Pope at Audience: God seeks each
one of us personally
Wednesday's General Audience (Vatican Media) |
At the General Audience on Wednesday, Pope Francis continued
his catechesis on the Our Father, focusing on the third invocation, “Thy will
be done”.
By Christopher Wells
“God is not ambiguous, He is not hidden behind riddles, He
has not planned the future of the world in an indecipherable manner.” In his
catechesis on the third petition of the “Our Father”, Pope Francis said that we
can see the will of the Father expressed in the words of Jesus: God wills “to
seek and to save that which was lost”. This, the Pope said, “without any shadow
of doubt, is the will of God: the salvation of all human beings”, of each one
of us individually.
Because of His love for us, God “knocks on the door of our
heart” in order “to draw us to Himself, to lead us forward along the path of
salvation”. God, the Pope said, “is close to each one of us with His love, in
order to lead us by the hand to salvation”.
“And we, in prayer, ask that God’s seeking might come to a
good end, that His universal plan of salvation should be accomplished,” Pope
Francis continued, “first, in each one of us, and then in the whole world.”
God’s desire for the salvation of human beings, and of the
whole world, means that our prayer that His will be done does not mean “bowing
our heads”, like slaves, to an unalterable fate. On the contrary, “God wants us
to be free,” the Pope said; and “it is His love that frees us”. “Thy will be
done”, he said, is “a courageous, even combative prayer” precisely because
there is so much evil in the world, which is not according to God’s
[antecedent] will.
The Our Father, he continued, “is a prayer that kindles in
us the same love [that] Jesus has for the will of the Father, a flame that
impels one to transform the world with love”. There is nothing of random chance
in the faith of Christians, the Pope explained: “Rather, there is a salvation
that waits to manifest itself in the life of each man and woman, and to be
fully accomplished in eternity.” If we prayer, he said, “it is because we
believe that God is able and desires to transform reality, overcoming evil with
good.”
Pope Francis pointed to the example of Jesus in the Garden
of Gethsemane, when the Lord prayed, “Father, if you are willing, remove this
chalice from me; but not my will, but yours, be done!” Although He is “crushed”
by the weight of evil in the world, Jesus “confidently abandons Himself to the
ocean of love of the will of the Father”. In His love, God will never abandon
us, the Pope insisted: “He will always be with us, beside us, within us. For a
believer, more than a hope, this is a certainty”.
Concluding his catechesis, Pope Francis invited all those
present in the Square to pray together the Our Father, each in their own
language.
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