence are not only futile;
they can also become dangerous.
Faith and
reason are not opposed
3. Through the
gift of faith we have met the One who
introduces himself with these surprising
words: "I am the truth" (John 14:6). Jesus
is the truth of the universe and of history,
the meaning and the destiny of human
existence, the foundation of all reality! It
is your responsibility, you who have
welcomed this Truth as the vocation and
certitude of your lives, to demonstrate its
reasonableness in the University environment
and in your work there. The question that
then arises is: how deeply does the truth of
Christ affect your studies, research,
knowledge of reality, and the comprehensive
education of the human person? It may happen
that, even among those who profess to be
Christians, some will behave in the
University as if God did not exist.
Christianity is not a mere subjective
religious preference, which is ultimately
irrational, and relegated to the private
sphere. As Christians we are duty-bound to
bear witness to what the Second Vatican
Council affirmed in Gaudium et Spes:
"For faith throws a new light on everything,
manifests God's design for man's total
vocation, and thus directs the mind to
solutions which are fully human" (no.11). We
must demonstrate that faith and reason are
not irreconcilable, but that, "Faith and
reason are like two wings on which the human
spirit rises to the contemplation of truth"
(cf Fides et ratio. Intr.)
Play an active
part on campus
4. My young
friends! You are the disciples and the
witnesses of Christ in the University. May
your University days be for all of you a
period of great spiritual and intellectual
maturity, which will lead you to deepen your
personal relationship with Christ. But if
your faith is linked merely to fragments of
tradition, fine sentiments or a generic
religious ideology, you will certainly not
be able to withstand the impact of the
environment you are in. You must therefore
seek to keep your Christian identity
steadfast, and rooted in the communion of
the Church. To do this, you must be nurtured
by persevering in prayer. Whenever possible,
seek out sound University professors and
lecturers. Do not remain isolated in what
are often difficult environments, but play
an active part in the life of Church
associations, movements and communities
operating in the university environment.
Draw close to the University parishes, and
allow the chaplaincies to help you. You must
build the Church within your Universities,
as a visible community which believes,
prays, gives account for our hope, and
lovingly welcomes every trace of good, truth
and beauty in University life. All this has
to be done wherever students live and meet,
and not only on the campus. I am certain
that the Pastors will not fail to devote
particular care to ministering to the
University environments, and will appoint
holy and competent priests to perform this
mission.
'Show' Jesus by
your life witness
5. Dear
participants at the 8th International Youth
Forum, I am happy to know you will be
present in St Peter's Square next Thursday,
to meet the young people from the Rome
diocese, and later for the Palm Sunday Mass,
when we shall be celebrating together the
19th World Youth Day on the theme "We wish
to see Jesus" (John 12:21). It will mark the
final stage in the spiritual preparation for
the great gathering in Cologne in 2005. It
is not enough to "speak" about Jesus to
young undergraduates: we must also "show"
Jesus to them, through the eloquent witness
of our lives (cf Novo Millennio Ineunte,
16). My wish for you is that this Rome
meeting will help to strengthen your love
for the universal Church and your commitment
to serving the University world. I am
depending on each and every one of you to
hand on to your local Churches and your
ecclesial groups the richness of gifts that
you are receiving in these intense days
here.
Invoking
the Virgin Mary, Seat of Wisdom, to protect
you on your path, I impart a special
heartfelt Apostolic Blessing on you and on
all those — fellow students, rectors,
professors, lecturers, chaplains and
administrative staff — who, with you, make
up the great "University community".
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