Pope at Audience: it’s one thing to talk mercy,
another to live it
(Vatican Radio) Today the
Lord invites us to make a serious examination of conscience, Pope Francis said
Thursday at a special Jubilee audience at St Peter’s Square in Rome. It’s
one thing to talk mercy but quite another to live it, he said. Mercy is not an
abstraction or a lifestyle and, paraphrasing the words of St James the Apostle,
mercy without works is dead in itself.
Pope Francis used the text of
Matthew 25:31 as a launching point for discussing acts of mercy toward others.
What makes mercy come alive is its dynamism to meet the spiritual and material
needs of others, he said. Mercy has eyes to see, ears to listen, hands to help
lift.
Sometimes we pass by dramatic
situations of poverty and it seems that they don’t touch us, the Pope said. We
continue as if nothing happened, in an indifference which ultimately makes us
hypocrites and without realizing it, leads to a form of spiritual lethargy that
numbs the soul and leaves life barren.
Those who have experienced
mercy in their own lives, the Pope continued, cannot remain indifferent to the
needs of our brothers. The teaching of the Lord Jesus does not allow for escape
routes. “I was hungry and you gave me food; I was thirsty and you gave me
drink; I was naked, displaced, sick, in prison and you visited me.”
Pope Francis concluded his
catechesis by reflecting on his recent apostolic journey to Armenia, the first
nation, he noted, to have embraced Christianity. He thanked the
President of Armenia and the Catholicos Karekin II, the Partriarch, the
Catholic bishops and the people of Armenia for welcoming him as a pilgrim in
fraternity and peace.
Finally, Pope Francis said,
as Christians we are called to strengthen our fraternal communion and bear
witness to the Gospel of Christ.
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