Pope Leo XIV holds a general audience in St. Peter’s Square at the Vatican (@Vatican Media)
Pope at Audience: As we cross from old year to new, let
us entrust everything to God
At the final General Audience of 2025, Pope Leo XIV invites
the faithful to give thanks for the past, seek forgiveness, and entrust the
journey ahead to God’s mercy.
By Vatican News
During his final General Audience of the year on Wednesday,
Pope Leo XIV recalled that the months just lived had been marked by events of
contrasting significance.
“Some of them joyful,” he said, “such as the pilgrimage of
so many of the faithful on the occasion of the Holy Year; others painful, such
as the passing of the late Pope Francis, and the scenarios of war that continue
to convulse the planet.”
Precisely for this reason, he added, the Church calls
believers to gather everything—joys and sufferings alike—before God, asking Him
“to renew, in us and around us, in the coming days, the wonders of his grace
and mercy.”
Te Deum prayer
With this in mind, Pope Leo reflected on the ancient
tradition of the solemn Te Deum sung on the evening of 31
December.
“It is in this dynamic,” he explained, “that the tradition
of the solemn singing of the Te Deum, with which we will thank the
Lord this evening for the blessings we have received, finds its place.”
Quoting Pope Francis, he contrasted this prayerful gratitude
with what he called a worldly attitude. “While ‘worldly gratitude and worldly
hope are evident... they are focused on the self, on its interests’,” Pope
Francis had said. “In this Liturgy... one breathes an entirely different
atmosphere: one of praise, of wonder, of gratitude.”
This spirit of thanksgiving, Pope Leo continued, also calls
for truthfulness of heart. “With these attitudes,” he said, “we are called upon
to reflect on what the Lord has done for us over the past year,” and also “to
examine our consciences honestly,” asking forgiveness “for all the times we
have failed to treasure his inspirations and invest the talents he has
entrusted to us in the best possible way.”
A journey with a destination
The Pope then pointed to a second sign that has marked the
Jubilee year: that of the journey. “This year,” he observed, “countless
pilgrims have come from all over the world to pray at the Tomb of Peter and to
confirm their adherence to Christ.”
Their pilgrimage, he explained, mirrors the deeper truth of
human existence. “Our whole life is a journey whose final destination
transcends space and time,” a journey fulfilled “in the encounter with God and
in full and eternal communion with Him.”
This hope finds voice, he added, when the Church prays in
the Te Deum: “Bring us with your saints to glory everlasting.”
The Holy Door
A third sign, the Pope continued, emerges in the light of
eternity: the passage through the Holy Door. “So many of us,” he said, “have
made this gesture, praying and imploring forgiveness for ourselves and our
loved ones.”
Crossing the threshold, he explained, expresses “our ‘yes’
to God,” who invites us, through forgiveness, “to cross the threshold of a new
life, animated by grace, modelled on the Gospel.”
Quoting Pope Paul VI, Pope Leo stressed that this life is
“inflamed by ‘love for that neighbour, in whose definition... every man is
included’,” even those “personally unknown to us, even if bothersome and
hostile,” yet always “endowed with the incomparable dignity of a brother.”
“This,” the Pope said, “is our ‘yes’ to a life lived with
commitment in the present and oriented towards eternity.”
“Let the sinner rejoice”
Reflecting on these signs in the light of Christmas, Pope
Leo recalled the words of Saint Leo the Great, who saw the Nativity as a
proclamation of universal joy. “Let the saint rejoice, because he is
approaching his reward; let the sinner rejoice, because he is offered
forgiveness; let the pagan take courage, because he is called to life.”
“This invitation,” the Pope said, “is addressed today to all
of us.” To the baptized, “because God has become our companion on the journey
towards true life”; to sinners, “because, forgiven, with his grace we can stand
up and set off again;” and to the poor and fragile, because the Lord, “making
our weakness his own, has redeemed it.”
God is Love
In conclusion, Pope Leo recalled the Jubilee of 1975, noting
how Pope Paul VI summed up its message in a single word: “love.”
“God is Love!” Pope Paul VI said during that audience. “God
loves me! God awaited me, and I have found him! God is mercy! God is
forgiveness! God is salvation! God, yes, God is life!”
“May these thoughts,” Pope Leo XIV concluded, “accompany us
in the passage from the old to the new year, and then always, in our lives.”
https://www.vaticannews.va/en/pope/news/2025-12/pope-leo-general-audience-31-december-2025.html

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