Pope Leo XIV at General Audience (@Vatican Media)
Pope at
Audience: God forgives without resentment and lifts up
During his weekly
General Audience in the Vatican, Pope Leo XIV reminds the faithful that God
forgives, lifts up, and restores trust, and that we can look to His Son for a
perfect example of moving on from wounds without resentment and cultivate inner
peace.
By Deborah
Castellano Lubov
Christ's
Resurrection is the source of our hope, Pope Leo XIV marvelled during his
weekly General Audience on Wednesday morning in the Vatican, as he continued
his catechesis series on Jesus Christ Our Hope.
The Holy Father
began his remarks recalling that the centre of our faith and the heart of our
hope are firmly rooted in the Resurrection of Christ.
When we read the
Gospels carefully, we realize that this mystery is surprising not only because
a man – the Son of God – rose from the dead, but also because of the way He
decided to do so.
"Indeed,
Jesus’ Resurrection is not a bombastic triumph, nor is it revenge or
retaliation against his enemies," the Pope reflected. Rather, "It is
a wonderful testimony to how love is capable of rising again after a great
defeat in order to continue its unstoppable journey."
“Jesus'
Resurrection is a wonderful testimony to how love is capable of rising again
after a great defeat in order to continue its unstoppable journey”
How our mentality differs from God's
The Pope pointed
out how our mentality and reactions tend to differ greatly from Christ's.
"When we get
up again after a trauma caused by others, often the first reaction is anger,
the desire to make someone pay for what we have suffered," but "the
Risen One," the Holy Father said, "emerges from the underworld of
death" and "does not take revenge." "He does not return
with gestures of power, but rather with meekness he manifests the joy of a love
greater than any wound and stronger than any betrayal."
No longer paralyzed
Moreover, Pope Leo
underscored, Jesus does not feel any need to reiterate or affirm His own
superiority, but appears to His friends and "does so with extreme
discretion, without forcing the pace of their capacity for acceptance, only
with the desire to return to communion with them, helping them to overcome the
sense of guilt."
In fact, Pope Leo
recalled that in the Upper Room, Jesus "enters the closed room of those
who are paralyzed by fear, bringing them a gift that no-one would have dared to
hope for: peace."
'Peace be with you'
The Lord's
greeting of 'Peace be with you!', the Holy Father marveled, strikes us for
being so simple and almost ordinary. But, he pointed out, it is accompanied by
a gesture "so beautiful that it is almost disconcerting," when Jesus
shows the disciples His hands and side, with the marks of the Passion.
The Pope observed
there was not a shadow of resentment for Jesus is now fully reconciled with
everything He suffered.
The Lord, in
showing His wounds, Pope Leo clarified, serve not to reproach, but to confirm a
love stronger than any infidelity, and "are the proof that, even in
the moment of our failure, God did not retreat. He did not give up on us."
“Even in the
moment of our failure, God did not retreat. He did not give up on us”
Transfiguration into a hope of mercy
When betrayals
wound us, Pope Leo acknowledged, we may often say, “it doesn’t matter”, “it is
all in the past”, but "we are not truly at peace.
However, he
stressed, this is not how Jesus operates or reasons, for the Lord "offers
His wounds as a guarantee of forgiveness" and "shows that the
Resurrection is not the erasure of the past, but its transfiguration into a
hope of mercy."
God forgives, lifts up, and restores trust
The Pope
emphasized that the Lord, with words of peace, entrusts the Apostles with the
responsibility of being instruments of reconciliation in the world, by
breathing on them and giving them the Holy Spirit, the same Spirit who
sustained Him in obedience to the Father and in love even to the Cross.
"From that
moment," the Holy Father noted, the Apostles would no longer be able to
remain silent about what they have seen and heard, namely "that God
forgives, lifts up, and restores trust."
We too are sent
With this in mind,
Pope Leo stated, "This is the heart of the mission of the Church: not to
administer power over others, but to communicate the joy of those who are loved
precisely when they did not deserve it."
"It is the
strength that gave rise to the Christian communities and made them grow,"
he said.
Finally, Pope Leo
XIV reminded the faithful that "we too are sent." "The Lord
shows us His wounds and says: Peace be with you," and, the Pope
reminded, He asks us to likewise be witnesses of His peace."
https://www.vaticannews.va/en/pope/news/2025-10/pope-leo-xiv-general-audience-1-october-2025.html

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