(Vatican Radio) Pope Francis on Wednesday called on the faithful to recognise God’s love for us and to share it with our brothers and sisters.
The Pope was addressing crowds
of pilgrims gathered in St. Peter’s Square for the General
Audience.
Listen to the report by Linda Bordoni...
As has become customary in these occasions, Pope Francis
took his time to stop, greet and exchange a few words, as well as kiss the
babies and children as he made his way through the crowds thronging St. Peter’s
Square for the weekly General Audience. And continuing his catechesis on the
Creed, the Pope turned his attention in particular to “The Holy Spirit: Lord and
Giver of Life”. With a reference to the Creed, Pope Francis explained that
the Spirit is “Lord”, fully God, the third person of the Blessed Trinity. He is
the gift of the Risen Christ, who draws us, through faith, into communion with
God. And speaking of the Holy Spirit who dwells in our hearts, and is the
pure source of “living water, springing up to eternal life”, the Pope said - the
Spirit purifies, renews and transforms us; he grants us his sevenfold gifts and
makes us children of God our Father. And inviting us all to see things with
the eyes of Christ, the Pope said “we are loved by God as His children, we can
live as children of God, as Jesus did. He concluded his reflection inviting
those present to be silent and to listen to the Holy Spirit who tells us: “God
loves us and always forgives us”.
Please find below Vatican Radio's
fult translation of the text:
Dear brothers and sisters, good
day.
The season of Easter that we are living with joy, guided by the
liturgy of the Church, is par excellence the time of the Holy Spirit, given to
us "not by measure" (cf. John 3:34) by the crucified and risen Jesus. This time
of grace ends with the feast of Pentecost, when the Church relives the
outpouring of the Spirit upon Mary and the Apostles gathered in prayer in the
Upper Room.
But who is the Holy Spirit? In the Creed we profess with
faith: "I believe in the Holy Spirit, the Lord and giver of life." The first
truth to which we adhere in the Creed is that the Holy Spirit is Kyrios,
Lord. This means that He is truly God as are the Father and the Son, on our part
object of the same act of worship and glorification that we direct to the Father
and the Son. The Holy Spirit, in fact, is the third Person of the Blessed
Trinity; the Holy Spirit is the great gift of the Risen Christ who opens our
minds and our hearts to faith in Jesus as the Son sent by the Father, and who
leads us to friendship, to communion with God
But I would like to focus
on the fact that the Holy Spirit is the inexhaustible source of God's life in
us. In all times and in all places man has yearned for a full and beautiful
life, a just and good one, a life that is not threatened by death, but that can
mature and grow to its fullest. Man is like a traveler who, crossing the deserts
of life, has a thirst for living water, gushing and fresh, capable of quenching
his deep desire for light, love, beauty and peace. We all feel this desire! And
Jesus gives us this living water: it is the Holy Spirit, who proceeds from the
Father and who Jesus pours into our hearts. Jesus tells us that "I came that
they may have life and have it more abundantly" (John 10, 10).
Jesus
promised the Samaritan woman that he would donate an eternally abundant ‘"living
water” to all those who recognize him as the Son sent by the Father to save us
(John 4: 5-26; 3:17). Jesus came to give us this' "living water" that is the
Holy Spirit, so that our life may be guided by God, may be animated by God, may
be nourished by God. When we say that a Christian is a spiritual man, this is
what we mean: a Christian is a person who thinks and acts according to God,
according to the Holy Spirit. And do we believe in God? Do we act according to
God? Or do we let ourselves be guided by so many other things that are not
God?
At this point we can ask ourselves: how can this water quench our
deep thirst? We know that water is essential for life; without water we die; it
quenches our thirst, it cleanses, it renders the earth fertile. In the
Epistle to the Romans we find this sentence: "God's love has been poured
into our hearts through the Holy Spirit who was given to us" (5:5). The '"living
water," the Holy Spirit, the Gift of the Risen One who comes to dwell in us,
cleanses us, enlightens us, renews us, transforms us because rendering us
partakers of the very life of God who is Love. This is why the Apostle Paul says
that the Christian's life is animated by the Spirit and by its fruits, which are
"love, joy, peace, generosity, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness,
self-control" (Gal 5:22 -23). The Holy Spirit leads us to divine life as
"children of the Only Son." In another passage from the Letter to the
Romans, which we have mentioned several times, St. Paul sums it up in these
words: "All who are led by the Spirit of God are sons of God. And you… have you
received the Spirit who renders us adoptive children, and thanks to whom we cry
out, "Abba! Father. “The Spirit itself, together with our own spirit, attests
that we are children of God. And if we are His children, we are also His heirs,
heirs of God and fellow heirs with Christ, provided we take part in his
suffering so we can participate in his glory "(8, 14-17). This is the precious
gift that the Holy Spirit brings into our hearts: the very life of God, the life
of true children, a relationship of familiarity, freedom and trust in the love
and mercy of God, which as an effect has also a new vision of others, near and
far, seen always as brothers and sisters in Jesus to be respected and loved. The
Holy Spirit teaches us to look with the eyes of Christ, to live life as Christ
lived, to understand life as Christ did. That's why the living water that is the
Holy Spirit quenches our lives because it tells us that we are loved by God as
His children, that we can love God as his children, and that by his grace we can
live as children of God, as did Jesus. And us? Do we listen to the Holy Spirit
who tells us: God loves you? Do we really love God and others as Jesus
did?
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