Pope
Francis to Kenya's clergy: the joy of service
(Vatican Radio) Pope Francis held a special meeting with clergy,
religious men and women, and seminarians at St. Mary's School in Nairobi, Kenya, on Thursday.
Putting aside his prepared text, the Holy Father spoke of the joy of a life of
radical service to the Gospel and of the radical faithfulness to Christ that is
the guarantee of happiness and success in ordained ministry and consecrated
discipleship.
An official transcript
of the Pope Francis' extemporaneous remarks is being prepared.
PREPARED TEXT: Pope's Address to Clergy, Religious, Seminarians,
in Kenya
"I
ask all of you to cherish your vocation as a gift from God and to keep ever
alive the flame of your zeal."
Below is the prepared text of Pope Francis' speech during his
meeting with clergy, men and women religious, and seminarians, at the athletic
field of St. Mary's School. He did not deliver this text, choosing instead to
speak off-the-cuff.
***
V./ Tumsifu Yesu Kristu! (Praised be Jesus Christ!)
R./ (Milele na Milele. Amina.) (Now and forever. Amen.)
My Brother Priests,
Brothers and Sisters of Consecrated Life,
Dear Seminarians,
I am very happy to be with you, to see the joy on your faces and
to listen to your words and your songs of happiness and hope. I thank Bishop
Mukobo, Father Phiri and Sister Michael Marie for their words of welcome on
your behalf. I also thank the Felician Sisters for their hospitality today.
Before all else, I thank you for the active contribution made to
the Church and to Kenyan society by so many consecrated persons, and priests. I
ask you to bring my affectionate greeting to your brothers and sisters who
could not be with us today, and especially to the elderly and infirm of your
communities.
“May God who began a good work in you bring it to completion at
the day of Christ Jesus!” (Phil 1:6).
This afternoon I would like to make my own this heartfelt prayer of the Apostle
Paul, with gratitude for your faithful service to the Lord in the midst of his
people.
Every day, moving in hospitals and at homes among the sick, the
suffering, the poor and the marginalized, you proclaim the loving mercy and
compassion of God. In parishes, schools and educational institutions, you work
to educate the young as Christians and as upright citizens. These efforts are
well spent. You help to build the spiritual and moral life of society on the
strong foundations of honesty, justice, solidarity and the responsible use of
freedom. In a special way, you serve as living signs of the Church’s communion,
which embraces all people and languages, excludes no one, and seeks the
salvation of all.
I ask all of you to cherish your vocation as a gift from God and
to keep ever alive the flame of your zeal. This encouragement goes in a special
way to the men and women religious and the consecrated persons present. Your
young hearts were set afire by the beauty of a life lived in the footsteps of
Christ, dedicated to God and to your neighbour. By daily renewing your “yes” to
the Lord’s call to follow him in the evangelical chastity, poverty and
obedience, you give him all that you have, all that you are. Although we live
and exercise our apostolate in the world, our hearts must be centred on heaven.
Let prayer, personal, liturgical and communal, be the heart of your day. Here I
would like to thank the cloistered religious for their hidden apostolate which
contributes so much to the fruitfulness of the Church’s mission in this
country.
Dear brother priests, your own vocation calls you, in imitation
of Christ the Good Shepherd, to go out to seek the poor, the sick, those in
need of God’s mercy. This is the source of our joy, to be heralds and ministers
of his compassion and love to all, without distinction. Amid the many duties
and distractions of the pastoral ministry, prayer, priestly fraternity, union
of mind and heart with your bishops, and frequent recourse to the grace of the
sacrament of Penance, must be your source of strength and a bulwark against the
subtle temptation of a spiritual worldliness. The Lord calls us to be ministers
of his grace despite our limitations and weaknesses. As our eternal high
priest, who was made perfect through suffering (Heb 2:10), he will strengthen your
witness to the transforming power of his cross and the joy of his eternal
victory.
Dear young seminarians, you too are very close to my heart!
These years of preparation and discernment are a grace-filled time when you
become convinced of God’s will for your lives. On your part, this calls for
honesty, self-knowledge and purity of intention; it must also be sustained by
personal prayer, inner freedom from self-seeking or undue attachments. Above
all, this should be a time of spiritual joy, the joy which wells up in a heart
which is open to God’s voice and humbly prepared to sacrifice everything for
the service of his holy people.
Dear friends, the Gospel we preach and strive to live is not an
easy path; it is narrow, but it fills the heart with untold joy. Once again I
echo the Apostle in assuring you that “I pray always with joy for all of you” (Phil 1:4). I ask
you to pray for me, and I commend you all to the surpassing love which we have
known in Christ Jesus. To all of you, with great affection, I impart my
blessing.
Mungu awabariki! (God bless you!)
[Original text: Italian]
[Translation provided by Vatican]
Nairobi, November
26, 2015 (ZENIT.org) Staff Reporter
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