Madrid - Saturday, 20 August 2011
Your Eminence,
Dear Brother Bishops,Dear Priests and Religious of the Hospitaller Order of Saint John of God,
Distinguished Authorities,Dear Young People, Family Members and Volunteers,
Dear Brother Bishops,Dear Priests and Religious of the Hospitaller Order of Saint John of God,
Distinguished Authorities,Dear Young People, Family Members and Volunteers,
I thank you most sincerely for your kind greeting and heartfelt welcome.
This evening, just before the Prayer Vigil with the young people from
throughout the world gathered in Madrid for this World Youth Day, we
have this chance to spend time together as a way of showing the Pope’s
closeness and esteem for each of you, for your families and for all
those who help and care for you in this Foundation of Saint Joseph’s
Institute.
Youth, as I have said more than once, is the age when life discloses
itself to us with all its rich possibilities, inspiring us to seek the
lofty goals which give it meaning. So when suffering appears on the
horizon of a young life, we are shaken; perhaps we ask ourselves: “Can
life still be something grand, even when suffering unexpectedly enters
it?”
In my Encyclical on Christian Hope, I observed that “the true
measure of humanity is essentially determined in relationship to
suffering and to the sufferer … A society unable to accept its suffering
members and incapable of helping to share their suffering and to bear
it inwardly through ‘com-passion’ is a cruel and inhuman society” (Spe
Salvi, 38). These words reflect a long tradition of humanity which
arises from Christ’s own self-offering on the Cross for us and for our
redemption. Jesus and, in his footsteps, his Sorrowful Mother and the
saints, are witnesses who shows us how to experience the tragedy of
suffering for our own good and for the salvation of the world.
These witnesses speak to us, first and foremost, of the dignity of
all human life, created in the image of God. No suffering can efface
this divine image imprinted in the depths of our humanity. But there is
more: because the Son of God wanted freely to embrace suffering and
death, we are also capable of seeing God’s image in the face of those
who suffer.
This preferential love of the Lord for the suffering helps
us to see others more clearly and to give them, above and beyond their
material demands, the look of love which they need. But this can only
happen as the fruit of a personal encounter with Christ. You yourselves –
as religious, family members, health care professionals and volunteers
who daily live and work with these young people – know this well.
Your
lives and your committed service proclaim the greatness to which every
human being is called: to show compassion and loving concern to the
suffering, just as God himself did.
In your noble work we hear an echo
of the words found in the Gospel: “just as you did it to one of the
least of these my brothers, you did it to me” (Mt 25:40).
At the same time, you are also witnesses of the immense goodness
which the lives of these young people represent for those who love them,
and for humanity as a whole.
In a mysterious yet real way, their
presence awakens in our often hardened hearts a tenderness which opens
us to salvation. The lives of these young people surely touch human
hearts and for that reason we are grateful to the Lord for having known
them.
Dear friends, our society, which all too often questions the
inestimable value of life, of every life, needs you: in a decisive way
you help to build the civilization of love. What is more, you play a
leading role in that civilization. As sons and daughters of the Church,
you offer the Lord your lives, with all their ups and downs, cooperating
with him and somehow becoming “part of the treasury of compassion so
greatly needed by the human race” (Spe Salvi, 40).
With great affection, and through the intercession of Saint Joseph,
Saint John of God and Saint Benito Menni, I commend you to God our Lord:
may he be your strength and your reward.
As a pledge of his love, I
cordially impart to you, and to your families and friends, my Apostolic
Blessing.
Thank you very much.