Posted on 03/18/2015 4:38:28 PM PDT by NYer
Children remind us that we are always children, they bring their way of seeing reality, with a confident and pure gaze (they have not yet learned the science of duplicity which we adults have learned), they can teach us to smile and cry again. Of course they also bring concerns and sometimes many problems, but a society with these concerns and these problems is far better than a society that is sad and gray because it has no children! This was the crux of Francis message at this Wednesdays General Audience in St. Peters Square.
After reflecting on the different figures withtin the family (mother, father, children, siblings, grandparents) over the past few weeks, today Francis focused on children as he continued his series of catecheses on the family ahead of the October Synod. Children are a great gift for humanity but they are also great outcasts because they arent allowed to be born, the Pope said. Francis announced that next week he will be talking about "some wounds that unfortunately hurt childhood". I think of "the many children I met during my recent visit to Asia: full of life, enthusiasm, and, on the other hand, I see that in the world today many of them live in undignified conditions... In fact, one can judge a society by the way it treats its children, not only morally, but also if it is a free society or a slave to international interests."
"First of all, children remind us all that, in the first years of life, we were totally dependent on the care and kindness of others. Not even the Son of God was spared this step. Francis recalled the beautiful and strong words the Gospel uses to speak about 'little ones'. This term 'little one' means all the people who depend on the help of others, and especially children. For example, Jesus says: "I give praise Father, Lord of heaven and earth, because you have hidden these things from the wise and learned, and revealed them to little ones. The Pope highlighted that God has no difficulty in being understood by children, and children have no trouble understanding God, before underlining that "children are in themselves a treasure for humanity and for the Church, because they constantly remind us of the necessary condition for entering the kingdom of God: not to consider ourselves self-sufficient, but in need of help, love, forgiveness. And all of us, we are in need of help, love and forgiveness ... all of us! "Children, he continued, remind us of another thing; they remind us that we are always children: even if one becomes an adult, or elderly, even if one becomes a parent, or occupies a position of responsibility, under all of this the identity of the child remains. We are all children. And this brings us back always to the fact that we did not give life to ourselves, we received it. The great gift of life is the first gift we have received, life. We sometimes risk forgetting about this, living as if we were the masters of our existence, and instead we are radically dependent. In fact, it is a great joy to hear that in every age, in every situation, in every walk of life, we are and we remain children.
But more in general, there are so many gifts, so many riches that children bring to humanity, the Pope continued. I will mention just a few. They bring their way of seeing reality, with a confident and pure gaze. Children have a spontaneous confidence in their mother and father; they have a spontaneous trust in God, in Jesus, the Virgin Mary. At the same time, their inner eye is pure, not yet tainted by malice, duplicity, the corrosion of life that hardens hearts. We know that even children have original sin, they have their egos, but they retain a purity and simplicity within. Children, Francis continued off the cuff, are not diplomats: they say what they feel, they say what they see, directly. And so often they challenge their parents: 'I don't like this because it's bad '... in front of other people. But children say what they see, they are not two faced. They have not yet learned the science of duplicity which we adults have learned.
Still speaking off the cuff, Francis said that children are able to smile and cry spontaneously. When I take them into my arms, he confided, some smile, others see me dressed in white, they think Im a doctor whos come to give then an injection and they cry. We often don smile sthat lack vivacity, that are artificial and clown-like. Our heart loses the ability to smile and cry, two things that we adults often 'block', we are no longer capable. Let us ask ourselves: do I still cry or have I lost myt ability to smile and cry spontaneously? It always depends on the heart that hardens Children can teach us to smile and cry again.
"Children, the Pope concluded, bring life, joy, hope, even trouble. But, life is like that. Of course they also bring concerns and sometimes many problems, but a society with these concerns and these problems is far better than a society that is sad and gray because it has no children! And when we see that the birth rate of a society is down to one percent, we can say that this society is sad, is gray because it has no children.
At the end of the Audience, Pope Francis embraced 25 homeless people of different religious and cultural backgrounds who came from Marseille to meet him and launch a message of hope fromt he heart of the Church. According to Vatican newspaper LOsservatore Romano, the five-day pilgrimage to Rome was promoted by the Archbishop of Marseilles, Mgr. Georges Pontier, who is also President of the French Episcopal Conference, along with Fr. Christian Papazian whose role involves welcoming and assisting the marginalised. These people receive daily assistance from Secours Catholique Caritas France. We have come here with conviction, to bear witness to the fact that we are all brothers and all have equal dignity because there are no differences between people, said Kadri, one of the homeless people. Fraternity is the goal we should all strive for, starting witht he homeless and the jobless, he added.
Ping!!
A society without children is dead.
Isn’t this the same Pope Francis who ‘chastised’ Catholics for wanting to ‘breed like rabbits’? So which is it?
Then a week later, he said not having kids was selfish or something.
“You no play-a da game, you no make-a da rules.” /punchline to old joke
This from the guy who won’t allow priests the option to be married.
Take the beam out of thine own eye.
Bingo! Rock star pope strikes again.
The way this Pope gives speeches reminds me of Obama. Most of what he said was basically meaningless sentimental/emotional nothings. And whenever he said something substantial, you don’t like it, because it was his Marxism peeking out.
We have friends living in “retirement communities “. The very idea seems horrible to us. The very young and the very old can share much with each other. As we become more and more isolated today, we lose so much. My wife was born in Thailand and I’ve lived there and in Hispanic communities here where the involvement of grandparents in the raising of children is ingrained and honorable. I’m injoying being grandpa and my wife is totally committed and delighted to be “Yai”.
Kids are great, but can you please not take them to late night R-rated movies, or on airplanes, or to Vegas?
Maybe some people (like politicians) are, but some of us are grown-ups....
My "It Takes A Village" Pinko Sense is tingling....
Beautiful words from our Holy Father. Children are truly a blessing and a gift from God. Only three replies in to your post and I am amazed at the ignorance and stupidity of some of the other poster comments.
Well said; I couldn’t imagine not having my children’s grandparents in their lives.
Amen to that.
A couple of years before my grandmother died, she told me how much she liked that my kids weren’t afraid of “old people”. I love that my kids knew my maternal grandparents and can still talk about time spent with them. My grandpa always lit up when around toddlers. It was a blessing for all of us.
Well, since you asked: Pope Francis was defending Humanae Vitae and at the same time urging responsible parenthood, refuting critics that said the Catholic Church just wants people to breed like rabbits.
Context, context.
“Won’t allow” priests to be married? Give me a break. These priests freely and willingly took a vow of celibacy. You think they should not be allowed to do so? Nobody forces a man to make this decision. Any of them could have decided differently and gotten married if that was their choice!
Children of God, you know.
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