A Message from Pope Francis - I am with you always
Dear Grandfathers, Grandmothers and Elderly friends,
“I am with you always” (Mt 28:20): this is the promise the Lord made to his disciples before he ascended into heaven. They are the words that he repeats to you today, dear grandfathers and grandmothers, dear elderly friends.
I am well aware that this Message comes to you at a difficult time: the pandemic swept down on us like an unexpected and furious storm; it has been a time of trial for everyone, but especially for us elderly persons. Many of us fell ill, others died or experienced the death of spouses or loved ones, while others found themselves isolated and alone for long periods.
The Lord is aware of all that we have been through in this
time. He is close to those who felt isolated and alone, feelings that became
more acute during the pandemic. Tradition has it that Saint Joachim, the
grandfather of Jesus, felt estranged from those around him because he had no children;
his life, like that of his wife Anne, was considered useless. So the Lord sent
an angel to console him. While he mused sadly outside the city gates, a
messenger from the Lord appeared to him and said, “Joachim, Joachim! The Lord
has heard your insistent prayer”.[1] Giotto, in one of his celebrated
frescoes,[2] seems to set the scene at night, one of those many sleepless
nights, filled with memories, worries and longings to which many of us have
come to be accustomed.
Even at the darkest moments, as in these months of pandemic,
the Lord continues to send angels to console our loneliness and to
remind us: “I am with you always”. He says this to you, and he says it to me.
That is the meaning of this Day, which I wanted to celebrate for the first time
in this particular year, as a long period of isolation ends and social life
slowly resumes. May every grandfather, every grandmother, every older person,
especially those among us who are most alone, receive the visit of an angel!
At times those angels will have the face of our
grandchildren, at others, the face of family members, lifelong friends or those
we have come to know during these trying times, when we have learned how
important hugs and visits are for each of us. How sad it makes me that in some
places these are still not possible!
The Lord, however, also sends us messengers through his
words, which are always at hand. Let us try to read a page of the Gospel every
day, to pray with the psalms, to read the prophets! We will be comforted by the
Lord's faithfulness. The Scriptures will also help us to understand what
the Lord is asking of our lives today. For at every hour of the day (cf. Mt 20:1-16)
and in every season of life, he continues to send labourers into his vineyard.
I was called to become the Bishop of Rome when I had reached, so to speak,
retirement age and thought I would not be doing anything new. The Lord is
always – always – close to us. He is close to us with new
possibilities, new ideas, new consolations, but always close to us. You know
that the Lord is eternal; he never, ever goes into retirement.
In Matthew’s Gospel, Jesus tells the Apostles, “Go therefore
and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and
of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all that I have
commanded you” (28:19-20). These words are also addressed to us today. They
help us better understand that our vocation is to preserve our roots, to pass
on the faith to the young, and to care for the little ones. Think about it:
what is our vocation today, at our age? To preserve our roots, to pass on the
faith to the young and to care for the little ones. Never forget this.
It makes no difference how old you are, whether you still
work or not, whether you are alone or have a family, whether you became a
grandmother or grandfather at a young age or later, whether you are still
independent or need assistance. Because there is no retirement age from the
work of proclaiming the Gospel and handing down traditions to your
grandchildren. You just need to set out and undertake something new.
At this crucial moment in history, you have a renewed
vocation. You may wonder: How this can be possible? My energy is running out
and I don’t think I can do much. How can I begin to act differently when habit
is so much a part of my life? How can I devote myself to those who are poor
when I am already so concerned about my family? How can I broaden my vision
when I can’t even leave the residence where I live? Isn’t my solitude already a
sufficiently heavy burden? How many of you are asking just that question: isn’t
my solitude already a sufficiently heavy burden? Jesus himself heard a similar
question from Nicodemus, who asked, “How can a man be born when he is old?” (Jn 3:4).
It can happen, the Lord replies, if we open our hearts to the working of the
Holy Spirit, who blows where he wills. The Holy Spirit whose freedom is such
that goes wherever, and does whatever, he wills.
