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APOSTOLIC EXHORTATION
DILEXI TE
OF THE HOLY FATHER LEO XIV
TO ALL CHRISTIANS
ON LOVE FOR THE POOR
1. “I HAVE LOVED YOU” (Rev 3:9). The Lord speaks
these words to a Christian community that,
unlike some others, had no influence or
resources, and was treated instead with violence
and contempt: “You have but little power… I will
make them come and bow down before your feet”
(Rev 3:8-9). This text reminds us of the words
of the canticle of Mary: “He has cast down the
mighty from their thrones, and lifted up the
lowly; he has filled the hungry with good
things, and sent the rich away empty” (Lk
1:52-53).
2. This declaration of love, taken from the Book
of Revelation, reflects the inexhaustible
mystery that Pope Francis reflected upon in the
Encyclical Dilexit Nos on the human and divine
love of the heart of Jesus Christ. There we saw
how Jesus identified himself “with the lowest
ranks of society” and how, with his love poured
out to the end, he confirms the dignity of every
human being, especially when “they are weak,
scorned, or suffering.” [1] As we contemplate
Christ’s love, “we too are inspired to be more
attentive to the sufferings and needs of others,
and confirmed in our efforts to share in his
work of liberation as instruments for the spread
of his love.” [2]
3. For this reason, in continuity with the
Encyclical Dilexit Nos, Pope Francis was
preparing in the last months of his life an
Apostolic Exhortation on the Church’s care for
the poor, to which he gave the title Dilexi Te,
as if Christ speaks those words to each of them,
saying: “You have but little power,” yet “I have
loved you” ( Rev 3:9). I am happy to make this
document my own — adding some reflections — and
to issue it at the beginning of my own
pontificate, since I share the desire of my
beloved predecessor that all Christians come to
appreciate the close connection between Christ’s
love and his summons to care for the poor. I too
consider it essential to insist on this path to
holiness, for “in this call to recognize him in
the poor and the suffering, we see revealed the
very heart of Christ, his deepest feelings and
choices, which every saint seeks to imitate.”
[3]
CHAPTER ONE
A FEW ESSENTIAL WORDS
4. Jesus’ disciples criticized the woman who
poured costly perfumed oil on his head. They
said: “Why this waste? For this ointment could
have been sold for a large sum, and the money
given to the poor.” However, the Lord said to
them in response: “You always have the poor with
you, but you will not always have me” (Mt
26:8-9,11). That woman saw in Jesus the lowly
and suffering Messiah on whom she could pour out
all her love. What comfort that anointing must
have brought to the very head that within a few
days would be pierced by thorns! It was a small
gesture, of course, but those who suffer know
how great even a small gesture of affection can
be, and how much relief it can bring. Jesus
understood this and told the disciples that the
memory of her gesture would endure: “Wherever
this good news is proclaimed in the whole world,
what she has done will be told in remembrance of
her” (Mt 26:13). The simplicity of that woman’s
gesture speaks volumes. No sign of affection,
even the smallest, will ever be forgotten,
especially if it is shown to those who are
suffering, lonely or in need, as was the Lord at
that time.
5. Love for the Lord, then, is one with love for
the poor. The same Jesus who tells us, “The poor
you will always have with you” (Mt 26:11), also
promises the disciples: “I am with you always”
(Mt 28:20). We likewise think of his saying:
“Just as you did it to one of the least of these
brothers and sisters of mine, you did it to me”
(Mt 25:40). This is not a matter of mere human
kindness but a revelation: contact with those
who are lowly and powerless is a fundamental way
of encountering the Lord of history. In the
poor, he continues to speak to us.
Saint Francis
6. Pope Francis, explaining his choice of that
name, related how, after his election, a
Cardinal friend of his embraced him, kissed him
and told him: “Do not forget the poor!” [4] It
is the same appeal that the leaders of the
Church made to Saint Paul when he went up to
Jerusalem to confirm his mission (cf. Gal
2:1-10). Years later, the Apostle could still
reaffirm that this was “actually what I was
eager to do” ( Gal 2:10). Care for the poor was
also a great concern of Saint Francis of Assisi:
in the person of a leper, Christ himself
embraced Francis and changed his life. Even
today, Saint Francis, as the Poor Man of Assisi,
continues to inspire us by his outstanding
example.
7. Eight centuries ago, Saint Francis prompted
an evangelical renewal in the Christians and
society of his time. Wealthy and self-confident,
the young Francis was taken aback and converted
by his direct contact with the poor and outcast
of society. The story of his life continues to
appeal to the minds and hearts of believers, and
many non-believers as well. It “changed
history.” [5]
A further step on the same path was taken
by the Second Vatican Council, as Saint Paul VI
pointed out when he said that “the ancient
parable of the Samaritan served as the model for
the Council’s spirituality.” [6]
I am convinced that the preferential
choice for the poor is a source of extraordinary
renewal both for the Church and for society, if
we can only set ourselves free of our
self-centeredness and open our ears to their
cry.
The cry of the poor
8. The passage of Sacred Scripture in which God
reveals himself to Moses in the burning bush can
serve as a constant starting-point for this
effort. There he says: “I have observed the
misery of my people who are in Egypt; I have
heard their cry on account of their taskmasters.
Indeed, I know their sufferings, and I have come
down to deliver them... So come, I will send
you” ( Ex 3:7-8,10). [7] God thus shows his
concern for the needs of the poor: “When the
Israelites cried out to the Lord, he raised up
for them a deliverer” ( Judg 3:15). In hearing
the cry of the poor, we are asked to enter into
the heart of God, who is always concerned for
the needs of his children, especially those in
greatest need. If we remain unresponsive to that
cry, the poor might well cry out to the Lord
against us, and we would incur guilt (cf. Deut
15:9) and turn away from the very heart of God.
9. The condition of the poor is a cry that,
throughout human history, constantly challenges
our lives, societies, political and economic
systems, and, not least, the Church. On the
wounded faces of the poor, we see the suffering
of the innocent and, therefore, the suffering of
Christ himself. At the same time, we should
perhaps speak more correctly of the many faces
of the poor and of poverty, since it is a
multifaceted phenomenon. In fact, there are many
forms of poverty: the poverty of those who lack
material means of subsistence, the poverty of
those who are socially marginalized and lack the
means to give voice to their dignity and
abilities, moral and spiritual poverty, cultural
poverty, the poverty of those who find
themselves in a condition of personal or social
weakness or fragility, the poverty of those who
have no rights, no space, no freedom.
10. In this sense, it can be said that the
commitment to the poor and to removing the
social and structural causes of poverty has
gained importance in recent decades, but it
remains insufficient. This is also the case
because our societies often favor criteria for
orienting life and politics that are marked by
numerous inequalities. As a result, the old
forms of poverty that we have become aware of
and are trying to combat are being joined by new
ones, sometimes more subtle and dangerous. From
this point of view, it is to be welcomed that
the United Nations has made the eradication of
poverty one of its Millennium Goals.
11. A concrete commitment to the poor must also
be accompanied by a change in mentality that can
have an impact at the cultural level. In fact,
the illusion of happiness derived from a
comfortable life pushes many people towards a
vision of life centered on the accumulation of
wealth and social success at all costs, even at
the expense of others and by taking advantage of
unjust social ideals and political-economic
systems that favor the strongest. Thus, in a
world where the poor are increasingly numerous,
we paradoxically see the growth of a wealthy
elite, living in a bubble of comfort and luxury,
almost in another world compared to ordinary
people.
This means that a culture still persists
— sometimes well disguised — that discards
others without even realizing it and tolerates
with indifference that millions of people die of
hunger or survive in conditions unfit for human
beings. A few years ago, the photo of a lifeless
child lying on a Mediterranean beach caused an
uproar; unfortunately, apart from some momentary
outcry, similar events are becoming increasingly
irrelevant and seen as marginal news items.
12. We must not let our guard down when it comes
to poverty. We should be particularly concerned
about the serious conditions in which many
people find themselves due to lack of food and
water. In wealthy countries too, the growing
numbers of the poor are equally a source of
concern. In Europe, more and more families find
themselves unable to make it to the end of the
month. In general, we are witnessing an increase
in different kinds of poverty, which is no
longer a single, uniform reality but now
involves multiple forms of economic and social
impoverishment, reflecting the spread of
inequality even in largely affluent contexts.
Let us not forget that “doubly poor are those
women who endure situations of exclusion,
mistreatment and violence, since they are
frequently less able to defend their rights.
Even so, we constantly witness among them
impressive examples of daily heroism in
defending and protecting their vulnerable
families.” [8]
While significant changes are under way
in some countries, “the organization of
societies worldwide is still far from reflecting
clearly that women possess the same dignity and
identical rights as men. We say one thing with
our words, but our decisions and reality tell
another story,” [9] especially if we consider
the numbers of women who are in fact destitute.
