Pope at Lateran University: the
Gospel and having a healthy perspective
Pope Francis during his visit to the Pontifical Lateran University in Rome (Vatican Media) |
Pope Francis makes a surprise visit to the Pontifical
Lateran University in Rome, telling the students to always seek the truth, and
to be courageous in planning the future.
By Vatican News
The news of the Pope’s impromptu visit was announced in a
tweet from the Pontifical Lateran University itself, at 9am on Tuesday morning.
Pope Francis, reads the tweet, will be making a surprise visit to the
University, in order to lead the Lenten Meditation. And that’s exactly what
happened: Pope Francis arrived and took his cue from the liturgical readings of
the day, starting with Book of the Prophet Daniel.
Fidelity to God and martyrdom
The text of the reading describes how the Babylonian King
Nebuchadnezzar throws three young sons of Israel into a burning furnace,
because they refuse to worship his golden statue. “Their convinced
determination to be faithful to God and to preserve their freedom exposes them
in fact to martyrdom”, said the Pope, “as it happens also today to your
Christian peers, in some parts of the world”. But God intervenes to prevent the
flames from hurting them.
“To be enveloped in flames and to remain unharmed: this is
possible with the help of the Lord Jesus, the Son of God, and the breeze of the
Holy Spirit”, said Pope Francis. “Even if we live in a cultural context marked
by a single thought, which envelops and anesthetizes everyone with its
deadly embrace, burning all forms of creativity and different thinking, we walk
unharmed thanks to our roots in Jesus and His Gospel”.
A healthy perspective
Academic experience, said the Pope, is meant to provide you
with critical awareness and a capacity for discernment. Fidelity to the Gospel
and acceptance of the rich patrimony of the Church's traditions is intended to
provide you with a "healthy" perspective of the times in which we
live. Those times are marked by what the Pope called a “comfortable and stingy
individualism”, all of us concerned solely with “our own well-being, free time
and self-fulfillment”. “How dangerous all this is”, said Pope Francis, “how it
separates us from others and therefore from reality, how much it makes us
sick”.
“The studies you do at this University”, continued the Pope,
“will be fruitful and useful only to the extent that they do not detach you
from this conscious belonging to the history of people and of all humanity”.
Instead, he concluded, “they will help you to interpret the world and to build
the future together with the Lord, well founded in belonging to the holy people
of God, whom He guides with love, inspires, nourishes and corrects with His
Word”.
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