Pope on theology of tenderness:
faith is the connection
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| Pope Francis meets participants at a conference entitled "Theology of tenderness", 13th September 2018. (Vatican Media) |
At a conference, Pope Francis explains how theology and
tenderness go hand in hand.
By Francesca Merlo
The words “theology” and “tenderness” seem very distant,
said Pope Francis to the participants at a conference in Rome this week.
The first word seems to recall a world of academics, the
second, interpersonal relations. “In reality,” said Pope Francis “our faith
ties them together inextricably. Theology is called upon to communicate the
concreteness of the God of love. And tenderness translates, to the present day,
the affection that God nurtures for us.”
This is the first of three reflections Pope Francis voiced
on the expression “the theology of tenderness”.
Feelings first
The Pope said, “Nowadays, everything begins with what one
feels”. He said theology is called upon to accompany existential research. It
cannot be reduced to a feeling but we must recognise that in many parts of the
world, vital questions are approached through current emotions rather than
social needs. This has not always been the case, and Pope Francis acknowledged
that “one may not like it, but it is a matter of fact.”
To love and be loved
Pope Francis asked what a theology of tenderness might
entail, bringing up two points: “the beauty of feeling loved by God” and “the
beauty of feeling like loving in the name of God.”
Antidote to fear
“To feel loved” he said, “is a message that in recent times
has reached us more powerfully”, from mercy, the essential characteristic of
the Holy Trinity and of Christian life. “Tenderness can indicate precisely the
manner in which we recognise the divine mercy.” He said that tenderness reveals
to us, next to the paternal aspect, the maternal aspect of God, who loves us “more
than a mother loves her child”.
He said tenderness is the “antidote to fear with regards to
God” and that “trust beats fear”. “To feel loved therefore means to learn to
trust in God, to tell Him, as He desires: ‘Jesus, I place my trust in you’”.
From stone to flesh
The Lord’s Passion “invites us to turn our hearts of stone
into hearts of flesh, and to grow passionate about God. And about man, for the
love of God.”
Tender God, tender man
Pope Francis said, “When we truly feel loved, we are led to
reciprocate that love.” Reminding us that “If God is infinitely tender, we, who
are made in the image of God, must also be capable of tenderness”.
He said that God’s tenderness brings us to the understanding
that “love is the meaning of life”. We are called to pour the love we receive
from the Lord back into the world – into the family, Church and society. “All
this” said Pope Francis, “not out of duty, but for love”.
A contemporary Word
These points address a “moving theology”: one that is not
narcissistic, but extends to services to the community, and one that does not
settle with repeating past paradigms, but that reflects the Incarnate Word.
“Certainly not the silent Word of God”, he continued, the
flesh that the Word is called to assume, that changes, from era to era.
Pope Francis concluded that there is much work to be done
for theology and for its mission today. “To incarnate the Word of God, for the
Church and for the person of the third millennium.”

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