Ideological prejudices
13. Looking beyond the data — which is sometimes
“interpreted” to convince us that the situation
of the poor is not so serious — the overall
reality is quite evident: “Some economic rules
have proved effective for growth, but not for
integral human development. Wealth has
increased, but together with inequality, with
the result that ‘new forms of poverty are
emerging.’ The claim that the modern world has
reduced poverty is made by measuring poverty
with criteria from the past that do not
correspond to present-day realities. In other
times, for example, lack of access to electric
energy was not considered a sign of poverty, nor
was it a source of hardship. Poverty must always
be understood and gauged in the context of the
actual opportunities available in each concrete
historical period.” [10] Looking beyond specific
situations and contexts, however, a 1984
document of the European Community declared that
“‘the poor’ shall be taken to mean persons,
families and groups of persons whose resources
(material, cultural and social) are so limited
as to exclude them from the minimum acceptable
way of life in the Member States in which they
live.” [11] Yet if we acknowledge that all human
beings have the same dignity, independent of
their place of birth, the immense differences
existing between countries and regions must not
be ignored.
14. The poor are not there by chance or by blind
and cruel fate. Nor, for most of them, is
poverty a choice. Yet, there are those who still
presume to make this claim, thus revealing their
own blindness and cruelty. Of course, among the
poor there are also those who do not want to
work, perhaps because their ancestors, who
worked all their lives, died poor. However,
there are so many others — men and women — who
nonetheless work from dawn to dusk, perhaps
collecting scraps or the like, even though they
know that their hard work will only help them to
scrape by, but never really improve their lives.
Nor can it be said that most of the poor are
such because they do not “deserve” otherwise, as
maintained by that specious view of meritocracy
that sees only the successful as “deserving.”
15. Christians too, on a number of occasions,
have succumbed to attitudes shaped by secular
ideologies or political and economic approaches
that lead to gross generalizations and mistaken
conclusions. The fact that some dismiss or
ridicule charitable works, as if they were an
obsession on the part of a few and not the
burning heart of the Church’s mission, convinces
me of the need to go back and re-read the
Gospel, lest we risk replacing it with the
wisdom of this world. The poor cannot be
neglected if we are to remain within the great
current of the Church’s life that has its source
in the Gospel and bears fruit in every time and
place.
CHAPTER TWO
GOD CHOOSES THE POOR
The choice of the poor
16. God is merciful love, and his plan of love,
which unfolds and is fulfilled in history, is
above all his descent and coming among us to
free us from slavery, fear, sin and the power of
death. Addressing their human condition with a
merciful gaze and a heart full of love, he
turned to his creatures and thus took care of
their poverty. Precisely in order to share the
limitations and fragility of our human nature,
he himself became poor and was born in the flesh
like us. We came to know him in the smallness of
a child laid in a manger and in the extreme
humiliation of the cross, where he shared our
radical poverty, which is death. It is easy to
understand, then, why we can also speak
theologically of a preferential option on the
part of God for the poor, an expression that
arose in the context of the Latin American
continent and in particular in the Puebla
Assembly, but which has been well integrated
into subsequent teachings of the Church. [12]
This “preference” never indicates exclusivity or
discrimination towards other groups, which would
be impossible for God. It is meant to emphasize
God’s actions, which are moved by compassion
toward the poverty and weakness of all humanity.
Wanting to inaugurate a kingdom of justice,
fraternity and solidarity, God has a special
place in his heart for those who are
discriminated against and oppressed, and he asks
us, his Church, to make a decisive and radical
choice in favor of the weakest.
17. It is in this perspective that we can
understand the numerous pages of the Old
Testament in which God is presented as the
friend and liberator of the poor, the one who
hears the cry of the poor and intervenes to free
them (cf. Ps 34:7). God, the refuge of the poor,
denounces through the prophets — we recall in
particular Amos and Isaiah — the injustices
committed against the weakest, and exhorts
Israel to renew its worship from within, because
one cannot pray and offer sacrifice while
oppressing the weakest and poorest. From the
beginning of Scripture, God’s love is vividly
demonstrated by his protection of the weak and
the poor, to the extent that he can be said to
have a particular fondness for them. “God’s
heart has a special place for the poor... The
entire history of our redemption is marked by
the presence of the poor.” [13]
Jesus, the poor Messiah
18. The Old Testament history of God’s
preferential love for the poor and his readiness
to hear their cry — to which I have briefly
alluded — comes to fulfillment in Jesus of
Nazareth. [14] By his Incarnation, he “emptied
himself, taking the form of a slave, being born
in human likeness” ( Phil 2:7), and in that form
he brought us salvation. His was a radical
poverty, grounded in his mission to reveal fully
God’s love for us (cf. Jn 1:18; 1 Jn 4:9). As
Saint Paul puts it in his customarily brief but
striking manner: “You know well the grace of our
Lord Jesus Christ, that though he was rich, yet
for your sakes he became poor, so that by his
poverty you might become rich” ( 2 Cor 8:9).
19. The Gospel shows us that poverty marked
every aspect of Jesus’ life. From the moment he
entered the world, Jesus knew the bitter
experience of rejection. The Evangelist Luke
tells how Joseph and Mary, who was about to give
birth, arrived in Bethlehem, and then adds,
poignantly, that “there was no place for them in
the inn” (Lk 2:7). Jesus was born in humble
surroundings and laid in a manger; then, to save
him from being killed, they fled to Egypt (cf.
Mt 2:13-15). At the dawn of his public ministry,
after announcing in the synagogue of Nazareth
that the year of grace which would bring joy to
the poor was fulfilled in him, he was driven out
of town (cf. Lk 4:14-30). He died as an outcast,
led out of Jerusalem to be crucified (cf. Mk
15:22). Indeed, that is how Jesus’ poverty is
best described: he experienced the same
exclusion that is the lot of the poor, the
outcast of society. Jesus is a manifestation of
this privilegium pauperum. He presented himself
to the world not only as a poor Messiah, but
also as the Messiah of and for the poor.
20. There are some clues about Jesus’ social
status. First of all, he worked as a craftsman
or carpenter, téktōn (cf. Mk 6:3). These were
people who earned their living by manual labor.
Not owning land, they were considered inferior
to farmers. When the baby Jesus was presented in
the Temple by Joseph and Mary, his parents
offered a pair of turtledoves or pigeons (cf. Lk
2:22-24), which according to the prescriptions
of the Book of Leviticus (cf. 12:8) was the
offering of the poor.
A fairly significant episode in the
Gospel tells us how Jesus, together with his
disciples, gathered heads of grain to eat as
they passed through the fields (cf. Mk 2:23-28).
Only the poor were allowed to do this
gleaning in the fields. Moreover, Jesus says of
himself: “Foxes have holes, and birds of the air
have nests; but the Son of Man has nowhere to
lay his head” (Mt 8:20; Lk 9:58). He is, in
fact, an itinerant teacher, whose poverty and
precariousness are signs of his bond with the
Father.
They are also conditions for those who
wish to follow him on the path of discipleship.
In this way, the renunciation of goods,
riches and worldly securities becomes a visible
sign of entrusting oneself to God and his
providence.
21. At the beginning of his public ministry,
Jesus appeared in the synagogue of Nazareth
reading the scroll of the prophet Isaiah and
applying the prophet’s words to himself: “The
Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he has
anointed me to bring good news to the poor” (Lk
4:18; cf. Is 61:1). He thus reveals himself as
the One who, in the here and now of history,
comes to bring about God’s loving closeness,
which is above all a work of liberation for
those who are prisoners of evil, and for the
weak and the poor. The signs that accompany
Jesus’ preaching are manifestations of the love
and compassion with which God looks upon the
sick, the poor and sinners who, because of their
condition, were marginalized by society and even
people of faith. He opens the eyes of the blind,
heals lepers, raises the dead and proclaims the
good news to the poor: God is near, God loves
you (cf. Lk 7:22). This explains why he
proclaims: “Blessed are you poor, for yours is
the kingdom of God” (Lk 6:20). God shows a
preference for the poor: the Lord’s words of
hope and liberation are addressed first of all
to them. Therefore, even in their poverty or
weakness, no one should feel abandoned. And the
Church, if she wants to be Christ’s Church, must
be a Church of the Beatitudes, one that makes
room for the little ones and walks poor with the
poor, a place where the poor have a privileged
place (cf. Jas 2:2-4).
22. In that time, the needy and the sick,
lacking the necessities of life, frequently
found themselves forced to beg. They thus bore
the added burden of social shame, due to the
belief that sickness and poverty were somehow
linked to personal sin.
Jesus firmly countered this mentality by
insisting that God “makes his sun rise on the
evil and on the good, and sends rain on the
righteous and on the unrighteous” (Mt 5:45).
Indeed, he completely overturned that notion, as
we see from the ending of the parable of the
rich man and Lazarus: “Child, remember that
during your lifetime you received your good
things, and Lazarus in like manner evil things;
but now he is comforted here, and you are in
agony” (Lk 16:25).
