INTERNATIONAL – Pope apologises to young people who have felt ignored by the Church

01 Nov 2018

By The Record

Pope Francis holds his pastoral staff as he celebrates the closing Mass of the Synod of Bishops on young people, the faith and vocational discernment in St Peter’s Basilica at the Vatican on 28 October. Photo: Paul Haring/CNS.

By Carol Glatz

Speaking on behalf of all adult Catholics, Pope Francis formally closed the Synod of Bishops by asking young people for forgiveness.

“Forgive us if often we have not listened to you; if, instead of opening our hearts, we have filled your ears. As Christ’s Church, we want to listen to you with love because young people’s lives are precious in God’s eyes and “in our eyes, too,” the Holy Father said at in St Peter’s Basilica.

The Mass closed a month-long synod on young people, faith and vocational discernment.

The Pope thanked the 300 synod members, experts, observers and ecumenical delegates for working in communion, with frankness and with the desire to serve God’s people.

“May the Lord bless our steps so that we can listen to young people, be their neighbours and bear witness before them to Jesus, the joy of our lives,” he said in his homily on 28 October.

Pope Francis emphasised that living the faith and sharing it with the world, especially with young people, entails going out to those in need, listening, being close to them and bearing witness to Jesus’ liberating message of salvation.

The Pope used the day’s Gospel reading from Mark 10:46-52 and its account of Jesus helping Bartimaeus as a model of how all Christians need to live out and share the faith.

The Holy Father said Bartimaeus was blind, homeless and fatherless, and he begged for Jesus’ mercy as soon as he heard he was near, but many rebuked the man, “telling him to be silent”.

“For such disciples, a person in need was a nuisance along the way, unexpected and unplanned,” the Pope added.

“Even though they followed Jesus, these disciples wanted things to go their way and preferred talking over listening to others.

“This is a risk constantly to guard against. Yet, for Jesus, the cry of those pleading for help is not a nuisance but a challenge,” Pope Francis continued.

Archbishop Eamon Martin of Armagh, Northern Ireland, Auxiliary Bishop Robert Barron of Los Angeles and other prelates leave the closing Mass of the Synod of Bishops on young people, the faith and vocational discernment in St Peter's Basilica. Photo: Paul Haring/CNS.

Archbishop Eamon Martin of Armagh, Northern Ireland, Auxiliary Bishop Robert Barron of Los Angeles and other prelates leave the closing Mass of the Synod of Bishops on young people, the faith and vocational discernment in St Peter’s Basilica. Photo: Paul Haring/CNS.

He said Jesus goes to Bartimaeus and lets him speak, taking the time to listen.

“This is the first step in helping the journey of faith: listening. It is the apostolate of the ear: listening before speaking,” Pope Francis explained.

The next step in the journey of faith, the Pope said, is to be a neighbour and do what is needed, without delegating the duty to someone else.

Jesus asks Bartimaeus: “What do you want me to do for you?” showing the Lord acts “not according to my own preconceived ideas, but for you, in your particular situation. That is how God operates. He gets personally involved with preferential love for every person”.

Being present and close to people’s lives “is the secret to communicating the heart of the faith, and not a secondary aspect,” the Supreme Pontiff said.

“When faith is concerned purely with doctrinal formulae, it risks speaking only to the head without touching the heart,” he said.

“And when it is concerned with activity alone, it risks turning into mere moralising and social work.”

Being a neighbour, the Pope said, means bringing the newness of God into other people’s lives, fighting the “temptation of easy answers and fast fixes” and of wanting to “wash our hands” of problems and responsibility.

“We want to imitate Jesus and, like him, to dirty our hands,” just as “the Lord has dirtied his hands for each one of us.

“Let us look at the cross, start from there and remember that God became my neighbour in sin and death.”

“When we too become neighbours, we become bringers of new life. Not teachers of everyone, not specialists in the sacred, but witnesses of the love that saves,” Pope Francis added.

Pope Francis looks on as Cardinal Lorenzo Baldisseri, secretary-general of the Synod of Bishops, reads a letter from the synod fathers to young people during the closing Mass of the Synod of Bishops on young people, the faith and vocational discernment. Photo: Paul Haring/CNS.

The third step in the journey of faith, he said, is to bear witness, particularly to those who are seeking life and salvation, but who “often find only empty promises and few people who really care”.

“It is not Christian to expect that our brothers and sisters who are seekers should have to knock on our doors; we ought to go out to them, bringing not ourselves but Jesus” and encouraging each person by proclaiming that “God is asking you to let yourself be loved by him”.

“How often, instead of this liberating message of salvation, have we brought ourselves, our own ‘recipes’ and ‘labels’ into the Church?

“How often do people feel the weight of our institutions more than the friendly presence of Jesus?” the Pope lamented.

“In these cases, we act more like an NGO, a state-controlled agency, and not the community of the saved who dwell in the joy of the Lord.”

Just as Jesus journeyed in his ministry with others, “we too have walked alongside one another” during the synod on young people, Pope Francis said, formally closing the synod assembly, which began on 3 October.

Before praying the Angelus with people gathered in St Peter’s Square, the Pope said the synod did more than produce a final document; it displayed a method of listening to the voices of the people of God and discerning responses in the light of Scripture and the Holy Spirit.

While the document was important and useful, he said, the methods employed during the synod and its preparations showed “a way of being and working together, young and old, listening and discerning, so as to reach pastoral choices that respond to reality”.