Pope
Francis: Angelus appeal for migrant families
(Vatican
Radio) Prayerful and practical solidarity with every family that has been
forced to flee a homeland torn by strife and to seek a better future in distant
lands and far-off shores: this was the promise of Pope Francis in remarks to
the faithful gathered in St. Peter’s Square before the Angelus prayer this
Sunday.
Drawing
on the first reading of the XXX Sunday in Ordinary Time, from the Book of the
Prophet Jeremiah, which tells of the Lord’s promise to deliver His faithful
people from captivity and restore them to liberty, Pope Francis said, “[T]his
prophecy of a people on their way is one I have also confronted with the images
of refugees making their way along the streets of Europe, a dramatic reality of
our times. God says to them: ‘They left weeping, I shall lead them back amid
consolations.’ Those families most suffering, uprooted from their land, were
present with us in the Synod as well: in our prayers and in our work, through
the voice of some of their pastors present at the meeting. These people in
search of dignity, these families searching for peace, remain with us still:
the Church does not abandon them, for they are part of the people that God
desires to free from slavery and lead to freedom.”
The
traditional prayer of Marian devotion followed Mass in St. Peter’s Basilica, to
mark the closing of the XIV Ordinary General Assembly of the Synod of Bishops,
which met in Rome over the past three weeks for prayerful reflection and
discussion of the vocation and mission of the family in the Church and in the
contemporary world.
In
his homily, Pope Francis reflected on the story recounted in the reading from
the Holy Gospel according to St. Mark, in which the Lord miraculously restores
the blind beggar, Bartimaeus, to sight. The Holy Father focused on the way the
story dramatizes the need for all of us in the Church to make sure that our
desires are ordered to Christ, and then to be confident in approaching Him with
humility as we ask Him for every blessing – even as we are mindful of all He
has done for us, and desirous of sharing the Good News with those, who need it
most.
“Let
us follow the path that the Lord desires,” said Pope Francis. “Let us ask Him
to turn to us with his healing and saving gaze, which knows how to radiate
light, as it recalls the splendour which illuminates it.” The Holy Father
concluded, saying, “Never allowing ourselves to be tarnished by pessimism or
sin, let us seek and look upon the glory of God, which shines forth in men and
women who are fully alive.”
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