Hope must be restored in communities and young people, pope says

Hope must be restored in communities and young people, pope says
Pope Francis greets visitors inSt. Peter's Square before his weekly general audience on September 27. Photo: CNS/Lola Gomez

VATICAN (CNS): Hope and fraternity must be kept alive, organized and coordinated into concrete action so every crisis can be read as an opportunity and dealt with positively, Pope Francis said at his weekly general audience on September 27.

“Hope needs to be restored to our European societies, especially to the new generations,” he told people gathered in St. Peter’s Square.

“In fact, how can we welcome others if we ourselves do not first have a horizon open to the future?” he said.

The pope spoke about his recent September 22 to 23 trip to Marseille—an ancient port city on the Mediterranean Sea and France’s second-largest city—to highlight the challenges and opportunities across the entire Mediterranean region and to focus on the plight of migrants crossing its waters [Sunday Examiner, October 1].

“We know the Mediterranean is the cradle of civilisation and a cradle is for life! It is not tolerable that it become a tomb, neither should it be a place of conflict,” war and human trafficking, he said, referring to the thousands of men, women and children who fall into the hands of traffickers offering them passage into Europe and to those who die from unsafe conditions on the sea or in detention.

He noted that the Mediterranean bridges Africa, Asia and Europe and their peoples, cultures, philosophies and religions. But a harmonious connection “does not happen magically, neither is it accomplished once and for all. It is the fruit of a journey in which each generation is called to travel.”

The pope explained the he went to Marseille to take part in the conclusion of the Mediterranean Meetings, which brought together bishops, mayors, young people and others from the Mediterranean area to look toward the future with hope.

This is the dream, this is the challenge: that the Mediterranean might recover its vocation, that of being a laboratory of civilisation and peace

Pope Francis

“This is the dream, this is the challenge: that the Mediterranean might recover its vocation, that of being a laboratory of civilisation and peace,” the pope said.

Otherwise, he asked, “How can young people, who are poor in hope, closed in on their private lives, worried about managing their own precariousness, open themselves to meeting others and to sharing?”

Communities, which are so often “sickened by individualism, by consumerism and by empty escapism, need to open themselves; their souls and spirits need to be oxygenated, and then they will be able to read the crisis as an opportunity and deal with it positively,” he said.

What came out of the Marseille event, he said, was an outlook on the Mediterranean that was hopeful and “simply human, not ideological, not strategic, not politically correct nor instrumental.”

“Europe needs to retrieve passion and enthusiasm. And I can say that I found passion and enthusiasm in Marseille,” the pope said, thanking its archbishop, Jean-Marc Cardinal Aveline, the priests, religious, lay faithful and the many people who “showed great warmth during the Mass in the Vélodrome Stadium.”

He also thanked French president, Emmanuel Macron, “whose presence testified that all of France was paying attention to the event in Marseille.”

The pope prayed that the Mediterranean region may become “what it has always been called to be—a mosaic of civilisation and hope.”

At the end of his main audience talk, the pope gave special greetings to the diaconate class of the Pontifical North American College, together with their families and friends. “Upon all of you I invoke the joy and peace of our Lord Jesus Christ. God bless you!”

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