Pope WYD Panama: address to youth
at Vigil – full text
Pope Francis addressing World Youth Day participants during the Vigil at Panama City's Metro Park on Jan. 26, 2019 (ANSA) |
Saturday, Jan. 26, was the penultimate day of the World
Youth Day in Panama. and the third full day of Pope Francis at the Jan. 22-27
event. The concluding papal event of the day was an evening vigil at Panama
City’s Metro Park. Please find below the full text of the Pope's address:
Address – Vigil with Youth
Metro Park, 26 January 2019
Dear young friends, good afternoon!
We have watched that beautiful presentation about the Tree of Life. It
shows us how the life that Jesus gives us is a love story, a life history that
wants to blend with ours and sink roots in the soil of our own lives.
That life is not a salvation up “in the cloud” and waiting to be
downloaded, a new “app” to be discovered, or a technique of mental
self-improvement. Stillless is it a “tutorial” for finding out the
latest news. The salvation the Lord offers us is an invitation to be part
of a love story interwoven with our personal stories; it is alive and wants to
be born in our midst so that we can bear fruit just as we are, wherever we are
and with everyone all around us. The Lord comes there to sow and to be
sown. He is the first to say “yes” to our lives and our history, and he
wants us to say “yes” along with him.
That was how he surprised Mary, and asked her to be part of this love
story. Obviously, the young woman of Nazareth was not part of the “social
networks” of the time. She was not an “influencer”, but without wanting
or trying to, she became the most influential woman in history.
Mary, the “influencer” of God. With just a few words, she was able to say
“yes” and to trust in the love and promises of God, the only force capable of
making all things new.
We are always struck by the strength of that young woman’s “yes”, the words “be
it done” that she spoke to the angel. This was no merely passive
or resigned acceptance or a faint “yes ”,as if to say, “Well, let’s give
it a try, and see what happens”. It was something else, something
different. It was the “yes” of someone prepared to be committed and take
a risk, ready to stake everything she had, with no more security than the
certainty of knowing that she was the bearer of a promise. Hers would
undoubtedly be a difficult mission, but the challenges that lay ahead were no
reason to say “no”. Things would get complicated, of course, but not in
the same way as happens when cowardice paralyzes us because things are not
clear or sure in advance. The “yes” and the desire to serve were stronger
than any doubts and difficulties.
This afternoon we also heard how Mary’s “yes” echoes and expands in every
generation. Many young people, like Mary, take a risk and stake their
future on a promise. Thank you, Erika and Rogelio, for the witness you
gave us. You shared your fears and difficulties and the risks you faced
with the birth of your daughter Inés. At one point, you said, “We
parents, for various reasons, find it hard to accept that our child will be
born with an illness or disability”. That is true and
understandable. Yet the amazing thing was what you went on to say, “When
our daughter was born, we decided to love her with all our heart”. Before
her birth, when faced with all the issues and problems that came up, you made a
decision and said, like Mary, “let it be done”; you decided to love her.
Presented with the life of your frail, helpless and needy daughter, your answer
was “yes”, and so we have Inés. You believed that the world is not only
for the strong!
Saying “yes” to the Lord means preparing to embrace life as it comes, with all
its fragility, its simplicity, and often enough too, with its conflicts and
annoyances, and to do so with the same love with which Erika and Rogelio
spoke. It means embracing our country, our families and our friends as
they are, with all their weak points and their flaws. Embracing life is
also seen in accepting things that are not perfect, pure or “distilled”, yet no
less worthy of love. Is a disabled or frail person not worthy of
love? Is a person who happens to be a foreigner, a person who made a
mistake, a person ill or in prison, not worthy of love? We know what
Jesus did: he embraced the leper, the blind man, the paralytic, the Pharisee
and the sinner. He embraced the thief on the cross and even embraced and
forgave those who crucified him.
Why did he do this? Because only what is loved can be saved. Only
what is embraced can be transformed. The Lord’s love is greater than all
our problems, frailties and flaws. Yet it is precisely through our
problems, frailties and flaws that he wants to write this love story. He
embraced the prodigal son, he embraced Peter after his denials and he always
embraces us whenever we fall: he helps us to get up and get back on our
feet. Because the worst fall, the fall that can ruin our lives, is to
remain down and not allow ourselves to be helped up.
How hard it is at times to understand God’s love! But what a gift it is
to know that we have a Father who embraces us despite all our imperfections!
So, the first step is not to be afraid to welcome life as it comes, to embrace
life!
Thank you, Alfredo, for your testimony and your courage in sharing it with us
all. I was impressed when you told us: “I started working on a construction
project, but once it was finished, I was without a job and things changed fast:
without an education, a trade and a job”. Let me summarize this in four
“ withouts ” that leave our life rootless and parched: without work,
without education, without community, without family.
