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HOLY MASS, BLESSING AND IMPOSITION OF THE ASHES HOMILY OF HIS HOLINESS POPE FRANCIS

[…] Prayer, charity and fasting need to grow “in secret”, but that is not true of their
effects. Prayer, charity and fasting are not medicines meant only for ourselves but
for everyone: they can change history. First, because those who experience their
effects almost unconsciously pass them on to others; but above all, because prayer,
charity and fasting are the principal ways for God to intervene in our lives and in
the world. They are weapons of the spirit and, with them, on this day of prayer and
fasting for Ukraine, we implore from God that peace which men and women are
incapable of building by themselves.
O Lord, you see in secret and you reward us beyond our every expectation. Hear
the prayers of those who trust in you, especially the lowly, those sorely tried, and
those who suffer and flee before the roar of weapons. Restore peace to our hearts;
once again, grant your peace to our days. Amen. […]

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POPE FRANCIS ANGELUS

After the Angelus:
Dear brothers and sisters, in recent days we have been shaken by something
tragic: war. Several times we have prayed that this road would not be taken. And
let us not stop praying; indeed, let us implore God more intensely. For this reason, I
renew to all the invitation to make 2 March, Ash Wednesday, a day of prayer and
fasting for peace in Ukraine. A day to be close to the sufferings of the Ukrainian
people, to feel that we are all brothers and sisters, and to implore God for the end
of the war.
Those who wage war, those who provoke war, forget humanity. They do not start
from the people, they do not look at the real life of people, but place partisan
interests and power before all else. They trust in the diabolical and perverse logic of
weapons, which is the furthest from the will of God. And they distance themselves
from ordinary people, who want peace, and who are the real victims in every
conflict, who pay for the follies of war with their own skin. I think of the elderly, of
those who are seeking refuge in these hours, of mothers fleeing with their
children… They are brothers and sisters for whom it is urgent to open humanitarian
corridors, and who should be welcomed.
With a heart broken by what is happening in Ukraine — and let us not forget the
wars in other parts of the world, such as in Yemen, in Syria, in Ethiopia… — I
repeat: Silence all weapons! God is with the peacemakers, not with those who use
violence. Because those who love peace, as the Italian Constitution states, reject
“war as an instrument of aggression against the freedom of other peoples and as a
means for the settlement of international disputes”. […]

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VIDEO MESSAGE OF HIS HOLINESS POPE FRANCIS ON THE OCCASION OF THE 30th WORLD DAY OF THE SICK

[…] This time of the pandemic is teaching us to view illness as a global and not a
merely individual phenomenon, and it invites us to reflect on other types of
“pathologies” that threaten humanity and the world. Individualism and indifference
to others are forms of selfishness that unfortunately end up being amplified in the
society of consumerist wellbeing and economic liberalism; and the consequent
inequalities are found even in the field of healthcare, where some enjoy so-called
“excellence” and many others struggle to access basic healthcare. To cure this
“social” virus, the antidote is the culture of fraternity, based on the awareness that
we are all equal as human persons, all equal as children of one God (cf. Fratelli
Tutti, 272). On this basis, it will be possible to have effective treatments for
everyone. But if we are not convinced that we are all equal, this will not work. […]

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POPE FRANCIS ANGELUS

After the Angelus:
[…] And next Tuesday, liturgical memorial of Saint Josephine Bakhita, we will
observe World Day of Prayer and Awareness against Human Trafficking . This is a
deep wound, inflicted by the shameful pursuit of economic interests, without any
respect for the human person. Many girls — we see them on the streets — who are
not free, they are slaves of traffickers, who send them to work and, if they do not
bring [back] money, they beat them. This is happening in our cities today. Let us
really think about it.
Faced with these scourges of humanity, I express my sorrow and I urge all those
with responsibility to act decisively to prevent both exploitation and the humiliating
practices that afflict women and girls in particular. […]
[…] In Monferrato: John, a young Ghanaian man, 25 years old, a migrant, who
suffered all the things that many migrants suffer to get here, and in the end he
settled in Monferrato. He began to work, to build his future, in a winery. And then
he fell ill with a terrible cancer. He is dying. And when they told him the truth, [and
asked him] what he would have liked to do, [he replied:] “Go back home to
embrace my father before dying”. As he was dying, he thought of his father. And in
that village in Monferrato, they immediately took up a collection and, medicated
with morphine, they put him and a companion on a plane and sent him home so
that he could die in his father’s arms. This shows us that in the midst of so much
bad news today, there are good things, there are “saints next door”. Thank you for
these two testimonies which are good for us. […]

