WYD Message 2020: Pope invites
youth to take a risk and change the world
Pope Francis during World Youth Day in Panama (Vatican Media) |
Pope Francis in his message for the 2020 diocesan World
Youth Day, invites young people to be missionary disciples and to give their
passions and dreams free rein.
By Lydia O’Kane
It’s two years until the next World Youth Day, which will
take place in the city of Lisbon in 2022 and in that intervening time, Pope
Francis is inviting young people to reflect on the themes for the diocesan
World Youth Days of 2020 and 2021.
“Young man, I say to you, arise!” is the 2020 theme taken
from Luke’s Gospel; and 2021 features the biblical text taken from the Acts of
the Apostles: “Stand up. I appoint you as a witness of what you have seen”.
“Arise” in 2020
Focusing his attention on this year’s message, which is
divided into five sections, Pope Francis says that for the young person who has
lost his or her vitality, dreams, optimism and enthusiasm, there is hope.
That hope is in Jesus, who the Pope says, “stands before you
as once he stood before the dead son of the widow, and with all the power of
His resurrection He urges you: ‘Young man, I say to you, arise.’”
That passage in the Bible, the Pontiff explains, “tells us
how Jesus, upon entering the town of Nain in Galilee, came upon the funeral
procession of a young person, the only son of a widowed mother. Jesus, struck
by the woman’s heartrending grief, miraculously restored her son to life.”
Pain and death
In the first section of the message, Pope Francis reflects
on Jesus’ “ability to see pain and death.” He points out that Jesus, “in the
midst of the crowd, makes out the face of a woman in great pain. His
ability to see generates encounter, the source of new life.”
In today’s world the Pope asks, how often do we end up being
eyewitnesses of events without ever experiencing them in real time?
Sometimes, he adds, “our first reaction is to take a picture with our cell
phone, without even bothering to look into the eyes of the persons involved.”
The Pontiff goes on to say that many young people are
“‘dead’ because they feel hopeless.” Others, he continues, “waste their
lives with superficial things, thinking they are alive while in fact they are
dead within”.
“Negative situations”, the Pope emphasizes in the message,
“can also be the result of personal failure, whenever something we care about,
something we were committed to, no longer seems to be working or giving the
desired results.” But failures, he underlines, “are part of the life of every
human being; sometimes they can also end up being a grace.”
A compassionate heart
In the second section of the message, “to have compassion”,
Pope Francis counsels young people not to be robbed of this sensitivity.
“If you can learn to weep with those who are weeping”, Pope
Francis says, “you will find true happiness.” “So many of your
contemporaries are disadvantaged and victims of violence and persecution.
Let their wounds become your own, and you will be bearers of hope in this
world.”
The closeness of God
To come forward and “touch” is the third section
of the message, and the Pope notes how Jesus in the passage from Luke’s Gospel
stops the funeral procession and demonstrates His closeness. The touch of
Jesus, the living One, comments the Pope, communicates life.
Pope Francis goes on to says that “if you can feel God’s
immense love for every living creature – especially our brothers and sisters
who experience hunger and thirst, or are sick or naked or imprisoned – then you
will be able to draw near to them as He does.”
The Divine Word gives life meaning
In the penultimate section, Pope Francis writes that “people
who are not on a journey never fall; then again, neither do they move forward.”
“This life is really a new creation, a new birth, not just a
form of psychological conditioning”, the Pope says.
He also stresses that young people need to look deeper than
mere fashionable phrases and words. It is Jesus’ Word, he says, that has a
deeper resonance, because “it goes infinitely deeper. It is a divine and
creative Word, which alone can bring the dead to life.”
An invitation to dream
In the final section entitled “Living the new life as ‘risen
ones’”, Pope Francis returns to the Gospel passage which recounts that the
young man “began to speak”.
Those touched and restored to life by Jesus, the Pope says,
“immediately speak up and express without hesitation or fear what has happened
deep within them: their personality, desires, needs and dreams.”
Concluding his message, the Pope points out that today, “we
are often ‘connected’ but not communicating. The indiscriminate use of
electronic devices can keep us constantly glued to the screen.”
With this Message, Pope Francis writes, “I would like to
join you, young people, in calling for a cultural change, based on Jesus’
command to ‘arise’. He calls us to embrace a reality that is so much more
than virtual.”
“Arise!” he adds, is also an invitation to “dream”, to “take
a risk”, to be “committed to changing the world, to rekindle your hopes and
aspirations, and to contemplate the heavens, the stars and the world around
you.”
The Pope then invites young people to “give their passions
and dreams free rein, “and, through them, offer the world, the Church and other
young people something beautiful, whether in the realm of the spirit, the arts
or society… Make your voices heard.”
Diocesan World Youth Day 2020 is marked on Palm Sunday,
April 5.
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