Pope in Ireland: Families can
help God’s dream come true
Pope Francis kistens to a family giving a testimony during the Festival of Families. (Vatican Media) |
Pope Francis participates in the Festival of Families
celebration in Dublin’s Croke Park Stadium on Saturday evening, and tells
families they are “the hope of the Church and of the world”. (With photo
gallery)
By Seàn-Patrick Lovett
Months of preparation went into creating the event
considered one of the highlights of the World Meeting of Families 2018: the
Festival of Families that was celebrated in Dublin’s Croke Park Stadium on
Saturday evening together with some 70,000 people. Even the stage design
reflected an ideal “circle of encounter” where families could sit close to Pope
Francis while sharing their testimonies and enjoying the performances.
Talent and testimony
The talent was provided by some of Ireland’s best performers
and musicians: a 1,000-voice choir, a 50-piece orchestra, and over 700 dancers
from the best Irish dance schools across the country, as well as international
artists like The Riverdance Troupe, American jazz singer, Dana Masters, and
Italian tenor, Andrea Bocelli.
The testimony came from five families representing Ireland,
Canada, India, Iraq, and Africa. All shared a common theme of how their
families had provided them with hope, love and support during the most
challenging moments of their lives. Their testimonies focused on themes of
forgiveness and hope in the family, the importance of grandparents, and even
the role of social media and technology in family life.
A good cup of tea
When the Pope addressed the gathering, he described it as “a
family celebration of thanksgiving to God for who we are: one family in Christ,
spread throughout the world”. Pope Francis’ speech was filled with references
to his Apostolic Exhortation, Amoris Laetitia, on the joy of love.
“God wants every family to be a beacon of the joy of His
love in our world”, said the Pope. “All of us are called to find, in the
family, our fulfilment in love”, he continued, and immediately qualified his
statement by adding that “No one said this would be easy”.
That’s when Pope Francis compared building relationships
within the family to the most familiar of all Irish pastimes: brewing a pot of
tea. “It is easy to bring the water to a boil”, he said, “but a good cup of tea
takes time and patience. It needs to brew!”. In the same way, it is Jesus who,
every day, “warms us with His love and lets it penetrate our whole being”, he
said.
Three small words
“Sorry”. “Please”. “Thanks”: these are the three small words
that Pope Francis often suggests as antidotes to the tensions that can arise
within the family. “There is no such thing as a perfect family”, he reminded
his audience. “Without the grace of forgiveness, families can grow sick and
gradually collapse”. On the contrary, said the Pope, “small and simple acts of
forgiveness, renewed each day, are the foundation upon which a solid Christian
family life is built”.
Social media pros and cons
Responding to the testimony of a family from India, the Pope
spoke about the positive use of social media as a way to build, what he called,
“a web of friendships, solidarity and mutual support”. Social media, he said,
“can be beneficial if used with moderation and prudence”. While families can
“connect through the internet and draw nourishment from it”, the Pope warned of
overusing social media to the extent that it risks “imprisoning us in a virtual
reality” that isolates us from “the very relationships that challenge us to
grow to our full potential in communion with others”.
Families that pray together stay together
Although he didn’t mention Fr Patrick Peyton by name, the
“good Irish priest” quoted by Pope Francis, was most likely recognizable to his
audience. The families that are united by prayer, are able to support other
families that live in challenging and difficult situations, he said. Again
referring to his Exhortation on love and the family, the Pope confirmed that it
is “the love of Christ that renews all things” and that “makes possible
marriage and conjugal love marked by fidelity, indissolubility, unity and
openness to life”.
In this regard, the Pope thanked another family, with their
ten children, for their “witness of love and faith”. It is in “mutual
self-giving”, said Pope Francis, that spouses are able to become “one flesh”
and to “open their hearts to those in need of love, especially the lonely, the
abandoned, the weak and the vulnerable, so often discarded by our throw-away
culture”.
The Pope also reserved a special word for the older
generation: “A society that does not value grandparents is a society that has
no future”, he said. Grandparents are the ones who teach us “the meaning of
conjugal and parental love”, he continued. Which is why it’s a “big mistake not
to ask the elderly about their experience, or to think that talking to them is
a waste of time”.
God’s dream
Pope Francis’ final request to the families gathered in
Croke Park Stadium, and to all those participating in the event via media
platforms around the world, was to “help God’s dream come true”. By witnessing
to the Gospel, he concluded, “you can help to draw all God’s children closer
together, so that they can grow in unity and learn what it is for the entire
world to live in peace as one great family”.
www.vaticannews.va/en
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