23. It becomes clear, then, that “our faith in
Christ, who became poor, and was always close to
the poor and the outcast, is the basis of our
concern for the integral development of
society’s most neglected members.” [15]
I often wonder, even though the teaching
of Sacred Scripture is so clear about the poor,
why many people continue to think that they can
safely disregard the poor. For the moment,
though, let us pursue our reflection on what the
Scriptures have to tell us about our
relationship with the poor and their essential
place in the people of God.
Mercy towards the poor in the Bible
24. The Apostle John writes: “Those who do not
love a brother or sister whom they have seen,
cannot love God whom they have not seen” (1 Jn
4:20). Similarly, in his reply to the scribe’s
question, Jesus quotes the two ancient
commandments: “You shall love the Lord your God
with all your heart, and with all your soul, and
with all your might” (Deut 6:5), and “You shall
love your neighbor as yourself” (Lev 19:18),
uniting them in a single commandment. The
Evangelist Mark reports Jesus’ response in these
terms: “The first is, ‘Hear, O Israel: the Lord
our God, the Lord is one; you shall love the
Lord your God with all your heart, and with all
your soul, and with all your mind, and with all
your strength.’ The second is this, ‘You shall
love your neighbor as yourself.’ There is no
other commandment greater than these”
(12:29-31).
25. The passage from the Book of Leviticus
teaches love for one’s neighbor, while other
texts call for respect — if not also love — even
for one’s enemy: “When you come upon your
enemy’s ox or donkey going astray, you shall
bring it back. When you see the donkey of one
who hates you lying under its burden and you
would hold back from setting it free, you must
help to set it free” (Ex 23:4-5). Here the
intrinsic value of respect for others is
expressly stated: anyone in need, even an enemy,
always deserves our assistance.
26. Jesus’ teaching on the primacy of love for
God is clearly complemented by his insistence
that one cannot love God without extending one’s
love to the poor. Love for our neighbor is
tangible proof of the authenticity of our love
for God, as the Apostle John attests: “No one
has ever seen God; if we love one another, God
lives in us, and his love is perfected in us…
God is love, and those who abide in love abide
in God, and God abides in them” (1 Jn 4:12,16).
The two loves are distinct yet inseparable. Even
in cases where there is no explicit reference to
God, the Lord himself teaches that every act of
love for one’s neighbor is in some way a
reflection of divine charity: “Truly I tell you,
just as you did it to one of the least of these
my brethren, you did it to me” (Mt 25:40).
27. For this reason, works of mercy are
recommended as a sign of the authenticity of
worship, which, while giving praise to God, has
the task of opening us to the transformation
that the Spirit can bring about in us, so that
we may all become an image of Christ and his
mercy towards the weakest. In this sense, our
relationship with the Lord, expressed in
worship, also aims to free us from the risk of
living our relationships according to a logic of
calculation and self-interest. We are instead
open to the gratuitousness that surrounds those
who love one another and, therefore, share
everything in common. In this regard, Jesus
advises: “When you give a dinner or a banquet,
do not invite your friends or your brothers or
your relatives or rich neighbors, lest they also
invite you in return, and you be repaid. But
when you give a feast, invite the poor, the
maimed, the lame, the blind, and you will be
blessed, because they cannot repay you” (Lk
14:12-14).
28. The Lord’s appeal to show mercy to the poor
culminates in the great parable of the last
judgment (cf. Mt 25:31-46), which can serve as a
vivid illustration of the Beatitude of the
merciful. In that parable, the Lord offers us
the key to our fulfillment in life; indeed, “if
we seek the holiness pleasing to God’s eyes,
this text offers us one clear criterion on which
we will be judged.” [16] The clear and forceful
words of the Gospel must be put into practice
“without any ‘ifs or buts’ that could lessen
their force. Our Lord made it very clear that
holiness cannot be understood or lived apart
from these demands.” [17]
29. In the early Christian community, acts of
charity were performed on the basis not of
preliminary studies or advance planning, but
directly following Jesus’ example as presented
in the Gospel. The Letter of James deals at
length with the problem of relations between
rich and poor, and asks the faithful two
questions in order to examine the authenticity
of their faith: “What good is it, my brothers
and sisters, if you say you have faith but do
not have works? Can faith save you? If a brother
or sister is naked and lacks daily food, and one
of you says to them, ‘Go in peace; keep warm and
eat your fill,’ and yet you do not supply their
bodily needs, what is the good of that? So faith
by itself, if it has no works, is dead”
(2:14-17).
30. James goes on to say: “Your gold and silver
have rusted, and their rust will be evidence
against you, and it will eat your flesh like
fire. You have laid up treasure for the last
days.
Listen!
The wages of the laborers who mowed your
fields, which you kept back by fraud, cry out,
and the cries of the harvesters have reached the
ears of the Lord of hosts. You have lived on the
earth in luxury and in pleasure; you have
fattened your hearts in a day of slaughter”
(5:3-5). These are powerful words, even if we
would rather not hear them! A similar appeal can
be found in the First Letter of John: “How does
God’s love abide in anyone who has the world’s
goods and sees a brother or sister in need and
yet refuses help?” (3:17).
31. The message of God’s word is “so clear and
direct, so simple and eloquent, that no
ecclesial interpretation has the right to
relativize it. The Church’s reflection on these
texts ought not to obscure or weaken their
force, but urge us to accept their exhortations
with courage and zeal. Why complicate something
so simple?
Conceptual tools exist to heighten
contact with the realities they seek to explain,
not to distance us from them.” [18]
32. Indeed, we find a clear ecclesial example of
sharing goods and caring for the poor in the
daily life of the first Christian community. We
can recall in particular the way in which the
question of the daily distribution of subsidies
to widows was resolved (cf. Acts 6:1-6). This
was not an easy problem, partly because some of
these widows, who came from other countries,
were sometimes neglected because they were
foreigners. In fact, the episode recounted in
the Acts of the Apostles highlights a certain
discontent on the part of the Hellenists, the
Jews who were culturally Greek. The Apostles do
not respond with abstract words, but by placing
charity towards all at the center, reorganizing
assistance to widows by asking the community to
seek wise and respected people to whom they
could entrust food distribution, while they take
care of preaching the Word.
33. When Paul went to Jerusalem to consult the
Apostles lest somehow he “should be running or
had run in vain” (Gal 2:2), he was asked not to
forget the poor (cf. Gal 2:10). Therefore, he
organized various collections in order to help
the poor communities. Among the reasons for
which Paul makes this gesture, the following
stands out: “God loves a cheerful giver” (2 Cor
9:7). The word of God reminds those of us not
normally prone to benevolent and disinterested
gestures, that generosity to the poor actually
benefits those who exercise it: God has a
special love for them.
In fact, the Bible is full of promises
addressed to those who give generously to
others: “Whoever is kind to the poor lends to
the Lord, and will be repaid in full” (Prov
19:17). “Give, and it will be given to you...
for the measure you give will be the measure you
get back” (Lk 6:38). “Then your light shall
break forth like the dawn, and your healing
shall spring up quickly” (Is 58:8). Of this, the
early Christians had no doubt.
34. The life of the first ecclesial communities,
described in the pages of the Bible and handed
down to us as God’s revealed word, has been
given to us as an example to imitate, but also
as a witness to the faith that works through
charity and an enduring inspiration for
generations yet to come. Throughout the
centuries, those pages have moved the hearts of
Christians to love and to perform works of
charity, which, like fruitful seeds, never cease
to produce a rich harvest.
CHAPTER THREE
A CHURCH FOR THE POOR
35. Three days after his election, my
predecessor expressed to the representatives of
the media his desire that care and attention for
the poor be more clearly present in the Church:
“How I would like a Church which is poor and for
the poor!” [19]
36. This desire reflects the understanding that
the Church “recognizes in those who are poor and
who suffer, the likeness of its poor and
suffering founder.” [20]
Indeed, since the Church is called to
identify with those who are least, at her core
“[T]here can be no room for doubt or for
explanations which weaken so clear a message… We
have to state, without mincing words, that there
is an inseparable bond between our faith and the
poor.” [21] In this regard, we have numerous
witnesses from disciples of Christ spanning
almost two millennia. [22]
The true riches of the Church
37. Saint Paul recounts that among the faithful
of the nascent Christian community not many were
“wise according to the flesh, not many were
powerful, not many were of noble birth” (1 Cor
1:26). However, despite their poverty, the early
Christians were clearly aware of the necessity
to care for those who were most in need. Already
at the dawn of Christianity, the Apostles laid
their hands on seven men chosen from the
community. To a certain extent, they integrated
them into their own ministry, instituting them
for the service — diakonía in Greek — of the
poorest (cf. Acts 6:1-5). It is significant that
the first disciple to bear witness to his faith
in Christ to the point of shedding his blood was
Stephen, who belonged to this group. In him, the
witness of caring for the poor and of martyrdom
are united.