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GREETING OF HIS HOLINESS POPE FRANCIS TO A GROUP OF THE “HOUSE OF THE SPIRIT AND THE ARTS” FOUNDATION

Dear brothers and sisters, good morning and welcome!
Thank you for this visit. I thank my friend Arnoldo Mosca Mondadori for his
presentation. Thank you, Arnoldo.
I greet the detainees from the prisons of San Vittore in Milan, Opera and Alba, with
the director and staff. I congratulate you on your work. They are artisanal activities,
and also have a symbolic Christian value: preparing the hosts for the Eucharistic
celebration; making musical instruments from wood recovered from boats that
carried migrants; carpentry, like Saint Joseph and Jesus; the production of wine,
which is the symbol of the feast – remember the wedding at Cana!
I greet the refugees who perform tailoring work.
I greet the young mothers with their children.
I greet the people with disabilities, who also collaborate in preparing the hosts and
the violins.
I greet the musicians of the multi-ethnic orchestra, with the directors and Maestro
Piovani, who composed the music for “Violino del mare”.
I greet the people from Spain, Brazil and Argentina, as well as the volunteers and
collaborators.
I thank you all because you are a seed of hope. With the support of the “House of
the Spirit and the Arts”, you give signs that are contrary to the unfortunately
widespread culture of rejection. Instead you seek to build, with the “discarded
stones”, a house where one breathes an air of social friendship and fraternity. Not
everything is easy – we know – it is not entirely a “bed of roses”! Each one of us
has his or her limits, mistakes and sins. All of us. But God’s mercy is greater, and if
we welcome each other as brothers and sisters, he forgives us and he helps us go
forward.
Brothers and sisters, let us remember with gratitude all those who contribute to the
work of the Foundation; and a grateful and prayerful thought goes in particular to
Ms. Marisa Baldoni.
I thank you once again and I encourage you to continue on your way. May Our Lady
and Saint Joseph accompany you. May you always have among you and in your
workshops the spirit of the house of Nazareth! I bless you with affection. And you,
please, do not forget to pray for me. Thank you.

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MESSAGE OF HIS HOLINESS POPE FRANCIS FOR THE 56th WORLD DAY OF SOCIAL COMMUNICATIONS

Dear brothers and sisters,
Last year we reflected on the need to “Come and See” in order to discover reality
and be able to recount it beginning with experiencing events and meeting people.
Continuing in this vein, I would now like to draw attention to another word ,
“listen”, which is decisive in the grammar of communication and a condition for
genuine dialogue. […]
[…] The reality of forced migration is also a complex issue, and no one has a
ready-made prescription for solving it. I repeat that, in order to overcome
prejudices about migrants and to melt the hardness of our hearts, we should try to
listen to their stories. Give each of them a name and a story. Many good journalists
already do this. And many others would like to do it, if only they could. Let us
encourage them! Let us listen to these stories! Everyone would then be free to
support the migration policies they deem most appropriate for their own country.
But in any case, we would have before our eyes not numbers, not dangerous
invaders, but the faces and stories, gazes, expectations and sufferings of real men
and women to listen to.
Listening to one another in the Church
In the Church, too, there is a great need to listen to and to hear one another. It is
the most precious and life-giving gift we can offer each other. “Christians have
forgotten that the ministry of listening has been committed to them by him who is
himself the great listener and whose work they should share. We should listen with
the ears of God that we may speak the word of God”. Thus, the Protestant
theologian Dietrich Bonhoeffer reminds us that the first service we owe to others in
communion consists in listening to them. Whoever does not know how to listen to
his brother or sister will soon no longer be able to listen to God either.
The most important task in pastoral activity is the “apostolate of the ear” – to listen
before speaking, as the Apostle James exhorts: “Let every man be quick to hear,
slow to speak” (1:19). Freely giving some of our own time to listen to people is the
first act of charity.
A synodal process has just been launched. Let us pray that it will be a great
opportunity to listen to one another. Communion, in fact, is not the result of
strategies and programmes, but is built in mutual listening between brothers and
sisters. As in a choir, unity does not require uniformity, monotony, but the plurality
and variety of voices, polyphony. At the same time, each voice in the choir sings
while listening to the other voices and in relation to the harmony of the whole. This
harmony is conceived by the composer, but its realization depends on the
symphony of each and every voice.
With the awareness that we participate in a communion that precedes and includes
us, we can rediscover a symphonic Church, in which each person is able to sing
with his or her own voice, welcoming the voices of others as a gift to manifest the
harmony of the whole that the Holy Spirit composes.
Rome, Saint John Lateran, 24 January 2022, Memorial of Saint Francis de Sales.

