GENERAL AUDIENCE POPE FRANCIS
Paul VI Audience Hall
Wednesday, 3 August 2016
Wednesday, 3 August 2016
PHOTO: thewire.com |
Dear
Brothers and Sisters, Good morning!
Today I should like to reflect
briefly on the Apostolic Journey to Poland that I made in recent days.
The occasion for the Journey
was World Youth Day, 25 years after the historic Day celebrated in Chęstochowa
shortly after the fall of the “Iron Curtain”. In these 25 years Poland has
changed, Europe has changed and the world has changed, and this WYD has become a
prophetic sign for Poland, for Europe and for the world. The new
generation of young people, the heirs and successors continuing the pilgrimage
begun by St John Paul II, have given a response to today’s challenge, they have
given the sign of hope, and this sign is called fraternity.
Because, precisely in this world at war, fraternity is needed, closeness is
needed, dialogue is needed, friendship is needed. This is the sign of hope:
when there is fraternity.
Let us begin precisely with
the young people, who were the primary reason for the Journey. Once
again they have answered the call: they came from all over the world — some of
them are even here! [indicating pilgrims in the Hall]. A celebration of
colours, of different faces, of languages, of diverse histories. I don’t know
how they do it: they speak different languages, but they manage to understand
one another! Why? Because they have this willingness to go together, to build
bridges, of fraternity. They also came with their wounds, with their questions,
but above all with the joy of encountering one another; and once again they
formed a mosaic of fraternity. One can speak of a mosaic of fraternity. An
emblematic image of World Youth Day is the expanse of multicoloured flags waved
by the young people: in effect, at WYD the flags of the nations become more
beautiful, as though “they are purified”, and even the flags of nations at war
with each other wave near each other. This is beautiful! Here too there are
their flags... let them be seen!
In this way, in this great
Jubilee meeting of theirs, the young people of the world heard the Message of
Mercy, in order to carry it everywhere in spiritual and corporal works. I thank
all the young people who came to Krakow! And I thank those who joined us from
every part of the Earth! Because in so many countries, small World Youth Days
were held in conjunction with the one in Krakow. May the gift that you have
received become a daily response to the Lord’s call. A recollection full of
affection goes to Susanna, the girl from this Diocese of Rome, who died right
after participating in WYD, in Vienna. May the Lord, who has certainly welcomed
her into Heaven, comfort her family and friends.
During this Journey I also
visited the Shrine of Chęstochowa. Before the icon of Our Lady, I received the
gift of the gaze of the Mother who, in a particular way, is the Mother of the
people of Poland, of that noble nation that has suffered so much, and with the
strength of faith and her maternal hand, has always raised itself again. I
greeted several Poles here [in the Hall]. You are good, you are good people!
There, under that gaze, one
understands the spiritual sense of the journey of this people, whose history is
linked indissolubly to the Cross of Christ. There one touches by hand the faith
of the holy faithful People of God, who safeguards hope through trials; and
also safeguards the wisdom which is a balance between tradition and innovation,
between memory and future. Poland today reminds all of Europe that there can be
no future for the continent without its founding values, which in their turn
have the Christian vision of mankind at the centre. Among these values is mercy,
of which two great children of Poland’s soil were special apostles: St Faustina
Kowalska and St John Paul II.
Lastly, this Journey also had
the horizon of the world, a world called to respond to the
challenge of a “piecemeal” war that is threatening it. Here the profound
silence of my visit to Auschwitz-Birkenau was more eloquent than any words. In
that silence I listened, I felt, the presence of all the souls that passed by
there; I felt the compassion, the mercy of God, that some holy souls were able
to take even into that abyss. In that deep silence I prayed for all the victims
of violence and of war. And there, in that place, I understood more than ever
before the value of remembrance, not only as the recollection of past events,
but as monition and responsibility for today and tomorrow, so that the seeds of
hatred and of violence do not take root in the furrows of history. Thus in
recalling the wars and the many wounds, so much pain that was experienced,
there are also many of today’s men and women who are suffering due to war, so
many of our brothers and sisters. Seeing that cruelty, in that concentration camp,
I immediately thought of the cruelty that is similar today: not as concentrated
as in that place, but everywhere throughout the world; this world that is ill
with cruelty, with pain, with war, with hatred, with sadness. And for this
reason I continually ask you to pray: that the Lord give us peace!
For all this I thank the Lord
and the Virgin Mary. And once again I express my gratitude to the President of
Poland and to the other Authorities, to the Cardinal Archbishop of Krakow and
to the entire Polish Episcopate, and to all those who, in a thousand ways, made
this event possible, who offered a sign of fraternity and of peace to Poland,
to Europe and to the world. I would also like to thank the young volunteers,
who worked for over a year to prepare for this event; and also the media, those
who work in the media: thank you very much for enabling this Day to be seen
throughout the world. And I cannot forget Anna Maria Jacobini, an Italian
journalist who lost her life there unexpectedly. Let us also pray for her: she
passed away carrying out her service.
Thank you!
Special
greetings:
Tomorrow I shall go to the
Papal Basilica of St Mary of the Angels, at the Portiuncula, on the eighth
centenary of the “Pardon of Assisi”, which occurred yesterday. It will be a
very simple pilgrimage but highly significant in this Holy Year of Mercy. I ask
you all to accompany me with your prayers, invoking the light and the strength
of the Holy Spirit and the heavenly intercession of St Francis.
I greet the English-speaking
pilgrims and visitors taking part in today’s Audience, particularly those from
Ireland, Sweden, Hong Kong, India, Indonesia, the Philippines, Aruba, Canada
and the United States of America. In a special way, I greet the many groups of
young people returning from our celebration of World Youth Day. With prayerful
good wishes that the present Jubilee of Mercy will be a moment of grace and
spiritual renewal for you and your families, I invoke upon all of you joy and
peace in our Lord Jesus Christ.
I address a special greeting
to young people, to the sick and to newlyweds.
Tomorrow we shall celebrate the memory of St John Vianney, patron saint of
priests, particularly of parish priests. May his deep humility be an example to
you, dear young people, to live life as a gift from God; may his
trusting abandonment in Christ the Saviour sustain you, dear sick
people, in your hour of suffering; and may his Christian witness give you
courage, dear newlyweds, to profess your faith without shame.
* * *
Message of
the Holy Father on the occasion of the Olympiad in Rio de Janeiro.
I would now like to address a
warm greeting to the people of Brazil, in particular to the city of Rio de
Janeiro, which is hosting the athletes and fans from throughout the world for
the occasion of the Olympiad. In a world which thirsts for peace, tolerance and
reconciliation, I hope that the spirit of the Olympic Games may inspire all,
participants and spectators, to fight “the good fight” and to finish the race
together (cf. 2 Tim 4:7-8), hoping to obtain as a prize not a medal but
something far more precious: the achievement of a civilization in which
solidarity reigns, based on the recognition that we are all members of a single
human family, independent of differences in culture, skin colour or religion.
For the Brazilian people who, with characteristic joy and hospitality, have
organized the Celebration of Sports, I hope that this may be an opportunity to
overcome difficult times and to give your all to “work as a team” in order to
build a safer and more just country, betting on a future full of hope and joy. May God bless you all!
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