38. A little less than two centuries later,
another deacon, Saint Lawrence, will demonstrate
his fidelity to Jesus Christ in a similar way by
uniting martyrdom and service to the poor. [23]
From Saint Ambrose’s account, we learn that
Lawrence, a deacon in Rome during the
pontificate of Pope Sixtus II, was forced by the
Roman authorities to turn over the treasures of
the Church. “The following day he brought the
poor with him. Questioned about where the
promised treasures might be, he pointed to the
poor saying, ‘These are the treasures of the
Church’.” [24] While narrating this event, Saint
Ambrose asks: “What treasures does Jesus have
that are more precious than those in which he
loves to show himself?” [25] And, remembering
that ministers of the Church must never neglect
the care of the poor, much less accumulate goods
for their own benefit, he says: “This task must
be carried out with sincere faith and wise
foresight.
Certainly, if anyone derives personal
advantage from it, he commits a crime; but if he
distributes the proceeds to the poor or redeems
a prisoner, he performs a work of mercy.” [26]
The Fathers of the Church and the Poor
39. From the first centuries, the Fathers of the
Church recognized in the poor a privileged way
to reach God, a special way to meet him. Charity
shown to those in need was not only seen as a
moral virtue, but a concrete expression of faith
in the incarnate Word. The community of the
faithful, sustained by the strength of the Holy
Spirit, was rooted in being close to the poor,
whom they considered not just an “appendage,”
but an essential part of Christ’s living body.
For example, while he was on his way to face
martyrdom, Saint Ignatius of Antioch exhorted
the community of Smyrna not to neglect the duty
to carry out acts of charity for those most in
need, admonishing them not to behave like those
who oppose God. “But consider those who are of a
different opinion with respect to the grace of
Christ, which has come to us, how opposed they
are to the will of God. They have no regard for
love; no care for the widow, or the orphan, or
the oppressed; of the bond, or of the free; of
the hungry, or of the thirsty.” [27] The Bishop
of Smyrna, Polycarp, expressly stated that
ministers of the Church should take care of the
poor: “And let the presbyters be compassionate
and merciful to all, bringing back those that
wander, visiting all the sick, and not
neglecting the widow, the orphan, or the poor,
but always ‘providing for that which is becoming
in the sight of God and man’.” [28]
From these two witnesses, we see that the
Church appears as a mother of the poor, a place
of welcome and justice.
40. For his part, Saint Justin, who addressed
his First Apology to Emperor Adrian, the Senate
and people of Rome, explained that Christians
bring all that they can to those in need because
they see them as brothers and sisters in Christ.
Writing about the assembly gathered in prayer on
the first day of the week, he underscored that
at the heart of the Christian liturgy, it is not
possible to separate the worship of God from
concern for the poor. Consequently, at a certain
point in the celebration: “they who are
well-to-do, and willing, give what each thinks
fit; and what is collected is deposited with the
president, who succors the orphans and widows,
and those who, through sickness or any other
cause, are in want, and those who are in bonds,
and the strangers sojourning among us, and in a
word takes care of all who are in need.” [29]
This demonstrates that the nascent Church did
not separate belief from social action: faith
without witness through concrete actions was
considered dead, as Saint James taught us (cf.
2:17).
Saint John Chrysostom
41. Among the Eastern Fathers, perhaps the most
ardent preacher on social justice was Saint John
Chrysostom, Archbishop of Constantinople from
the late 300s to the early 400s. In his
homilies, he exhorted the faithful to recognize
Christ in the needy: “Do you wish to honor the
body of Christ? Do not allow it to be despised
in its members, that is, in the poor, who have
no clothes to cover themselves. Do not honor
Christ’s body here in church with silk fabrics,
while outside you neglect it when it suffers
from cold and nakedness… [The body of Christ on
the altar] does not need cloaks, but pure souls;
while the one outside needs much care. Let us
therefore learn to think of and honor Christ as
he wishes. For the most pleasing honor we can
give to the one we want to venerate is that of
doing what he himself desires, not what we
devise… So you too, give him the honor he has
commanded, and let the poor benefit from your
riches. God does not need golden vessels, but
golden souls.” [30] Affirming with crystal
clarity that, if the faithful do not encounter
Christ in the poor who stand at the door, they
will not be able to worship him even at the
altar, he continues: “What advantage does Christ
gain if the sacrificial table is laden with
golden vessels, while he himself dies of hunger
in the person of the poor? Feed the hungry
first, and only afterward adorn the altar with
what remains.” [31] He understood the Eucharist,
therefore, as a sacramental expression of the
charity and justice that both preceded and
accompanied it. That same charity and justice
should perpetuate the Eucharist through love and
attention to the poor.
42. Consequently, charity is not optional but a
requirement of true worship.
Chrysostom vehemently denounced excessive
wealth connected with indifference for the poor.
The attention due to them, rather than a mere
social requirement, is a condition for
salvation, which gives unjust wealth a
condemnatory weight. “It is very cold and the
poor man lies in rags, dying, freezing,
shivering, with an appearance and clothing that
should move you. You, however, red in the face
and drunk, pass by. And how do you expect God to
deliver you from misfortune?... You often adorn
an unfeeling corpse, which no longer understands
honor, with many varied and gilded garments. Yet
you despise the one who feels pain, who is torn
apart, tortured, tormented by hunger and cold.”
[32] This profound sense of social justice leads
him to affirm that “not giving to the poor is
stealing from them, defrauding them of their
lives, because what we have belongs to them.”
[33]
Saint Augustine
43. Augustine’s spiritual guide was Saint
Ambrose, who insisted on the ethical requirement
to share material goods: “What you give to the
poor is not your property, but theirs. Why have
you appropriated what was given for common use?”
[34] For the Bishop of Milan, almsgiving is
justice restored, not a gesture of paternalism.
In his preaching, mercy takes on a prophetic
character: he denounces structures that
accumulate things and reaffirms communion as the
Church’s vocation.
44. Formed in this tradition, the holy Bishop of
Hippo taught for his part about the preferential
love for the poor. A vigilant pastor and
theologian of rare insight, he realizes that
true ecclesial communion is expressed also in
the communion of goods. In his Commentaries on
the Psalms, he reminds us that true Christians
do not neglect love for those most in need:
“Observing your brothers and sisters, you know
if they are in need, but if Christ dwells in
you, also be charitable to strangers.” [35] This
sharing of goods therefore stems from
theological charity and has as its ultimate goal
the love of Christ. For Augustine, the poor are
not just people to be helped, but the
sacramental presence of the Lord.
45. The Doctor of Grace saw caring for the poor
as concrete proof of the sincerity of faith.
Anyone who says they love God and has no
compassion for the needy is lying (cf. 1 Jn
4:20). Commenting on Jesus’ encounter with the
rich young man and the “treasure in heaven”
reserved for those who give their possessions to
the poor (cf. Mt 19:21), Augustine puts the
following words in the Lord’s mouth: “I received
the earth, I will give heaven; I received
temporal goods, I will give back eternal goods;
I received bread, I will give life… I have been
given hospitality, but I will give a home; I was
visited when I was sick, but I will give health;
I was visited in prison, but I will give
freedom. The bread you have given to my poor has
been consumed, but the bread I will give will
not only refresh you, but will never end.” [36]
The Almighty will not be outdone in
generosity to those who serve the people most in
need: the greater the love for the poor, the
greater the reward from God.
46. This Christocentric and deeply ecclesial
perspective leads us to affirm that offerings,
when born of love, not only alleviate the needs
of one’s brother or sister, but also purify the
heart of the giver, if he or she is willing to
change. Indeed, in the words of
Pseudo-Augustine: “almsgiving can be beneficial
to you in erasing past sins, if you have amended
your ways.” [37] It is, so to speak, the
ordinary path to conversion for those who wish
to follow Christ with an undivided heart.
47. In a Church that recognizes in the poor the
face of Christ and in material goods the
instrument of charity, Augustine’s thought
remains a sure light. Today, fidelity to
Augustine’s teachings requires not only the
study of his works, but also a readiness to live
radically his call to conversion, which
necessarily includes the service of charity.
48. Many other Fathers of the Church, both
Eastern and Western, have spoken about the
primacy of attention to the poor in the life and
mission of every Christian.
From this perspective, in summary, it can
be said that patristic theology was practical,
aiming at a Church that was poor and for the
poor, recalling that the Gospel is proclaimed
correctly only when it impels us to touch the
flesh of the least among us, and warning that
doctrinal rigor without mercy is empty talk.
