Pope in Bulgaria: Full text of
address to Catholic community in Rakovski
Pope Francis greets the Catholic Community of Rakovsky (Vatican Media) |
Pope Francis meets with the Catholic community in Rakovski,
Bulgaria at the Church of St. Michael the Archangel. Here are the Pope's
prepared remarks:
Address of His Holiness Pope Francis
Meeting with the Catholic Community
Rakovski, Church of Saint Michael the Archangel
Monday, 6 May 2019
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
Good afternoon! Thank you for your warm welcome and
for your dancing and testimonies. It is always brings me joy to meet the
Holy People of God with its myriad faces and charisms.
Bishop Iovcev asked me to help you to “see with eyes of
faith and love”. But first, I would like to thank you for helping me to
see better and to understand a little more fully why this land was so dear and
important to Saint John XXIII. Here the Lord was preparing what would be
an important step in our ecclesial journey. Here he developed strong
friendships with our Orthodox brothers and sisters, and this led him on a path
that would help foster the longed-for, yet ever fragile sense of fraternity
between individuals and communities.
To see with the eyes of faith. I would like to recall
something that “Good Pope John” once said. His heart was so attuned to
the Lord that he could register his disagreement with those around him who saw
nothing but evil and to refer to them as “prophets of doom”. He was
convinced of the need to trust in God’s providence, which constantly
accompanies us and even in the midst of adversity is capable of bringing about
his deeper and unforeseeable plans (Opening Address of the Second Vatican
Council, 11 October 1962).
God’s people learn to see, trust, discover and let
themselves be guided by the power of the resurrection. They recognize, of
course, that there will always be painful times and unjust situations, yet they
do not wring their hands, shrink back in fear or, even worse, create a climate
of scepticism, discomfort or disruption, since this does nothing but harm the
soul, causing hope to flag and hindering every possible solution. Men and
women of God have the courage to take the first step in finding creative ways
of directly testifying that Love is not dead, but has triumphed over every
obstacle. They get involved because they have learned that, in Jesus, God
himself gets involved. He put his own flesh at stake so that no one will
feel alone or abandoned.
I would like to share with you an experience I had a few
hours ago. This morning I visited the Vrazhdebna refugee camp and met
asylum-seekers and refugees from various countries of the world who are looking
for a better place to live than the one they left. I also met the Caritas
volunteers. They told me that at the heart of the Centre’s life and work
is the recognition that every person is a child of God, regardless of ethnicity
or religious confession. In order to love someone, there is no need to
ask for a curriculum vitae; love precedes, it takes the first step.
Because it is gratuitous. In that Caritas Centre are many
Christians who have learned to see with God’s own eyes. God is not
worried about details, but seeks out and awaits each person with a Father’s
eyes. Seeing with the eyes of faith is a summons not to spend your life
pinning labels, classifying those who are worthy of love and those who are not,
but trying to create conditions in which every person can feel loved,
especially those who feel forgotten by God because they are forgotten by their
brothers and sisters. Those who love do not waste time in self-pity, but
always try to do something concrete. In the Centre, they learn to see
problems, to acknowledge them and to confront them; they let themselves be
questioned and try to discern things with the eyes of the Lord. As Pope
John said: “I never met a pessimist who managed to do something good”.
The Lord is the first not to be pessimistic. He constantly tries to
open up paths of resurrection for all of us. How marvellous it is when
our communities become building-sites of hope!
On the other hand, to see things with the eyes of God, we
need other people. We need them to teach us to look and feel the way
Jesus looks and feels, to let our heart beat with his own feelings. This
is why it pleased me when Mitko and Miroslava, with their little daughter
Bilyana, told us that for them the parish has always been a second home, the
place where they always found strength to carry on, amid community prayer and
the support of loved ones.
The parish, in this way, becomes a home in the midst of
homes. It manages to make the Lord present there, where every family,
every person tries to earn their daily bread. There, at every street
corner, is the Lord, who did not want to save us by decree, but came into our
midst. He wants to enter into the heart of our families and say to us, as
he did to the disciples: “Peace be with you!”
