Dear Brothers and Sisters,
1. It is a great joy for me to meet you again in this square which
yesterday witnessed an event you waited so long for: the beatification of
Padre Pio of Pietrelcina. Today is the day of thanksgiving.
The solemn Eucharistic celebration, at which Cardinal Angelo Sodano, my
Secretary of State, presided, ended a short while ago. I offer him a cordial
greeting, which I extend to each of the other Cardinals and Bishops present,
as well as to the many priests and faithful taking part.
Dear Capuchin Friars, I embrace you with special affection, as I do the
other members of the great Franciscan family who are praising the Lord for the
marvels he worked in the humble friar of Pietrelcina, an exemplary follower of
the Poor Man of Assisi.
Many of you, dear pilgrims, are members of prayer groups founded by Padre
Pio: I greet you affectionately together with all the other faithful who,
prompted by their devotion to the new blessed, have wished to be here on this
joyful occasion. Lastly, I would like to extend a special greeting to all the
sick: you were dear to Padre Pio's heart and work; thank you for your
treasured presence!
2. Divine Providence wanted Padre Pio to be beatified on the eve of the
Great Jubilee of the Year 2000, as a dramatic century draws to a close. What
is the message that the Lord would like to offer to believers and to all
humanity with this event of major spiritual importance?
Padre Pio's witness, which is evident from his life and even from his
physical condition, suggests to us that this message coincides with the
essential meaning of the Jubilee now close at hand: Jesus is the one Saviour
of the world. In him God's mercy was made flesh in the fullness of time, to
bring salvation to humanity mortally wounded by sin. “By his wounds you have
been healed” (1 Pt 2:24), the blessed father repeated to all in the
words of the Apostle Peter, he whose body was marked with those wounds.
In 60 years of religious life, practically all spent at San Giovanni
Rotondo, he was totally dedicated to prayer and to the ministry of
reconciliation and spiritual direction. This was well emphasized by the
Servant of God Pope Paul VI: “Look what fame he had.... But why?... Because
he said Mass humbly, heard confessions from dawn to dusk and was ... the one
who bore the wounds of our Lord. He was a man of prayer and suffering” (20
February 1971).
Totally absorbed in God, always bearing the marks of Jesus' Passion in his
body, he was bread broken for men and women starving for God the Father's
forgiveness. His stigmata, like those of Francis of Assisi, were the work and
sign of divine mercy, which redeemed the world by the Cross of Jesus Christ.
Those open, bleeding wounds spoke of God's love for everyone, especially for
those sick in body and spirit.
3. And what can be said of his life, an endless spiritual combat, sustained
by the weapons of prayer, centred on the sacred daily acts of Confession and
Mass? Holy Mass was the heart of his whole day, the almost anxious concern of
all his hours, his moment of closest communion with Jesus, Priest and Victim.
He felt called to share in Christ's agony, an agony which continues until the
end of the world.
Dear friends, in our time, when we are still under the illusion that
conflicts can be resolved by violence and superior strength, and frequently
give in to the temptation to abuse the force of arms, Padre Pio repeats
what he once said: “What a dreadful thing war is! In every person wounded in
the flesh, there is Jesus suffering”. Nor should we fail to note that
both his works — the “House for the Relief of Suffering” and the prayer
groups — were conceived by him in 1940, as the catastrophe of the Second
World War loomed in Europe. He was not idle, but from his secluded friary in
Gargano he responded with prayer, works of mercy and love for God and
neighbour. And today, from heaven, he is telling everyone again that this is
the authentic way of peace.
4. The prayer groups and the “House for the Relief of Suffering”: these
are two significant “gifts” which Padre Pio has left us. Conceived and
desired by him as a hospital for the sick poor, the “House for the Relief of
Suffering” was planned from the start as a health-care facility open to
everyone, but this was no reason for it to be less equipped than other
hospitals. Indeed, Padre Pio wanted it to have most advanced scientific and
technological equipment, so that it would be a place of authentic hospitality,
loving respect and effective treatment for every suffering person. Is it not a
true miracle of Providence that it continues to grow in accordance with its
founder's spirit?
As for the prayer groups, he wanted them to be like beacons of light and
love in the world. He longed for many souls to join him in prayer: “Pray”,
he used to say, “pray to the Lord with me, because the whole world needs
prayers. And every day, when your heart especially feels the loneliness of
life, pray, pray to the Lord together, because God too needs our prayers!”.
It was his intention to create an army of praying people who would be a
“leaven” in the world by the strength of prayer. And today the whole
Church is grateful to him for this precious legacy, admires the holiness of
her son and invites everyone to follow his example.
5. Dear brothers and sisters, Padre Pio's witness is a powerful call
to the supernatural dimension, not to be confused with exaggerated concern for
miracles, a deviation which he always and resolutely shunned. Priests and
consecrated persons in particular should look to him.
He teaches priests to become the docile and generous instruments of divine
grace, which heals people at the root of their ills, restoring peace of heart
to them. The altar and the confessional were the two focal points of his life:
the charismatic intensity with which he celebrated the divine mysteries is a
very salutary witness, to shake priests from the temptation of habit and help
them rediscover, day by day, the inexhaustible treasure of spiritual, moral
and social renewal which is placed in their hands.
To consecrated persons and especially to the Franciscan family, he offers a
witness of extraordinary fidelity. Francis was his baptismal name, and he was
a worthy follower of the Seraphic Father in poverty, chastity and obedience
from the time he first entered the friary. He practised the Capuchin rule
in all its rigour, generously embracing the life of penance. He found no
gratification in pain but chose it as a way of expiation and purification.
Like the Poor Man of Assisi, he aimed at conformity with Jesus Christ,
desiring only “to love and to suffer”, in order to help the Lord in the
exhausting and demanding work of salvation. In “firm, constant and
iron” obedience (Letter I, p. 488), he found the highest expression
of his unconditional love for God and the Church.
What a consolation to feel we have Padre Pio close to us, one who only
wanted to be “a poor friar who prays”: a brother of Christ, a brother
of Francis, a brother of the suffering, a brother of each one of us. May his
help guide us on the way of the Gospel and make us ever more generous in
following Christ!
May the Blessed Virgin Mary, whom he loved and helped others to love
with profound devotion, obtain this for us. May his intercession, which
we confidently invoke, obtain this for us.
I accompany these hopes with my Apostolic Blessing, which I cordially
impart to you, dear pilgrims present here, and to all who are united in spirit
with our festive gathering.