PASTORAL VISIT IN AUSTRALIA
ADDRESS OF JOHN PAUL II AT THE
AIRPORT
Fairbairn (Australia), 24 November
1986
Your Excellency the Governor-General of the Commonwealth of Australia, Mr Prime Minister, Ladies and Gentlemen,
1. It is with great gratitude and joy that I set foot on Australian soil: gratitude
to God who has enabled me to make this visit, and joy at the thought that I am
among friends. I thank you, Your Excellency, for your kind words of welcome on
behalf of the people of Australia, and I thank you and the Prime Minister, as
well as many other distinguished Australian citizens, for inviting me to come. I
also wish to express my gratitude to the Australian bishops for their invitation,
and to the Catholic community for its generous endorsement of the official
invitations. My gratitude extends, in fact, to all the citizens of this
country.
I come to Australia in the footsteps of my predecessor Paul VI, who was the
first Pope in history to visit Australia. For me personally it is the second
time. My first visit to your beautiful country took place in 1973 on the
occasion of the International Eucharistic Congress in Melbourne. At that time I
was able to come here to Canberra, where I met the Prime Minister and other
leading members of Parliament. I also visited the War Memorial and the
Australian National University. I still have warm memories of that visit, which
was followed by brief visits to the State capitals as well as to Geelong and
Queanbeyan.
2. On this occasion, however, I come as a pilgrim, as one who journeys as an act of
religious devotion. I come here as Pastor of the Catholic people, to celebrate
the Eucharist with them, to strengthen them in their faith, to confirm their
hope and to invite them to an ever more generous love of God our Father and of
men and women everywhere. I come as a fellow Christian to all who acknowledge
Jesus Christ as Lord, and confess that he is the Son of God and the "one
Mediator between God and mankind". I look forward to praying with my
fellow Christians, listening with them to the word of God in the Scriptures, and
encouraging them in fidelity to the faith we share.
To all Australians, people of undoubted good will, I come as a friend: to urge
you to pursue in your lives all those values worthy of the human person; to
encourage you to be open-hearted, generous to the unfortunate and caring towards
those who are pushed to the margins of life. In the words of Saint Paul, may
"the Lord be generous in increasing your love and make you love one another
and the whole human race".
3. All the invitations and the letters I have received from Australians tell me
that you look to the Pope to remind you of things that your hearts may be saying
to you, but which are often drowned out by the hurly-burly of everyday life. I
shall try to respond to your hopes and expectations, so that together during
these days we can direct our hearts to God and in him find the full explanation
of our human dignity.
The message that I bring and offer to all those who would freely listen to my
voice is not mine. It is the message of Jesus Christ. Many of you follow him in
discipleship and still others of you revere his teachings. But whether or not
you profess faith in Jesus Christ, or talk about this faith with the language
that I use, I ask you to consider the profound truths of the Fatherhood of God
and be unity of all men and women as children of God. I ask you to reflect on
what the world could be if people everywhere acknowledged these truths and lived
their lives in accordance with them.
We were made – all of us – for life and for love. We need mutual
encouragement and support. In the loving providence of God our Father, the world
is meant to provide a home for the whole human family; there is room for
everyone to live and there can be sustenance for all. And everyone has the right
to pursue his or her destiny with dignity, and to share in the good things that
God has made available to his children.
If these thoughts strike a chord within you, then lift up your hearts and ponder
the mystery of God and the mystery of humanity. From quiet meditation and the
peaceful exchange of reflections, you will discover or rediscover your personal
relationship to God and to each other, and find out just how effective you can
be in building a society worthy of your children and your children’s children.
4. Dear friends: I greet you all. with respect, esteem and love. I wish it were
possible to speak to each of you, to shake everyone’s hand, to bless every
child, to embrace each person who is ill or infirm. I do, however, offer
personally to every one of you the tender wishes of my heart, and I pray that we
may be held gently together in the strong arms of the God and Father of us
all.
Everywhere you turn, there is a challenge for you to show your faith in God, a
challenge to show your love and concern for all who share with you the gift of
human life and bear its burdens. From this land of yours, so blessed by God, you
must lift up your eyes and see again and again the needs of people everywhere.
As Australians you have a very special calling to be mindful of all the
dimensions of world justice and all the requirements of universal human
solidarity.
Dear people of Australia: I have come here to your land to bear witness also to
the greatness of your mission and to your immense capacity for good. In this
sense too, with generous and uplifted hearts: Advance Australia Fair!
© Copyright 1986 - Libreria Editrice Vaticana
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