Pope Francis greeted a group of Auschwitz concentration camp survivors after his general audience in St Peter’s Square.
Addressing the 33 former prisoners and Polish pilgrims present, he
said the day’s feast of St Faustina Kowalska “reminded the world that
God is rich in mercy and that his love is more powerful than death, than
sin and every evil.”
During his weekly message, the Pontiff said that Christians are
called to follow the example of St Therese of Lisieux, who helped draw
people to Jesus by way of attraction, not by proselytising.
She was a reminder that an authentic witness is proclaimed through a
union with Christ “in prayer, adoration and in concrete charity, which
is serving Jesus, who is present in the least of our brothers and
sisters,” he said.
In his main audience talk, Pope Francis reflected on his recent visit
to Georgia and Azerbaijan, which, along with his visit in June to
Armenia, fulfilled his desire to encourage the Catholic communities in
the Caucasus region, he said.
Recalling the October 1 Mass in Tbilisi celebrating the feast of St
Therese, the patroness of the missions, the Pope said, “This is what the
religious men and women I met in Tbilisi do, as well as in Baku: They
do it with prayer and charitable works. I encouraged them to be
steadfast in the faith with memory, courage and hope.”
Although both countries celebrated the 25th anniversary of their
independence from the Soviet regime, they still “face numerous
difficulties in different aspects of social life” and the Catholic
Church, in collaboration with other churches and Christian communities
are called to be “a sign of charity and human development, he said.
“In Georgia, this mission naturally passes through the collaboration
with our Orthodox brothers and sisters, who form the vast majority of
the populations,” the Pope said.
Pope Francis said a “very important sign” of this collaboration was
the presence of Orthodox Patriarch Ilia II at the airport upon his
arrival as well as their meeting at Svetitskhoveli Cathedral, which
houses the seamless tunic of Jesus, a garment the Pope described as a
“symbol of unity of the church.”
“This unity is supported by the blood of so many martyrs of different
Christian confessions. Among the most tested are the Assyrian-Chaldeans
in Tbilisi with whom I lived an intense moment of prayer for peace in
Syria, Iraq and in the whole Middle East,” the pope said.
The witness of love and unity given by religious men and women as
well as Christian families in Georgia was also witnessed in Azerbaijan.
Although the majority of the population is Muslim, he said, they share a
good relationship with the small Catholic community there and “maintain
fraternal ties with Orthodox Christians.”
Pope Francis said the celebration of the Eucharist and the
interreligious meeting in Baku were proof that “faith knows how to
maintain the right relationship” between different faiths and expressed
his hope that through this unity, the people of the Caucasus may “live
in peace and mutual respect.”
The Eucharist is “where the spirit harmonises different languages and
gives the strength of witness” which creates communion in Christ and
drives Christians to “seek an encounter and dialogue with all who
believe in God, to build together a more just and fraternal world,” the
Pope said.