Pope
Francis addresses youth at prayer vigil
(Vatican
Radio) Following Mass for the First Sunday of Advent, thousands of young people
filled the square in front of Bangui’s Cathédrale Notre-Dame for a Prayer Vigil
that went into the night.
Pope
Francis joined the youth immediately after the Mass offering them words of
encouragement before hearing several Confessions.
In
his address to the young people, the Holy Father spoke off the cuff in Italian,
calling to mind the country’s symbol for youth: the banana tree. “The Banana
tree is a symbol of life, always growing, always reproducing, always providing
fruit with high alimentary energy. The banana tree is also resistant. I think
this expresses well your path in this difficult moment of war, hate, and
division: the path of resistance.”
Referring
to a young person who had spoken to the crowd before him speaking of his desire
to flee, Pope Francis said, “Fleeing the challenges of life is never the
solution! One must resist, have the courage to resist, to fight for the good!
The one who flees does not have the courage to give life.”
The
Holy Father then spoke to them of three useful things for their situation:prayer, efforts
toward peace, and forgiveness.
“You
must pray to resist, to love, to not hate, and to be artisans of peace.”
Below,
please find the full text of Pope Francis’ prepared remarks:
Address
of Pope Francis
Prayer Vigil with Young People and Confessions
Bangui, Cathedral Square
Prayer Vigil with Young People and Confessions
Bangui, Cathedral Square
29
November 2015
Dear
Young Friends,
Good
evening! It is a great joy for me to be here with you this evening, as we enter
upon a new liturgical year with the beginning of Advent. Is this not, for each
one of us, an occasion to begin anew, a chance to “go across to the other
side?” (cf. Lk 8:22).
During
this, our meeting I will be able to celebrate the Sacrament of Reconciliation
with some of you. I encourage each of you to reflect on the grandeur of this
sacrament, in which God comes to meet us personally. Whenever we ask, he comes
to us and helps us to “go across to the other side”, to that side of our life
where God forgives us and bathes us in his love which heals, soothes and raises
up! The Jubilee of Mercy, which I just opened particularly for you, dear
Central African and African friends, rightly reminds us that God is waiting for
us, with arms wide open, as we see in the beautiful image of the Father who
welcomes the prodigal son.
The
forgiveness which we receive comforts us and enables us to make a new start,
with trusting and serene hearts, better able to live in harmony with ourselves,
with God and with others. The forgiveness which we receive enables us in turn
to forgive others. There is always a need for this, especially in times of
conflict and violence, as you know all too well. I renew my closeness to all
those among you who are have experienced sorrow, separation and the wounds
inflicted by hatred and war. In such situations, forgiving those who have done
us harm is, humanly speaking, extremely difficult. But God offers us the strength
and the courage to become those artisans of reconciliation and peace which your
country greatly needs. The Christian, as a disciple of Christ, walks in the
footsteps of his Master, who on the Cross asked his Father to forgive those who
were crucifying him (cf. Lk 23:34). How far is this sentiment from those which
too often reign in our hearts! Meditating on the attitude and the words of
Jesus, “Father, forgive them”, can help to turn our gaze and convert our heart.
For
many people, it is a scandal that God came to be one of us. It is a scandal
that he died on a cross. Yes, it is scandalous: the scandal of the cross. The
cross continues to scandalize. Yet it remains the one sure way: the way of the
cross, the way of Jesus who came to share our life and to save us from sin (cf.
Meeting with Young Argentineans, 25 July 2013). Dear friends, this cross speaks
to us of the closeness of God: he is with us, he is with each one of you, in
your joys and in your trials.
Dear
young people, the most precious good which we can have in this life is our
relationship with God. Are you convinced of this? Are you aware of the
inestimable value that you have in God’s eyes? Do you know that you are loved
and accepted by him, unconditionally, as you are? (cf. Message for the World
Youth Day 2015, 2). Devoting time to prayer and the reading of Scripture,
especially the Gospels, you will come to know him, and yourselves, ever better.
Today too, Jesus’ counsels can illumine your feelings and your decisions. You
are enthusiastic and generous, pursuing high ideals, searching for truth and
beauty. I encourage you to maintain an alert and critical spirit in the face of
every compromise which runs contrary to the Gospel message.
Thank
you for your creative dynamism, which the Church greatly needs. Cultivate this!
Be witnesses to the joy of meeting Jesus. May he transform you, strengthen your
faith and help you to overcome every fear, so that you may embrace ever more
fully God’s loving plan for you! God wills the happiness of every one of his
children. Those who open themselves to his gaze are freed from sin, from
sorrow, from inner emptiness and from isolation (cf. Evangelii Gaudium, 1).
Instead, they can see others as brothers or sisters, accepting their
differences and recognizing that they are a gift for all of us.
It
is in this way that peace is built, day by day. It calls for setting out on the
path of service and humility, and being attentive to the needs of others. To
embrace this mindset, we need to have a heart capable of bending low and
sharing life with those most in need. That is where true charity is found. In
this way solidarity grows, beginning with small gestures, and the seeds of
division disappear. In this way dialogue among believers bears fruit,
fraternity is lived day by day and it enlarges the heart by opening up a
future. In this way, you will be able to do so much good for your country. I
encourage you do so.
Dear
young friends, the Lord is alive and he is walking at your side. When
difficulties seem to abound, when pain and sadness seem to prevail all around
you, he does not abandon you. He has left us the memorial of his love: the
Eucharist and the sacraments, to aid our progress along the way and furnish the
strength we need to daily move forward. This must be the source of your hope
and your courage as you “go across to the other side” (cf. Lk 8:22), with
Jesus, opening new paths for yourselves and your generation, for your families,
for your country. I pray that you will be filled with this hope. May you be ever
anchored in it, so that you can give it to others, to this world of ours so
wounded by war and conflicts, by evil and sin. Never forget: the Lord is with
you. He trusts you. He wants you to be missionary disciples, sustained in times
of difficulty and trial by the prayers of the Virgin Mary and those of the
entire Church. Dear young people of Central Africa, go forth! I am sending you
out!
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