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MESSAGE OF HIS HOLINESS
POPE JOHN PAUL II FOR LENT 1996
"Give them something to eat" (Mt
14:16)
Dear Brothers and Sisters!
1. Once again the Lord is calling us to follow him along the journey of Lent.
Each year all the faithful are invited to respond anew as individuals and as a
community to our baptismal vocation and to bear fruits of conversion. Lent is a
journey of evolving, creative reflection which inspires penance and gives new
impetus to every aspect of our commitment to follow the Gospel. It is a journey
of love which opens the hearts of believers to our brothers and sisters and
draws them to God. Jesus asks his disciples to live and to radiate charity; this
new commandment of love represents the authoritative summation of the Decalogue
entrusted by God to Moses on Mount Sinai. Each day we encounter people who are
hungry, thirsty or sick, people who are outcasts or migrants. During this season
of Lent we are invited to pay greater heed to the suffering written on their
faces, faces which challenge us to acknowledge the various aspects of poverty
that continue in our time.
2. The Gospel makes it clear that the Redeemer is especially compassionate to
those in difficulty. He speaks to them of the Kingdom of God and heals the body
and spirit of those who are in need of care. He then says to his disciples,
"Give them something to eat". However the disciples realize that they only have
five loaves of bread and two fish. Like the disciples in Bethsaida, we today are aware that the means at our disposal are certainly insufficient
to meet the needs of the nearly eight hundred million people who suffer from
hunger and malnutrition, and who still struggle, on the threshold of the Year
2000, for survival.
What can we do? Do we leave things as they are, and resign ourselves to being
helpless? This is the question that, at the beginning of Lent, I would like to
pose to each member of the faithful and to the whole Church. The crowds of
starving people children, women, the elderly, immigrants, refugees, the
unemployed - raise to us their cry of suffering. They implore us, hoping to be
heard. How can we not open our ears and our hearts and start to make available
those five loaves and two fish which God has put into our hands? If each one of
us contributes something, we can all do something for them. Of course this will
require sacrifices, which call for a deep inner conversion. Certainly it will
involve changing our exaggerated consumerist behaviour, combatting hedonism,
resisting attitudes of indifference and the tendency to disregard our personal
responsibilities.
3. Hunger is a great tragedy afflicting humanity. We urgently need to
acknowledge this fact and to offer resolute and generous support to the various
Organizations and Movements founded to alleviate the sufferings of those who
risk death from starvation, giving special consideration to those people not
reached by government or international programmes. It is necessary to continue
the fight against hunger both in less developed countries and in highly
industrialized nations where, unfortunately, there is an ever growing gap
separating the rich from the poor.
The earth has the resources necessary to feed all humanity. We need to learn
to use them intelligently, respecting the environment and the rhythms of nature,
guaranteeing fairness and justice in business dealings and ensuring a
distribution of wealth which takes into account the duty of solidarity. Some
might object that this is a grand and unachievable utopia. Yet the social
teaching and activity of the Church demonstrates the contrary: where men and
women turn to the Gospel, this project of sharing and solidarity becomes a
remarkable reality.
4. Even as we witness the destruction of great quantities of products
necessary for human life, we are saddened to see the disturbing spectacle of
long lines of people waiting their turn at soup-kitchens or around convoys of
humanitarian organizations committed to distributing needed supplies. Even in
great modern cities, it is not uncommon to see people sorting through refuse
bins once the local markets have closed.
When we consider scenes such as these, symptomatic as they are of profound
contradictions, how can our hearts fail to rebel against them? How can we not
feel spontaneously moved to Christian charity? Authentic Christian solidarity,
however, is no mere transient feeling. Only as the result of a patient and
responsible training from childhood on does solidarity become a fundamental
personal attitude which affects all our actions and areas of responsibility. A
general process of consciousness raising is needed, a process capable of
involving society as a whole. The Catholic Church, in full cooperation with other religious
denominations, seeks to offer her own distinctive contribution to such a
process. This is a fundamental work of human promotion and of fraternal sharing,
one which requires that the poor themselves be involved, in whatever way they
can.
5. Dear Brothers and Sisters! I entrust to you these Lenten reflections, so
that you can ponder them as individuals and as a community under the guidance of
your Pastors. I urge you to take significant practical steps which are able to
multiply the few loaves and fish at our disposal. This will provide effective
help in addressing the various forms of hunger and will be an authentic way of
living this providential period of Lent, a season of conversion and
reconciliation.
As you carry out these demanding resolutions, I gladly impart to each of you
my Apostolic Blessing as a pledge of strength and consolation. May the Lord
grant us the grace to set out generously, in prayer and penance, on the path
towards the celebration of Easter.
Given at Castelgandolfo, on 8 September, the Feast of the Nativity of the
Blessed Virgin Mary, in the year 1995, the seventeenth of my Pontificate.
JOHN PAUL II
© Copyright 1995 - Libreria Editrice Vaticana
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