At the conclusion of his audience yesterday, Pope Francis asked for a
minute’s silence and then together with the crowd, he recited a Hail
Mary for the child’s health.
He had met Noemi, who suffers with spina bifida, and her parents, earlier in the day.
“Now, I would now like to ask you for an act of charity,” said the
Holy Father to the tens of thousands of faithful gathered in sunshine at
St Peter’s Square. With a smile he added “It’s not a collection!”
He went on, “Before coming to the Square, I went to see a seriously
ill child aged just one and a half. Her mother and father pray and
implore the Lord to cure their daughter. She is called Noemi and she
smiled, poor girl.”
“Let us carry out an act of love; we do not know her but she is a
baptised child, she is one of us, a Christian. Let us ask the Lord to
help her in this moment and to give her health: first in silence, and
then let us pray the Hail Mary.”
Silence fell over the square for a moment, after which the Pope said,
“And now let us pray together to the Virgin for the health of Noemi.
Thank you for this act of charity,” he concluded, after all the pilgrims
recited the Hail Mary together.
The Pope met Noemi and her parents where he lives at Santa Marta.
According to Andrea Sciarretti, Noemi’s father, the Pope telephoned the
family on 15 October and they had a lovely chat.
After introducing himself and explaining he had received his letter,
the Pope asked Andrea, “What can I do for you?”
Noemi’s father said
Pope Francis was very easy to talk too. He was Noemi’s great friend.
Afterwards the Pope sent them a present of rosary beads.
After meeting the Pontiff yesterday, Andrea Sciarretti told the
Italian news agency Ansa that meeting Pope Francis evoked a huge range
of emotions.
“It was an indescribable feeling, a mixture of feelings – one was of
being with a great man of the Lord, to then thinking of our ill
daughter.”
The twenty-six year old father from Guardiagrele said he and
his wife are fighting to obtain a type of medical treatment for their
baby.
Earlier at the audience, Pope Francis continued his catechesis on the
Creed, speaking of the need for a “communion of spiritual goods”.
The
Pope named three ‘spiritual goods’ – the sacraments, charisms and
charity.
“The sacraments offer us the impetus to become missionaries, and the
apostolic commitment to taking the faith to all places, even the most
hostile, is the most authentic fruit of a steadfast sacramental life,
inasmuch as it constitutes participation in God’s salvific plan, which
aims at bringing salvation to all,” he said.
Charisms help to build up the Church in unity, holiness and service.
They are not given for the benefit of the recipient, but “for use by the
people of God”. They are “particular graces, given to some for the good
of many others,” he said.
Charity is the third aspect of this communion of spiritual goods.
“The charisms are important in the life of the Christian community, but
they are always a means of growing in charity, which St Paul places
above the charisms,” Pope Francis said.
“Without love even the most extraordinary gifts are in vain whilst the smallest of our gestures of love brings good to all.”
The charity of which he spoke, was not the “easy charity that we
offer between ourselves” but something deeper, the pontiff said. “It is a
communion that makes us able to enter into the joy and the pain of
others in order to sincerely make them our own.”
Often we are too dry, indifferent and detached, and instead of
transmitting fraternity, we transmit ill-humour, coldness and
selfishness, he said, but only “love that comes from the Holy Spirit”
will make the Church grow.