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ADDRESS OF HIS HOLINESS POPE FRANCIS TO THE DELEGATION OF THE CUSTODY OF THE HOLY LAND ON THE CENTENARY OF THE JOURNAL”LA TERRA SANTA”

[…] To make known the Holy Land, means communicating the “Fifth Gospel”, that
is, the historical and geographical environment in which the Word of God was
revealed and incarnated in Jesus of Nazareth, for us and for our salvation. It also
means making known the people who live there today, the life of the Christians of
the various Churches and denominations, but also that of Jews and Muslims, to
attempt to build a fraternal society in a context as complex and difficult as that of
the Middle East.
Communication, in the time of social networks, must help to build community, or
better still, fraternity (see Message for the World Communications Day 2019). I
encourage you to recount the fraternity that is possible: the fraternity between
Christians of Churches and confessions that are unfortunately still separated, but
which in the Holy Land are often already close to unity, as I myself have had the
opportunity to observe; to tell of the fraternity that is possible among all the
children of Abraham – Jews, Christians and Muslims; to tell of the ecclesial
fraternity that is open to migrants, displaced persons and refugees, to restore to
them the dignity they were deprived of when they had to leave their homeland in
search of a future for themselves and their children. To tell all of this.
I thank you because, to recount the Holy Land, you endeavour to meet people
where and as they are (see Message for World Communications Day 2021). Indeed,
to carry out your reports, your enquiries and your publications, you do not limit
yourselves to the calmer territories; you also visit the more difficult and afflicted
situations, such as Syria, Lebanon, Palestine and Gaza. I know that you try to
present stories of goodness, those of active resistance to the evil of war, those of
reconciliation, those of the restoration of dignity to the children robbed of their
childhood, those of refugees with their tragedies but also with their dreams and
their hopes. Thank you, because to carry out your work in this way, you have not
spared the soles of your shoes, and I know that you will not do so in the future, to
be able to recount all of this.
Indeed, in communicating a certain reality, nothing can completely replace personal
experience, living there. And you live and work in the very place where the Word of
God, his message of salvation, was made incarnate and “encounterable” in Jesus
Christ: not only in his words, but in his eyes, in his voice, in his gestures (cf.
Message for World Communications Day 2021). Jesus’ attractiveness “depended on
the truth of his preaching; yet the effectiveness of what he said was inseparable
from how he looked at others, from how he acted towards them, and even from his
silence. The disciples not only listened to his words; they watched him speak.
Indeed in him – the incarnate Logos – the Word took on a face; the invisible God let
himself be seen, heard and touched (cf. 1 Jn 1.1-3). The word is effective only if it
is “seen” only if it engages us in experience, in dialogue” (ibid.).
Dear communicators of the Custody of the Holy Land, you are required to make
known what the Synod on the Word of God (2008) and then Pope Benedict XVI
called “the Fifth Gospel”, that is, that Land where the history and geography of
salvation meet and allow us to make a new reading of the biblical text, in particular
the Gospel texts. There “we can see, indeed, tangibly feel that reality of the history
that God brought about with men and women; beginning with the places of
Abraham’s life and including the places of Jesus’ life, from the incarnation to the
empty tomb, the sign of his Resurrection. Yes, God entered this land, he acted with
us in this world” (Benedict XVI, Regina Caeli, 17 May 2009). And the Paschal
Mystery also illuminates and gives meaning to today’s history, to the journey of the
peoples who live on that earth today, a journey unfortunately marked by wounds
and conflicts, still today, but which God’s grace always opens up to hope, hope of
fraternity and peace (cf. ibid.). In this sense too, by telling the story of the Holy
Land, you are telling the “Fifth Gospel”, the Gospel that God continues to write in
history.
Through the means of social communication, you are able to enrich the faith of
many, even those who do not have the opportunity of making a pilgrimage to the
holy places. You do so by means of your professional commitment, carried out
skilfully every day in the service of the Gospel. This is valuable for believers
throughout the world and, at the same time, supports the Christians who live in the
Land of Jesus. And I want to take advantage of this opportunity to express my
closeness to them. I always remember them, also in prayer. Please, when you
return home, convey my greeting and my blessing to the families and Christian
communities of the Holy Land.
Dear brothers and sisters, may the Lord’s providence and the protection of the Holy
Virgin always accompany you in your activities. I heartily impart the apostolic
blessing to you all, and to the other collaborators who were unable to come. And I
ask you, from the Holy Land, for a prayer for me too. Thank you!

