GENERAL AUDIENCE POPE FRANCIS
Paul
VI Audience Hall
Wednesday, 13 January 2016
4. The Mercy of God
Dear Brothers and Sisters, Good morning!
Today we shall begin the catecheses on mercy
according to the biblical perspective, in order to learn mercy by listening
to what God himself teaches us through his Word. We shall start with the Old
Testament, which prepares us and leads us to the full revelation of Jesus
Christ, in whom the mercy of the Father is fully revealed.
In Sacred Scripture, the Lord is presented as a “merciful
God”. This is his name, through which he unveils, so to speak, his face and
his heart to us. As the Book of Exodus recounts, on revealing himself to Moses
he defined himself in this way: “the Lord, a God merciful and gracious, slow
to anger, and abounding in steadfast love and faithfulness” (34:6). We also
find this formula in other texts, with certain variations, but the emphasis is
always placed on mercy and on the love of God who never tires of forgiving (cf.
Gen 4:2; Joel 2:13; Ps 86 [85]: 15, 103 [102]: 8, 145[144]:8; Neh 9:17).
Together let us consider, one by one, these words of Sacred Scripture which
speak to us about God.
The Lord is “merciful”: this word evokes a
tender approach like that of a mother toward her child. Indeed, the Hebrew term
used in the Bible evokes the viscera or even the maternal womb. Therefore, the
image it suggests is that of a God who is moved and who softens for us like
a mother when she takes her child in her arms, wanting only to love, protect,
help, ready to give everything, even herself. This is the image that this term
evokes. A love, therefore, which can be defined in the best sense as
“visceral”.
Then it is written that the Lord is “gracious”,
in the sense of having grace, he has compassion and, in his greatness, he bends
down to those who are weak and poor, ever ready to welcome, to
understand, to forgive. He is like the father in the parable recounted in
the Gospel of Luke (cf. Lk 15:11-32): a father who does not withdraw in
resentment at the younger son for having forsaken him, but on the contrary, he
continues to await him — he begot him — and then he runs to meet him and
embraces him. He does not even let him explain — as though he had covered his
mouth — so great is his love and joy at having found him again. Then the father
also goes to call the older son who is offended and does not want to join in
the celebration, the son who always stayed home and who lived more as a servant
than as a son. To him too, the father bends down, invites him to enter, tries
to open his heart to love, so that no one is excluded from the celebration of
mercy. Mercy is a celebration!
It is also said of this merciful God that he is “slow
to anger”, literally, “of great breadth”, that is, having a broad
capacity of forbearance and patience. God knows how to wait, his time is
not the impatient one of man; he is like the wise farmer who knows how to wait,
allowing time for the good seed to grow, in spite of the weeds (cf. Mt
13:24-30).
Lastly, the Lord proclaims himself “abounding in
steadfast love and faithfulness”. How beautiful this definition of God is!
It is all-encompassing. For God is great and powerful, and this greatness and
power are used to love us, who are so small, so incompetent. The word “love”,
used here, indicates affection, grace, goodness. It is not soap
opera love.... It is love which takes the first step, which does not depend on
human merit but on immense gratuitousness. It is divine solicitude that nothing
can impede, not even sin, because it is able to go beyond sin, to overcome evil
and forgive it.
Abounding in “faithfulness”: this is the final
word of God’s revelation to Moses. God’s faithfulness never fails, because the
Lord is the guardian who, as the Psalm says, never slumbers but keeps constant
vigil over us in order to lead us to life: “May he not suffer your foot to
slip; may he slumber not who guards you: Indeed he neither slumbers nor sleeps,
the guardian of Israel.... The Lord will guard you from all evil; he will guard
your life. The Lord will guard your coming and your going, both now and
forever” (Ps 121[120]:3-4, 7-8).
This merciful God is faithful in his mercy and St Paul
says something beautiful: if you are not faithful to him, he will remain
faithful, for he cannot deny himself. Faithfulness in mercy is the very being
of God. For this reason God is totally and always trustworthy. A solid and
steadfast presence. This is the assurance of our faith. Thus, in this Jubilee
of Mercy, let us entrust ourselves to him totally, and experience the joy of
being loved by this “God who is merciful and gracious, slow to anger and
abounding in love and faithfulness”.
Special greetings:
Before concluding our meeting, in which we have
reflected together on the Mercy of God, I encourage you to pray for the victims
of the attack that occurred yesterday in Istanbul. May the Lord, the All
Merciful, grant eternal peace to the victims, comfort to their families, steadfast
solidarity to society as a whole, and convert the hearts of the aggressors.
I greet the English-speaking pilgrims and visitors
taking part in today’s Audience, including the pilgrimage groups from Ireland,
Finland and the United States of America. With prayerful good wishes that the
Church’s celebration of the Jubilee of Mercy will be a moment of grace and
spiritual renewal for all, I invoke upon you and your families an abundance of
joy and peace in the Lord. God bless you all!
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