Pope Francis at general audience: There will always be martyrs among us
Dec 11,2019
With temperatures in Rome continuing to drop, the pope held his general audience in Paul VI hall inside the Vatican. He stopped to accept a cup of tea from this priest standing among the crowd.
Then the pope continued his catechesis on the Acts of the Apostles, reflecting on the story of St. Paul, who turned his sufferings as a prisoner into a proclamation of Jesus as the risen Lord.
POPE FRANCIS
“Paul’s love for Christ is so strong that even these chains are seen through the eyes of faith, faith that for Paul is not a theory nor opinion about God and the world, but rather an impact of God’s love on his heart. It is love for Jesus Christ.”
Pope Francis remembered persecuted Christians of today. He likened modern-day martyrs to St. Paul’s own life of sacrifice dedicated to Christ.
POPE FRANCIS
“Today in the world, in Europe, many Christians are persecuted and give their lives for their faith.” “Martyrdom is the breath of a Christian’s life, of a Christian community. There will always be martyrs among us. This is the sign we’re on the path of Jesus.”
After the audience, performers from the Moscow State Circus impressed the pope with their human pyramids and juggling. They performed to “Jingle Bell Rock,” in the spirit of Christmas.
Claudia Torres
Pope reflects on St. Paul’s persecution as a joyful testimony of the Gospel
Dec 11,2019
In the General Audience, the pope continued his series on the Acts of the Apostles, reflecting on the suffering Paul experienced. Because of his beliefs, he was persecuted for his faith. Yet, it does not stop him. Instead, Paul was able to view each trial as an opportunity to spread the faith and be a missionary disciple.
Pope Francis asked that his example fill each Christian with fidelity and confirm the call of every follower of Christ to be a joyful witness of the Gospel.
SUMMARY OF POPE’S CATECHESIS IN ENGLISH
Dear Brothers and Sisters:
In our catechesis on the Acts of the Apostles, we see how with the passage of time Paul’s missionary apostolate is increasingly marked by suffering. His return to Jerusalem exposes him to a fierce persecution. Accused of preaching against the Law and the Temple, he is arrested and put in chains. After being interrogated by the Sanhedrin, Paul is taken to Caesarea where the Governor Felix and King Agrippa hear his case. Finally, having appealed to the Emperor, he begins his journey to Rome. In all this, Saint Luke brings out the similarity between Paul and Jesus, and presents Paul’s sufferings as themselves an eloquent proclamation of the crucified and risen Lord. Indeed, his love for Christ made his chains of captivity an instrument for spreading the liberating power of the Gospel. May Paul’s example of perseverance amid trials, and his ability to view everything with the eyes of faith, strengthen us in fidelity, and confirm us in our vocation to be missionary disciples and witnesses to the joy of the Gospel.
I greet the English-speaking pilgrims and visitors taking part in today’s Audience, especially the groups from the United States of America. I pray that each of you, and your families, may experience a blessed Advent, in preparation for the coming of the newborn Saviour at Christmas.
May God bless you!
Copyright – Vatican Media
GENERAL AUDIENCE: St. Paul, Suffering Witness of Risen One (Full Text)
‘Today, many Christians in the world, in Europe, are persecuted and give their life for the faith, or are persecuted with white gloves, namely, left aside, marginalized…’
This morning’s General Audience was held at 9:20 am in Paul VI Hall, where the Holy Father Francis met with groups of pilgrims and faithful from Italy and from all over the world.
Continuing with the series of catecheses on the Acts of the Apostles, in his address in Italian the Pope meditated on the theme: “In a short time you think to make me a Christian!” (Acts 26:28) — Paul is a prisoner before King Agrippa (Biblical passage: Acts of the Apostles 26:22-23).
After summarizing his catechesis in several languages, the Holy Father expressed special greetings to groups of faithful present.
The General Audience ended with the singing of the Pater Noster and the Apostolic Blessing.
Read the source: https://zenit.org/articles/general-audience-st-paul-suffering-witness-of-risen-one-full-text/
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The Holy Father’s Catechesis
Dear Brothers and Sisters, good morning!
In the reading of the Acts of the Apostles, the journey of the Gospel continues in the world, and the seal of suffering marks increasingly Paul’s witness. However, this is something that grows over time in Paul’s life. Paul isn’t only the evangelizer full of ardour, the intrepid missionary among the pagans, who gives life to new Christian communities, but he is also the suffering witness of the Risen One (Cf. Acts 9:15-16).
The Apostle’s arrival in Jerusalem, described in chapter 21 of the Acts, unleashes a ferocious hatred in his regard; they reprimand him: “But he was a persecutor! Don’t trust him!” As it was for Jesus, for Paul also Jerusalem is the hostile city. Going to the Temple, he is recognized; <he is> led outside to be lynched, and saved in extremis by the Roman soldiers. Accused of teaching against the Law and the Temple, he is arrested and begins his prisoner’s pilgrimage, first before the Sanhedrin, then before the Roman Procurator in Caesarea and finally before King Agrippa. Luke shows the similarity between Paul and Jesus, both hated by their adversaries, accused publicly and acknowledged innocent by the imperial Authorities and so Paul is associated to his Master’s Passion, and his passion becomes a living Gospel. I <have> come from Saint Peter’s Basilica, where this morning I had an audience earlier with Ukrainian pilgrims from a Ukrainian diocese. How these people have been persecuted; how much they have suffered for the Gospel! However, they didn’t negotiate the faith. They are an example. Today, many Christians in the world, in Europe, are persecuted and give their life for the faith, or are persecuted with white gloves, namely, left aside, marginalized . . . Martyrdom is the air of a Christian’s life, of a Christian community. There will always be martyrs among us: this is the sign that we are following Jesus’ way. It’s a blessing of the Lord, that there be in the People of God, a man or a woman who gives this witness of martyrdom.