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ADDRESS OF HIS HOLINESS POPE FRANCIS TO THE MEMBERS OF THE DIPLOMATIC CORPS ACCREDITED TO THE HOLY SEE

Dear Ambassadors,
Last year, thanks also to the lessening of the restrictions put in place in 2020, I had
occasion to receive many Heads of State and Governments, as well as various civil
and religious authorities.
Among those many meetings, I would like to mention that of 1 July 2021, devoted
to reflection and prayer for Lebanon. To the beloved Lebanese people, who are
working to find a solution to the economic and political crisis that has gripped the
nation, I wish today to renew my closeness and my prayers. At the same time, I
trust that necessary reforms and the support of the international community will
help the country to persevere in its proper identity as a model of peaceful
coexistence and brotherhood among the different religions.
In the course of 2021, I was also able to resume my Apostolic Journeys. In March, I
had the joy of travelling to Iraq. Providence willed this, as a sign of hope after years
of war and terrorism. The Iraqi people have the right to regain their dignity and to
live in peace. Their religious and cultural roots go back thousands of years:
Mesopotamia is a cradle of civilization; it is from there that God called Abraham to
inaugurate the history of salvation.
In September, I travelled to Budapest for the conclusion of the International
Eucharistic Congress, and thereafter to Slovakia. It was an opportunity for me to
meet with the Catholic faithful and Christians of other confessions, and to dialogue
with the Jewish community. I likewise travelled to Cyprus and Greece, a Journey
that remains vivid in my memory. That visit allowed me to deepen ties with our
Orthodox brothers and to experience the fraternity existing between the various
Christian confessions.
A very moving part of that Journey was my visit to the island of Lesbos, where I
was able to see at first hand the generosity of all those working to provide
hospitality and assistance to migrants, but above all, to see the faces of the many
children and adults who are guests of these centres of hospitality. Their eyes spoke
of the effort of their journey, their fear of an uncertain future, their sorrow for the
loved ones they left behind and their nostalgia for the homeland they were forced
to depart. Before those faces, we cannot be indifferent or hide behind walls and
barbed wires under the pretext of defending security or a style of life. This we
cannot do.
Consequently, I thank all those individuals and governments working to ensure that
migrants are welcomed and protected, and to support their human promotion and
integration in the countries that have received them. I am aware of the difficulties
that some states encounter in the face of a large influx of people. No one can be
asked to do what is impossible for them, yet there is a clear difference between
accepting, albeit in a limited way, and rejecting completely.
There is a need to overcome indifference and to reject the idea that migrants are a
problem for others. The results of this approach are evident in the dehumanization
of those migrants concentrated in hotspots where they end up as easy prey to
organized crime and human traffickers, or engage in desperate attempts to escape
that at times end in death. Sadly, we must also note that migrants are themselves
often turned into a weapon of political blackmail, becoming a sort of “bargaining
commodity” that deprives them of their dignity.
Here I would like to renew my gratitude to the Italian authorities, thanks to whom
several persons were able to come with me to Rome from Cyprus and Greece. This
was a simple yet meaningful gesture. To the Italian people, who suffered greatly at
the beginning of the pandemic, but who have also shown encouraging signs of
recovery, I express my heartfelt hope that they will always maintain their
characteristic spirit of generosity, openness and solidarity.
At the same time, I consider it essential that the European Union arrive at internal
cohesion in handling migration movements, just as it did in dealing with the effects
of the pandemic. There is a need to adopt a coherent and comprehensive system
for coordinating policies on migration and asylum, with a view to sharing
responsibility for the reception of migrants, the review of requests for asylum, and
the redistribution and integration of those who can be accepted. The capacity to
negotiate and discover shared solutions is one of the strong points of the European
Union; it represents a sound model for a farsighted approach to the global
challenges before us.
Nonetheless, the migration issue does not regard Europe alone, even though it is
especially affected by waves of migrants coming from Africa and from Asia. In
recent years, we have witnessed, among others, an exodus of Syrian refugees and,
more recently, the many people who have fled Afghanistan. Nor can we overlook
the massive migration movements on the American continent, which press upon the
border between Mexico and the United States of America. Many of those migrants
are Haitians fleeing the tragedies that have struck their country in recent years.