Care of the sick
49. Christian compassion has manifested itself
in a particular way in the care of the sick and
suffering. Based on the signs present in Jesus’
public ministry — the healing of the blind,
lepers and paralytics — the Church understands
that caring for the sick, in whom she readily
recognizes the crucified Lord, is an important
part of her mission. During a plague in the city
of Carthage, where he was Bishop, Saint Cyprian
reminded Christians of the importance of caring
for the sick: “This pestilence and plague, which
seems so horrible and deadly, searches out the
righteousness of each one, and examines the
minds of the human race, to see whether the
healthy serve the sick; whether relatives love
each other with sincerity; whether masters have
pity on their sick servants; whether doctors do
not abandon the sick who beg for help.” [38] The
Christian tradition of visiting the sick,
washing their wounds, and comforting the
afflicted is not simply a philanthropic
endeavor, but an ecclesial action through which
the members of the Church “touch the suffering
flesh of Christ.” [39]
50. In the sixteenth century, Saint John of God
founded the Hospitaller Order that bears his
name, creating model hospitals that welcomed
everyone, regardless of social or economic
status. His famous expression, “Do good, my
brothers!” became a motto for active charity
towards the sick. At the same time, Saint
Camillus de Lellis founded the Order of
Ministers of the Sick — the Camillians — taking
on the mission of serving the sick with total
dedication. His rule commands: “Each person
should ask the Lord for a motherly affection for
their neighbor so that we may serve them with
all charity, both in soul and body, because we
desire, with the grace of God, to serve all the
sick with the affection that a loving mother has
for her only sick child.” [40] In hospitals, on
battlefields, in prisons, and on the streets,
the Camillians have embodied the mercy of Christ
the Physician.
51. Caring for the sick with maternal affection,
as a mother cares for her child, many
consecrated women have played an even greater
role in providing healthcare to the poor. The
Daughters of Charity of Saint Vincent de Paul,
the Hospital Sisters, the Little Sisters of
Divine Providence, and many other women’s
congregations have become a maternal and
discreet presence in hospitals, nursing homes
and retirement homes. They have brought comfort,
a listening ear, a presence, and above all,
tenderness. They have built, often with their
own hands, healthcare facilities in areas
lacking medical assistance. They taught hygiene,
assisted in childbirth and administered medicine
with natural wisdom and deep faith. Their homes
became oases of dignity where no one was
excluded. The touch of compassion was the first
medicine. Saint Louise de Marillac wrote to her
sisters, the Daughters of Charity, reminding
them that “they have been singularly blessed by
God for the service of the sick poor of the
hospitals.” [41]
52. Today, this legacy continues in Catholic
hospitals, healthcare facilities in remote
areas, clinics operating in jungles, shelters
for drug addicts and in field hospitals in war
zones. The Christian presence among the sick
reveals that salvation is not an abstract idea,
but concrete action. In the act of healing a
wound, the Church proclaims that the Kingdom of
God begins among the most vulnerable. In doing
so, she remains faithful to the One who said, “I
was sick and you visited me” (Mt 25:36). When
the Church kneels beside a leper, a malnourished
child or an anonymous dying person, she fulfills
her deepest vocation: to love the Lord where he
is most disfigured.
Care of the poor in monastic life
53. Monastic life, which originated in the
silence of the desert, was from the outset a
witness to solidarity. Monks and nuns left
everything — wealth, prestige, family — not only
because they despised worldly goods — contemptus
mundi — but also to encounter the poor Christ in
this radical detachment. Saint Basil the Great,
in his Rule, saw no contradiction between the
monks’ life of prayer and contemplation and
their work on behalf of the poor. For him,
hospitality and care for the needy were an
integral part of monastic spirituality, and
monks, even after having left everything to
embrace poverty, had to help the poorest with
their work, because “in order to have enough to
help the needy… it is clear that we must work
diligently... This way of life is profitable not
only for subduing the body, but also for charity
towards our neighbor, so that through us God may
provide enough for our weaker brothers and
sisters.” [42]
54. In Caesarea, where he was Bishop, he built a
place known as Basiliad, which included
lodgings, hospitals and schools for the poor and
sick. The monk, therefore, was not only an
ascetic, but also a servant. Basil thus
demonstrated that to be close to God, one must
be close to the poor. Concrete love was the
criterion of holiness. Praying and caring,
contemplating and healing, writing and
welcoming: everything was an expression of the
same love for Christ.
55. In the West, Saint Benedict of Norcia
formulated a Rule that would become the backbone
of European monastic spirituality. Welcoming the
poor and pilgrims occupies a prominent place in
the document: “The poor and pilgrims are to be
received with all care and hospitality, for it
is in them that Christ is received.” [43] These
were not just words: for centuries Benedictine
monasteries were places of refuge for widows,
abandoned children, pilgrims and beggars. For
Benedict, community life was a school of
charity. Manual labor not only had a practical
function, but also formed the heart for service.
Sharing among the monks, caring for the sick and
listening to the most vulnerable prepared them
to welcome Christ who comes in the person of the
poor and the stranger. Today, Benedictine
monastic hospitality remains a sign of a Church
that opens its doors, welcomes without asking
and heals without demanding anything in return.
56. Over time, Benedictine monasteries became
places for overcoming the culture of exclusion.
Monks and nuns cultivated the land, produced
food, prepared medicines and offered them, with
simplicity, to those most in need. Their silent
work was the leaven of a new civilization, where
the poor were not a problem to be solved, but
brothers and sisters to be welcomed. The rule of
sharing, working together and helping the
vulnerable established an economy of solidarity,
in contrast to the logic of accumulation. The
monks’ witness showed that voluntary poverty,
far from being misery, is a path of freedom and
communion. They did not limit themselves to
helping the poor: they became their neighbors,
brothers and sisters in the same Lord. In the
cells and cloisters, they created a mysticism of
God’s presence in the little ones.
57. In addition to providing material
assistance, monasteries played a fundamental
role in the cultural and spiritual formation of
the humblest. In times of plague, war and
famine, they were places where the needy found
bread and medicine, but also dignity and a
voice. It was there that orphans were educated,
apprentices received training and ordinary
people were taught agricultural techniques and
how to read.
Knowledge was shared as a gift and a
responsibility. The abbot was both teacher and
father, and the monastic school was a place of
freedom through truth. Indeed, as John Cassian
writes, the monk must be characterized by
“humility of heart… which leads not to knowledge
that puffs up, but to knowledge that enlightens
through the fullness of charity.” [44] By
forming consciences and transmitting wisdom,
monks contributed to a Christian pedagogy of
inclusion. Culture, marked by faith, was shared
with simplicity. Knowledge, illuminated by
charity, became service. Monastic life thus
revealed itself as a style of holiness and a
concrete way to transform society.
58. The monastic tradition teaches us that
prayer and charity, silence and service, cells
and hospitals form a single spiritual fabric.
The monastery is a place of listening and
action, of worship and sharing. Saint Bernard of
Clairvaux, the great Cistercian reformer,
“firmly recalled the need for a sober and
measured life, in the refectory as in monastic
clothing and buildings, recommending the support
and care of the poor.” [45]
For him, compassion was not an option,
but the true path of following Christ.
Monastic life, therefore, if faithful to
its original vocation, shows that the Church is
fully the bride of the Lord only when she is
also the sister of the poor. The cloister is not
only a refuge from the world, but a school where
one learns to serve it better. Where monks and
nuns have opened their doors to the poor, the
Church has revealed with humility and firmness
that contemplation does not exclude mercy, but
demands it as its purest fruit.
Freeing prisoners
59. Since apostolic times, the Church has seen
the liberation of the oppressed as a sign of the
Kingdom of God. Jesus himself proclaimed at the
beginning of his public ministry: “The Spirit of
the Lord is upon me, because he has anointed me
to bring good news to the poor. He has sent me
to proclaim release to the captives” (Lk 4:18).
The early Christians, even in precarious
conditions, prayed for and assisted their
brothers and sisters who were prisoners, as the
Acts of the Apostles (cf. 12:5; 24:23) and
various writings of the Fathers attest. This
mission of liberation has continued throughout
the centuries through concrete actions,
especially when the tragedy of slavery and
imprisonment has marked entire societies.
60. Between the late twelfth and the early
thirteenth centuries, when many Christians were
captured in the Mediterranean or enslaved in
wars, two religious orders arose: the Order of
the Most Holy Trinity and of the Captives
(Trinitarians), founded by Saint John of Matha
and Saint Felix of Valois, and the Order of the
Blessed Virgin Mary of Mercy (Mercedarians),
founded by Saint Peter Nolasco with the support
of the Dominican Saint Raymond of Peñafort.
These communities of consecrated persons were
born with the specific charism of freeing
Christians who had been enslaved, placing their
own possessions at the disposal of the enslaved
[46] and many times offering their own lives in
exchange. The Trinitarians, with their motto
Gloria tibi Trinitas et captivis libertas (Glory
to you, O Trinity, and liberty to the captives),
and the Mercedarians, who added a fourth vow
[47] to the religious vows of poverty, chastity
and obedience, testified that charity can be
heroic. The liberation of prisoners is an
expression of Trinitarian love: a God who frees
not only from spiritual slavery but also from
concrete oppression.
The act of rescuing someone from slavery
and captivity is seen as an extension of
Christ’s redemptive sacrifice, whose blood is
the price of our redemption (cf. 1 Cor 6:20).
61. The original spirituality of these orders
was deeply rooted in contemplation of the cross.