It is impossible for us to grow unless we have strong roots to support us and
to keep us firmly grounded. It is easy to drift off, when
nothing holds us down. There is a question that we older people have to
ask ourselves, but also a question that you need to ask us and we have to
answer: What roots are we providing for you, what foundations for you to grow
as persons? It is easy enough to criticize and complain about young
people if we are depriving them of the jobs, education and community
opportunities they need to take root and to dream of a future. Without
education, it is difficult to dream of a future; without work, it is very
difficult to dream of a future; without a family and community, it is almost
impossible to dream of a future. Because dreaming of a future means
learning how to answer not only the question what I am
living for, but also who I am living for, who makes it worthwhile for
me to live my life.
As Alfredo told us, when we find ourselves at a loss and without work, without
education, without community and without family, at the end of the day we feel
empty and we end up filling that emptiness with anything we can. Because
we no longer know for whom to live, to fight and to love.
I remember once talking with some young people, and one of them asked me:
“Father, why are so many young people today not interested in whether God
exists or find it difficult to believe in him, and they seem so bored and
aimless in life? I asked them in return what they thought. I
remember one particular answer that touched me and it relates to the experience
Alfredo shared – “it’s because many of them feel that, little by little, they
stopped existing for others; often they feel invisible”. This is the
culture of abandonment and lack of concern for others. Not everyone, but
many people feel that they have little or nothing to contribute,because
there is no one around to ask them to get involved. How can they think
that God exists, if others have long since stopped thinking that they exist?
We know well that to feel acknowledged or loved it is not enough to be
connected all day long. To feel respected and asked to get involved is
greater than simply being “on-line”. It means finding spaces where, with
your hands, your heart and your head, you can feel part of a larger community
that needs you and that you yourselves need.
The saints understood this very well. I think, for example, of Saint John
Bosco. He did not go off to seek young people in far-off places, but
learned to see with God’s eyes everything that was going on in his city.
So, he was struck by the hundreds of children and young people left to
themselves, without education, without work and without the helping hand of a
community. Many other people were living in the same city, and many
criticized those young people, but they were unable to see them with God’s
eyes. Don Bosco did, and found the energy to take the first
step: to embrace life as it presented itself. From there, he was not
afraid to take the second step: to create a community, a family with them,
where through work and study they could feel loved. He gave them roots
from which they could reach up to heaven.
I think of many places in our Latin America that promote what they
call familia grandehogar de Cristo. With the same spirit
as the John Paul II Foundation that Alfredo spoke of and many other centres,
they seek to accept life as it comes, in its totality and complexity, because
they know that “there is hope for a tree, if it be cut down, that it will
sprout again, and that its shoots will not cease” (Job 14:7).
It is always possible to “sprout shoots and grow” when there is a community, a
warm home that enables us to take root, that provides the confidence we need
and prepares our hearts to discover a new horizon: the horizon of a beloved son
or daughter who is sought, found and entrusted with a mission. Through
real faces, the Lord makes himself present. To say “yes” to this love
story is to say “yes” to becoming a means of building in our neighbourhoods
those ecclesial communities capable of walking the streets of our cities,
embracing and weaving new relationships. To be an “influencer” in the
twenty-first century is to be guardians of roots, guardians of all that
prevents our life from dissipating and evaporating into nothingness. Be
guardians of everything that can make us feel part of one another, to feel that
we belong.
That was what Nirmeen experienced at World Youth Day in Krakow. She found
a lively, happy community that welcomed her, gave her a sense of belonging and
allowed her to live the joy that comes from being found by Jesus.
A saint once asked: “Will the progress of society consist only in owning the
latest car or buying the newest gadget on the market? Is that the extent
of our greatness as human beings? Is that all there is to live for?”
( cf . SAINT ALBERTO HURTADO, Holy Week Meditation for Young People,
1946). So let me ask you: Is that your idea of greatness? Weren’t
you created for something more? The Virgin Mary understood this and said,
“Let it be done!” Erika and Rogelio understood this and said, “Let it be
done!” Alfredo understood this and said, “Let it be done!” Nirmeen
understood this and said, “Let it be done!” Young friends, I ask you: Are
you willing to say “yes”? The Gospel teaches us that the world will not
be better because there are fewer sick, weak, frail or elderly people to be concerned
about, or because there are fewer sinners. Rather it will be better when
more people, like these friends, are willing and enthused enough to give birth
to the future and believe in the transforming power of God’s love. Are
you willing to be an “influencer” like Mary, who dared to say, “Let it be
done”? Only love makes us more human and fulfilled; everything else is a
pleasant but useless placebo.
In a few moments, we will encounter the living Jesus in Eucharistic
adoration. You can be sure that he has many things to say to you, about
different situations in your lives, families and countries.
Face to face with him, don’t be afraid to open your heart to him and to ask him
to renew the fire of his love, so that you can embrace life with all
its frailty and flaws, but also with its grandeur and beauty. May he help
you to discover the beauty of being alive.
Do not be afraid to tell him that you too want to be a part of his love story
in this world, that you are ready for something greater!
Friends: when you meet Jesus face to face, I ask you also to pray for me, so
that I too will be unafraid to embrace life, to care for its roots and to say,
like Mary, “Let it be done, according to your word!”.
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