Pope Francis' Message for World Mission Day 2016: full
text
Statue of St Therese of Lisieux, patron of missions and missionaries. |
(Vatican Radio) Pope Francis
has released a Message for World Mission Sunday 2016, which takes place each
year on the third Sunday of October.
Below please find the full
text of Pope Francis’ Message
Missionary Church, Witness
of Mercy
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
The Extraordinary Jubilee of
Mercy, which the Church is celebrating, casts a distinct light on World Mission
Sunday 2016: it invites us to consider the missio ad gentes as a great, immense
work of mercy, both spiritual and material. On this World Mission Sunday, all
of us are invited to "go out" as missionary disciples, each
generously offering their talents, creativity, wisdom and experience in order
to bring the message of God’s tenderness and compassion to the entire human
family. By virtue of the missionary mandate, the Church cares for those who do
not know the Gospel, because she wants everyone to be saved and to experience
the Lord’s love. She “is commissioned to announce the mercy of God, the beating
heart of the Gospel” (Misericordiae Vultus, 12) and to proclaim mercy in every
corner of the world, reaching every person, young or old.
When mercy encounters a person,
it brings deep joy to the Father’s heart; for from the beginning the Father has
lovingly turned towards the most vulnerable, because his greatness and power
are revealed precisely in his capacity to identify with the young, the
marginalized and the oppressed (cf. Deut 4:31; Ps 86:15; 103:8; 111:4). He is a
kind, caring and faithful God who is close to those in need, especially the
poor; he involves himself tenderly in human reality just as a father and mother
do in the lives of their children (cf. Jer 31:20). When speaking of the womb,
the Bible uses the word that signifies mercy: therefore it refers to the love
of a mother for her children, whom she will always love, in every circumstance
and regardless of what happens, because they are the fruit of her womb. This is
also an essential aspect of the love that God has for all his children, whom he
created and whom he wants to raise and educate; in the face of their weaknesses
and infidelity, his heart is overcome with compassion (cf. Hos 11:8). He is merciful
towards all; his love is for all people and his compassion extends to all
creatures (cf. Ps 144:8-9).
Mercy finds its most noble
and complete expression in the Incarnate Word. Jesus reveals the face of the
Father who is rich in mercy; he “speaks of [mercy] and explains it by the use
of comparisons and parables, but above all he himself makes it incarnate and
personifies it” (JOHN PAUL II, Dives in Misericordia, 2). When we welcome and
follow Jesus by means of the Gospel and sacraments, we can, with the help of
the Holy Spirit, become merciful as our heavenly Father is merciful; we can
learn to love as he loves us and make of our lives a free gift, a sign of his
goodness (cf. Misericordiae Vultus, 3). The Church, in the midst of humanity,
is first of all the community that lives by the mercy of Christ: she senses his
gaze and feels he has chosen her with his merciful love. It is through this
love that the Church discovers its mandate, lives it and makes it known to all
peoples through a respectful dialogue with every culture and religious belief.
This merciful love, as in the
early days of the Church, is witnessed to by many men and women of every age
and condition. The considerable and growing presence of women in the missionary
world, working alongside their male counterparts, is a significant sign of
God’s maternal love. Women, lay and religious, and today even many families,
carry out their missionary vocation in various forms: from announcing the
Gospel to charitable service. Together with the evangelizing and sacramental
work of missionaries, women and families often more adequately understand
people's problems and know how to deal with them in an appropriate and, at
times, fresh way: in caring for life, with a strong focus on people rather than
structures, and by allocating human and spiritual resources towards the
building of good relations, harmony, peace, solidarity, dialogue, cooperation
and fraternity, both among individuals and in social and cultural life, in
particular through care for the poor.
In many places evangelization
begins with education, to which missionary work dedicates much time and effort,
like the merciful vine-dresser of the Gospel (cf. Lk 13:7-9; Jn 15:1),
patiently waiting for fruit after years of slow cultivation; in this way they
bring forth a new people able to evangelize, who will take the Gospel to those
places where it otherwise would not have been thought possible. The Church can
also be defined as "mother" for those who will one day have faith in
Christ. I hope, therefore, that the holy people of God will continue to
exercise this maternal service of mercy, which helps those who do not yet know
the Lord to encounter and love him. Faith is God’s gift and not the result of
proselytizing; rather it grows thanks to the faith and charity of evangelizers
who witness to Christ. As they travel through the streets of the world, the
disciples of Jesus need to have a love without limits, the same measure of love
that our Lord has for all people. We proclaim the most beautiful and greatest
gifts that he has given us: his life and his love.
All peoples and cultures have
the right to receive the message of salvation which is God’s gift to every
person. This is all the more necessary when we consider how many injustices,
wars, and humanitarian crises still need resolution. Missionaries know from
experience that the Gospel of forgiveness and mercy can bring joy and
reconciliation, justice and peace. The mandate of the Gospel to "go
therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the
Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all that
I have commanded you" (Mt 28:19-20) has not ceased; rather this command
commits all of us, in the current landscape with all its challenges, to hear
the call to a renewed missionary "impulse", as I noted in my
Apostolic Exhortation Evangelii Gaudium: "Each Christian and every
community must discern the path that the Lord points out, but all of us are
asked to obey his call to go forth from our own comfort zone in order to reach
all the ‘peripheries’ in need of the light of the Gospel” (20).
This Jubilee year marks the
90th anniversary of World Missionary Day, first approved by Pope Pius XI in
1926 and organized by the Pontifical Society for the Propagation of the Faith.
It is appropriate then to recall the wise instructions of my Predecessors who
ordered that to this Society be destined all the offerings collected in every
diocese, parish, religious community, association and ecclesial movement
throughout the world for the care of Christian communities in need and for
supporting the proclamation of the Gospel even to the ends of the earth. Today
too we believe in this sign of missionary ecclesial communion. Let us not close
our hearts within our own particular concerns, but let us open them to all of
humanity.
May Holy Mary, sublime icon
of redeemed humanity, model of missionaries for the Church, teach all men,
women and families, to foster and safeguard the living and mysterious presence
of the Risen Lord in every place, he who renews personal relationships,
cultures and peoples, and who fills all with joyful mercy.
From the Vatican, 15 May
2016, Solemnity of Pentecost
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