REGINA CÆLI POPE FRANCIS
Saint Peter's Square – Divine Mercy
Sunday, 23 April 2017
Dear Brothers and Sisters, Good morning!
We know that each Sunday we commemorate the Resurrection
of the Lord Jesus, but in this period after Easter, Sunday takes on an even
more illuminating significance. In the Tradition of the Church, this Sunday,
the first after Easter, was called “[Domenica] in albis”.
What does this mean? The expression is meant to recall the Rite performed by
those who had received Baptism at the Easter Vigil. Each of them would receive
a white garment — alba, bianca — to indicate their
new dignity as children of God. This is still done today — infants are offered
a small symbolic garment, while adults wear a proper one, as we saw at the
Easter Vigil. In the past, that white garment was worn for a week, until this
Sunday, from which the name in albis deponendis is derived, which
means the Sunday on which the white garment is removed. In this way, when the
white garment was removed, the neophytes would begin their new life in Christ
and in the Church.
There is something else. In the Jubilee of the Year 2000,
Saint John Paul ii established that this Sunday be dedicated to Divine Mercy.
Truly, it was a beautiful insight: it was the Holy Spirit who inspired him in
this way. Just a few months ago we concluded the Extraordinary Jubilee of
Mercy, and this Sunday we are invited to always hold firmly to the grace which
comes from God’s mercy. Today’s Gospel is the account of the Apparition of the
Risen Christ to the disciples gathered in the Upper Room (cf. Jn 20:19-31).
Saint John writes that after greeting his disciples, Jesus says to them: “As
the Father has sent me, even so I send you”. After saying this, he makes the
gesture of breathing on them and adds: “Receive the Holy Spirit. If you forgive
the sins of any, they are forgiven” (vv. 21-23). This is the meaning of the
mercy that is presented on the very day of Jesus’ Resurrection as the
forgiveness of sins. The Risen Jesus passed on to his Church, as her first
task, his own mission of bringing to all the concrete message of forgiveness.
This is the first task: to announce forgiveness. This visible sign of his mercy
brings with it peace of heart and joy of the renewed encounter with the Lord.
Mercy in the light of Easter enables us to perceive it as
a true form of awareness. This is important: mercy is a true form
of awareness. We know that it is experienced through many forms. It is
experienced through the senses, it is experienced through intuition, through
reason and even other forms. Well, it can also be experienced in mercy, because
mercy opens the door of the mind in order to better understand
the mystery of God and of our personal existence. Mercy enables us to
understand that violence, rancour, vengefulness have no meaning, and the first
victim is whoever feels these sentiments, because he deprives himself of his
own dignity. Mercy also opens the door of the heart and allows
one to express closeness especially to those who are lonely and marginalized,
because it makes them feel as brothers and sisters, and as children of one
Father. It favours recognition of those who need consolation and helps one find
the appropriate words so as to give comfort.
Brothers and sisters, mercy warms the heart and makes it
sensitive to the needs of brothers and sisters with sharing and participation.
Thus, mercy requires everyone to be instruments of justice, reconciliation and
peace. Let us never forget that mercy is the keystone in the life of faith, and
the concrete form by which we make Jesus’ Resurrection visible.
May Mary, Mother of Mercy, help us to believe and
joyfully experience all this.
After the Regina Caeli:
Dear brothers and sisters, yesterday, in Oviedo, Spain,
the priest Luis Antonio Rosa Ormières was declared Blessed. He lived in the
19th century, putting his many human and spiritual qualities at the service of
education, and for this reason he founded the Congregation of the Sisters of
the Guardian Angel. May his example and his intercession help in particular
those who work in schools and in the educational field.
I wholeheartedly greet all of you, faithful from Rome and
pilgrims from Italy and from so many countries, in particular the Confraternity
of Saint Sebastian from Kerkrade, The Netherlands, the Nigerian Catholic
Secretariat and the Liebfrauen parish of Bocholt, Germany.
I greet the Polish pilgrims and express heartfelt
appreciation for the initiative of Caritas Poland in support
of many families in Syria. A special greeting goes to the devotees of Divine
Mercy who gathered today in the Church of Santo Spirito in Sassia;
as well as to the “Race for Peace”, a relay race that starts today from this Square
and ends in Wittenberg, Germany.
I greet the many groups of young people, especially those
who recently have been and those who are preparing to be confirmed — there are
so many of you! — from the Dioceses of Piacenza-Bobbio, Trento, Cuneo, Milan,
Lodi, Cremona, Bergamo, Brescia and Vicenza, Italy. And also the Masaccio
School of Treviso and the San Carpoforo Institute of Como.
Lastly I thank all those who have sent me messages of
Easter greetings in this period. I sincerely reciprocate them, invoking for
each one and for each family the grace of the Risen Lord. Happy Sunday to
everyone, and please, do not forget to pray for me. Enjoy your lunch. Arrivederci!
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Copyright - Libreria Editrice Vaticana
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