Pope
leads prayer vigil ahead of Synod
(Vatican Radio) Pope Francis presided a prayer
vigil in St. Peter’s Square on Saturday evening, ahead of the Extraordinary
Synod on the Family, which is set to begin on Sunday at the Vatican.
The outdoor vigil began at 7 p.m., Rome time, and
drew tens of thousands of faithful. During his homily, the Pope asked that the
Church pray for the Synod Fathers, in particular for the gift to listen in
the manner of God, to have a spirit of openness in discussions and to
maintain a fixed gaze on Jesus Christ.
Thousands of people were also gathered in the
square for the pre-vigil program, which included the testimonies of married and
engaged couples, Scripture readings, prayer, singing and reflections on the
family, written by Pope Francis and his predecessors.
Below is the Vatican Radio translation of the
Pope’s homily:
Dear families, good evening!
The evening falls on our assembly.
It is the hour in which one willingly returns home
to the same meal, in the thick of affections, of the good that has been done
and received, of the encounters which warm the heart and make it grow, good
wine which anticipates in the days of man the feast without end.
It is also the most weighty hour for he who finds
himself face to face with his own loneliness, in the bitter twilight of broken
dreams and plans: how many people trudge through the day in the blind alley of
resignation, abandonment, even resentment: in how many homes was the wine of
joy less plenty, therefore, the zest – and the wisdom – of life. For one
another we make our prayer heard.
It is significant how – even in the
individualistic culture which distorts and renders connections fleeting –
in each person born of a woman, there remains alive an essential need of
stability, of an open door, of someone with whom to weave and to share the
story of life, a history to which to belong.
The communion of life assumed by spouses, their
openness to the gift of life, the mutual protection, the encounter and the
memory of generations, educational support, the transmission of the Christian
faith to their children . . . With all this, the family continues to be a
school without parallel of humanity, an indispensable contribution to a just
and united society. (cfr Esort. ap. Evangelii gaudium, 66-68).
And the deeper its roots, the more it is possible
in life to leave and to go far, without getting lost or feeling out of place in
foreign lands.
This horizon helps us to grasp the importance of
the Synodal assembly, which opens tomorrow.
Already, the “convenire in unum” surrounding the
Bishop of Rome is an event of grace, in which episcopal collegiality is made
manifest in a path of spiritual and pastoral discernment.
To search for that which today the Lord asks of
His Church, we must lend our ears to the beat of this time and perceive the
“scent” of the people today, so as to remain permeated with their joys
and hopes, by their sadness and distress, at which time we will know how to
propose the good news of the family with credibility.
We know, in fact, as in the Gospel, there is a
strength and tenderness capable of defeating that which is created by
unhappiness and violence.
Yes, in the Gospel there is salvation which
fulfills the most profound needs of man! Of this salvation – work of God’s
mercy and grace – as a Church, we are sign and instrument, a living and
effective sacrament.
If it were not so, our building would remain only
a house of cards, and pastors would be reduced to clerics of state, on whose
lips the people would search in vain for the freshness and “smell of the
Gospel.” (Ibid., 39).
Thus emerges also the subject of our prayer.
Above all, we ask the Holy Spirit, for the gift of
listening for the Synod Fathers: to listen in the manner of God, so that they
may hear, with him, the cry of the people; to listen to the people, until they
breathe the will to which God calls us.
Besides listening, we invoke an openness toward a
sincere discussion, open and fraternal, which leads us to carry with pastoral
responsibility the questions that this change in epoch brings.
We let it flow back into our hearts, without ever
losing peace, but with serene trust which in his own time the Lord will not
fail to bring into unity.
Does not Church history perhaps recount many
similar situations, which our Fathers knew how to overcome with persistent
patience and creativity?
The secret lies in a gaze: and it is the third
gift that we implore with our prayer. Because, if we truly intend to walk among
contemporary challenges, the decisive condition is to maintain a fixed gaze on
Jesus Christ – Lumen Gentium – to pause in contemplation and in adoration of
His Face.
If we assume his way of thinking, of living and of
relating, we will never tire of translating the Synodal work into guidelines
and paths for the pastoral care of the person and of the family.
In fact, every time we return to the source of Christian
experience, new paths and un-thought of possibilities open up. This is what the
Gospel hints at: “Do whatever he tells you.”
These are the words which contain the spiritual
testament of Mary, “the friend who is ever-concerned that wine not be lacking
in our lives” (EV 286). Let us make these words ours!
At that point, our listening and our discussion on
the family, loved with the gaze of Christ, will become a providential occasion
with which to renew – according to the example of Saint Francis – the Church
and society.
With the joy of the Gospel we will rediscover the
way of a reconciled and merciful Church, poor and friend of the poor; a Church
“given strength that it might, in patience and in love, overcome its sorrows
and its challenges, both within itself and from without.” (Lumen Gentium, 8)
May the Wind of Pentecost blow upon the Synod’s
work, on the Church, and on all of humanity. Undo the knots which prevent
people from encountering one another, heal the wounds that bleed, rekindle
hope.
Grant us this creative charity which consents to
love as Jesus loved. And our message may reclaim the vivacity and enthusiasm of
the first missionaries of the Gospel.
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