Christ is the Redeemer of prisoners par
excellence, and the Church, his Body, prolongs
this mystery in time. [48] Religious did not see
redemption as a political or economic action,
but as a quasi-liturgical act, the sacramental
offering of themselves. Many gave their own
bodies to replace prisoners, literally
fulfilling the commandment: “No one has greater
love than this, to lay down one’s life for one’s
friends” ( Jn 15:13). The tradition of these
orders did not come to an end. On the contrary,
it inspired new forms of action in the face of
modern forms of slavery: human trafficking,
forced labor, sexual exploitation and various
forms of dependency. [49] Christian charity is
liberating when it becomes incarnate. Likewise,
the mission of the Church, when she is faithful
to her Lord, is at all times to proclaim
liberation. Even today, when “millions of people
— children, women and men of all ages — are
deprived of their freedom and forced to live in
conditions akin to slavery,” [50] this legacy is
carried on by these orders and other
institutions and congregations working in urban
peripheries, conflict zones and migration
routes. When the Church bends down to break the
new chains that bind the poor, she becomes a
paschal sign.
62. We cannot conclude this reflection on people
deprived of their freedom without mentioning
those in various prisons and detention centers.
In this regard, we recall the words that Pope
Francis addressed to a group of prisoners: “For
me, entering a prison is always an important
moment, because prison is a place of great
humanity... Humanity that is tried, sometimes
worn down by difficulties, guilt, judgments,
misunderstandings, suffering, but at the same
time full of strength, desire for forgiveness,
and a desire for redemption.” [51] This desire,
among other things, has also been taken up by
the orders devoted to the ransom of prisoners as
a preferential service to the Church. As Saint
Paul proclaimed: “For freedom Christ has set us
free” ( Gal 5:1). This freedom is not only
interior: it manifests itself in history as love
that cares for and frees us from every bond of
slavery.
Witnesses of evangelical poverty
63. In the thirteenth century, faced with the
growth of cities, the concentration of wealth
and the emergence of new forms of poverty, the
Holy Spirit gave rise to a new type of
consecration in the Church: the mendicant
orders. Unlike the stable monastic model,
mendicants adopted an itinerant life, without
personal or communal property, entrusting
themselves entirely to providence. They did not
merely serve the poor: they made themselves poor
with them. They saw the city as a new desert and
the marginalized as new spiritual teachers.
These orders, such as the Franciscans,
Dominicans, Augustinians and Carmelites,
represented an evangelical revolution, in which
a simple and poor lifestyle became a prophetic
sign for mission, reviving the experience of the
first Christian community (cf. Acts 4:32). The
witness of the mendicants challenged both
clerical opulence and the coldness of urban
society.
64. Saint Francis of Assisi became the icon of
this spiritual springtime. By embracing poverty,
he wanted to imitate Christ, who was poor, naked
and crucified. In his Rule, he asks that “the
brothers should not appropriate anything,
neither house, nor place, nor anything else. And
as pilgrims and strangers in this world, serving
the Lord in poverty and humility, they should go
about begging with confidence, and should not be
ashamed, because the Lord made himself poor for
us in this world.” [52] His life was one of
continuous self-emptying: from the palace to the
leper, from eloquence to silence, from
possession to total gift. Francis did not found
a social service organization, but an
evangelical fraternity. In the poor, he saw
brothers and sisters, living images of the Lord.
His mission was to be with them, and he did so
through a solidarity that overcame distances and
a compassionate love. Francis’ poverty was
relational: it led him to become neighbor, equal
to, or indeed lesser than others.
His holiness sprang from the conviction
that Christ can only be truly received by giving
oneself generously to one’s brothers and
sisters.
65. Saint Clare of Assisi, who was inspired by
Francis, founded the Order of Poor Ladies, later
called the Poor Clares. Her spiritual struggle
consisted in faithfully maintaining the ideal of
radical poverty. She refused the papal
privileges that could have guaranteed material
security for her monastery and, with firmness,
obtained from Pope Gregory IX the so-called
Privilegium Paupertatis, which guaranteed the
right to live without any material goods. [53]
This choice expressed her total trust in God and
her awareness that voluntary poverty was a form
of freedom and prophecy. Clare taught her
sisters that Christ was their only inheritance
and that nothing should obscure their communion
with him. Her prayerful and hidden life was a
cry against worldliness and a silent defense of
the poor and forgotten.
66. Saint Dominic de Guzmán, a contemporary of
Francis, founded the Order of Preachers, with a
different charism but the same radicalism of
life. He wanted to proclaim the Gospel with the
authority that comes from a life of poverty,
convinced that the Truth needs witnesses of
integrity. The example of poverty in their lives
accompanied the Word they preached. Free from
the weight of earthly goods, the Dominican
Friars were better able to dedicate themselves
to their principal work of preaching.
They went to the cities, especially the
universities, in order to teach the truth about
God. [54]
In their dependence on others, they
showed that faith is not imposed but offered.
And by living among the poor, they
learned the truth of the Gospel “from below,” as
disciples of the humiliated Christ.
67. The mendicant orders were therefore a living
response to exclusion and indifference. They did
not expressly propose social reforms, but an
individual and communal conversion to the logic
of the Kingdom. For them, poverty was not a
consequence of a scarcity of goods, but a free
choice: to make themselves small in order to
welcome the small. As Thomas of Celano said of
Francis: “He showed that he loved the poor
intensely… He often stripped himself naked to
clothe the poor, whom he sought to resemble.”
[55] Beggars became the symbol of a pilgrim,
humble and fraternal Church, living among the
poor not to proselytize but as an expression of
their true identity. They teach us that the
Church is a light when she strips herself of
everything, and that holiness passes through a
humble heart devoted to the least among us.
The Church and the education of the poor
68. Addressing educators, Pope Francis recalled
that education has always been one of the
highest expressions of Christian charity: “Yours
is a mission full of obstacles as well as
joys... A mission of love, because you cannot
teach without loving.” [56] In this sense, since
ancient times, Christians have understood that
knowledge liberates, gives dignity, and brings
us closer to the truth. For the Church, teaching
the poor was an act of justice and faith.
Inspired by the example of the Master who taught
people divine and human truths, she took on the
mission of forming children and young people,
especially the poorest, in truth and love.
This mission took shape with the founding
of congregations dedicated to education.
69. In the sixteenth century, Saint Joseph
Calasanz, struck by the lack of education and
training among the poor young people of Rome,
established Europe’s first free public school in
some rooms adjacent to the church of Santa
Dorotea in Trastevere. This was the seed from
which the Poor Clerics Regular of the Mother of
God of the Pious Schools, known as the Piarists,
would later emerge and develop, though not
without difficulty. Their goal was that of
transmitting to young people “not only secular
knowledge but also the wisdom of the Gospel,
teaching them to recognize, in their personal
lives and in history, the loving action of God
the Creator and Redeemer.” [57] In fact, we can
consider this courageous priest as the “true
founder of the modern Catholic school, aimed at
the integral formation of people and open to
all.” [58] Inspired by the same sensitivity,
Saint John Baptist de La Salle, realizing the
injustice caused by the exclusion of the
children of workers and ordinary people from the
educational system of France at that time,
founded the Brothers of the Christian Schools in
the seventeenth century, with the ideal of
offering them free education, solid formation,
and a fraternal environment. De La Salle saw the
classroom as a place for human development, but
also for conversion.
In his colleges, prayer, method,
discipline and sharing were combined. Each child
was considered a unique gift from God, and the
act of teaching was a service to the Kingdom of
God.
70. In the nineteenth century, also in France,
Saint Marcellin Champagnat founded the Institute
of the Marist Brothers of the Schools. “He was
sensitive to the spiritual and educational needs
of his time, especially to religious ignorance
and the situation of neglect experienced in a
particular way by the young.” [59] He dedicated
himself wholeheartedly to the mission of
educating and evangelizing children and young
people, especially those most in need, during a
period when access to education continued to be
the privilege of a few. In the same spirit,
Saint John Bosco began the great work of the
Salesians in Italy based on the three principles
of the “preventive method” — reason, religion,
and loving kindness. [60] Blessed Antonio
Rosmini founded the Institute of Charity, in
which “intellectual charity” was placed
alongside “material charity,” with
“spiritual-pastoral charity” at the top, as an
indispensable dimension of any charitable action
aimed at the good and integral development of
the person. [61]
71. Many female congregations were protagonists
of this pedagogical revolution.
Founded in the eighteenth and nineteenth
centuries, the Ursulines, the Sisters of the
Company of Mary Our Lady, the Maestre Pie and
many others, stepped into the spaces where the
state was absent. They created schools in small
villages, suburbs and working-class
neighborhoods. In particular, the education of
girls became a priority. The religious sisters
taught literacy, evangelized, took care of
practical matters of daily life, elevated their
spirits through the cultivation of the arts,
and, above all, formed consciences. Their
pedagogy was simple: closeness, patience and
gentleness. They taught by the example of their
lives before teaching with words.
In times of widespread illiteracy and
systemic exclusion, these consecrated women were
beacons of hope. Their mission was to form
hearts, teach people to think and promote
dignity. By combining a life of piety and
dedication to others, they fought abandonment
with the tenderness of those who educate in the
name of Christ.
