Pope Francis: Perseverance in prayer needed, but not
"magic wand"
(Vatican Radio) Pope Francis
on Wednesday said “prayer is not a magic wand.” He was speaking during his
weekly General Audience in St. Peter’s Square.
The Pope was discussing the
Parable of the Unjust Judge – also known as the Parable of the Persistent Widow
– from the Gospel of Luke.
In the parable, the
persistence of a widow forces the unjust judge to grant her request for
justice, “so that she will not eventually wear [him] out.” (Lk 18: 1-8).
“Widows, together with
orphans and foreigners, were the most vulnerable groups of society” – Pope
Francis said – “The rights secured to them by the Law could be easily trampled
upon because, being alone and helpless, it was difficult from them to avail
themselves: A poor widow, there, alone, no one to defend her, she could be
ignored, even denied justice; thus also with the orphan, the foreigner, the
migrant…at that time this was a very great problem.”
The Holy Father said the
widow in the parable used the only weapon she had: Her persistence is
presenting her request for justice, “and this persistence achieved its goal.”
Pope Francis said if the
widow can bend the will of the Unjust Judge, then God, who is “a good and just
Father,” will “do justice to those who cry out to him day and night.”
“All of us experience moments
of fatigue and discouragement, especially when our prayers seem ineffective,”
Pope Francis said.
“But Jesus assures us: unlike
the unjust judge, God promptly answers promptly his children, although this
does not mean he does it in the time and manner that we would like. Prayer is
not a magic wand!” – continued the Pope – “It helps to preserve our faith in
God, and to trust in Him even when we do not comprehend His will. In this,
Jesus himself - who prayed so much! – is the example.”
Pope Francis gives the
example of Our Lord’s prayer at Gethsemane, where he prayed for the Father to
“deliver him from the bitter cup of the passion.”
“But his prayer is permeated
by faith in the Father, and trusts without restraint in His will: But – says
Jesus – not as I will, but as you will,” Pope Francis explained.
“The goal of the prayer is of
secondary importance; what matters above all is the relationship with the
Father,” – the Pope continued – “This is what makes the prayer transform the
desire and shape it according to the will of God, whatever it may be, because
the person who prays first of all aspires to union with God, who is Merciful
Love.”
Pope Francis concluded his
catechesis by mentioning the parable ends with a question: When the Son of Man
comes, will he find faith on the earth?
“And with this question we
are all warned: we must not desist from prayer, even if it is not answered,”
the Pope said. “And it is the prayer which keeps the faith, without this, the
faith wavers”
“We ask the Lord for a faith
which becomes unceasing prayer, persevering, like that of the widow in the
parable, a faith that is nourished by the desire of his arrival. And in this
prayer we experience the compassion of God, like a Father who comes to meet his
children full of merciful love.”
After his catechesis, Pope
Francis prayed for the victims of terrorist attacks that took place in Syria on Monday, and
also made an appeal for
International Missing Children’s Day.
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