While the Holy Father was speaking to youth in
Panama
last week, his message was for the whole
world.
Recognizing
the weariness felt in the priesthood and in religious communities due to the
sins that wound the Church today, he said: .
“Weariness
of hope comes from seeing a Church wounded by sin, which so often failed to
hear all those cries that echoed the cry of the Master: ‘My God, why have you
forsaken me?... Let us open the door and
let our wearied hope return without fear to the deep well of our first love,
when Jesus passed our way, gazed at us with mercy and asked us to follow him.”
Describing
the fatigue of Jesus’ found in the Gospel of John (Ch. 4) he said Jesus was weary as He sat down beside the well. “The Lord knew what it was to be tired, and
in his weariness so many struggles of our nations and peoples, our communities
and all who are weary and heavily burdened can find a place.”
“There are
many reasons for weariness on our journey as priests, consecrated men and
women, and members of lay movements: from long hours of work, which leave
little time to eat, rest and be with family, to ‘toxic’ working conditions and
relationships that lead to exhaustion and disappointment. Like the Samaritan
woman who for years had been carrying the empty pitchers of failed loves, we
know that not just any word can help us regain energy and prophecy in our
mission. Not just any novelty, however alluring it may seem, can quench our
thirst.”
The Holy
Father warned against a particular type of weariness that “calls into question
the energy, resources and viability of our mission in this changing and
challenging world. It is a weariness
that paralyzes. It comes from looking ahead and not knowing how to react to the
intense and confusing changes that we as a society are experiencing.
“Weariness
of hope” can “lodge in the heart of our communities. Everything apparently goes
on as usual, but in reality, faith is crumbling and failing.”
Pope
Francis reminded those with vocations “how the Spirit inspired … the founders
of your institutes and the bishops and priests who laid the basis for your
communities.”
“Through
these “saints next door,” the Holy Spirit “gave life and fresh breath to a
particular moment of history when all hope and dignity seemed to be stifled and
crushed.”
“A wearied
hope will be healed … when it is unafraid to return to the place of its first
love and to find, in the peripheries and challenges before us today, the same
song, the same gaze that inspired the song and the gaze of those who have gone
before us.”
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