Vatican
City, 8 July 2013 (VIS) – At midday, following the Holy Mass
celebrated on the Day for seminarians, novices and those discerning
their vocations, in the context of the Year of Faith, Pope Francis
appeared at the window of his study to pray the Angelus with the
faithful and pilgrims gathered in St. Peter's Square.
The
Bishop of Rome appealed to all those present to pray for the
participants in this Day, “that their love for Christ might mature
more and more in their lives and that they might become true
missionaries of God's Kingdom”, and then went on to comment on this
Sunday's gospel, relating it to the call to the vocation.
“Jesus
is not an isolated missionary”, he said; “he does not want to
fulfill his mission alone, but involves his disciples. Today we see
that, in addition to the Twelve Apostles, He calls seventy-two
others, and sends them into the villages, two by two, to announce
that the Kingdom of God is near. This is very beautiful! Jesus does
not want to act alone, He has come to bring to the world the love of
God and wants to spread that love with communion and fraternity. For
this reason, he immediately forms a community of disciples, a
missionary community, and trains them for the mission”.
“Beware,
however: the purpose is not to socialize, to spend time together –
no, the purpose is to proclaim the Kingdom of God, and this is
urgent! There is no time to waste in small talk, no need to wait for
the consent of all – it is necessary to go out and proclaim. The
peace of Christ is to be brought to everyone, and if some do not
welcome it, then you go on. Healing is to be brought to the sick, as
God wishes to heal man from all evil. How many missionaries do this!
They sow life, health, comfort in the peripheries of the world”.
“These
seventy-two disciples, whom Jesus sent ahead of him, who are they?
Whom do they represent? If the Twelve are the Apostles, and therefore
also represent the Bishops, their successors, these may represent
seventy-two other ordained ministers – priests and deacons – but
in a wider sense we can think of other ministries in the Church,
catechists and lay faithful who engage in parish missions, those who
work with the sick, with the various forms of discomfort and
alienation, but always as missionaries of the Gospel, with the
urgency of the Kingdom that is at hand. Everyone must become
missionaries, everyone can hear Jesus' call and go on to proclaim His
kingdom!
“The
Gospel says that those seventy-two returned from their mission full
of joy, because they had experienced the power of the Name of Christ
against evil. … We should not boast as if we were the protagonists:
the protagonist is the Lord and His grace. Our joy is only this: in
being His disciples, His friends. … Do not be afraid of being
joyful! … It is the joy that the Lord gives us when we let Him
enter into our lives and invite us to go forth into the peripheries
of life and announce the Gospel, with joy and courage!”
After
the Angelus, Pope Francis mentioned that two days ago his first
encyclical, “Lumen Fidei” (On the Light of Faith) was published.
Pope Benedict XVI had started this encyclical for the Year of Faith
and to follow the previous encyclicals dedicated to love and hope. “I
picked up this fine project and completed it. I offer it with joy to
the whole People of God: indeed, today more than ever before, we need
to return to the essentials of the Christian faith, to deepen it, and
to measure current issues by it. I think that this encyclical, at
least in some parts, can also be useful to those who are searching
for God and for the meaning of life. I entrust it to the hands of
Mary, the perfect icon of faith, that it may bring the fruits the
Lord wishes”.
The
Holy Father went on to greet the young people of the diocese of Rome
who are preparing to go to Rio de Janeiro to participate in World
Youth Day. “Dear young people, I too am preparing! Let us walk
together towards this great celebration of faith! May Our Lady
accompany us”.
Finally,
he greeted the Franciscan Sisters and the Rosminian Angeline Sisters,
who are holding their General Chapters, and the leaders of the
Community of Sant'Egidio who have come to Rome from various countries
to attend a training course.
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