Pope answers childrens' questions about suffering and
growing up
(Vatican Radio) Why does God let children suffer? How can
kids change the world? And how can they overcome their fear of growing up?
Those were the soul-searching questions that three children
asked Pope Francis on Friday during a meeting with members of an organisation
for middle school students called ‘I Cavalieri’ or The Knights.
The colourful encounter included young knights from all over
Italy, along with groups from Spain, Portugal, France and Switzerland, plus
others linked up online from Latin America.
overcome her fear of moving to high school and
saying goodbye to all her current friends.
The Pope told her that life is a continual round of big and
small ‘hellos and goodbyes’. We grow up, he said, by making new friends and
letting go of old ones. Don't be frightened, he said, but try to see it as a
challenge. Don’t worry about what’s behind the wall, but imagine instead a
horizon you can see in the countryside and try to always move forward
towards your new horizons.
A second child, Giulio, asked the Pope how young
people can help change the world for the better.
Getting the kids to shout out answers, Pope Francis asked
what happens if they have two sweets and a friend comes to call? And if they
only have one sweet? Do you put it in your pocket and eat it later? Or do you
share what you have with others? Show me your hands, he instructed the kids:
are they closed and selfish, or open and generous? Our hands are a symbol for
our hearts, he said, and only open, generous hearts can change the
world.
If you have a friend at school that you don’t like, the Pope
went on, don’t go and gossip about that person with others, because that shows
you have a closed heart. If someone insults you, don’t insult them back, but
try and change the world with small, every day, acts of generosity and
solidarity. Jesus taught us to pray for our friends and our enemies, for
those who make us suffer, he said, just as Our Father in heaven makes the sun
shine upon good and bad people.
Finally a young Bulgarian boy, Tanio, told the Pope how he’d
been abandoned in an orphanage and adopted by Italian parents at five years
old. His new mum died a year later, leaving his dad and grandparents to look
after him. Now his grandparents have died too, so he asked the Pope: How
can we believe that God loves us when we lose people in this way?
Pope Francis confessed that he too asks the same question
when he visits sick children in hospital. How can we believe in God’s love when
we see kids suffer from hunger in some parts of the world,
while so much food is wasted in other places? There are simply no words
to answer these questions, he told his young audience. The only explanation
you may find is in the love of those who support and care for you.
God doesn’t answer my questions either, he admitted, but
when I look at the Cross and remember that God let his own Son suffer, I know
that there must be a sense to it somewhere. I can’t explain it to you, he said,
but you may find it on your own. Remember, he concluded, there are questions
and situations in life which cannot be explained, yet the love of God
is always there, and people around you can help you feel his presence in
your life.
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