The issue of migration, together with the pandemic and climate change, has clearly
demonstrated that we cannot be saved alone and by ourselves: the great
challenges of our time are all global. It is thus troubling that, alongside the greater
interconnection of problems, we are seeing a growing fragmentation of solutions. It
is not uncommon to encounter unwillingness to open windows of dialogue and
spaces of fraternity; this only fuels further tensions and divisions, as well as a
generalized feeling of uncertainty and instability. What is needed instead is a
recovery of our sense of shared identity as a single human family. The alternative
can only be growing isolation, marked by a reciprocal rejection and refusal that
further endangers multilateralism, the diplomatic style that has characterized
international relations from the end of the Second World War to the present time.
For some time now, multilateral diplomacy has been experiencing a crisis of trust,
due to the reduced credibility of social, governmental and intergovernmental
systems. Important resolutions, declarations and decisions are frequently made
without a genuine process of negotiation in which all countries have a say. This
imbalance, now dramatically evident, has generated disaffection towards
international agencies on the part of many states; it also weakens the multilateral
system as a whole, with the result that it becomes less and less effective in
confronting global challenges.
The diminished effectiveness of many international organizations is also due to their
members entertaining differing visions of the ends they wish to pursue. Not
infrequently, the centre of interest has shifted to matters that by their divisive
nature do not strictly belong to the aims of the organization. As a result, agendas
are increasingly dictated by a mindset that rejects the natural foundations of
humanity and the cultural roots that constitute the identity of many peoples. As I
have stated on other occasions, I consider this a form of ideological colonization,
one that leaves no room for freedom of expression and is now taking the form of
the “cancel culture” invading many circles and public institutions. Under the guise of
defending diversity, it ends up cancelling all sense of identity, with the risk of
silencing positions that defend a respectful and balanced understanding of various
sensibilities. A kind of dangerous “one-track thinking” [pensée unique] is taking
shape, one constrained to deny history or, worse yet, to rewrite it in terms of
present-day categories, whereas any historical situation must be interpreted in the
light of a hermeneutics of that particular time, not that of today.
Multilateral diplomacy is thus called to be truly inclusive, not canceling but
cherishing the differences and sensibilities that have historically marked various
peoples. In this way, it will regain credibility and effectiveness in facing the
challenges to come, which will require humanity to join together as one great family
that, starting from different viewpoints, should prove capable of finding common
solutions for the good of all. This calls for reciprocal trust and willingness to
dialogue; it entails “listening to one another, sharing different views, coming to
agreement and walking together”. Indeed, “dialogue is the best way to realize what
ought always to be affirmed and respected apart from any ephemeral consensus”.
Nor should we overlook “the existence of certain enduring values”. Those are not
always easy to discern, but their acceptance “makes for a robust and solid social
ethics. Once those fundamental values are adopted through dialogue and
consensus, we realize that they rise above consensus”. Here I wish to mention in
particular the right to life, from conception to its natural end, and the right to
religious freedom.
In this regard, in recent years we have seen a growing collective awareness of the
urgent need to care for our common home, which is suffering from the constant
and indiscriminate exploitation of its resources. Here I think especially of the
Philippines, struck in these last weeks by a devastating typhoon, and of other
nations in the Pacific, made vulnerable by the negative effects of climate change,
which endanger the lives of their inhabitants, most of whom are dependent on
agriculture, fishing and natural resources.
Precisely this realization should impel the international community as a whole to
discover and implement common solutions. None may consider themselves exempt
from this effort, since all of us are involved and affected in equal measure. At the
recent COP26 in Glasgow, several steps were made in the right direction, even
though they were rather weak in light of the gravity of the problem to be faced. The
road to meeting the goals of the Paris Agreement is complex and appears to be
long, while the time at our disposal is shorter and shorter. Much still remains to be
done, and so 2022 will be another fundamental year for verifying to what extent
and in what ways the decisions taken in Glasgow can and should be further
consolidated in view of COP27, planned for Egypt next November. […]

