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MESSAGE OF JOHN PAUL II
FOR LENT 1998
Come, 0 blessed of my Father, for I was poor, marginalized and
you welcomed me!
1. Dear Brothers and Sisters! Each year Lent recalls the mystery of Christ "lead
by the Spirit in the desert" (Lk. 4:1). With this unique
experience, Jesus gave witness to His complete surrender to the will of the
Father. The Church offers the faithful this liturgical season so that they can
renew themselves internally through the Word of God and may express in life the
love which Christ instills in the heart of everyone who believes in Him.
This year, in preparation for the Great Jubilee of the Year 2000, the Church
contemplates the Mystery of the Holy Spirit. By this mystery the Church is being
lead in the desert to experience with Christ the fragility of the human being,
but also the closeness of God who saves. The prophet Hosea writes: 'I will
allure her, and bring her into the desert, and speak tenderly to her (Hos
2:16). The season of Lent is, therefore, a journey of conversion in the Holy
Spirit, encountering God in our life. In fact, the desert is a place of dryness
and death, synonymous with solitude. At the same time, it is a place of
dependence on God, of meditation and of the essential. For a Christian the
desert journey represents a personal experience of inadequacy before God,
thereby becoming more sensitive to the presence of the poor.
2. This year I wish to propose, for reflection by all the faithful, words
inspired by the Gospel of Matthew: "Come, O blessed of my Father, for I was
poor, marginalized and you welcomed me!" (cfr. Mt. 25: 34-36).
Poverty has different meanings. The first which comes to mind is the
absence of sufficient material means. This poverty, which for many of our
brothers crosses the line to misery, is a scandal. It assumes a multiplicity of
forms and is found linked to various painful phenomena: the lack of the
necessary means of survival and primary health care; the absence of a home or
its inadequacy and the consequent abnormal situations; the marginalization of
the weakest from society and the unemployed from the productive sector; the
loneliness of those having no one to count on; the condition of international
refugees and those who suffer from war and its cruelties; the inequality of
salaries; the absence of a family and the grave consequences which derive from
this such as drugs and violence. The individual is humiliated by the lack of
these necessities of life. It is a tragedy before which those who have the
possibility to intervene cannot, in conscience, remain indifferent.
Another equally serious form of poverty exists. It is not the lack of
material means but that of spiritual nourishment, of a response to essential
questions, of hope for one's own existence. This poverty touches the soul and
brings about grave sufferings. The consequences of this are right before our
eyes and are often very sad, a life void of meaning. This kind of misery is
mostly found in environments where people live in comfort, materially satisfied
but without a spiritual orientation. Christ's word in the desert confirms this:
"Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceeds from
the mouth of God." (Mt 4: 4). In the depth of his heart, he asks
for meaning, he yearns for love.
The proclamation of the Gospel in word and deed is the response to this
poverty. The Gospel brings salvation and also brings light even in the darkness
of suffering because it conveys the love and mercy of God. In the end it is the
hunger for God that consumes the human being. Without the comfort which comes
from God, mankind is abandoned to himself, always in need and without the true
source of life.
The Church continually combats all forms of poverty, because as Mother she
is concerned that each and every person be able to live fully in dignity as a
child of God. The Lenten Season is a special time for the members of the Church
to recall their task towards helping their brethren.
3. Sacred Scripture constantly calls us to solicitude towards the poor,
because God Himself is present in them: "He who is kind to the poor lends
to the Lord, and He will repay him for his deed." (Prov. 19: 17).
New Testament Revelation teaches not to scorn the poor since Christ identifies
Himself with them. In opulent societies and a world ever increasingly marked by
a practical materialism invading every aspect of life, we cannot forget the
strong words with which Christ admonishes the rich (cfr. Mt. 19: 23-24;
Lk 6: 24-25; Lk 16: 19-31). In particular, we cannot forget
that He Himself 'became poor so that by His poverty you might become rich' (2
Cor. 8: 9). The Son of God `emptied Himself, taking the form of a
servant, ... He humbled Himself and became obedient unto death, even death on a
cross (Phil. 2: 7-8). By becoming fully human, including even in
poverty, suffering and death, it is possible that in Christ every person can
find himself.
