Pope at Audience: Even at darkest moment, never too late to love and forgive
During his weekly General Audience, Pope Leo XIV illustrates
to the faithful how Jesus' love, despite being betrayed, did not allow evil to
have the last word, and "that there is always a way to continue to love,
even when everything seems irredeemably compromised."
By Deborah Castellano Lubov
"Let us ask today for the grace to be able to forgive,
even when we do not feel understood, even when we feel abandoned."
Pope Leo XIV gave this recommendation during his weekly
General Audience on Wednesday morning—his first public event in the Vatican
since departing from Castel Gandolfo on Tuesday evening.
Due to the Roman heat, the audience took place inside the
Vatican’s Paul VI Hall. Regardless, the Holy Father still stopped over to
greet faithful who were not able to fit into the Hall and were instead in other
locations nearby to stay out of the extreme temperatures.
Pope Leo XIV greets
faithful in St. Peter's Basilica who were unable to enter in Vatican's Paul VI
Hall (@Vatican Media)
The Lord's forgiving
love
Continuing his series of catecheses on the Jubilee theme of
'Christ our Hope,' the Holy Father focused this week on Jesus’ Passion, Death,
and Resurrection by considering the Lord's forgiving love, especially how the
Lord, despite His having been betrayed, loves His disciples until the end.
Pope Leo specifically explored a "striking and luminous
gesture" in the Gospel, in which Jesus, during the Last Supper, offers a
morsel to the one who is about to betray Him.
"It is not only a gesture of sharing," the Pope
said, but rather "it is much more; it is love’s last attempt not to give
up."
"To love until the end: here," Pope Leo continued,
"is the key to understanding Christ’s heart. A love that does not cease in
the face of rejection, disappointment, even ingratitude."
Jesus does not submit
"Jesus knows the time, but He does not submit to it: He
chooses it. It is He who recognizes the moment in which his love must pass
through the most painful wound, that of betrayal. And instead of withdrawing,
accusing, defending Himself… He continues to love: He washes the feet, dips the
bread and offers it. 'It is the one to whom I hand the morsel after I have
dipped it.'”
With this simple and humble gesture, Pope Leo said,
"Jesus carries His love forward and to its depths, not because He is
ignoring what is happening, but precisely because He sees it clearly."
"He has understood that the freedom of the other, even
when it is lost in evil, can still be reached by the light of a meek gesture,
because He knows that true forgiveness does not await repentance, but offers
itself first, as a free gift, even before it is accepted."
Pope Leo XIV at General
Audience (@Vatican Media)
Forgiveness reveals
and manifests hope
Unfortunately Judas, Pope Leo observed, does not understand,
and "after the morsel—says the Gospel—'Satan entered him.'”
"This passage strikes us," the Pope said, "as
if evil, hidden until then, manifested itself after love showed its most
defenseless face. And precisely for this reason, brothers and sisters, that
morsel is our salvation: because it tells us that God does
everything—absolutely everything—to reach us, even in the hour when we reject
Him."
It is here, the Holy Father said, that forgiveness reveals
all its power and manifests the true face of hope. "It is not
forgetfulness; it is not weakness. It is the ability to set the other free,
while loving him to the end."
"Jesus’ love," Pope Leo explained, "does not
deny the truth of pain, but it does not allow evil to have the last word."
There is always a way
to continue to love
This, the Holy Father said, is the mystery Jesus
accomplishes for us, in which we too, at times, are called to participate.
"How many relationships are broken, how many stories
become complicated, how many unspoken words remain suspended," he
reflected, while observing, "And yet the Gospel shows us that there is
always a way to continue to love, even when everything seems irredeemably
compromised."
“And yet the Gospel shows us that there is always a way
to continue to love, even when everything seems irredeemably compromised...”
To forgive, the Pope said, does not mean to deny evil, but
to prevent it from generating further evil. "It is not to say that nothing
has happened, but to do everything possible to ensure that resentment does not
determine the future."
Countering temptation
with the Lord
"Dear brothers and sisters, we too experience painful
and difficult nights," the Pope recognized, saying we experience "
nights of the soul, nights of disappointment, nights in which someone has hurt
or betrayed us." In those moments, he acknowledged, "the temptation
is to close ourselves up, to protect ourselves, to return the blow."
"But the Lord," the Holy Father reassured,
"shows us the hope that another way always exists. He teaches us that one
can offer a morsel even to someone who turns their back on us. That one can
respond with the silence of trust. And that we can move forward with dignity,
without renouncing love."
Pope Leo XIV at
General Audience (@Vatican Media)
And thus, the Pope invited the faithful today to ask the
Lord for the ability to forgive, even when they feel abandoned or
misunderstood, because it is precisely in those hours that love can reach its
pinnacle.
"As Jesus teaches us," the Pope marveled, "to
love means to leave the other free—even to betray—without ever ceasing to
believe that even that freedom, wounded and lost, can be snatched from the
deception of darkness and returned to the light of goodness."
Jesus shows each betrayal presents opportunity for salvation
The Pope said that when the light of forgiveness
"succeeds in filtering through the deepest crevices of the heart,"
"we understand that it is never futile."
"Even if the other does not accept it, even if it seems
to be in vain," Pope Leo said, "forgiveness frees those who give it:
it dispels resentment, it restores peace, and it returns us to ourselves."
Hence, Pope Leo XIV concluded, "Jesus, with the simple
gesture of offering bread, shows that every betrayal can become an opportunity
for salvation, if it is chosen as a space for a greater love."
Pope Leo XIV greeting
the faithful (@Vatican Media)
https://www.vaticannews.va/en/pope/news/2025-08/pope-leo-xiv-general-audience-20-august-2025.html





Không có nhận xét nào:
Đăng nhận xét