Posted by Deborah Castellano Lubov on 18 January, 2017
Prayer leads one forward in hope and when things become dark, there must be more prayer! And there will be more hope.
Pope
Francis gave this advice during this morning’s General Audience in the
Vatican’s Paul VI Hall, as he continued his series of catecheses on the
theme of Christian hope.
Francis
drew inspiration from the figure of Jonah, a prophet who tries to flee
from the Lord’s call, a difficult mission entrusted the Lord entrusted
to him.
When
the ship that Jonah had boarded was tossed by a storm, the pagan
sailors asked him, as a man of God, to pray that they might escape sure
death. Jonah prays on behalf of the sailors, and, taking up once more
his prophetic mission, shows himself ready to sacrifice his life for
their sake. As a result, the sailors come to acknowledge the true God.
This
story, the Jesuit Pope underlined, reminds us of the link between hope
and prayer. Anguish in the face of death, he stressed, often makes us
recognize our human frailty and our need to pray for salvation.
“The reaction of these ‘pagans,'”Francis
observed, “was the right reaction in face of death, in face of danger,
because it is then that man has a complete experience of his frailty and
his need of salvation. The instinctive horror of dying awakens the
necessity to hope in the God of life.”
The pagans’ desperate hope that this ‘god’
will prevent them from perishing, the Pontiff said, are “words of hope
that becomes prayer.” This supplication full of anguish, Francis noted,
comes from lips of men facing the imminent danger of death.
“We disdain too easily from turning to God
in our need as if it were only a self-interested prayer, and, hence,
imperfect. However, God knows our weakness, He knows that we remember
Him to ask for help, and with the indulgent smile of a father, He
responds benevolently,” the Pope said.
“Hope, which had induced them to pray so
that they would not die, is now revealed more powerful and operates a
reality that goes beyond what they hoped for: not only do they not
perish in the tempest, but they open themselves to the acknowledgement
of the true and only Lord of Heaven and earth.”
Pope Francis concluded, praying that the
Lord make us understand this connection between prayer and hope, and for
the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity which is beginning, making us
reflect on the love of Christ and pushing us toward reconciliation.
The Holy See Press Office also confirmed
to journalists present that before entering the General Audience, the
Pope, on his way in, greeted a boy with leukemia, but didn’t have
details to provide about his age or what nation he was from.
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