In becoming poor Himself, Christ truly became one with each person living in
poverty. That is why the words which inspire the theme of this Lenten Message
are heard also at the Last Judgement where Christ blesses those who recognized
his image in the needy: "Truly I say to you, as you did it to one of the
least of these my brethren, you did it to me" (Mt 25: 40).
Therefore, those who truly love God welcome the poor. They really understand
that God took on this condition so as to be totally united with mankind.
Welcoming the poor is a sign of true love for Jesus Christ as proven by Saint
Francis who kisses the leper because in him he recognized the suffering Christ
4.Every Christian feels called to share the pain and difficulty of the
'other' in whom God Himself is hidden. However, this opening to the needs of
others implies a truly warm welcoming which is only possible in a personal
commitment of poverty in spirit Poverty, in fact, does not exist only in the
negative sense. There is also a poverty which is blessed by God. This the
Gospel calls "blessed" (Mt 5: 3). Thanks to this poverty in
spirit, the Christian recognizes that salvation comes exclusively from God and
makes him ready to serve his brother considering him 'better than yourself` (Phil.
2: 3). Spiritual poverty entails the fruit of the new heart which God gives us.
In the season of Lent such fruit must mature through concrete behaviour such
as: the spirit of service, the openness to look for the good of the other, the
willingness to share with our brother, the commitment of combatting that pride
which isolates us from our neighbour.
This atmosphere of welcoming is increasingly necessary in confronting
today's diverse forms of distancing ourselves from others. This is profoundly
evidenced in the problem of millions of refugees and exiles, in the phenomenon
of racial intolerance as well as intolerance toward the person whose only "fault"
is a search for work and better living conditions outside his own country and in
the fear of all who are different and thus seen as a threat. In this way, the
Word of the Lord acquires new relevance in the face of the needs of so many
people who search for housing, struggle for work and seek education for their
children. As regards these people, the welcoming of them remains a challenge
for the Christian community which cannot ignore its obligation to respond so
that everyone is able to find living conditions suitable to the dignity of a
child of God!
I exhort every Christian, in this Lenten season, to evidence his personal
conversion through a concrete sign of love toward those in need, recognizing in
this person the face of Christ and repeating, as if almost face to face: "I
was poor, I was marginalized ... and you welcomed me".
5. As a result of this commitment, the light of hope will again be ignited
for many people. When with Christ the Church serves the person in need, she
opens hearts to a new hope going beyond evil and suffering, beyond sin and
death. In fact, the evils which afflict us, the vastness of problems, the
immense number of those who suffer, represent an obstacle which cannot be
humanly overcome. The Church offers its assistance, also of a material nature,
to relieve these difficulties. At the same time the Church knows that she is
able and must give much more. That what is expected from her, above all else,
is a word of hope. Where material means are not able to alleviate the misery,
for example in the case of corporal or spiritual ailments, the Church announces
to the poor the hope that comes from Jesus Christ In this time of preparation
for Easter, I wish to repeat that proclamation. In preparation for the Jubilee
of the Year 2000, the Church dedicates 1998 to the virtue of hope and I repeat
to all -but in particular those who most feel themselves to be poor, alone,
suffering, marginalized- the words of the Easter Sequence: "Christ, my
hope, is risen". He has conquered the evil which constrains men to
darkness, the sin which closes their hearts in selfishness, the fear of death
which threatens them.
In the mystery of the death and resurrection of Christ, we see light for
every human being. This Lenten Message is an invitation to open our eyes to the
poverty of many. It also strives to indicate the path so as to encounter in
Easter that Christ who, giving Himself to us as nourishment, inspires our hearts
with faith and hope. Therefore I wish that this 1998 Lenten Season becomes the
occasion for each Christian to experience poverty with the Son of God and to be
an instrument of His love in the service of our brother in need.
From the Vatican, 9 September 1997
JOHN PAUL II
Copyright © Libreria Editrice Vaticana
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