Pope's World Peace Day Message
There is light even in our
darkest hour
Pope Francis releases his
message for the World Day of Peace to be celebrated on January 1, 2023, and
recalls that all crises are interconnected and that we must not forget any of them,
but work for the good of humanity.
By Francesca Merlo, Vatican News
“No one can be saved
alone. Combatting Covid-19 together, embarking together on paths of peace.”
With this as its title, Pope Francis has presented his message for the
56th World Day of Peace, held annually on 1 January.
Remain
steadfast
The Holy Father’s
message, released on Friday, opens with a quotation from the First Letter of
Saint Paul to the Thessalonians (5:1-2).
“Now concerning the times
and the seasons, brothers and sisters, you do not need to have anything written
to you. For you yourselves know very well that the day of the Lord will come
like a thief in the night.”
Thus, the Pope recalls
that the Apostle Paul encouraged the Thessalonian community to remain
steadfast. Likewise he says, “when tragic events seem to overwhelm our lives,
we are called to keep our hearts open to hope and to trust in God, who makes
himself present, accompanies us with tenderness, sustains us in our weariness
and, above all, guides our path.”
Darkness
of the Covid-19 pandemic
There is light even in
the darkest hour, says Pope Francis, before going on to use the Covid-19
pandemic as an example: “The pandemic seems to have upset even the most
peaceful parts of our world, and exposed any number of forms of fragility.”
Three years later, he
stresses, “the time is right to question, learn, grow and allow ourselves to be
transformed as individuals and as communities” reminding us, as he has done
before, that “we never emerge the same from times of crisis: we emerge either
better or worse."
This experience has made
us all the more aware of the need for everyone, including peoples and nations,
to restore the word “together” to a central place in our lexicon. Only
the peace that comes from a fraternal and disinterested love can help us
overcome personal, societal, and global crises.
“Our greatest and yet
most fragile treasure is our shared humanity as brothers and sisters, children
of God. None of us can be saved alone.”
Man-made
wars
Pope Francis goes on to
stress that this is not the post-Covid era we had hoped for or expected. “At
the very moment when we dared to hope that the darkest hours of the Covid-19
pandemic were over, a terrible new disaster befell humanity,” he said, noting
that the world witnessed the onslaught of another scourge: another war, “driven
by culpable human decisions.”
Pope Francis notes that
the war in Ukraine is “reaping innocent victims and spreading insecurity, not
only among those directly affected, but in a widespread and indiscriminate way
for everyone, also for those who, even thousands of miles away, suffer its
collateral effects – we need but think of grain shortages and fuel prices.”
“This war,” he says, “together
with all the other conflicts around the globe, represents a setback for the whole
of humanity and not merely for the parties directly involved. While a vaccine
has been found for Covid-19, suitable solutions have not yet been found for the
war.”
“Certainly, the virus of
war is more difficult to overcome than the viruses that compromise our bodies,
because it comes, not from outside of us, but from within the human heart
corrupted by sin.”
No one
can be saved alone
“What then is being asked
of us?” the Pope asks, in light of all these difficult times: “First of all, to
let our hearts be changed by our experience of the crisis.”
In fact, he explains: “we
can no longer think exclusively of carving out space for our personal or
national interests, ... instead we must think in terms of the common good.”
We cannot, however,
ignore one fundamental fact, he continues: “Many moral, social, political, and
economic crises we are experiencing are all interconnected, and what we see as
isolated problems are actually causes and effects of one another.”
And he calls on all those
in positions of responsibility and on all men and women of good will “to
revisit the issue of ensuring public health for all”; to “promote actions that
enhance peace and put an end to the conflicts and wars that continue to spawn
poverty and death”; “to join in caring for our common home and in implementing
clear and effective measures to combat climate change”; “to battle the virus of
inequality and to ensure food and dignified labor for all, supporting those who
lack even a minimum wage and find themselves in great difficulty.”
“The scandal of entire
peoples starving remains an open wound.”
May we make this a good year for all
Finally, Pope Francis
asks that in the coming New Year that “we journey together, valuing the lessons
that history has to teach us.”
“To all men and women of good will, I express my prayerful trust that, as artisans of peace, they may work, day by day, to make this a good year!”
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