As I have often observed, we will not emerge from the
present crisis as we were before, but either better or worse. And “God willing…
this may prove not to be just another tragedy of history from which we learned
nothing… If only we might keep in mind all those elderly persons who died for lack
of respirators... If only this immense sorrow may not prove useless, but enable
us to take a step forward towards a new style of life. If only we might
discover once for all that we need one another, and that in this way our human
frailty can experience a rebirth” (Fratelli Tutti, 35). No one is saved alone. We are all
indebted to one another. We are all brothers and sisters.
Given this, I want to tell you that you are needed in order
to help build, in fraternity and social friendship, the world of tomorrow: the
world in which we, together with our children and grandchildren, will live once
the storm has subsided. All of us must “take an active part in renewing and
supporting our troubled societies” (ibid., 77). Among the pillars that support this new
edifice, there are three that you, better than anyone else, can help to set
up. Those three pillars are dreams, memory and prayer.
The Lord’s closeness will grant to all, even the frailest among us, the
strength needed to embark on a new journey along the path of dreams, memory and
prayer.
The prophet Joel once promised: “Your old men shall
dream dreams, and your young men will have visions” (3:1). The future of
the world depends on this covenant between young and old. Who, if not the
young, can take the dreams of the elderly and make them come true? Yet for this
to happen, it is necessary that we continue to dream. Our dreams of justice, of
peace, of solidarity can make it possible for our young people to have new
visions; in this way, together, we can build the future. You need to show that
it is possible to emerge renewed from an experience of hardship. I am sure that
you have had more than one such experience: in your life you have faced any
number of troubles and yet were able to pull through. Use those experiences to
learn how to pull through now.
Dreams are thus intertwined with memory. I think of the painful memory of war, and its importance for helping the young to learn the value of peace. Those among you who experienced the suffering of war must pass on this message. Keeping memory alive is a true mission for every elderly person: keeping memory alive and sharing it with others. Edith Bruck, who survived the horror of the Shoah, has said that “even illuminating a single conscience is worth the effort and pain of keeping alive the memory of what has been.” She went on to say: “For me, memory is life.”[3] I also think of my own grandparents, and those among you who had to emigrate and know how hard it is to leave everything behind, as so many people continue to do today, in hope of a future. Some of those people may even now be at our side, caring for us. These kinds of memory can help to build a more humane and welcoming world. Without memory, however, we will never be able to build; without a foundation, we can never build a house. Never. And the foundation of life is memory.
Finally, prayer. As my predecessor, Pope
Benedict, himself a saintly elderly person who continues to pray and work
for the Church, once said: “the prayer of the elderly can protect the
world, helping it perhaps more effectively than the frenetic activity of many
others.”[4] He spoke those words in 2012, towards the end of his
pontificate. There is something beautiful here. Your prayer is a very precious
resource: a deep breath that the Church and the world urgently need (cf. Evangelii Gaudium, 262). Especially in these difficult
times for our human family, as we continue to sail in the same boat across the
stormy sea of the pandemic, your intercession for the world and for the Church
has great value: it inspires in everyone the serene trust that we will soon
come to shore.
Dear grandmother, dear grandfather, dear elderly friends, in
concluding this Message to you, I would also like to mention the example of
Blessed (and soon Saint) Charles de Foucauld. He lived as a hermit in Algeria
and there testified to “his desire to feel himself a brother to all” (Fratelli Tutti, 287). The story of his life shows how it is
possible, even in the solitude of one’ s own desert, to intercede for the poor
of the whole world and to become, in truth, a universal brother or sister.
I ask the Lord that, also through his example, all of us may open our hearts in sensitivity to the sufferings of the poor and intercede for their needs. May each of us learn to repeat to all, and especially to the young, the words of consolation we have heard spoken to us today: “I am with you always”! Keep moving forward! May the Lord grant you his blessing.
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