Nurture hope tomorrow by healing pain today, says Pope Francis

18 Nov 2021

By Contributor

By Junno Arocho Esteves, Catholic News Service

Pope Francis gives the homily as he celebrates Mass marking World Day of the Poor in St Peter’s Basilica at the Vatican on Sunday 14 November, 2021. Photo: CNS/Remo Casilli, Reuters.

The gift of hope becomes tangible in people’s lives through concrete actions that seek to relieve the suffering of the poor and console the downtrodden, Pope Francis has said.

In his homily at a Mass for the World Day of the Poor, Sunday 14 November, the Holy Father said that true Christian hope is not “the naive, even adolescent optimism of those who hope things may change” but is instead built daily through concrete gestures that manifest “the kingdom of love, justice and fraternity that Jesus inaugurated.”

“We are asked to nurture tomorrow’s hope by healing today’s pain,” he said. “The hope born of the Gospel has nothing to do with a passive expectation that things may be better tomorrow, but with making God’s promise of salvation concrete today. Today and every day.”

Priests attend Pope Francis’ celebration of Mass marking World Day of the Poor in St Peter’s Basilica at the Vatican Sunday 14 November, 2021. Photo: CNS/Remo Casilli, Reuters.

The Mass capped a series of events marking the annual world day, including a 12 November pilgrimage to Assisi with hundreds of poor men, women and children from across Europe.

Several Catholic charitable organisations helped in bringing pilgrims to Assisi as well as organizing local events.

France-based charity Fratello, also organised a worldwide prayer meeting on 14 November dedicated to the poor.

During the meeting, the group shared a video message sent by Pope Francis to mark the occasion.

In it, Pope Francis asked the poor for forgiveness “in the name of all Christians who have wounded, ignored or humiliated you.”

Pope Francis reverences a Marian image as he celebrates Mass marking World Day of the Poor in St Peter’s Basilica at the Vatican Sunday 14 November, 2021. Photo: CNS/Remo Casilli, Reuters.

“Every man and every woman is a temple of God, you are the temple of God, you are the treasure of the church,” Pope Francis told them.

“Your place is not at the door of the churches, but instead in the heart of the church. Know that you are God’s favourites. Among you there are hidden saints.”

In his homily for the Mass in St Peter’s Basilica, Pope Francis reflected on the Sunday Gospel reading from St Mark, in which Jesus describes the days of tribulation when “the sun will be darkened, and the moon will not give its light.”

While the grim description may “leave us bewildered,” Pope Francis said, Christ also invites his followers to hope in the salvation that is to come.

However, he added, it is also a word of consolation for the poor who are often forced into poverty and are “victims of injustice and the inequality of a throwaway society that hurries past without seeing them and, without scruple, abandons them to their fate.”

“The World Day of the Poor, which we are celebrating, asks us not to turn aside, not to be afraid to take a close look at the suffering of those most vulnerable,” Pope Francis said.

While Christian hope is fundamental, he continued, it must translate into decisions and actions of “concern, justice and solidarity” with the poor and with the environment, through tenderness and compassion.

Pope Francis greets a woman as he leaves after celebrating Mass marking World Day of the Poor in St Peter’s Basilica at the Vatican Sunday 14 November, 2021. Photo: CNS/Remo Casilli, Reuters.

“It is up to us to overcome the temptation to be concerned only about our own problems; we need to grow tender before the tragedies of our world, to share its pain. Like the tender leaves of a tree, we are called to absorb the pollution all around us and turn it into goodness,” Pope Francis said.

After Mass, the Holy Father greeted pilgrims gathered in St Peter’s Square for his Sunday Angelus address and reminded them of the need to help the poor who are the presence of Jesus in the world.

“Humanity progresses, develops, but the poor are always with us,” he said.

“There are always the poor, and in them Christ is present, Christ is present in the poor.”