Today’s General Audience began at 10:30am in Saint Peter’s
Square, where the Holy Father, Pope Francis met with groups of pilgrims and the
faithful who had come from various parts of Italy and other parts of the
world. In his catechesis, spoken in Italian,
the Pope focused his mediation on the holiness of the Church.
Following the syntheses of the catechesis, spoken in various
languages, Pope Francis spoke greetings to various linguistic groups who were
present.
The General Audience was concluded with the singing of the Pater Noster and the Apostolic Blessing.
Catechesis of the Holy Father, Pope Francis
for the General Audience
Dear brothers and sisters, good morning!
In the Credo, after having professed: I
believe in one Church, we add the adjective holy; thereby
affirming the holiness of the Church, and this is a characteristic that has
been present since the initial understandings of faith in the first Christians,
the ones we simply refer to as the saints (cf Acts 9:13:32,
41; Rm 8:27; 1 Cor 6:1), because they were certain that the Church is made holy
by the action of God through the Holy Spirit.
But in what sense is the Church holy if we see that
historically, the Church, in her long journey through the centuries, has had
such difficulty, so many problems, so many dark moments? How can a Church
made up of human beings, of sinners be holy: sinful men and women, sinful
priests, sinful sisters, sinful bishops, sinful Cardinals, sinful Popes?
Everyone! How can such a Church be holy?
To respond to the question, I should like to be guided by a
part of the Letter of Saint Paul to the Christians at Ephesus. The
Apostle, taking for his example their familiar relationships, affirmed
that Christ loved the Church and gave himself for her, in order to make
her holy (5:25-26). Christ loved the Church, and gave himself
entirely on the cross. This means that the Church is holy because she is
led by God who is holy; he is faithful and will not abandon her in times of
trial or even of death (cf Mt 16:18). The Church is holy because Jesus
Christ, the Holy One of God (cf Mk 1:24) is united in an indissoluble way to
her (cf Mt: 28:20); she is holy because she is guided by the Holy Spirit who
purifies, transforms and renews her. She is not holy based on our merits,
but because God makes her holy, she is the fruit of the Holy Spirit and of the
Spirit’s gifts. We human beings do not make the Church holy. It is
God, the Holy Spirit who by his love makes the Church holy.
You could say to me: but the Church is made up of
sinners, we see it every day. And this is true: we are a Church of sinners;
and we sinners are called to allow ourselves to be transformed, renewed,
sanctified by God. There has been in history the temptation of some who
affirmed: the Church is only the Church of the pure, of those who are totally
coherent, and the others are estranged. This isn’t true. This is a heresy. No!
The Church, which is holy, does not reject sinners; on the contrary, she
receives them, is open also to those who are most distant, she calls all people
to allow themselves to be enveloped by the mercy, the tenderness and the forgiveness
of the Father, who offers every possibility of encountering him, of walking
towards sanctity. But, Father, I am a sinner, I have grave sins, how
can I feel part of the Church? Dear brother, dear sister, it is
precisely this that the Lord desires; that you say to him: Lord, I am
here, with my sins! Forgive me, help me to walk, transform my heart! The
God we encounter in the Church isn’t a merciless judge, but He is like the
Father of the evangelical parable. You can be as the son who left home, who touched
the depth of estrangement from God. When you have the strength to say: I
want to go back home, you will find the door open. God comes to meet you
because He always waits for you, he embraces you, He kisses you and celebrates.
The Lord wants us to be part of a Church that is able to open her arms to
welcome all, which is not the house of a few, but the house of all, where all
can be renewed, transformed, sanctified by His love, the strongest and the
weakest, the sinners, the indifferent, those who feel discouraged and lost. The
Church offers every possibility of following the way of sanctity, which is the
way of the Christian. She makes us encounter Jesus Christ in the Sacraments,
especially in Confession and in the Eucharist; she communicates to us the Word
of God, she makes us live in charity, in the love of God towards all people. So
we ask ourselves: do we allow ourselves to be sanctified? Are we a Church that
calls and welcomes sinners with open arms, that gives courage and hope or are
we a Church that is shut in on herself? Are we a Church in which the love of
God is lived, in which there is care for the other, in which we pray for one
another?
A final question: what can I do, I who feel weak,
fragile, sinful? God says to you: do not be afraid of sanctity, do not
be afraid to aim high, to allow yourself to be loved and purified by God, do
not be afraid to let yourself be guided by the Holy Spirit. Let us allow
ourselves to be infected by God’s holiness. Every Christian is called to
sanctity (cf. Dogmatic Constitution Lumen Gentium, 39-42); and sanctity does
not consist first of all in doing extraordinary things, but in letting God act.
It is the encounter of our weakness with the strength of His grace; it is trust
in His action that enables us to live in charity, to do everything with joy and
humility for the glory of God and in the service of our neighbor. There is a
famous phrase of the French writer Leon Bloy, who in the last moments of his
life said: There is only one sadness in life, that of not being saints. Let
us not lose hope in sanctity; let us all follow this way. Do we want to be
saints? All? The Lord awaits all of us with open arms. Let us live our faith
with joy, let us allow ourselves to be loved by the Lord … let us ask for
this gift of God in prayer, for ourselves and for others.
At the conclusion of the catechesis, summaries of this
text were also provided in various languages. Once the summary had been
pronounced in all languages, the Holy Father offered greetings to pilgrims of
various languages. Here is the translation of the greetings he offered to
English-speaking pilgrims:
I cordially greet the members of the delegation from the
International Centre for Interreligious and Intercultural Dialogue in Vienna. I
also welcome the Buddhist visitors from Japan, including the delegations from
the Tendai denomination and the Nakano Dharma Centre of Rissho Kosei-kai. Upon
all the English-speaking pilgrims and visitors present at today’s Audience,
including those from Scotland, Benin, Australia, India, Japan, Canada and the
United States I invoke God’s blessings of joy and peace!
Finally, I wish to send an affectionate greeting to the
youth, to the sick, to the newly-weds. Today, we celebrate the Memorial
of the Guardian Angels. May their presence reinforce in each of you, dear
young people, the certitude that God is accompanying you in your daily lives;
sustaining you, dear sick persons, taking away your daily fatigue; and may they
help you, dear newly-weds to build your families based on the love of God.
May God bless you all!
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