Paul is called to defend himself from the accusations and, in the end, in the presence of King Agrippa II, his apologia changes into an effective witness of faith (Cf. Acts 26:1-23). Then Paul recounts his own conversion: the Risen Christ has made him Christian and has entrusted to him the mission among the Gentiles, “that they may turn from darkness to light and from the power of Satan to God, that they may receive forgiveness of their sins and a place among those who are sanctified by faith” in Christ (v. 18). Paul obeyed this charge and did nothing other than show how the prophets and Moses announced what he now proclaims: “that the Christ must suffer, and that, by being the first to rise from the dead, he would proclaim light both to the people and to the Gentiles” (v. 23).
Paul’s passionate witness touches the heart of King Agrippa, who is only lacking the decisive step. And the King says thus: ”In a short time you think to make me a Christian!” (v. 28). Paul is declared innocent, but he cannot be released because he has appealed to Caesar. Thus, the unstoppable journey of the Word of God continues towards Rome. Paul, in chains, will end up here in Rome.
Henceforth, Paul’s portrait is that of a prisoner whose chains are the sign of his fidelity to the Gospel and of the testimony rendered to the Risen One. The chains are certainly a humiliating test for the Apostle, who appears to the eyes of the world as a “criminal” (2 Timothy 2:9). However, his love for Christ is so strong that even these chains are read with the eyes of faith; faith that for Paul isn’t “a theory, an opinion on God and on the world,” but “the impact of the love of God on his heart, [. . . ] it’s love for Jesus Christ.” (Benedict XVI, Homily on the Occasion of the Pauline Year, June 28, 2008).
Dear brothers and sisters, Paul teaches us perseverance in trials and the capacity to read all with the eyes of faith. Let us ask the Lord today, through the intercession of the Apostle, to revive our faith and to help us to be faithful to the end to our vocation of Christians, of disciples of the Lord, of missionaries.
[Original text: Italian] [ZENIT’s translation by Virginia M. Forrester]In Italian
A warm welcome goes to the Italian-speaking pilgrims. In particular, I greet the Missionaries of Charity; and the parish groups, especially those of Mendicino and of Faro-Fiumicino. In addition, I greet the personnel of the Police Headquarters of Crotone, the Feasts of Mesagne Committee; the delegations of the Municipalities of Introd and of Bolsena; the group of professionals and doctors in Optometry; and the Friends of the Blessed Pellesi Association of San Michele dei Mucchietti-Sassuolo.
Finally, I greet the young people, the elderly, the sick and the newlyweds. Observed next Friday is the Memorial of Saint Lucy, Virgin and Martyr. I wish all of you that the light of the Child Jesus, now on the horizon, may invade your life with His blessing.
[Original text: Italian] [ZENIT’s translation by Virginia M. Forrester]
Copyright: Vatican Media
‘May the Light of the Child Jesus, Invade Your Lives With His Blessing,’ Pope Prays at General Audience
Reflecting on St. Paul, the Persecuted, and Martyrdom, Francis Also Praises the Strength of Persecuted Ukrainian Faithful
May the light of the Child Jesus invade your lives with His blessing…
This Advent Season, the Holy Father gave this reminder during his General Audience this morning, Dec. 11, 2019, in the Vatican’s Paul VI Hall. Continuing his series of catecheses on the Acts of the Apostles, this week he focused again on St. Paul and specifically on the theme “In a short time would you persuade me to be a Christian?” (Acts 26: 28). Paul a prisoner before King Agrippa (Acts 26: 22-23).
The Holy Father greeted the English-speaking pilgrims and visitors taking part in today’s audience, especially the groups from the United States of America. “I pray that each of you, and your families, may experience a blessed Advent, in preparation for the coming of the newborn Saviour at Christmas,” he prayed, adding: “May God bless you!”
In his catechesis on St. Paul, the Jesuit Pope observed how St. Luke shows the similarity between Paul and Jesus. They both were “hated by their adversaries, accused publicly and acknowledged innocent by the imperial authorities and so Paul is associated to his Master’s Passion, and his passion becomes a living Gospel.”
Francis noted that before today’s General Audience he came from Saint Peter’s Basilica, where he had an audience earlier with Ukrainian pilgrims from a Ukrainian diocese.
“How these people have been persecuted; how much they have suffered for the Gospel! However, they didn’t negotiate the faith. They are an example.”
“Today,” he continued, “many Christians in the world, in Europe, are persecuted and give their life for the faith, or are persecuted with white gloves, namely, left aside, marginalized . . . Martyrdom is the air of a Christian’s life, of a Christian community.”
Francis noted there will always be martyrs among us, and said “this is the sign that we are following Jesus’ way. It’s a blessing of the Lord, that there be in the People of God, a man or a woman who gives this witness of martyrdom.”
St. Paul, the Holy Father stressed, teaches us perseverance in trials and the capacity to read all with the eyes of faith. “Let us ask the Lord today, through the intercession of the Apostle, to revive our faith and to help us to be faithful to the end to our vocation of Christians, of disciples of the Lord, of missionaries.”
Greeting the young people, elderly, sick and newlyweds, Pope Francis reminded that Friday, Dec. 13, is the Memorial of Saint Lucy, Virgin and Martyr, concluding: “I wish all of you that the light of the Child Jesus, now on the horizon, may invade your life with His blessing.”
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#GENERAL #AUDIENCE: St. #Paul, Suffering Witness of Risen One (Full Text)
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GENERAL AUDIENCE: St. Paul, Suffering Witness of Risen One (Full Text) – ZENIT – English
‘Today, many Christians in the world, in Europe, are persecuted and give their life for the faith, or are persecuted with white gloves, namely, left aside, marginalized…’
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