Pope at Holy Thursday Mass calls
for hatred to be washed away

By Carol Glatz
Catholic News Service
ROME (CNS) – One's feelings of hatred must be washed away with
forgiveness and humble service toward others – they should never
be left to linger long enough to poison the soul, Pope Benedict XVI
said.
During his March 20 celebration of the Mass of the Lord's Supper, which
commemorated Jesus' institution of the Eucharist, the pope reflected
on the symbolic meaning of the ritual of the washing of the feet.
While the ritual symbolizes the call to imitate Christ by serving one
another, it also means people must always and continually offer forgiveness,
he said.
Through his passion and death on the cross, Jesus died for sins that
are "infinitely greater than all the debts others may have with
us," the pope said in his homily at Rome's Basilica of St. John
Lateran.
Jesus' parable of the unforgiving servant urges everyone "to not
let rancor toward others become, deep down, a poison of the soul."
Holy Thursday, he said, reminds the faithful "to continually purify
our memory, sincerely forgive one another, wash the feet of one another,"
to be able to gather around the Lord's banquet.
Pope Benedict also washed the feet of 12 priests from the Diocese of
Rome for the first time in his three-year pontificate. The last two
Holy Thursdays, Pope Benedict washed the feet of 12 laymen during the
evening Mass of the Lord's Supper.
The pope poured water from a golden pitcher onto the foot of each priest
and then gently rubbed each foot dry with a dry white towel.
In his homily, the pope said confession and listening to God's word
are ways the faithful can purify their inner being.
"We need the washing of the feet – the washing of sins –
every day and for this we need the confession of sins," he said.
He said, "Day after day, we are covered in filth of every form,
empty words, prejudices, abridged and distorted wisdom; multiple forms
of half-truths or blatant lies continually infiltrate our hearts."
"All of this darkens and contaminates our soul, threatening us
with the inability" to discern or strive for the truth and the
good, he said.
In addition to the sacrament of reconciliation, God also cleanses his
children and "makes us pure with his word and his love, through
his giving of himself," the pope said.
The faithful must welcome the word of Christ with an attitude of "meditation,
prayer and faith" so that its healing powers "develop their
purifying power in us," said the pope.
Donations collected during the Mass were earmarked for La Edad de Oro
orphanage in Havana, Cuba, where members of the Daughters of Charity
care for people with disabilities.
Earlier in the day, Pope Benedict celebrated the chrism Mass in St.
Peter's Basilica, leading more than 1,500 priests and bishops in the
renewal of their ordination promises.
He encouraged today's priests to be honest, righteous and courageous
in the face of evil, and at the humble service of God and all humanity.
The pope blessed the chrism and the oils used in the sacraments of baptism,
confirmation, ordination and the anointing of the sick.
Deacons carried the oils in large silver urns to the main altar while
catechumens, youths preparing for confirmation, the sick and deacons
about to be ordained in the Diocese of Rome wheeled small tables carrying
large, artistic urns called "anfore," which also contained
the sacramental oils.
In his homily, the pope reminded his audience of the vows many of them
made when they embraced the priesthood: to stand before God and serve
him.
A priest "must be a righteous, vigilant person, a person who is
upstanding" in leading a holy and Christian life, he said.
But he must also be a servant, he added, and all he does must be carried
out with that humble attitude.
During the celebration of the Eucharist, for example, the priest is
"fulfilling a service to God and a service to all people,"
he said.
Christ created an institution that entailed the giving of oneself even
unto death for the good of all humanity, the pope said. Today's priests
must become part of this faith tradition based on such selfless service,
he said.
Service also entails obedience, the pope said.
"Humanity's temptation is always wanting to be completely autonomous,
to only follow one's own desire, and to believe that only by doing so
will we be free; that only through something akin to limitless freedom
would man be fully man, would become divine," he said.
But, the pope said, the truth is "we have to share our freedom
with others and we can be free only in communion with them." True
freedom also comes about only when pursuing God's will, he added.
While this kind of obedience to God is something expected of all people,
it must be made even more concretely evident in the life of a priest,
he said.
As priests, "we do not proclaim ourselves, but (God) and his word,"
said the pope. "We do not invent the church in the way we would
like it to be, but we proclaim the word of Christ in the right way,
only in communion with his body."
Priestly obedience means serving God and the church and that might mean
having to go places or do things that were not part of one's own plans,
the pope said.
"This letting oneself be led when we do not desire is an essential
part of our service and it is exactly this that makes us free,"
he said.
By letting oneself be led by God and his will, "we experience something
new -- the richness of God's love," said the pope.
He said a priest also must be vigilant against "the persistent
powers of evil."
He must help the world always be on the lookout for God, he must be
upstanding, hold firm against current trends, stand for the truth, and
be dedicated in his commitment to the good, the pope said.
"The priest must be honest, bold and ready" to withstand insults
and abuse for the Lord and be joyous in suffering dishonor for the sake
of his name, Pope Benedict said.