Pope to Young People: God loves
you, the Church needs you
Young people and Synod fathers with Pope Francis at the 2018 Synod for Young People, the Faith, and Vocation Discernment (Vatican Media) |
Pope Francis’ post-synodal Apostolic Exhortation is
presented at a Press Conference in the Vatican. The result of last October’s
Synod on Young People, the message of the document is summed up in its title:
“Christ is alive”.
By Seàn-Patrick Lovett
“Christ is alive and He wants you to be alive!” The opening
lines of the Apostolic
Exhortation set both the tone and the content of the Pope’s
message. But the closing lines are what make the document an “exhortation” in
the true sense of the word: “The Church needs your momentum, your intuitions,
your faith”, writes Pope Francis”. “And when you arrive where we have not yet
reached, have the patience to wait for us”.
Pope Francis’ message is addressed not only to young people,
but also to “the entire People of God”. The Pope says he was “inspired by the
wealth of reflections and conversations” that took place during last October’s
Synod, on the theme of “Young People, the Faith and Vocational Discernment”,
and he divides his reflections into nine chapters.
Chapter 1: The Word of God and Young People
Pope Francis begins by giving Old Testament examples of how,
“in an age when young people were not highly regarded, some texts show that God
sees them differently”. Turning to the New Testament, he reminds us that, as
far as Jesus was concerned, “age did not establish privileges, and being young
did not imply lesser worth or dignity”.
Chapter 2: The Ever-young Jesus
The Pope continues by presenting an eternally young Jesus as
the model for a Church that is young “when she is herself”, a Church that
“dares to be different”. Pope Francis admits that the figure of Jesus is not
always presented in an “attractive and effective way”. On the contrary, he
writes, there are young people who consider the Church “a nuisance, an
irritant”. They want a Church that “listens”, not one that “condemns”.
Chapter 3: The “Now” of God
Young people are more than “the future of our world”, says
Pope Francis: “even now they are helping to enrich it”. Which is why they are
not satisfied with “prepackaged answers and ready-made solutions”. The Pope
examines a series of challenges, ranging from migration and exploitation, to
sexuality, and the pros and cons of living in a digital world. He also
addresses the issue of child abuse. “With the help of young people”, he
suggests, “this dark moment…can be an opportunity for a reform of epoch-making
significance”.
Chapter 4: Three Great Truths
Chapter four of the Exhortation contains what Pope Francis
calls Three Great Truths. The first is that “God loves you”, with a love that
is more concerned with “reconciling than forbidding…with the future than with
the past”. The second is that “Christ saves you”, forgiving us “time and
again…bearing us on His shoulders”. The third is that “Christ is alive”, a
realization that helps us to “stop complaining, and look to the future”.
Chapter 5: The Age of Choice
Pope Francis describes youth as “the age of choice”, and
suggests we should not be “afraid to take chances and make mistakes”. Working
for the “common good” and “living the present” are themes the Pope explores in
Chapter five, along with a call for young people to be “protagonists of
change”, and “courageous missionaries”.
Chapter 6: Young People and the Elderly
In Chapter 6, Pope Francis reminds young people how
important it is for them to maintain a relationship with the elderly: “so that
we can benefit from their experience”, he writes. The Pope observes how “the
old dream dreams and the young see visions… If young people sink roots in those
dreams”, he says, “they can peer into the future”.
Chapter 7: Youth Ministry
Youth ministry is the focus of Chapter seven. According to
Pope Francis, youth ministry should be “flexible”, an opportunity to “journey
together”. Young people are moved by “the grammar of love”, he says”, “not by
being preached at”. The Pope stresses the need to identify “new approaches”
that are creative and even daring. The arts, sports, and care for the
environment”, are all areas of positive pastoral development, he writes.
Chapter 8: Vocation
Responding to our vocation means fostering and developing
“all that we are”, says Pope Francis in Chapter eight. This may find expression
in Holy Matrimony, he writes, where “true love is passionate” and sexuality has
two purposes: “to love and to generate life”. But the Pope also challenges
young people to consider “the vocation to special consecration” and not to
“dismiss the possibility” of devoting themselves to God.
Chapter 9: Discernment
In the final Chapter of the Exhortation, Pope Francis
reminds us that: “Without the wisdom of discernment, we can easily become prey
to every passing trend”. A vocation is a gift, but it is also demanding, he
writes. In order to enjoy the gifts of God, “we have to be ready to take
risks”.
The Pope’s final words in the document are an implicit
challenge to take such risks: “Dear young people”, concludes Pope Francis, “my
joyful hope is to see you keep running the race before you, outstripping all
those who are slow or afraid!”
Read the full text of the post-synodal Apostolic
Exhortation "Christus
vivit!" at the Vatican website.
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