Vatican City, 2014 (VIS) – Before the
catechesis of this Wednesday's general audience in St. Peter's
Square, the Pope received in the Paul VI Hall the participants in the
pilgrimage organised by the Secular Institute of the Little Apostles
of Charity, founded sixty years ago by Blessed Luigi Monza who worked
“with skill and love” in the care of the disabled. Pope Francis
mentioned the Institute in his catechesis as an example of the
charism of care for the most vulnerable, recalling that the work of
Luigi Monza was supported by Pope Paul VI when he was archbishop of
Milan, Italy, and urged them to be held as an example “for families
and for those who hold public responsibilities”.
After the catechesis and during his
greetings in various languages, the Holy Father addressed German and
Polish pilgrims, reminding them that October is the month of the Holy
Rosary, and invited them to meditate on the path and work of Christ
through the eyes of Mary, and to pray the rosary to accompany the
work of the Synod of Bishops on the family.
He also addressed the
Portuguese-speaking faithful, including members of the “Associacao
Crista de Empresarios e Gestores” (Christian Association of
Businesspeople and Managers), encouraging them to persevere in their
testimony in society and to allow themselves to be guided by the Holy
Spirit “to understand the true path of history”.
“Keep the flame of faith burning,
ignited on the day of your baptism and sustained by the example of
the holy martyrs, so that others may see the joy of your life in
Christ”, he said to pilgrims from Croatia.
“I also greet Bishop Javier
Echevarria, prelate of Opus Dei, as well as the faithful of the
prelature present here to give thanks for the beatification of Bishop
Alvaro del Portillo”, he concluded, in Spanish. “May the
intercession and the example of the new blessed help them to respond
generously to God's call to holiness and to the apostolate in
ordinary life, in the service of the Church and of the whole of
humanity. Many thanks, and may God bless you”.
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