Pope
Francis has urged everyone to keep praying for peace in the Middle
East, saying the search for peace is a long one that requires patience
and perseverance.
Speaking during his Angelus address, the Pope also
condemned the proliferation of wars and conflicts and questioned
whether they were wars about problems or commercial wars to sell arms on
the black market.
His remarks came just hours after thousands of
people attended a prayer vigil in St. Peter’s Square on Saturday evening
as part of the events for the special day of prayer and fasting for
peace in Syria and the world that was called by the Pope and was marked
by people across the globe in different ways.
Please find below an English translation of Pope Francis' Angelus address:
Dear brothers and sisters, good morning!
In
the Gospel for today, Jesus reiterates the conditions for being his
disciples: not putting anything before your love for Him, carrying your
cross, and following Him. Many people came up to Jesus, wanted to be one
of His followers; and this would happen especially in the wake of some
prodigious dream, that indicated Him as the Messiah, the King of Israel.
But Jesus doesn’t want to create illusions for anyone. He knows full
well what awaits Him in Jerusalem, the road that the Father is asking
Him to take: it’s the road of the cross, of sacrificing Himself for the
redemption of our sins. Following Jesus doesn’t mean taking part in a
triumphal parade! It means sharing in His merciful love, becoming part
of His great mission of mercy towards each and every man. The mission of
Jesus is precisely a mission of mercy, of forgiveness, of love! Jesus
is so merciful! And this universal forgiveness, this mercy, comes
through the cross.
Jesus doesn’t want to carry out this mission
alone: He wants to involve us too, in the mission that the Father
entrusted to Him. After the resurrection, He will say to His disciples.
“As the Father sent me, so am I sending you… If you forgive anyone’s
sins, they are forgiven” (John 20, 21.22). A disciple of Jesus gives up
all his or her goods, because he or she has found in Him the greatest
Good, within which every other good receives its true worth and meaning:
family relations, other relationships, work, cultural and economic
wealth, and so forth… A Christian detaches from everything, and then
finds everything in the logic of the Gospel, the logic of love and
service.
To explain this requirement, Jesus uses two parables:
the one of the tower to be built, and the one of the king who goes to
war. The second parable goes like this: “What king, marching to war
against another king, would not first sit down and consider whether with
ten thousand men he could stand up to the other, who was advancing
against him with twenty thousand? If not, then while the other king was
still a long way off, he would send envoys to sue for peace” (Luke 14,
31-32). Here Jesus doesn’t want to discuss war, it’s only a parable. But
at this moment in time, when we’re strongly praying for peace, this
Word of the Lord affects us closely, and fundamentally it says: there’s a
deeper war we must fight, all of us! It’s the strong and brave decision
to renounce evil and its seductions, and to choose good, fully prepared
to pay personally: that’s following Christ, that’s taking up our cross!
This deep war against evil!
What’s the point of fighting wars,
many wars, if you’re not capable of fighting this deep war against evil?
There’s no point! It’s no good… This means, among other things, this
war against evil means saying no to fratricidal hatred, and to the lies
that it uses; saying no to violence in all its forms; saying no to the
proliferation of arms and their sale on the black market. There are so
many of them! There are so many of them! And the doubt always remains:
this war over there, this other war over there – because there are wars
everywhere – is it really a war over problems, or is it a commercial
war, to sell these arms on the black market? These are the enemies we
must fight, united and coherent, following no other interests but those
of peace and of the common good.
Dear brothers, today we also
remember the Nativity of the Virgin Mary, a celebration particularly
beloved by the Oriental Churches. And all of us, now, can send our warm
greetings to all the brothers, sisters, bishops, monks, nuns of the
Oriental Churches, Orthodox and Catholic: our warm greetings! Jesus is
the sun, Mary is the first light that announces its dawning. Yesterday
evening we kept vigil, calling on Her intercession in our prayer for
peace in the world, especially in Syria and in the whole of the Middle
East. We invoke Her now as Queen of Peace. Queen of Peace, pray for us!
Queen of Peace, pray for us!
Please find below an English translation of Pope Francis’ post-Angelus appeal:
I
would like to thank everyone who, in various ways, joined in the Vigil
of Prayer and Fasting yesterday evening. I thank the many people who
united the offering of their sufferings. I express my gratitude to the
civil authorities, as well as to the members of other Christian
communities and of other religions, and to men and women of good will
who have undertaken, on this occasion, periods of prayer, fasting and
reflection.
But the task remains: we move forward with prayer
and works of peace. I invite you to continue to pray so that the
violence and devastation in Syria may cease immediately and that a
renewed effort be undertaken to achieve a just solution to this
fratricidal conflict. Let us pray also for other countries in the Middle
East, in particular for Lebanon, that it may find its hoped-for
stability and continue to be a model of peaceful co-existence; for Iraq,
that sectarian violence may give way to reconciliation; and that the
peace process between the Israelis and Palestinians may proceed with
determination and courage. Finally, let us pray for Egypt, that all
Egyptians, Muslims and Christians, may commit themselves to build up
together a society dedicated to the good of the whole population.
The search for peace is long and demands patience and perseverance! Let us keep praying for this!