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MESSAGE OF HIS HOLINESS POPE FRANCIS FOR WORLD MISSION DAY 2022

Dear brothers and sisters!
These words were spoken by the Risen Jesus to his disciples just before his
Ascension into heaven, as we learn from the Acts of the Apostles: “You shall receive
power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you; and you shall be my witnesses in
Jerusalem and in all Judea and Samaria and to the ends of the earth” (1:8). They
are also the theme of the 2022 World Mission Day which, as always, reminds us
that the Church is missionary by nature. This year World Mission Day offers us the
opportunity to commemorate several important events in the Church’s life and
mission: the fourth centenary of the founding of the Congregation de Propaganda
Fide, now the Congregation for the Evangelization of Peoples, and the second
centenary of the Society of the Propagation of the Faith. A hundred years ago, the
latter, together with the Society of the Holy Childhood and the Society of Saint Peter
the Apostle, was granted the title “Pontifical”.
Let us reflect on the three key phrases that synthesize the three foundations of the
life and mission of every disciple: “You shall be my witnesses”, “to the ends of the
earth” and “you shall receive the power of the Holy Spirit”.
1. “You shall be my witnesses” – The call of every Christian to bear witness to
Christ
This is the central point, the heart of Jesus’ teaching to the disciples, in view of
their being sent forth into the world. The disciples are to be witnesses of Jesus,
thanks to the grace of the Holy Spirit that they will receive. Wherever they go and
in whatever place they find themselves. Christ was the first to be sent, as a
“missionary” of the Father (cf. Jn 20:21), and as such, he is the Father’s “faithful
witness” (cf. Rev 1:5). In a similar way, every Christian is called to be a missionary
and witness to Christ. And the Church, the community of Christ’s disciples, has no
other mission than that of bringing the Gospel to the entire world by bearing
witness to Christ. To evangelize is the very identity of the Church.
A deeper look at the words, “You shall be my witnesses”, can clarify a few ever
timely aspects of the mission Christ entrusted to the disciples. The plural form of
the verb emphasizes the communitarian and ecclesial nature of the disciples’
missionary vocation. Each baptized person is called to mission, in the Church and
by the mandate of the Church: consequently, mission is carried out together, not
individually, in communion with the ecclesial community, and not on one’s own
initiative. Even in cases where an individual in some very particular situation carries
out the evangelizing mission alone, he must always do so in communion with the
Church which commissioned him. As Saint Paul VI taught in the Apostolic
Exhortation Evangelii Nuntiandi, a document dear to my heart: “Evangelization is
for no one an individual and isolated act; it is one that is deeply ecclesial. When the
most obscure preacher, catechist or pastor in the most distant land preaches the
Gospel, gathers his little community together or administers a sacrament, even
alone, he is carrying out an ecclesial act, and his action is certainly attached to the
evangelizing activity of the whole Church by institutional relationships, but also by
profound invisible links in the order of grace. This presupposes that he acts not in
virtue of a mission which he attributes to himself or by a personal inspiration, but in
union with the mission of the Church and in her name” (No. 60). Indeed, it was no
coincidence that the Lord Jesus sent his disciples out on mission in pairs; the
witness of Christians to Christ is primarily communitarian in nature. Hence, in
carrying out the mission, the presence of a community, regardless of its size, is of
fundamental importance.
In addition, the disciples are urged to live their personal lives in a missionary key:
they are sent by Jesus to the world not only to carry out, but also and above all to
live the mission entrusted to them; not only to bear witness, but also and above all
to be witnesses of Christ. In the moving words of the Apostle Paul, “[we are]
always carrying in the body the death of Jesus, so that the life of Jesus may also be
manifested in our bodies” (2 Cor 4:10). The essence of the mission is to bear
witness to Christ, that is, to his life, passion, death and resurrection for the love of
the Father and of humanity. Not by chance did the apostles look for Judas’
replacement among those who, like themselves, had been witnesses of the Lord’s
resurrection (cf. Acts 1:21). Christ, indeed Christ risen from the dead, is the One to
whom we must testify and whose life we must share. Missionaries of Christ are not
sent to communicate themselves, to exhibit their persuasive qualities and abilities
or their managerial skills. Instead, theirs is the supreme honour of presenting Christ
in words and deeds, proclaiming to everyone the Good News of his salvation, as the
first apostles did, with joy and boldness.
In the final analysis, then, the true witness is the “martyr”, the one who gives his or
her life for Christ, reciprocating the gift that he has made to us of himself. “The
