Pope Francis meets participants at a 'Cor Unum'
conference
(Vatican Radio) Pope Francis
on Friday met with participants at an international conference organised by the
Pontifical Council ‘Cor Unum’ to mark the tenth anniversary of Pope Benedict
XVI’s first encyclical ‘Deus Caritas Est’.
Reflecting on the theme of
the conference, ‘Love will never end’, Pope Francis said the message of the
encyclical remains timely, especially in this Jubilee year as we celebrate the
central belief of our faith, that God is love.
Listen:
The love which we receive
from God and share with others, he said, is “the fulcrum of the history of the
Church and of the history of each one of us.” The act of charity, the Pope
said, is not simply almsgiving to ease one’s conscience, but rather a “loving
attentiveness towards the other” and a desire to share friendship with God.
Even if we turn away from
God, the Pope told participants, it is in God’s nature to communicate his love
and mercy to us. The mission of charitable organisations is of utmost
importance, he said, because, it is not with words, but with concrete love that
we can make every person feel loved by the Father. The Pope concluded by
thanking all those who daily are committing themselves to this charitable
mission which remains a challenge to every Christian. The more we live in this
spirit of receiving and sharing God's love with others, he said, the more
authentic we all are as Christians.
Please find below the full
address by Pope Francis to participants at the conference organised by the
Pontifical Council ‘Cor Unum
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
I welcome you on the occasion
of the International Conference on the theme: “Love will never end (1 Cor
13:8): Prospects ten years on from the Encyclical Deus Caritas Est”, organized
by the Pontifical Council Cor Unum, and I thank Monsignor Dal Toso for the
words of greetings addressed to me on behalf of all of you.
The first Encyclical of Pope
Benedict XVI concerns a theme that allows us to retrace the entire history of
the Church, which is also a history of charity. It is a story of the love
received from God, to be carried to the world: this charity received and given
is the fulcrum of the history of the Church and of the history of each one of
us. The act of charity is not, in fact, simply almsgiving to ease one’s
conscience. It includes a “loving attentiveness towards the other” (cf.
Evangelii Gaudium, 199), which considers the other as “one with himself” (cf.
Saint Thomas Aquinas, Summa Theologiae, II-II, q. 27, art. 2), and desires to
share friendship with God. Charity, therefore, is at the centre of the
life of the Church and, in the words of Saint Thérèse of the Child Jesus, is
truly the heart of the Church. Both for individual members of the
faithful and for the Christian community as a whole, the words of Jesus hold
true: that charity is the first and greatest of the commandments: “You shall
love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with
all your mind, and with all your strength… You shall love your neighbour as
yourself” (Mk 12:30-31).
The present Jubilee Year is
also an opportunity to return to this beating heart of our life and our
witness, to the centre of the proclamation of faith: “God is love” (1 Jn 4:8,
16). God does not simply have the desire or capacity to love; God
is love: charity is his essence, it is his nature. He is unique, but not
solitary; he cannot be alone, he cannot be closed in on himself because he is
communion, he is charity; and charity by its nature is communicated and
shared. In this way, God associates man to his life of love, and even if
man turns away from him, God does not remain distant but goes out to meet
him. This going out to meet us, culminating in the Incarnation of his
Son, is his mercy. It is his way of expressing himself to us sinners, his
face that looks at us and cares for us. The Encyclical reads: “Jesus’
programme is ‘a heart which sees’. This heart sees where love is needed
and acts accordingly” (no. 31). Charity and mercy are in this way closely
related, because they are God’s way of being and acting: his identity and his
name.
The first aspect which the
Encyclical recalls for us is the face of God: who is the God we can encounter
in Christ? How faithful and unsurpassable is his love? “No one has
greater love than this, to lay down one’s life for one’s friends” (Jn 15:13).
All our expressions of love, of solidarity, of sharing are but a reflection of
that love which is God. He, without ever tiring, pours out his love on
us, and we are called to become witnesses to this love in the world.
Therefore, we should look to divine charity as to the compass which orients our
lives, before embarking on any activity: there we find direction; from charity
we learn how to see our brothers and sisters and the world. Ubi amor, ibi
oculus, say the Medievals: where there is love, there is the ability to
see. Only by “remaining in his love” (cf. Jn 15:1-17) will we know how to
understand and love those around us.
The Encyclical – and this is
the second aspect I wish to emphasize – reminds us that this charity needs to
be reflected more and more in the life of the Church. How I wish that
everyone in the Church, every institution, every activity would show that God
loves man! The mission that our charitable organizations carry out is
important, because they provide so many poor people with a more dignified and
human life, which is needed more than ever. But this mission is of utmost
importance because, not with words, but with concrete love it can make every
person feel loved by the Father, loved as his son or daughter and destined for
eternal life with him. I would like to thank all those who daily are
committing themselves to this mission which challenges every Christian.
In this Jubilee Year, my intention has been to emphasize that we can all
experience the grace of the Jubilee by putting into practice the spiritual and
corporal works of mercy: to live the works of mercy means to conjugate the verb
“to love” according to Jesus. In this way then, all of us together can
contribute concretely to the great mission of the Church: to communicate the
love of God which is meant to be spread.
Dear brothers and sisters,
the message of the Encyclical Deus Caritas Est remains timely, indicating the
ever relevant prospect for the Church’s journey. The more we live in this
spirit, the more authentic we all are as Christians.
Thank you again for your
commitment and for what you will be able to achieve in this mission of
charity. May the Blessed Mother always assist you, and my blessing be
with you. Please do not forget to pray for me. Thank you.
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