MESSAGE OF HIS HOLINESS POPE
FRANCIS
FOR THE
56th WORLD DAY OF PEACE
1 JANUARY 2023
No one can be saved alone.
Combatting Covid-19 together, embarking together
on paths of peace
“Now concerning the times and the seasons,
brothers and sisters, you do not need to have
anything written to you. For you yourselves know
very well that the day of the Lord will come
like a thief in the night” (First Letter of
Saint Paul to the Thessalonians, 5:1-2).
1. With these words, the Apostle Paul encouraged
the Thessalonian community to remain steadfast,
their hearts and feet firmly planted and their
gaze fixed on the world around them and the
events of history, even as they awaited the
Lord’s return. When tragic events seem to
overwhelm our lives, and we feel plunged into a
dark and difficult maelstrom of injustice and
suffering, we are likewise called to keep our
hearts open to hope and to trust in God, who
makes himself present, accompanies us with
tenderness, sustains us in our weariness and,
above all, guides our path. For this reason,
Saint Paul constantly exhorts the community to
be vigilant, seeking goodness, justice and
truth: “So then, let us not fall asleep as
others do, but let us keep awake and be sober”
(5:6). His words are an invitation to remain
alert and not to withdraw into fear, sorrow or
resignation, or to yield to distraction or
discouragement. Instead, we should be like
sentinels keeping watch and ready to glimpse the
first light of dawn, even at the darkest hour.
2. Covid-19 plunged us into a dark night. It
destabilized our daily lives, upset our plans
and routines, and disrupted the apparent
tranquillity of even the most affluent
societies. It generated disorientation and
suffering and caused the death of great numbers
of our brothers and sisters.
Amid a whirlwind of unexpected challenges and
facing a situation confusing even from a
scientific standpoint, the world’s healthcare
workers mobilized to relieve immense suffering
and to seek possible remedies. At the same time,
political authorities had to take measures to
organize and manage efforts to respond to the
emergency.
In addition to its physical aspects, Covid-19
led to a general malaise in many individuals and
families; the long periods of isolation and the
various restrictions on freedom contributed to
this malaise, with significant long-term
effects.
Nor can we overlook the fractures in our social
and economic order that the pandemic exposed,
and the contradictions and inequalities that it
brought to the fore. It threatened the job
security of many individuals and aggravated the
ever-increasing problem of loneliness in our
societies, particularly on the part of the poor
and those in need. We need but think of the
millions of informal workers in many parts of
the world left without a job and without any
support during the time of the lockdown.
Only rarely do individuals and societies achieve
progress in conditions that generate such
feelings of despondency and bitterness, which
weaken efforts to ensure peace while provoking
social conflict, frustration and various forms
of violence. Indeed, the pandemic seems to have
upset even the most peaceful parts of our world,
and exposed any number of forms of fragility.
3. Three years later, the time is right to
question, learn, grow and allow ourselves to be
transformed as individuals and as communities;
this is a privileged moment to prepare for “the
day of the Lord”. I have already observed on a
number of occasions that we never emerge the
same from times of crisis: we emerge either
better or worse. Today we are being asked: What
did we learn from the pandemic? What new paths
should we follow to cast off the shackles of our
old habits, to be better prepared, to dare new
things? What signs of life and hope can we see,
to help us move forward and try to make our
world a better place?
Certainly, after directly experiencing the
fragility of our own lives and the world around
us, we can say that the greatest lesson we
learned from Covid-19 was the realization that
we all need one another. That our greatest and
yet most fragile treasure is our shared humanity
as brothers and sisters, children of God. And
that none of us can be saved alone.
Consequently, we urgently need to join together
in seeking and promoting the universal values
that can guide the growth of this human
fraternity. We also learned that the trust we
put in progress, technology and the effects of
globalization was not only excessive, but turned
into an individualistic and idolatrous
intoxication, compromising the very promise of
justice, harmony and peace that we so ardently
sought. In our fast-paced world, the widespread
problems of inequality, injustice, poverty and
marginalization continue to fuel unrest and
conflict, and generate violence and even wars.
