Pope at Audience urges Christians
to open their hearts
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| Pope Francis at the Beneral Audience (Vatican Media) |
During the weekly General Audience Pope Francis continued
his catechesis dedicated to the “Our Father”.
By Linda Bordoni
Pope Francis on Wednesday urged Christians to
open their hearts pointing out that Christ’s victory has not yet been fully
achieved.
To the crowds gathered in St. Peter’s Square for the General
Audience, the Pope said Jesus has come, and there are multiple signs of the
kingdom, yet the world is still marked by sin and the hearts of many remain
closed, which compels us to implore the Lord: “your kingdom come”!
The world, he said, continues to be populated by so many
people who suffer, by people who do not reconcile and do not forgive, by wars
and by many forms of exploitation: “Let's think, for example of the trafficking
of children”.
All of these facts, he said, are proof that many men and
women still live with their hearts closed.
‘Father: we need you!’
It is above all in these situations, he said, that we turn
to the second invocation of Our Lord’s Prayer: “Your kingdom come!” with which
we say, ‘Father, we need you, Jesus, we need you everywhere" and forever
Lord, be among us!”
Recalling Christ’s words when he began his preaching in Galilee
and proclaimed: “This is the time of fulfillment. The kingdom of God is at
hand. Repent, and believe in the gospel”, the Pope explained that these words
do not contain a threat; to the contrary, they are an announcement and a
message of joy.
Jesus, he said, does not want to push people to conversion
by sowing the fear of God's impending judgment, nor, he said, does he
proselytize.
He announces, the Pope continued, that the signs of the
coming of His Kingdom are manifest and they are all positive. In fact, he said,
Jesus begins his ministry by taking care of the sick - both in body and in
spirit - of those who lived a life of social exclusion, such as lepers, of
sinners.
God is patient and gentle
Sometimes we may ask, he said, why does our imploration “your
kingdom come” emerge so slowly?
It’s because God is not like us, he explained: “God is
patient!” And he wants to establish his kingdom not with violence but
with gentleness, “like a grain of mustard seed, which, though tiny, grows into
a mighty tree”.
Pope Francis concluded his catechesis urging Christians to
pray the Our Father and to sow the words that implore the coming of His Kingdom
in the midst of our sins and failures.
Let's give these words, he said, “to those who are
defeated and bent by life, to those who have tasted more hatred than love, to
those who have lived useless days without ever understanding why. Let's give
them to those who have fought for justice, to all the martyrs of history”.
Let’s give these words, he appealed, “to those who
have come to the conclusion they have fought in vain and that evil dominates
this world”.

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