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MESSAGE OF HIS HOLINESS JOHN PAUL II
FOR LENT 1982
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
“Who is my neighbour?” (Lk 10:29).
You will remember: it was with the parable of the Good Samaritan
that Jesus answered this question posed by a lawyer who had just acknowledged
what he read in the Law: “You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart,
and with all your soul, and with all your strength, and with all your mind; and
your neighbour as yourself”.
The Good Samaritan is in the first place Christ himself; he is the
one who approached us first and made us his neighbour, so as to help us, to heal
us and to save us: “He emptied himself, taking the form of a servant, being born
in the likeness of men. And being found in human form he humbled himself and
became obedient unto death, even death on a cross” (Phil 2:7-8).
If there is still some distance between God and ourselves, that can
only be due to us and to the obstacles we place in the way of this coming close:
the sin which is in our heart, the injustices that we commit, the hatred and
divisions that we foster, everything that still prevents us from loving God with
all our heart and our strength. The time of Lent is the special time for
purification and penance, so as to allow our Saviour to make us his neighbour
and save us by his love.
The second commandment is similar to the first (cf. Mt 22:39)
and cannot be separated from it. We love others with that selfsame love which
God puts into our hearts and with which he loves them. Here too, how many
obstacles in the way of making others our neighbour: we do not love God and our
neighbour enough. Why do we still have so many difficulties in leaving the
important but insufficient stage of thought, declarations or protestations, in
order to become truly immigrants with the immigrants, refugees with the
refugees, and poor alongside those who lack everything?
The liturgical period of Lent is given us in and through the Church
in order to purify us of that remainder of selfishness and excessive attachment
to things – material or otherwise – which keep us apart from those who have a
right to our help: principally those who, whether physically near of far, are
unable to live their lives with dignity as men and women created by God in his
image and likeness.
Allow yourselves, then, to be imbued by the spirit of penance and
conversion, which is the spirit of love and sharing. Imitating Christ, draw
close to those who have been left naked and wounded, those whom the world
ignores or rejects. Take part in all that is being done in your local Church to
help Christians and all people of good will to obtain for each one of their
brothers and sisters the means, including the material means, of living with
dignity and of taking upon themselves their own human and spiritual advancement
and that of their families.
May the Lenten collection, even in poor countries, allow you,
through sharing, to help the local Churches of still less favoured countries to fulfil their mission as Good Samaritans towards those for whom they are
immediately responsible: their own poor, the undernourished, those who are
denied justice, those who are still unable to ensure their own development and
the development of their communities.
Penance, conversion: this is the road to follow; not a sad one, but
a liberating one suggested by the Lenten period.
And if we still ask the question: “Who is my neighbour?”, we shall
read the answer on the face of the Risen One, and hear it from his lips: “Truly,
I say to you, as you did it to one of the least of these my brethren, you did it
to me” (Mt 25:40).
JOHN PAUL II
© Copyright 1982 - Libreria Editrice Vaticana
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