It is "in the tragedy of the Gethsemane, in Jesus’ agony, in suffering, in the anguish of death, in the opposition between the human will not to die and God’s will", which, according to Benedict XVI, "the whole tragedy of the human being, the tragedy of our life is accomplished". While Abraham "thinks the greatest freedom lies in a ‘no’ and, to accomplish his own freedom, he says no to God, so he thinks he is himself", Jesus "sees that a ‘no’ is not the greatest freedom, but a ‘yes’ is, complying with God’s will is". "Only in a ‘yes’ warned the Holy Father does man become really himself, does he become immensely open, does he become divine". "In the ‘yes, Jesus becomes free", repeated the Pope, equating the sentence uttered by God’s Son "not my will but your will" to the emblem of the "tragedy of the Gethsemane". "Transferring the human will to the divine will: this is how concluded the Pope a true humanity is born, this is how we are redeemed".” ” ” ” ” “