Vatican City, 16 January 2016 (VIS) –
Education, sharing and witness were the three words that the Pope
suggested to the members of the Christian Workers' Movement for
living the vocation of work, a vocation that "calls us to
imitate actively the tireless work of the Father and of Jesus Who, as
the Gospel tells us, are always working".
In the Paul VI Hall Francis spoke to
seven thousand members of the organisation about the importance of
education which "is not solely about teaching various techniques
or imparting ideas, but rather making ourselves and the reality that
surrounds us more human. And this applies in a special way to work:
it is necessary to teach a new 'humanism of work'. We live in a time
of exploitation of workers, in a time in which work is not at the
service of the dignity of the person, but is instead slave labour. We
must instruct and educate in a new humanism of work, in which
mankind, and not profit, is at the centre; in which the economy does
not exploit but instead serves man".
Education is fundamental in helping us
"not to be deceived into thinking that work, our daily effort,
the gift of oneself and study do not have any value. I would add that
nowadays, in the world of work – as in every environment – it is
urgent to educate in following the luminous and demanding road of
honesty, shunning the short cuts of favouritism and influential
connections. These temptations, great and small, are always present,
but they must always be seen as moral bargains unworthy of man: they
are to be rejected, so that the heart is accustomed to staying free.
Otherwise, they generate a false and harmful mentality, which must be
combated: that of illegality, which leads to the corruption of the
person and of society. Illegality is like an unseen octopus, hidden
and submerged but which grabs and poisons with its tentacles,
contaminating and causing great harm".
With regard to sharing, the Pope
remarked that work is not merely an individual vocation, but rather
an opportunity to enter into relations with others. "Work should
unite people, not distance them from each other or cause them to be
closed and distant. … It offers the chance to share daily life, to
be interested in those near us, to receive as a gift and as a
responsibility the presence of others".
Referring to the "Civil Service
projects", an initiative of the Movement which enables it to
bring people and new contexts together and occupy itself with their
problems and hopes, he emphasised that others should not simply
receive passing attention but should instead be the focus of genuine
projects. "Everyone makes plans for himself, but planning for
others allows us to take a step further: to place intelligence at the
service of love, making the person more complete and life happier,
through the capacity to give".
Finally, witness. "The apostle
Paul encouraged the witness of faith through activity, conquering
laziness and indolence, and he set out a very strong and clear rule:
'If anyone is not willing to work, let him not eat'. In that time too
there were those who made others work so that they themselves could
eat. Today, instead, there are people who would like to work but they
are not able to, and struggle even to eat. You encounter many young
people who do not work; they are truly, as you have said, the new
excluded people of our time. Just think that in some countries in
Europe, this cultured Europe of ours, youth unemployment reaches 40
per cent, 47 per cent in other countries, 50 per cent in others. But
what can a young person do without working? Where does he or she end
up? As a victim of addiction, psychological illness, suicide. The
statistics of suicide among the young are not always published. It is
a tragedy, a tragedy of the excluded people of our time, who are
deprived of their dignity. Human justice requires access to work for
all. Even divine mercy calls to us: faced with people in difficulty
and in situations of hardship – I think of young people for whom
getting married or having children is a problem, as they do not have
a sufficiently stable job or a house – it is not helpful to give
sermons. Instead it is necessary to transmit hope, comfort with
presence, and support with concrete assistance".
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