Vatican City, 26 December 2014 (VIS) –
At midday the Holy Father appeared at the window of his study in the
Vatican Apostolic Palace to pray the Angelus with the faithful and
pilgrims gathered in St. Peter's Square. Before the Marian prayer,
the Pontiff gave a brief address to those present, on the subject of
coherence with faith.
“The Gospel of this feast day shows a
part of Jesus’ discourse to his disciples in the moment in which He
sends them on their mission. Among other things, He says, 'You will
be hated by all because of my name, but whoever endures to the end
will be saved'. These words of the Lord do not disrupt the
celebration of Christmas, but strip it of that false
saccharine-sweetness that does not belong to it. It makes us
understand that in the trials accepted on account of the faith,
violence is overcome by love, death by life. To truly welcome Jesus
in our existence, and to prolong the joy of the Holy Night, the path
is precisely the one indicated in this Gospel: that is, to bear
witness in humility, in silent service, without fear of going against
the current, able to pay in person. While not all of us are called,
as St. Stephen was, to shed their own blood, every Christian is
nonetheless required in every circumstance to lead a life coherent
with the faith he or she professes. Christian integrity is a grace
that we must ask of the Lord. To be coherent, to live as Christians
rather than merely saying, 'I am Christian' while living like a
pagan. Coherence is a grace we must ask for today”.
Francis explained that following the
Gospel is a “demanding but beautiful path, and those who follow it
with devotion and courage receive the gift promised by the Lord to
men and women of goodwill”. He asked those present to pray “in a
special way for those who are discriminated against, persecuted and
killed for their witness of Christ … so that due to the sacrifice
of these latter-day martyrs, of whom there are many, the commitment
to recognising and guaranteeing religious freedom, an inalienable
right of every human being, may be reinforced in every part of the
world”.
After the Angelus prayer, the Pope
conveyed his wishes for peace to all those present and prayed to St.
Stephen for the grace of Christian coherence: “thinking, feeling
and living as a Christian, not thinking as a Christian and living as
a pagan”.
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