Pope
thanks families for witnessing to truth, goodness and beauty
(Vatican
Radio) Pope Francis on Saturday thanked all families who bear witness to the
beauty of family life. The Holy Father was speaking in Philadelphia at a Prayer
Vigil for the 8th World Meeting of Families taking place at the city’s Benjamin
Franklin Parkway.
The
Pope listened to six couples giving testimony about the joys and difficulties
of family life in different parts of the globe. He then set aside his prepared
remarks and spoke off the cuff, telling his enthusiastic audience that God
loved the world so much he sent his own Son into a family because Mary and
Joseph had their hearts open and ready to receive his love.
Pope
Francis acknowledged that family life brings many difficulties and many worries
but he said God gave us the light of the Resurrection so that we have the
strength to go forward in hope. What God most wants from us, he said is to
knock on the doors of families and to find people who love each other, who
bring up their children with love and who contribute to a society of
truth, goodness and beauty.
Please
find below the full prepared text of Pope Francis’s words at the Prayer Vigil
for the Meeting of Families in Philadelphia' Benjamin Franklin Parkway
Dear
Brothers and Sisters, Dear Families,
First of all, I want to thank the families who were willing to share their life
stories with us. Thank you for your witness! It is always a gift to
listen to families share their life experiences; it touches our hearts.
We feel that they speak to us about things that are very personal and unique,
which in some way involve all of us. In listening to their experiences,
we can feel ourselves drawn in, challenged as married couples and parents, as
children, brothers and sisters, and grandparents.
As I was listening, I was thinking how important it is for us to share our home
life and to help one another in this marvelous and challenging task of “being a
family”.
Being with you makes me think of one of the most beautiful mysteries of our
Christian faith. God did not want to come into the world other than
through a family. God did not want to draw near to humanity other than
through a home. God did not want any other name for himself than Emmanuel
(cf. Mt 1:23). He is “God with us”. This was his desire from the
beginning, his purpose, his constant effort: to say to us: “I am God with you,
I am God for you”. He is the God who from the very beginning of creation
said: “It is not good for man to be alone” (Gen 2:18). We can add: it is
not good for woman to be alone, it is not good for children, the elderly or the
young to be alone. It is not good. That is why a man leaves his
father and mother, and clings to his wife, and the two of them become one flesh
(cf. Gen 2:24). The two are meant to be a home, a family.
From time immemorial, in the depths of our heart, we have heard those powerful
words: it is not good for you to be alone. The family is the great
blessing, the great gift of this “God with us”, who did not want to abandon us
to the solitude of a life without others, without challenges, without a home.
God does not dream by himself, he tries to do everything “with us”. His
dream constantly comes true in the dreams of many couples who work to make
their life that of a family.
That is why the family is the living symbol of the loving plan of which the
Father once dreamed. To want to form a family is to resolve to be a part
of God’s dream, to choose to dream with him, to want to build with him, to join
him in this saga of building a world where no one will feel alone, unwanted or
homeless.
As Christians, we appreciate the beauty of the family and of family life as the
place where we come to learn the meaning and value of human
relationships. We learn that “to love someone is not just a strong
feeling – it is a decision, it is a judgment, it is a promise” (Erich Fromm,
The Art of Loving). We learn to stake everything on another person, and
we learn that it is worth it.
Jesus was not a confirmed bachelor, far from it! He took the Church as
his bride, and made her a people of his own. He laid down his life for
those he loved, so that his bride, the Church, could always know that he is God
with us, his people, his family. We cannot understand Christ without his
Church, just as we cannot understand the Church without her spouse, Christ
Jesus, who gave his life out of love, and who makes us see that it is worth the
price.
Laying down one’s life out of love is not easy. As with the Master, “staking
everything” can sometimes involve the cross. Times when everything seems
uphill. I think of all those parents, all those families who lack
employment or workers’ rights, and how this is a true cross. How many
sacrifices they make to earn their daily bread! It is understandable
that, when these parents return home, they are so weary that they cannot give
their best to their children.
I think of all those families which lack housing or live in overcrowded
conditions. Families which lack the basics to be able to build bonds of
closeness, security and protection from troubles of any kind.
I think of all those families which lack access to basic health services.
Families which, when faced with medical problems, especially those of their
younger or older members, are dependent on a system which fails to meet their
needs, is insensitive to their pain, and forces them to make great sacrifices
to receive adequate treatment.
We cannot call any society healthy when it does not leave real room for family
life. We cannot think that a society has a future when it fails to pass
laws capable of protecting families and ensuring their basic needs, especially
those of families just starting out. How many problems would be solved if
our societies protected families and provided households, especially those of
recently married couples, with the possibility of dignified work, housing and
healthcare services to accompany them throughout life.
God’s dream does not change; it remains intact and it invites us to work for a
society which supports families. A society where bread, “fruit of the
earth and the work of human hands” continues to be put on the table of every
home, to nourish the hope of its children.
Let us help one another to make it possible to “stake everything on
love”. Let us help one another at times of difficulty and lighten each
other’s burdens. Let us support one another. Let us be families
which are a support for other families.
Perfect families do not exist. This must not discourage us. Quite
the opposite. Love is something we learn; love is something we live; love
grows as it is “forged” by the concrete situations which each particular family
experiences. Love is born and constantly develops amid lights and
shadows. Love can flourish in men and women who try not to make conflict
the last word, but rather a new opportunity. An opportunity to seek help,
an opportunity to question how we need to improve, an opportunity to discover
the God who is with us and never abandons us. This is a great legacy that
we can give to our children, a very good lesson: we make mistakes, yes; we have
problems, yes. But we know that that is not really what counts. We
know that mistakes, problems and conflicts are an opportunity to draw closer to
others, to draw closer to God.
This evening we have come together to pray, to pray as a family, to make our
homes the joyful face of the Church. To meet that God who did not want to
come into our world in any other way than through a family. To meet “God
with us”, the God who is always in our midst.
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