MESSAGE OF
POPE FRANCIS FOR WORLD MISSION DAY 2016
Dear Brothers
and Sisters,
The
Extraordinary Jubilee of Mercy, which the Church is celebrating, casts a
distinct light on World Mission Sunday 2016: it invites us to consider the
missio ad gentes as a great, immense work of mercy, both spiritual and
material. On this World Mission Sunday, all of us are invited to "go
out" as missionary disciples, each generously offering their talents,
creativity, wisdom and experience in order to bring the message of God’s tenderness
and compassion to the entire human family. By virtue of the missionary mandate,
the Church cares for those who do not know the Gospel, because she wants
everyone to be saved and to experience the Lord’s love. She “is commissioned to
announce the mercy of God, the beating heart of the Gospel” (Misericordiae
Vultus, 12) and to proclaim mercy in every corner of the world, reaching every
person, young or old.
When mercy
encounters a person, it brings deep joy to the Father’s heart; for from the
beginning the Father has lovingly turned towards the most vulnerable, because
his greatness and power are revealed precisely in his capacity to identify with
the young, the marginalized and the oppressed (cf. Deut 4:31; Ps 86:15; 103:8;
111:4). He is a kind, caring and faithful God who is close to those in need,
especially the poor; he involves himself tenderly in human reality just as a
father and mother do in the lives of their children (cf. Jer 31:20). When
speaking of the womb, the Bible uses the word that signifies mercy: therefore
it refers to the love of a mother for her children, whom she will always love,
in every circumstance and regardless of what happens, because they are the
fruit of her womb. This is also an essential aspect of the love that God has
for all his children, whom he created and whom he wants to raise and educate;
in the face of their weaknesses and infidelity, his heart is overcome with
compassion (cf. Hos 11:8). He is merciful towards all; his love is for all
people and his compassion extends to all creatures (cf. Ps 144:8-9).
Mercy finds
its most noble and complete expression in the Incarnate Word. Jesus reveals the
face of the Father who is rich in mercy; he “speaks of [mercy] and explains it
by the use of comparisons and parables, but above all he himself makes it
incarnate and personifies it” (John Paul II, Dives in Misericordia, 2). When we
welcome and follow Jesus by means of the Gospel and sacraments, we can, with
the help of the Holy Spirit, become merciful as our heavenly Father is merciful;
we can learn to love as he loves us and make of our lives a free gift, a sign
of his goodness (cf. Misericordiae Vultus, 3). The Church, in the midst of
humanity, is first of all the community that lives by the mercy of Christ: she
senses his gaze and feels he has chosen her with his merciful love. It is
through this love that the Church discovers its mandate, lives it and makes it
known to all peoples through a respectful dialogue with every culture and
religious belief.
This merciful
love, as in the early days of the Church, is witnessed to by many men and women
of every age and condition. The considerable and growing presence of women in
the missionary world, working alongside their male counterparts, is a
significant sign of God’s maternal love. Women, lay and religious, and today
even many families, carry out their missionary vocation in various forms: from
announcing the Gospel to charitable service. Together with the evangelizing and
sacramental work of missionaries, women and families often more adequately
understand people's problems and know how to deal with them in an appropriate
and, at times, fresh way: in caring for life, with a strong focus on people
rather than structures, and by allocating human and spiritual resources towards
the building of good relations, harmony, peace, solidarity, dialogue,
cooperation and fraternity, both among individuals and in social and cultural
life, in particular through care for the poor.
In many places
evangelization begins with education, to which missionary work dedicates much
time and effort, like the merciful vine-dresser of the Gospel (cf. Lk 13:7-9;
Jn 15:1), patiently waiting for fruit after years of slow cultivation; in this
way they bring forth a new people able to evangelize, who will take the Gospel
to those places where it otherwise would not have been thought possible. The
Church can also be defined as "mother" for those who will one day
have faith in Christ. I hope, therefore, that the holy people of God will
continue to exercise this maternal service of mercy, which helps those who do
not yet know the Lord to encounter and love him. Faith is God’s gift and not
the result of proselytizing; rather it grows thanks to the faith and charity of
evangelizers who witness to Christ. As they travel through the streets of the
world, the disciples of Jesus need to have a love without limits, the same
measure of love that our Lord has for all people. We proclaim the most
beautiful and greatest gifts that he has given us: his life and his love.
All peoples
and cultures have the right to receive the message of salvation which is God’s
gift to every person. This is all the
more necessary when we consider how many injustices, wars, and humanitarian
crises still need resolution. Missionaries know from experience that the Gospel
of forgiveness and mercy can bring joy and reconciliation, justice and peace.
The mandate of the Gospel to "go therefore and make disciples of all
nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the
Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you" (Mt
28:19-20) has not ceased; rather this command commits all of us, in the current
landscape with all its challenges, to hear the call to a renewed missionary
"impulse", as I noted in my Apostolic Exhortation Evangelii Gaudium:
"Each Christian and every community must discern the path that the Lord
points out, but all of us are asked to obey his call to go forth from our own
comfort zone in order to reach all the ‘peripheries’ in need of the light of
the Gospel” (20).
This Jubilee
year marks the 90th anniversary of World Missionary Day, first approved by Pope
Pius XI in 1926 and organized by the Pontifical Society for the Propagation of
the Faith. It is appropriate then to
recall the wise instructions of my Predecessors who ordered that to this
Society be destined all the offerings collected in every diocese, parish,
religious community, association and ecclesial movement throughout the world
for the care of Christian communities in need and for supporting the
proclamation of the Gospel even to the ends of the earth. Today too we believe in this sign of
missionary ecclesial communion. Let us not close our hearts within our own
particular concerns, but let us open them to all of humanity.
May Holy Mary,
sublime icon of redeemed humanity, model of missionaries for the Church, teach
all men, women and families, to foster and safeguard the living and mysterious
presence of the Risen Lord in every place, he who renews personal
relationships, cultures and peoples, and who fills all with joyful mercy.
From the
Vatican, 15 May 2016, Solemnity of Pentecost
FRANCIS
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