Vatican City, 27 September 2015 (VIS) –
The Pope's first day in Philadelphia concluded yesterday with his
participation in the Festival of Families in the Benjamin Franklin
Parkway. The Pope arrived by popemobile, greeted by thousands of
faithful and well-wishers along the way. The event was hosted by the
actor Mark Wahlberg, and there were performances by several
musicians, including Aretha Franklin, who sang “Amazing Grace”,
the tenor Andrea Bocelli who performed the Lord's Prayer accompanied
by the Philadelphia Symphonic Orchestra, and the Colombian singer
Juanes. The festival also included readings, some by the actor Jim
Caviezel, and testimonies from families from all over the world.
The Pope set aside the official text
prepared for the occasion, which is given below, and improvised a
brief address in which he said that God gave the “most beautiful
thing He had”, the world, to a family, to a man and a woman so that
they would grow, multiply and make the land fruitful. Francis also
remarked that He wanted His only Son to grow up within a family home,
and emphasised that the family enjoys “divine citizenship”. While
there are problems in every home, they can be overcome with love,
whereas the division of the heart prevents difficulties from being
overcome. Finally, he insisted on the special care due to children
and the elderly, the hope and memory of the family.
“Dear brothers and sisters, dear
families. First of all, I want to thank the families who were willing
to share their life stories with us. Thank you for your witness! It
is always a gift to listen to families share their life experiences;
it touches our hearts. We feel that they speak to us about things
that are very personal and unique, which in some way involve all of
us. In listening to their experiences, we can feel ourselves drawn
in, challenged as married couples and parents, as children, brothers
and sisters, and grandparents.
“As I was listening, I was thinking
how important it is for us to share our home life and to help one
another in this marvellous and challenging task of 'being a family'.
Being with you makes me think of one of the most beautiful mysteries
of our Christian faith. God did not want to come into the world other
than through a family. God did not want to draw near to humanity
other than through a home. God did not want any other name for
Himself than Emmanuel. He is 'God with us'. This was His desire from
the beginning, His purpose, His constant effort: to say to us: 'I am
God with you, I am God for you. He is the God who from the very
beginning of creation said: 'It is not good for man to be alone'. We
can add: it is not good for woman to be alone, it is not good for
children, the elderly or the young to be alone. It is not good. That
is why a man leaves his father and mother, and clings to his wife,
and the two of them become one flesh. The two are meant to be a home,
a family.
“From time immemorial, in the depths
of our heart, we have heard those powerful words: it is not good for
you to be alone. The family is the great blessing, the great gift of
this 'God with us', who did not want to abandon us to the solitude of
a life without others, without challenges, without a home. God does
not dream by Himself, He tries to do everything 'with us'. His dream
constantly comes true in the dreams of many couples who work to make
their life that of a family.
“That is why the family is the living
symbol of the loving plan of which the Father once dreamed. To want
to form a family is to resolve to be a part of God’s dream, to
choose to dream with Him, to want to build with Him, to join Him in
this saga of building a world where no one will feel alone, unwanted
or homeless. As Christians, we appreciate the beauty of the family
and of family life as the place where we come to learn the meaning
and value of human relationships. We learn that 'to love someone is
not just a strong feeling – it is a decision, it is a judgement, it
is a promise'. We learn to stake everything on another person, and we
learn that it is worth it.
“Jesus was not a confirmed bachelor,
far from it! He took the Church as His bride, and made her a people
of His own. He laid down His life for those He loved, so that His
bride, the Church, could always know that He is God with us, His
people, His family. We cannot understand Christ without His Church,
just as we cannot understand the Church without her spouse, Christ
Jesus, Who gave His life out of love, and Who makes us see that it is
worth the price.
“Laying down one’s life out of love
is not easy. As with the Master, 'staking everything' can sometimes
involve the cross. Times when everything seems uphill. I think of all
those parents, all those families who lack employment or workers’
rights, and how this is a true cross. How many sacrifices they make
to earn their daily bread! It is understandable that, when these
parents return home, they are so weary that they cannot give their
best to their children.
“I think of all those families which
lack housing or live in overcrowded conditions. Families which lack
the basics to be able to build bonds of closeness, security and
protection from troubles of any kind.
“I think of all those families which
lack access to basic health services. Families which, when faced with
medical problems, especially those of their younger or older members,
are dependent on a system which fails to meet their needs, is
insensitive to their pain, and forces them to make great sacrifices
to receive adequate treatment.
“We cannot call any society healthy
when it does not leave real room for family life. We cannot think
that a society has a future when it fails to pass laws capable of
protecting families and ensuring their basic needs, especially those
of families just starting out. How many problems would be solved if
our societies protected families and provided households, especially
those of recently married couples, with the possibility of dignified
work, housing and healthcare services to accompany them throughout
life.
“God’s dream does not change; it
remains intact and it invites us to work for a society which supports
families. A society where bread, 'fruit of the earth and the work of
human hands' continues to be put on the table of every home, to
nourish the hope of its children.
“Let us help one another to make it
possible to 'stake everything on love'. Let us help one another at
times of difficulty and lighten each other’s burdens. Let us
support one another. Let us be families which are a support for
other families.
“Perfect families do not exist. This
must not discourage us. Quite the opposite. Love is something we
learn; love is something we live; love grows as it is 'forged' by the
concrete situations which each particular family experiences. Love is
born and constantly develops amid lights and shadows. Love can
flourish in men and women who try not to make conflict the last word,
but rather a new opportunity. An opportunity to seek help, an
opportunity to question how we need to improve, an opportunity to
discover the God Who is with us and never abandons us. This is a
great legacy that we can give to our children, a very good lesson: we
make mistakes, yes; we have problems, yes. But we know that that is
not really what counts. We know that mistakes, problems and conflicts
are an opportunity to draw closer to others, to draw closer to God.
“This evening we have come together
to pray, to pray as a family, to make our homes the joyful face of
the Church. To meet that God who did not want to come into our world
in any other way than through a family. To meet 'God with us', the
God Who is always in our midst”.
Today, 27 September, the Pope will meet
the bishops attending the World Meeting of Families in the St.
Charles Borromeo Seminary, visit detainees at the Curran-Fromhold
Correctional Facility and will celebrate Mass to conclude the Eighth
World Meeting of Families in the Benjamin Franklin Parkway. After
greeting the organisers of the event and the volunteers who
participated, he will board his return flight to Rome, departing at 8
p.m. local time (2 a.m., 28 September in Rome).
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