primary reason for evangelizing is the love of Jesus which we have received, the
experience of salvation which urges us to ever greater love of him” (Evangelii
Gaudium, 264).
Finally, when it comes to Christian witness, the observation of Saint Paul VI remains
ever valid: “Modern man listens more willingly to witnesses than to teachers, and if
he does listen to teachers, it is because they are witnesses” (Evangelii Nuntiandi,
41). For this reason, the testimony of an authentic Christian life is fundamental for
the transmission of the faith. On the other hand, the task of proclaiming Christ’s
person and the message is equally necessary. Indeed, Paul VI went on to say:
“Preaching, the verbal proclamation of a message, is indeed always indispensable…
The word remains ever relevant, especially when it is the bearer of the power of
God. This is why Saint Paul’s axiom, “Faith comes from what is heard” (Rom
10:17), also retains its relevance: it is the word that is heard which leads to belief”
(ibid., 42).
In evangelization, then, the example of a Christian life and the proclamation of
Christ are inseparable. One is at the service of the other. They are the two lungs
with which any community must breathe, if it is to be missionary. This kind of
complete, consistent and joyful witness to Christ will surely be a force of attraction
also for the growth of the Church in the third millennium. I exhort everyone to take
up once again the courage, frankness and parrhesía of the first Christians, in order
to bear witness to Christ in word and deed in every area of life.
2. “To the ends of the earth” – The perennial relevance of a mission of universal
evangelization
In telling the disciples to be his witnesses, the risen Lord also tells them where they
are being sent: “…in Jerusalem and in all Judea and Samaria and to the ends of the
earth” (Acts 1:8). Here we clearly see the universal character of the disciples’
mission. We also see the “centrifugal” geographical expansion, as if in concentric
circles, of the mission, beginning with Jerusalem, which Jewish tradition considered
the centre of the world, to Judea and Samaria and to “the ends of the earth”. The
disciples are sent not to proselytize, but to proclaim; the Christian does not
proselytize. The Acts of the Apostles speak of this missionary expansion and
provide a striking image of the Church “going forth” in fidelity to her call to bear
witness to Christ the Lord and guided by divine providence in the concrete
conditions of her life. Persecuted in Jerusalem and then spread throughout Judea
and Samaria, the first Christians bore witness to Jesus everywhere (cf. Acts 8:1, 4).
Something similar still happens in our own day. Due to religious persecution and
situations of war and violence, many Christians are forced to flee from their
homelands to other countries. We are grateful to these brothers and sisters who do
not remain locked in their own suffering but bear witness to Christ and to the love
of God in the countries that accept them. Hence, Saint Paul VI encouraged them to
recognize the “responsibility incumbent on immigrants in the country that receives
them” (Evangelii Nuntiandi, 21). More and more, we are seeing how the presence
of faithful of various nationalities enriches the face of parishes and makes them
more universal, more Catholic. Consequently, the pastoral care of migrants should
be valued as an important missionary activity that can also help the local faithful to
rediscover the joy of the Christian faith they have received.
The words “to the ends of the earth” should challenge the disciples of Jesus in every
age and impel them to press beyond familiar places in bearing witness to him. For
all the benefits of modern travel, there are still geographical areas in which
missionary witnesses of Christ have not arrived to bring the Good News of his love.
Then too no human reality is foreign to the concern of the disciples of Jesus in their
mission. Christ’s Church will continue to “go forth” towards new geographical, social
and existential horizons, towards “borderline” places and human situations, in order
to bear witness to Christ and his love to men and women of every people, culture
and social status. In this sense, the mission will always be a missio ad gentes, as
the Second Vatican Council taught. The Church must constantly keep pressing
forward, beyond her own confines, in order to testify to all the love of Christ. Here I
would like to remember and express my gratitude for all those many missionaries
who gave their lives in order to “press on” in incarnating Christ’s love towards all
the brothers and sisters whom they met.
3. “You will receive power” from the Holy Spirit – Let us always be strengthened
and guided by the Spirit.
When the risen Christ commissioned the disciples to be his witnesses, he also
promised them the grace needed for this great responsibility: “You shall receive
power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you; and you shall be my witnesses”
(Acts 1:8). According to the account in Acts, it was precisely following the descent
of the Holy Spirit on the disciples that the first act of witnessing to the crucified and
