Vatican City, 8 April 2015 (VIS) –
During today's Wednesday general audience in St. Peter's Square, the
Holy Father continued with his cycle of catechesis on the family,
completing his reflection on children, “the most beautiful fruit of
the blessing that the Creator has bestowed on man and woman”. This
week he focused on the “stories of passion” that many children
sadly experience. “Many children, from the very beginning, are
rejected, abandoned, robbed of their childhood and their future. One
might even dare say, almost as a justification, that it was a mistake
to bring them into the world. This is shameful! Please, let us not
punish them for our own errors! Children are never a mistake!”
“Those who have the task of governing
and educating – indeed, I would say, all adults – are responsible
for children, and everyone must do what he can to change this
situation. I refer to the passion of children. Every marginalised,
abandoned child, living on the streets by begging or by any other
expedient, without schooling, without medical care, is a cry lifted
up to God and an accusation against the system we have constructed. …
However, none of these children are forgotten by the Father in
Heaven. None of their tears are in vain. And our responsibility must
not be forgotten either, the social responsibility of persons and
countries”.
Francis recalled how Jesus urged the
apostles to let the children come to Him, and remarked that “thanks
to God, children with serious difficulties very often find
extraordinary parents, willing to make any sacrifice and to spare no
act of generosity”. However, he added, “these parents should not
be left alone! We must accompany them in their efforts, but also
offer them moments of shared joy and carefree pleasure, so that they
are not entirely consumed by the routines of therapy”. The Pope
also mentioned that often children suffer the consequences of lives
damaged by precarious or underpaid employment, unreasonable working
hours, immature relationships and irresponsible separations. “Often
they experience violence that they are not able to overcome, and
before the eyes of adults are forced to grow accustomed to
degradation”.
The Holy Father emphasised that the
well-being of children must always be taken seriously, and noted that
now, as in the past, the Church offers her maternity in the service
of children and families. “Imagine a society that decided, once and
for all, to establish the principle that … where the children who
come into this world are concerned, no sacrifice on the part of
adults may be judged as too costly or too great, so as to avoid any
child believing himself to be a mistake, without value, or being
abandoned to the wounds inflicted by life”. He concluded, “May
the Lord judge our life by listening to what the angels of children
bring to Him, those angels that always see the face of the Father in
heaven. Let us always ask ourselves, what do they tell God about us,
these children's angels?”
No comments:
Post a Comment