Vatican
City, 26 October 2013 (VIS) – More than 150,000 people from 75
countries representing all five continents gathered in Rome this
afternoon to meet the Pope in St. Peter's Square, following the
pilgrimage to the tomb of St. Peter as part of the Year of Faith. The
pilgrimage was entitled “Family, live the joy of faith”, and the
Holy Father, who toured St. Peter's Square by open car, embracing
children along the way, dedicated his address to this theme.
Francis
entered the square, shaking hands with ten children carrying
balloons; before his address he listened to several people who
recounted their experiences: families going through difficult times
and young people who would like to marry but are unable to find work,
and he asked, “How is it possible to live the joy which comes from
faith, in the family, today? … Life is often wearisome, and many
times tragically so. We have heard this recently… But what is most
burdensome in life is not this: what weighs more than all of these
things is a lack of love. … Without love, the burden becomes even
heavier, intolerable”.
“Dear
families”, he continued, “the Lord knows our struggles: he knows
them. He knows the burdens we have in our lives. But the Lord also
knows our great desire to find joy and rest! … Jesus wants our joy
to be complete! He said this to the apostles and today he says it to
us. … Take home this Word of Jesus, carry it in your hearts, share
it with the family”.
Francis
took his second word from the Rite of Marriage. “'I promise to be
true to you, in joy and in sadness' … At that moment, the couple
does not know what will happen, nor what joys and pains await them.
They are setting out, like Abraham, on a journey together. And that
is what marriage is! Setting out and walking together, hand in hand,
putting yourselves in the Lord’s powerful hands. Hand in hand,
always and for the rest of your lives. And do not pay attention to
this makeshift culture, which can shatter our lives. With trust in
God’s faithfulness, everything can be faced responsibly and without
fear. Christian spouses are not naive; they know life’s problems
and temptations. But they are not afraid to be responsible before God
and before society. They do not run away, they do not hide, they do
not shirk the mission of forming a family and bringing children into
the world”.
He
added, “Christians celebrate the sacrament of marriage because they
know they need it! … They need Jesus’ help to walk beside one
another in trust, to accept one another each day, and daily to
forgive one another. And this is important! To know how to forgive
one another in families because we all make mistakes, all of us!
Sometimes we do things … which harm others. It is important to have
the courage to ask for forgiveness when we are at fault in the
family”.
He
repeated the three key words for family life: please, thank you and
sorry. “We say please so as not to be forceful in family life. ...
We say thank you, thank you for love! … And the last word: sorry.
We all make mistakes and … harsh words are spoken but please listen
to my advice: don’t ever let the sun set without reconciling. Peace
is made each day in the family. … If love is missing, joy is
missing, nothing is fun. Jesus gives always gives us that love: he is
its endless source”.
Finally,
he offered as an example the scene of Jesus’ Presentation in the
Temple, chosen by the Pontifical Council for the Family as the image
to represent this event. “Like all of you, the persons depicted in
this scene have a journey to make: Mary and Joseph have travelled as
pilgrims to Jerusalem in obedience to the Law of the Lord; the aged
Simeon and the elderly prophetess Anna have come to the Temple led by
the Holy Spirit. In this scene three generations come together, the
interweaving of three generations. … These two elderly persons
represent faith as memory. But let me ask you: Do you listen to your
grandparents? … Grandparents are like the wisdom of the family,
they are the wisdom of a people. … And a people that does not
listen to grandparents is one that dies! … Mary and Joseph are the
family, sanctified by the presence of Jesus who is the fulfilment of
all God’s promises. Like the Holy Family of Nazareth, every family
is part of the history of a people; it cannot exist without the
generations who have gone before it. Therefore, today we have
grandparents and children. The children learn from their
grandparents, from the previous generation”.
“Dear
families”, he concluded, “you, too, are a part of God’s people.
Walk joyfully in the midst of this people. Remain ever close to Jesus
and bring him to everyone by your witness”.
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