72. For the Christian faith, the education of
the poor is not a favor but a duty. Children
have a right to knowledge as a fundamental
requirement for the recognition of human
dignity. Teaching them affirms their value,
giving them the tools to transform their
reality. Christian tradition considers knowledge
a gift from God and a community responsibility.
Christian education does not only form
professionals, but also people open to goodness,
beauty and truth. Catholic schools, therefore,
when they are faithful to their name, are places
of inclusion, integral formation and human
development. By combining faith and culture,
they sow the seeds of the future, honor the
image of God and build a better society.
Accompanying migrants
73. The experience of migration accompanies the
history of the People of God. Abraham sets out
without knowing where he is going; Moses leads
the pilgrim people through the desert; Mary and
Joseph flee with the child Jesus to Egypt.
Christ himself, who “came to what was his own,
and his own people did not accept him” (Jn
1:11), lived among us as a stranger. For this
reason, the Church has always recognized in
migrants a living presence of the Lord who, on
the day of judgment, will say to those on his
right: “I was a stranger and you welcomed me”
(Mt 25:35).
74. In the nineteenth century, when millions of
Europeans emigrated in search of better living
conditions, two great saints distinguished
themselves in the pastoral care of migrants:
Saint John Baptist Scalabrini and Saint Frances
Xavier Cabrini. Scalabrini, Bishop of Piacenza,
founded the Missionaries of Saint Charles to
accompany migrants to their destinations,
offering them spiritual, legal and material
assistance. He saw migrants as recipients of a
new evangelization, warning of the risks of
exploitation and loss of faith in a foreign
land. Responding generously to the charism that
the Lord had given him, “Scalabrini looked
forward to a world and a Church without
barriers, where no one was a foreigner.” [62]
Saint Frances Cabrini, born in Italy and a
naturalized American, was the first citizen of
the United States of America to be canonized. To
fulfill her mission of assisting migrants, she
crossed the Atlantic several times. “Armed with
remarkable boldness, she started schools,
hospitals and orphanages from nothing for the
masses of the poor who ventured into the new
world in search of work. Not knowing the
language and lacking the wherewithal to find a
respectable place in American society, they were
often victims of the unscrupulous. Her motherly
heart, which allowed her no rest, reached out to
them everywhere: in hovels, prisons and mines.”
[63] In the Holy Year of 1950, Pope Pius XII
proclaimed her Patroness of All Migrants. [64]
75. The Church’s tradition of working for and
with migrants continues, and today this service
is expressed in initiatives such as refugee
reception centers, border missions and the
efforts of Caritas Internationalis and other
institutions. Contemporary teaching clearly
reaffirms this commitment. Pope Francis has
recalled that the Church’s mission to migrants
and refugees is even broader, insisting that
“our response to the challenges posed by
contemporary migration can be summed up in four
verbs: welcome, protect, promote and integrate.
Yet these verbs do not apply only to migrants
and refugees. They describe the Church’s mission
to all those living in the existential
peripheries, who need to be welcomed, protected,
promoted and integrated.” [65] He also said:
“Every human being is a child of God! He or she
bears the image of Christ! We ourselves need to
see, and then to enable others to see, that
migrants and refugees do not only represent a
problem to be solved, but are brothers and
sisters to be welcomed, respected and loved.
They are an occasion that Providence
gives us to help build a more just society, a
more perfect democracy, a more united country, a
more fraternal world and a more open and
evangelical Christian community.” [66] The
Church, like a mother, accompanies those who are
walking. Where the world sees threats, she sees
children; where walls are built, she builds
bridges. She knows that her proclamation of the
Gospel is credible only when it is translated
into gestures of closeness and welcome. And she
knows that in every rejected migrant, it is
Christ himself who knocks at the door of the
community.
At the side of the least among us
76. Christian holiness often flourishes in the
most forgotten and wounded places of humanity.
The poorest of the poor — those who lack not
only material goods but also a voice and the
recognition of their dignity — have a special
place in God’s heart. They are the beloved of
the Gospel, the heirs to the Kingdom (cf. Lk
6:20). It is in them that Christ continues to
suffer and rise again. It is in them that the
Church rediscovers her call to show her most
authentic self.
77. Saint Teresa of Calcutta, canonized in 2016,
has become a universal icon of charity lived to
the fullest extent in favor of the most
destitute, those discarded by society. Foundress
of the Missionaries of Charity, she dedicated
her life to the dying abandoned on the streets
of India. She gathered the rejected, washed
their wounds and accompanied them to the moment
of death with the tenderness of prayer. Her love
for the poorest of the poor meant that she did
not only take care of their material needs, but
also proclaimed the good news of the Gospel to
them: “We are wanting to proclaim the good news
to the poor that God loves them, that we love
them, that they are somebody to us, that they
too have been created by the same loving hand of
God, to love and to be loved. Our poor people
are great people, are very lovable people, they
do not need our pity and sympathy, they need our
understanding love. They need our respect; they
need that we treat them with dignity.” [67] All
this came from a deep spirituality that saw
service to the poorest as the fruit of prayer
and love, the source of true peace, as Pope John
Paul II reminded the pilgrims who came to Rome
for her beatification: “Where did Mother Teresa
find the strength to place herself completely at
the service of others? She found it in prayer
and in the silent contemplation of Jesus Christ,
his Holy Face, his Sacred Heart. She herself
said as much: ‘The fruit of silence is prayer;
the fruit of prayer is faith; the fruit of faith
is love; the fruit of love is service.’
It was prayer that filled her heart with
Christ’s own peace and enabled her to radiate
that peace to others.” [68] Teresa did not
consider herself a philanthropist or an
activist, but a bride of Christ crucified,
serving with total love her suffering brothers
and sisters.
78. In Brazil, Saint Dulce of the Poor — known
as “the good angel of Bahia” — embodied the same
evangelical spirit with Brazilian
characteristics. Referring to her and two other
religious women canonized during the same
celebration, Pope Francis recalled their love
for the most marginalized members of society and
said that the new saints “show us that the
consecrated life is a journey of love at the
existential peripheries of the world.” [69]
Sister Dulce responded to precariousness with
creativity, obstacles with tenderness and need
with unshakeable faith. She began by taking in
the sick in a chicken coop and from there
founded one of the largest social services in
the country. She assisted thousands of people a
day, without ever losing her gentleness, making
herself poor with the poor for the love of the
Poorest One. She lived with little, prayed
fervently and served with joy. Her faith did not
distance her from the world, but drew her even
more deeply into the pain of the least among us.
79. We could also mention individuals such as
Saint Benedict Menni and the Sisters
Hospitallers of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, who
worked alongside people with disabilities; Saint
Charles de Foucauld among the communities of the
Sahara; Saint Katharine Drexel for the most
underprivileged groups in North America; Sister
Emmanuelle, with the garbage collectors in the
Ezbet El Nakhl neighborhood of Cairo; and many
others. Each in their own way discovered that
the poorest are not only objects of our
compassion, but teachers of the Gospel. It is
not a question of “bringing” God to them, but of
encountering him among them. All of these
examples teach us that serving the poor is not a
gesture to be made “from above,” but an
encounter between equals, where Christ is
revealed and adored.
Saint John Paul II reminded us that
“there is a special presence of Christ in the
poor, and this requires the Church to make a
preferential option for them.” [70]
Therefore, when the Church bends down to
care for the poor, she assumes her highest
posture.
Popular Movements
80. We must also recognize that, throughout
centuries of Christian history, helping the poor
and advocating for their rights has not only
involved individuals, families, institutions, or
religious communities. There have been, and
still are, various popular movements made up of
lay people and led by popular leaders, who have
often been viewed with suspicion and even
persecuted. I am referring to “all those persons
who journey, not as individuals, but as a
closely-bound community of all and for all, one
that refuses to leave the poor and vulnerable
behind... ‘Popular’ leaders, then, are those
able to involve everyone... They do not shun or
fear those young people who have experienced
hurt or borne the weight of the cross.” [71]
81. These popular leaders know that solidarity
“also means fighting against the structural
causes of poverty and inequality; of the lack of
work, land and housing; and of the denial of
social and labor rights. It means confronting
the destructive effects of the empire of money…
Solidarity, understood in its deepest sense, is
a way of making history, and this is what the
popular movements are doing.” [72]
For this reason, when different
institutions think about the needs of the poor,
it is necessary to “include popular movements
and invigorate local, national and international
governing structures with that torrent of moral
energy that springs from including the excluded
in the building of a common destiny.” [73]
Popular movements, in fact, invite us to
overcome “the idea of social policies being a
policy for the poor, but never with the poor and
never of the poor, much less part of a project
which can bring people back together.” [74] If
politicians and professionals do not listen to
them, “democracy atrophies, turns into a slogan,
a formality; it loses its representative
character and becomes disembodied, since it
leaves out the people in their daily struggle
for dignity, in the building of their future.”
[75] The same must be said of the institutions
of the Church.