The pandemic brought all this to the fore, yet
it also had its positive effects. These include
a chastened return to humility, a rethinking of
certain consumeristic excesses, and a renewed
sense of solidarity that has made us more
sensitive to the suffering of others and more
responsive to their needs. We can also think of
the efforts, which in some cases proved truly
heroic, made by all those people who worked
tirelessly to help everyone emerge from the
crisis and its turmoil as best they could.
This experience has made us all the more aware
of the need for everyone, including peoples and
nations, to restore the word “together” to a
central place. For it is together, in fraternity
and solidarity, that we build peace, ensure
justice and emerge from the greatest disasters.
Indeed, the most effective responses to the
pandemic came from social groups, public and
private institutions, and international
organizations that put aside their particular
interests and joined forces to meet the
challenges. Only the peace that comes from a
fraternal and disinterested love can help us
overcome personal, societal and global crises.
4. Even so, at the very moment when we dared to
hope that the darkest hours of the Covid-19
pandemic were over, a terrible new disaster
befell humanity. We witnessed the onslaught of
another scourge: another war, to some extent
like that of Covid-19, but driven by culpable
human decisions. The war in Ukraine is reaping
innocent victims and spreading insecurity, not
only among those directly affected, but in a
widespread and indiscriminate way for everyone,
also for those who, even thousands of kilometres
away, suffer its collateral effects – we need
but think of grain shortages and fuel prices.
Clearly, this is not the post-Covid era we had
hoped for or expected. This war, together with
all the other conflicts around the globe,
represents a setback for the whole of humanity
and not merely for the parties directly
involved. While a vaccine has been found for
Covid-19, suitable solutions have not yet been
found for the war. Certainly, the virus of war
is more difficult to overcome than the viruses
that compromise our bodies, because it comes,
not from outside of us, but from within the
human heart corrupted by sin (cf. Gospel of Mark
7:17-23).
5. What then is being asked of us? First of all,
to let our hearts be changed by our experience
of the crisis, to let God, at this time in
history, transform our customary criteria for
viewing the world around us. We can no longer
think exclusively of carving out space for our
personal or national interests; instead, we must
think in terms of the common good, recognizing
that we belong to a greater community, and
opening our minds and hearts to universal human
fraternity. We cannot continue to focus simply
on preserving ourselves; rather, the time has
come for all of us to endeavour to heal our
society and our planet, to lay the foundations
for a more just and peaceful world, and to
commit ourselves seriously to pursuing a good
that is truly common.
In order to do this, and to live better lives
after the Covid-19 emergency, we cannot ignore
one fundamental fact, namely that the many
moral, social, political and economic crises we
are experiencing are all interconnected, and
what we see as isolated problems are actually
causes and effects of one another. Consequently,
we are called to confront the challenges of our
world in a spirit of responsibility and
compassion. We must revisit the issue of
ensuring public health for all. We must promote
actions that enhance peace and put an end to the
conflicts and wars that continue to spawn
poverty and death. We urgently need to join in
caring for our common home and in implementing
clear and effective measures to combat climate
change. We need to battle the virus of
inequality and to ensure food and dignified
labour for all, supporting those who lack even a
minimum wage and find themselves in great
difficulty. The scandal of entire peoples
starving remains an open wound. We also need to
develop suitable policies for welcoming and
integrating migrants and those whom our
societies discard. Only by responding generously
to these situations, with an altruism inspired
by God’s infinite and merciful love, will we be
able to build a new world and contribute to the
extension of his kingdom, which is a kingdom of
love, justice and peace.
In sharing these reflections, it is my hope that
in the coming New Year we can journey together,
valuing the lessons that history has to teach
us. I offer my best wishes to Heads of State and
Government, to Heads of International
Organizations, and to the leaders of the
different religions. To all men and women of
good will I express my prayerful trust that, as
artisans of peace, they may work, day by day, to
make this a good year! May Mary Immaculate,
Mother of Jesus and Queen of Peace, intercede
for us and for the whole world.
From the Vatican, 8 December 2022
Francis
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