Monday, January 1, 2024

Francis remembers Benedict with affection on first anniversary


01 January 2024, The Tablet

Francis remembers Benedict with affection on first anniversary

by Jonathan Liedl, CNA
email sharing button
facebook sharing button
twitter sharing button
pinterest sharing button
linkedin sharing button

“We feel so much affection for him, so much gratitude, so much admiration. From heaven he blesses us and accompanies us.”

In his final Angelus address of 2023, Pope Francis paid tribute to Pope Benedict XVI on the anniversary of his death, saying that the late Pope Emeritus continues to bless and aid the Church from heaven. 

Speaking on New Year’s Eve from the window of the Apostolic Palace, following a longer address on the Holy Family’s secret to enduring hardships, Francis said that Benedict XVI “lovingly and wisely” served the Church

“We feel so much affection for him, so much gratitude, so much admiration. From heaven he blesses us and accompanies us,” Pope Francis said on the feast of the Holy Family as pilgrims in St Peter’s Square applauded.

Benedict died on 31 December 2022 at the age of 95. The Bavarian was Pope from 2005–2013 and is considered among the most important theologians of contemporary times. He had lived the last nine years of his life in the Vatican’s Mater Ecclesiae Monastery after resigning on 11 February 2013, the first pope to do so in 600 years. 

Earlier in the day, a special Mass in honour of Benedict XVI was celebrated in St Peter’s, part of a two-day conference on his life, teaching, and legacy.

During his Angelus address, Pope Francis also reflected on how the Holy Family experienced hardships but endured them by marveling at God’s presence in their lives.

The Pope noted the “surprising” fact that Jesus was born into a family that was “expert in suffering”, as evidenced by the Gospel reading: when Mary and Joseph present Jesus at the temple, they offer the lowliest prescribed sacrifice, a pair of birds, and Mary is told by Simeon that “a sword will pierce through your own soul”.

“How is it that, the family of Jesus, the only family in history who could boast of having God present in flesh and blood among them, instead of being rich, was poor!” the Pope said.

“Instead of having things easy, it seems this family encounters obstacles! Instead of being free from hardship, this family is immersed in tremendous sorrow!”  

Pope Francis said this fact shows that God, in Christ, “came to live our life with its problems” and “saved us in this way, living in our midst”. By becoming incarnate in a family that faced hardships, Pope Francis said that Christ tells families facing difficulties today: “I know what you are experiencing.” 

“I experienced it, I, my mother and my father, we experienced it so we can say to your family too: You are not alone!” 

Pope Francis said the Holy Family also has a lesson to teach families facing challenges: the importance of the “ability to marvel” before God, “not getting used to the ordinariness of things” which “can be a secret for moving forward well as a family”.

He spoke about the importance of marvelling at one’s own spouse, taking his or her hand or “looking the other tenderly in the eyes for a few seconds in the evening”.

“Marvelling always brings us to tenderness,” the Pope said, noting that “tenderness is beautiful in marriage”.

Francis also said adults should marvel at the miracle of life by taking time to play with children. In his customary off-the-cuff fashion, he reported that on a telephone call yesterday he had asked a friend where she was. She told him she was at the park, on a walk with her children. “This is good parenting,” the Pope said.  

Pope Francis also said that instead of shutting grandparents out of our lives, families should marvel at their wisdom by listening to their stories. 

“Grandparents bring us back to what is essential,” Francis said. 

Concluding his remarks on the Holy Family and the importance of marvelling, Pope Francis said each person should marvel “at our own story of love”, paying attention to how God has walked with us, even in the midst of negative aspects.

The Pope prayed for Our Lady to “help us marvel every day at the good, and to know how to teach others the beauty of marvelling”. 

Following his recitation of the Angelus, the Pope expressed his closeness to people in the Nigerian state of Plateau, where bandits killed over 140 people during attacks on Christmas Eve, and also to those in Liberia, where a tanker truck explosion killed 40 on 27 December.

Pope Francis also asked for continued prayers for those suffering due to war in Ukraine, Palestine and Israel, and Sudan, as well as the Rohingya people in Indonesia. 

Connecting with his reflection on the Gospel, the pope also underscored that the family is the basic cell of society, which “always needs to be defended and sustained, always!”

email sharing button
facebook sharing button
twitter sharing button
pinterest sharing button
linkedin sharing button

No comments:

Post a Comment