Pope’s Angelus of Sunday 7
January 2018: Full text
Greeting the crowds gathered in St. Peter's Square for the
Sunday Angelus, Pope Francis invited those present to reflect on their Baptism
and on how it constitutes a commitment and the identity card of the believer.
Dear brothers and sisters, good morning!
Today's celebration of the Baptism of the Lord concludes the
time of Christmas and invites us to think about our baptism. Jesus wanted to
receive the baptism preached and administered by John the Baptist in the River
Jordan. It was a baptism of penitence: those who approached expressed the
desire to be cleansed of their sins and, with God's help, they committed
themselves to beginning a new life.
We then understand the great humility of Jesus, the One who
had not sinned, in lining up with the penitents, mingled among them to be
baptized in the waters of the river. In doing so, He manifested what we
celebrated at Christmas: the availability of Jesus to immerse Himself in the
river of humanity, to take upon Himself the shortcomings and weaknesses of
humanity, to share our desire to be free and to overcome everything that
separates us from God and makes us strangers to our brothers and sisters. Just
like in Bethlehem, along the banks of the River Jordan, God keeps his promise
to take charge of the fate of human beings, and Jesus is the tangible and
definitive sign.
Today's Gospel stresses that Jesus, "emerging from the
water, saw the heavens open and the Spirit descend upon Him like a dove".
The Holy Spirit, who had worked since the beginning of creation and had guided
Moses and the people in the desert, now fully descends on Jesus to give Him the
strength to fulfill His mission in the world. The Spirit is the creator of the
baptism of Jesus and also of our baptism. It is the Spirit who opens the eyes
of the heart to the truth, the whole truth. It is the Spirit who drives our
lives along the path of charity. It is the Spirit who is the gift the Father
has given each of us on the day of our baptism. It is the Spirit who transmits
to us the tenderness of divine forgiveness. And it is still the Holy Spirit,
who causes the revealing Word of the Father to resound: "You are my
beloved Son: in you I am well pleased". At the very moment when the Son
expresses His solidarity with sinners, the voice of the Father is heard,
confirming His identity and mission.
The Feast of Jesus’ Baptism invites every Christian to
remember his or her own baptism. To forget our baptism means to expose
ourselves to the risk of losing our memory of what the Lord has done in us. We
risk ending up considering it only as something that happened in the past, and
not the Sacrament in which we became new creatures and were clothed with
Christ, made part of the relationship of Jesus with God the Father. Thanks to
Baptism, we are also able to forgive and love those who offend us and do us
harm; we are able to recognize in the last and in the poor the face of the Lord
who visits us and is close to us. In short, more than a sociological moment
that inscribes our name in the parish register, the day of our baptism
constitutes a commitment and the identity card of the believer.
Let us invoke the maternal protection of Mary Most Holy, so
that all Christians may increasingly understand the gift of Baptism and commit
themselves to live it consistently, bearing witness to the love of the Father
and the Son and the Holy Spirit.
Pope Francis’ remarks after the Angelus
Following the Angelus Prayer, Pope Francis greeted
pilgrims and visitors present in St Peter’s Square.
Dear brothers and sisters,
I greet all of you, the faithful of Rome and pilgrims from
Italy and from different countries. I greet in particular the faithful from
South Korea and those from Biella.
Again this year, on today's feast of the Baptism of Jesus, I
had the joy of baptizing some children. On them, and on all the children who
have recently been baptized, I invoke the maternal protection of the Mother of
God, because, helped by the example of their parents and godparents they may
grow up as disciples of the Lord.
I wish everyone a pleasant Sunday and a good journey in the
year that has just begun, thanks to the light that Jesus gave us at Christmas.
Please do not forget to pray for me. Enjoy your lunch and goodbye!
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