risen Christ took place. That kerygmatic proclamation – Saint Peter’s “missionary”
address to the inhabitants of Jerusalem – inaugurated an era in which the disciples
of Jesus evangelized the world. Whereas they had previously been weak, fearful
and closed in on themselves, the Holy Spirit gave them the strength, courage and
wisdom to bear witness to Christ before all.
Just as “no one can say ‘Jesus is Lord’, except by the Holy Spirit” (1 Cor 12:3), so
no Christian is able to bear full and genuine witness to Christ the Lord without the
Spirit’s inspiration and assistance. All Christ’s missionary disciples are called to
recognize the essential importance of the Spirit’s work, to dwell in his presence
daily and to receive his unfailing strength and guidance. Indeed, it is precisely when
we feel tired, unmotivated or confused that we should remember to have recourse
to the Holy Spirit in prayer. Let me emphasize once again that prayer plays a
fundamental role in the missionary life, for it allows us to be refreshed and
strengthened by the Spirit as the inexhaustible divine source of renewed energy
and joy in sharing Christ’s life with others. “Receiving the joy of the Spirit is a
grace. Moreover, it is the only force that enables us to preach the Gospel and to
confess our faith in the Lord” (Message to the Pontifical Mission Societies, 21 May
2020). The Spirit, then, is the true protagonist of mission. It is he who gives us the
right word, at the right time, and in the right way.
In light of this action of the Holy Spirit, we also want to consider the missionary
anniversaries to be celebrated in 2022. The establishment of the Sacred
Congregation De Propaganda Fide in 1622 was motivated by the desire to promote
the missionary mandate in new territories. A providential insight! The Congregation
proved to be crucial for setting the Church’s evangelizing mission truly free from
interference by worldly powers, in order to establish those local Churches which
today display such great vigour. It is our hope that, as in its past four centuries, the
Congregation, with the light and strength of the Spirit, will continue and intensify its
work of coordinating, organizing and promoting the Church’s missionary activities.
The same Spirit who guides the universal Church also inspires ordinary men and
women for extraordinary missions. Thus it was that a young French woman, Pauline
Jaricot, founded the Society for the Propagation of the Faith exactly two hundred
years ago. Her beatification will be celebrated in this jubilee year. Albeit in poor
health, she accepted God’s inspiration to establish a network of prayer and
collection for missionaries, so that the faithful could actively participate in the
mission “to the ends of the earth”. This brilliant idea gave rise to the annual
celebration of World Mission Day, in which the funds collected in local communities
are applied to the universal fund with which the Pope supports missionary activity.
In this regard, I think too of the French Bishop Charles de Forbin-Janson, who
established the Association of the Holy Childhood to promote the mission among
children, with the motto “Children evangelize children, children pray for children,
children help children the world over”. I also think of Jeanne Bigard, who
inaugurated the Society of Saint Peter the Apostle for the support of seminarians
and priests in mission lands. Those three Mission Societies were recognized as
“Pontifical” exactly a hundred years ago. It was also under the inspiration and
guidance of the Holy Spirit that Blessed Paolo Manna, born 150 years ago, founded
the present-day Pontifical Missionary Union, to raise awareness and encourage
missionary spirit among priests, men and women religious and the whole people of
God. Saint Paul VI himself was part of this latter Society, and confirmed its papal
recognition. I mention these four Pontifical Mission Societies for their great
historical merits, but also to encourage you to rejoice with them, in this special
year, for the activities they carry out in support of the mission of evangelization in
the Church, both universal and local. It is my hope that the local Churches will find
in these Societies a sure means for fostering the missionary spirit among the People
of God.
Dear brothers and sisters, I continue to dream of a completely missionary Church,
and a new era of missionary activity among Christian communities. I repeat Moses’
great desire for the people of God on their journey: “Would that all the Lord’s
people were prophets!” (Num 11:29). Indeed, would that all of us in the Church
were what we already are by virtue of baptism: prophets, witnesses, missionaries
of the Lord, by the power of the Holy Spirit, to the ends of the earth! Mary, Queen
of the Missions, pray for us!

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SOLEMNITY OF MARY, THE HOLY MOTHER OF GOD WORLD DAY OF PEACE POPE FRANCIS ANGELUS

After the Angelus, the Pope continued:
[…] Let us go home thinking: peace, peace, peace! We need peace. I was watching
the images on the television programme “A sua immagine”, today, on war, on
displaced persons, on poverty… but this happens in the world today. We want
peace! […]