ANGELUS POPE
FRANCIS
SOLEMNITY OF THE ASSUMPTION OF THE BLESSED VIRGIN MARY
Saint Peter's Square
Monday, 15 August 2016
Monday, 15 August 2016
PHOTO: www.stjamespa.org |
Dear Brothers and Sisters, Good morning! Happy Feast
of the Assumption!
The Gospel passage (Lk 1:39-56) of today’s Feast of
the Assumption of Mary into Heaven describes the encounter between Mary and her
cousin Elizabeth, emphasizing that “Mary arose and went with haste into the
hill country, to a city of Judah” (v. 39). In those days, Mary hastened to a
small city in the vicinity of Jerusalem in order to meet Elizabeth. Today,
however, we contemplate her on her journey toward the Heavenly Jerusalem, to
encounter at last the face of the Father and to see once again the face of her
Son Jesus. So often in her earthly life she had travelled mountainous areas,
until the painful final phase of Calvary, associated with the Mystery of the
Passion of Christ. Today, we see her arrive at God’s mountain, “clothed with
the sun, with the moon under her feet, and on her head a crown of twelve stars”
(Rev 12:1) — as the Book of Revelation reads — and we see her cross the
threshold of the heavenly homeland.
She was the first to believe in the Son of God, and is
the first to be assumed into heaven in body and soul. She was the first to
gather Jesus in her arms when he was still a boy, and is the first to be
gathered in his arms to be introduced into the eternal Kingdom of the Father.
Mary, a humble and simple maiden from an isolated village on the edge of the
Roman Empire, precisely because she received and lived the Gospel, is allowed
by God to be beside the Son’s throne for eternity. This is how the Lord puts
down the mighty from their thrones and exalts those of low degree (cf. Lk
1:52).
The Assumption of Mary is a great mystery which
regards each one of us, it regards our future. Mary, in fact, precedes us on
the path walked upon by those who, through their Baptism, have bound their life
to Jesus, as Mary bound her own life to Him. Today’s feast makes us look to
heaven, foretells the “new heaven and new earth”, with the Risen Christ’s
victory over death and the definitive defeat of evil. Therefore, the exultation
of the humble maiden of Galilee, expressed in the Canticle of the Magnificat,
becomes the song of all humanity, which sees with satisfaction the Lord stoop
over all men and all women, humble creatures, and assume them with him into
heaven.
The Lord stoops over the humble, to raise them up, as
the Canticle of the Magnificat proclaims. This hymn of Mary
also leads us to think of the many current painful situations, in particular of
women overwhelmed by the burden of life and by the tragedy of violence, of
women enslaved by the oppression of the powerful, of children forced into
inhuman labour, of women obliged to surrender in body and in spirit to the
greed of men. May they begin as soon as possible a life of peace, of justice,
of love, awaiting the day in which they will finally feel they are held by
hands which do not humiliate them, but which lift them tenderly and lead them
on the path of life, to heaven. May Mary, a maiden, a woman who suffered a
great deal in her life, make us think of these women who suffer so much. Let us
ask the Lord that He himself may take them by the hand and lead them on the
path of life, freeing them from these forms of slavery.
Now let us turn trustingly to Mary, gentle sweet Queen
of Heaven, and ask her: “Give us days of peace, watch over our journey, let us
see your Son, filled with the joy of Heaven” (Hymn of Second Vespers).
After the Angelus:
Dear brothers and sisters, to the Queen of Peace, whom
we contemplate today in heavenly glory, I would like once again to entrust the
anxiety and the sorrow of people who in many parts of the world are innocent
victims of persistent conflicts. My thoughts turn to the residents of North
Kivu in the Democratic Republic of Congo, recently struck by new massacres
which for some time have been perpetrated in shameful silence, without even
attracting our attention. Sadly these victims are part of the many innocent who
have no bearing on world opinion. May Mary obtain for everyone feelings of
compassion, of understanding and of a desire for harmony!
I greet all of you, people of Rome and pilgrims from
various countries!
I wish a happy Feast of the Assumption to all of you
present here and to those in various vacation sites, as well as those who have
not be been able to go on vacation, especially the sick, lonely people and
those who ensure indispensable services for communities during these holidays.
I thank you for coming and please, do not forget to
pray for me. Enjoy your lunch. Arrivederci!
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