Pope Leo during Jubilee Audience on 20th of December (AFP or licensors)
Pope: Even as Jubilee ends we remain pilgrims of hope
As the Jubilee Year draws to a close, Pope Leo XIV reminds
the faithful that its deepest gift endures. Hope, he says, continues to shape
the Church’s journey, calling all to remain pilgrims who generate life and
renewal.
Vatican News
Addressing the faithful during the last Saturday Jubilee
Audience of this Holy Year, Pope Leo XIV reminded Christians that the
pilgrimage it inspired does not end.
“The Jubilee is drawing to a close,” the Pope said, “but the
hope that this Year has given us does not end: we will remain pilgrims of
hope.”
Beginning his catechesis with words regarding the
approaching celebration of Christmas, Pope Leo XIV reflected on the meaning of
Christian hope, rooted not in fear but in the closeness of God revealed in
Jesus Christ.
Without Christ, he noted, the proclamation that “the Lord is
near” could sound threatening; in Jesus, however, it becomes a promise of mercy.
“In Him there is no threat, but forgiveness,” the Pope said,
pointing to the mystery of the Incarnation as the definitive sign of a God who
gives life and continually renews it.
Without hope we are dead
Quoting Saint Paul’s words to the Romans, “For in hope we
were saved”, Pope Leo XIV explained that hope is not a vague sentiment, but a
living, generative force.
“Without hope, we are dead; with hope, we come into the
light,” he said, describing hope as a theological virtue, “a power of God,”
that brings forth life.
True strength, the Pope explained, is not found in
domination or fear. “What threatens and kills is not strength,” he said, “it is
arrogance, aggressive fear, evil that generates nothing.” God’s strength, by
contrast, “gives birth,” and for this reason, he concluded, “to hope is to
generate.”
Listen to the cry of the earth and the cry of the poor
Turning to the groaning of creation described by Saint Paul,
Pope Leo XIV invited the faithful to listen attentively to “the cry of the
earth and the cry of the poor,” lamenting the injustice of a world in which
resources are increasingly concentrated in the hands of a few. God, he
recalled, intended the goods of creation for all.
“Our task,” he said plainly, “is to generate, not to steal.”
History is in the hands of God and those who hope in Him
Even suffering, the Pope noted, takes on a new meaning in
faith: it becomes “the suffering of childbirth.” God continues to create, and
human beings, sustained by hope, are called to cooperate in that creative work.
“History,” he said, “is in the hands of God and of those who hope in Him.”
Reflecting on the Marian dimension of Christian prayer, Pope
Leo XIV pointed to Mary of Nazareth as the living image of hope that gives
life. In her, he said, believers see “one of us who generates,” one who gave
“face, body and voice to the Word of God.”
“Jesus wants to be born again,” the Pope said. “We can give
Him body and voice. This is the childbirth for which creation waits.”
“To hope,” he concluded, “is to see this world become the world
of God.”
https://www.vaticannews.va/en/pope/news/2025-12/pope-leo-xiv-jubilee-audience-pilgrims-hope.html

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