I am happy that you like the “advice” I share with spouses:
“Never go to bed angry, not even for one night”. From what I see, it
works for you! It is a bit of advice that can also be helpful for all of
us Christians. It is true that, as you also said, we experience various
trials; that is why we need to be on guard against anger, resentment or
bitterness taking possession of our hearts. We have to help each other in
this, caring for one another, so that the fire that the Spirit has kindled in
our hearts never goes out.
You appreciate, and are grateful, that your priests and religious
sisters care for you. As I was listening to you, I was struck by that
priest who spoke not about how successful he had been during his years of
ministry, but about all those people God placed in his path to help him become
a good minister of God.
The People of God is grateful to its priests, and priests
recognize that they learn how to be believers with the help of their people,
their family, living in their midst. A living community, one that
supports, accompanies, integrates and enriches. Never separated, but
united, where everyone learns to be a sign and blessing of God for others.
A priest without his people loses his identity, and a people can grow
apart without its priests. The unity between the priest who supports and
fights for his people, and the people who support and fight for their priest.
Each dedicates his or her life to the others. None of us can live
only for ourselves; we live for others. The priestly people can say with
its priests: “This is my body given up for you”. That is how we learn to
be a Church, a family and a community that welcomes, listens, accompanies,
cares for others, revealing its true face, which is that of a mother. A
Church that is a mother – Mother Church – experiences and makes her children’s
problems her own, not offering ready-made answers, but seeking together paths
of life and reconciliation. Trying to make present the Kingdom of God.
A Church, a family and a community that takes up the knotty problems of
life, which are often like balls of tangled wool; before untangling them, it
has to make them its own, taking them into its hands and loving them.
A family among families, open to bearing witness in today’s
world, as our sister told us, open to faith, hope and love for the Lord and for
those whom he has a preferential love. A home with open doors.
In this sense, I have a “job” for you. You are the
children, in faith, of the great witnesses who testified by their lives to the
love of the Lord in these lands. The brothers Cyril and Methodius, holy
men with great dreams, were convinced that the most authentic way to talk to
God was in one’s own language. This made them boldly decide to translate
the Bible, so that no one would be without the Word of life.
Being a home with open doors, in the footsteps of Cyril and
Methodius, means that today too, we need to be bold and creative. We have
to ask how we can translate the love God has for us into concrete and
understandable language for the younger generation. We know from
experience that “young people frequently fail to find in our usual programmes a
response to their concerns, their needs, their problems and issues” (Christus
Vivit, 202). And this requires of us new and imaginative efforts in
our pastoral outreach. Finding ways to touch their hearts, to learn about
their expectations and to encourage their dreams, as a community-family that
supports, accompanies and points to the future with hope. A great
temptation faced by young people is the lack of deep roots to support them; as
a result, they feel uprooted and alone. Our young people, when they feel
called to express all the potential they possess, often give up half-way
because of the frustrations or disappointments they experience, since they have
no roots to rely on as they look to the future (cf. ibid. 179-186). How
much more so, when they are forced to leave behind their homes, their country
and their family.
Let us not be afraid to meet new challenges, as long as we
make every effort to ensure that our people never lack the light and
consolation born of friendship with Jesus, a community of faith to support
them, and ever new horizons that can give them meaning and a goal in life
(cf. Evangelii Gaudium, 49). May we never forget that the
most beautiful chapters in the life of the Church were written when God’s
People set out with creativity to translate the love of God in their own time,
with the challenges they gradually encountered. It is good to know that
you can count on a great living history, but it is even more beautiful to
realize that you are being asked to write its next chapter. Never tire of
being a Church that continues to give birth, amid the contradictions, sorrows
and poverty, to the sons and daughters that this land needs today, at the start
of this twenty-first century. Always listen with one ear to the Gospel
and the other to the heart of your people.
I thank you for this very enjoyable meeting and, thinking of
Pope John, I would like the blessing I now give you to be a caress of the Lord
for each of you.
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