CHAPTER FOUR
A HISTORY THAT CONTINUES
The century of the Church’s Social Doctrine
82. The acceleration of technological and social
change in the past two centuries, with all its
contradictions and conflicts, not only had an
impact on the lives of the poor but also became
the object of debate and reflection on their
part. The various movements of workers, women
and young people, and the fight against racial
discrimination, gave rise to a new appreciation
of the dignity of those on the margins of
society. The Church’s social doctrine also
emerged from this matrix. Its analysis of
Christian revelation in the context of modern
social, labor, economic and cultural issues
would not have been possible without the
contribution of the laity, men and women alike,
who grappled with the great issues of their
time. At their side were those men and women
religious who embodied a Church forging ahead in
new directions. The epochal change we are now
undergoing makes even more necessary a constant
interaction between the faithful and the
Church’s Magisterium, between ordinary citizens
and experts, between individuals and
institutions. Here too, it needs to be
acknowledged once more that reality is best
viewed from the sidelines, and that the poor are
possessed of unique insights indispensable to
the Church and to humanity as a whole.
83. The Church’s Magisterium in the past 150
years is a veritable treasury of significant
teachings concerning the poor. The Bishops of
Rome have given voice to new insights refined
through a process of ecclesial discernment. By
way of example, in his Encyclical Letter Rerum
Novarum, Leo XIII addressed the labor question,
pointing to the intolerable living conditions of
many industrial workers and arguing for the
establishment of a just social order. Other
popes also spoke on this theme.
Saint John XXIII, in his Encyclical Mater
et Magistra (1961), called for justice on a
global scale: rich countries could no longer
remain indifferent to countries suffering from
hunger and extreme poverty; instead, they were
called upon to assist them generously with all
their goods.
84. The Second Vatican Council represented a
milestone in the Church’s understanding of the
poor in God’s saving plan. Although this theme
remained marginal in the preparatory documents,
Saint John XXIII, in his Radio Message of 11
September 1962, a month before the opening of
the Council, called attention to the issue. In
his memorable words, “the Church presents
herself as she is and as she wishes to be: the
Church of all and in particular the Church of
the poor.” [76] The intense efforts of bishops,
theologians and experts concerned with the
renewal of the Church — with the support of
Saint John XXIII himself — gave the Council a
new direction. The centrality of Christ in these
considerations both on a doctrinal and social
level would prove fundamental. Many Council
Fathers supported this approach, as eloquently
expressed by Cardinal Lercaro in his
intervention of 6 December 1962: “The mystery of
Christ in the Church has always been and today
is, in a particular way, the mystery of Christ
in the poor.” [77]
He went on to say that, “this is not
simply one theme among others, but in some sense
the only theme of the Council as a whole.” [78]
The Archbishop of Bologna, in preparing
the text for this intervention, noted the
following: “This is the hour of the poor, of the
millions of the poor throughout the world. This
is the hour of the mystery of the Church as
mother of the poor. This is the hour of the
mystery of Christ, present especially in the
poor.” [79] There was a growing sense of the
need for a new image of Church, one simpler and
more sober, embracing the entire people of God
and its presence in history. A Church more
closely resembling her Lord than worldly powers
and working to foster a concrete commitment on
the part of all humanity to solving the immense
problem of poverty in the world.
85. At the opening of the second session of the
Council, Saint Paul VI took up this concern
voiced by his predecessor, namely that the
Church looks with particular attention “to the
poor, the needy, the afflicted, the hungry, the
suffering, the imprisoned, that is, she looks to
all humanity that suffers and weeps: she is part
of them by evangelical right.” [80] In his
General Audience of 11 November 1964, he pointed
out that “the poor are representatives of
Christ,” and compared the image of the Lord in
the poor to that seen in the Pope. He affirmed
this truth with these words: “The representation
of Christ in the poor is universal; every poor
person reflects Christ; that of the Pope is
personal... The poor man and Peter can be one in
the same person, clothed in a double
representation; that of poverty and that of
authority.” [81] In this way, the intrinsic link
between the Church and the poor was expressed
symbolically and with unprecedented clarity.
86. The Pastoral Constitution Gaudium et Spes,
building on the teachings of the Church Fathers,
forcefully reaffirms the universal destination
of earthly goods and the social function of
property that derives from it. The Constitution
states that “God destined the earth and all it
contains for all people and nations so that all
created things would be shared fairly by all
humankind under the guidance of justice tempered
by charity… In their use of things people should
regard the external goods they lawfully possess
as not just their own but common to others as
well, in the sense that they can benefit others
as well as themselves. Therefore, everyone has
the right to possess a sufficient amount of the
earth’s goods for themselves and their family…
Persons in extreme necessity are entitled to
take what they need from the riches of others…
By its nature, private property has a social
dimension that is based on the law of the common
destination of earthly goods. Whenever the
social aspect is forgotten, ownership can often
become the object of greed and a source of
serious disorder.” [82]
This conviction was reiterated by Saint
Paul VI in his Encyclical Populorum Progressio.
There we read that no one can feel authorized to
“appropriate surplus goods solely for his [or
her] own private use when others lack the bare
necessities of life.” [83] In his address to the
United Nations, Pope Paul VI spoke as the
advocate of poor peoples [84] and urged the
international community to build a world of
solidarity.
87. With Saint John Paul II, the Church’s
preferential relationship with the poor was
consolidated, particularly from a doctrinal
standpoint. His teaching saw in the option for
the poor a “special form of primacy in the
exercise of Christian charity, to which the
whole tradition of the Church bears witness.”
[85] In his Encyclical Sollicitudo Rei Socialis,
he went on to say: “Today, furthermore, given
the worldwide dimension which the social
question has assumed, this love of preference
for the poor, and the decisions which it
inspires in us, cannot but embrace the immense
multitudes of the hungry, the needy, the
homeless, those without medical care and, above
all, those without hope of a better future. It
is impossible not to take account of the
existence of these realities. To ignore them
would mean becoming like the ‘rich man’ who
pretended not to know the beggar Lazarus lying
at his gate (cf. Lk 16:19-31).” [86] Saint John
Paul II’s teaching on work is likewise important
for our consideration of the active role that
the poor ought to play in the renewal of the
Church and society, thus leaving behind a
certain “paternalism” that limited itself to
satisfying only the immediate needs of the poor.
In his Encyclical Laborem Exercens, he
forthrightly stated that “human work is a key ,
probably the essential key , to the whole social
question.” [87]
88. Amid the multiple crises that marked the
beginning of the third millennium, the teaching
of Benedict XVI took a more distinctly political
turn. Hence, in the Encyclical Caritas in
Veritate, he affirms that “the more we strive to
secure a common good corresponding to the real
needs of our neighbors, the more effectively we
love them.” [88] He observed, moreover, that
“hunger is not so much dependent on lack of
material things as on shortage of social
resources, the most important of which are
institutional. What is missing, in other words,
is a network of economic institutions capable of
guaranteeing regular access to sufficient food
and water for nutritional needs, and also
capable of addressing the primary needs and
necessities ensuing from genuine food crises,
whether due to natural causes or political
irresponsibility, nationally and
internationally.” [89]
89. Pope Francis recognized that in recent
decades, alongside the teachings of the Bishops
of Rome, national and regional Bishops’
Conferences have increasingly spoken out. He
could personally attest, for example, to the
particular commitment of the Latin American
episcopate to rethinking the Church’s
relationship with the poor. In the immediate
post-conciliar period, in almost all Latin
American countries, there was a strong sense of
the Church’s need to identify with the poor and
to participate actively in securing their
freedom. The Church was moved by the masses of
the poor suffering from unemployment,
underemployment, unjust wages and sub-standard
living conditions. The martyrdom of Saint Oscar
Romero, the Archbishop of San Salvador, was a
powerful witness and an inspiration for the
Church. He had made his own the plight of the
vast majority of his flock and made them the
center of his pastoral vision. The Conferences
of the Latin American Bishops held in Medellín,
Puebla, Santo Domingo and Aparecida were also
significant events for the life of the Church as
a whole. For my part, having served as a
missionary in Peru for many years, I am greatly
indebted to this process of ecclesial
discernment, which Pope Francis wisely linked to
that of other particular Churches, especially
those in the global South. I would now like to
take up two specific themes of this episcopal
teaching.
Structures of sin that create poverty and
extreme inequality
90. At Medellín, the bishops declared themselves
in favor of a preferential option for the poor:
“Christ our Savior not only loved the poor, but,
‘being rich, he became poor.’ He lived a life of
poverty, focused his mission on preaching their
liberation, and founded his Church as a sign of
this poverty in our midst… The poverty endured
by so many of our brothers and sisters cries out
for justice, solidarity, witness, commitment and
efforts directed to ending it, so that
the saving mission entrusted by Christ may be
fully accomplished.” [90] The bishops stated
forcefully that the Church, to be fully faithful
to her vocation, must not only share the
condition of the poor, but also stand at their
side and work actively for their integral
development. Faced with a situation of worsening
poverty in Latin America, the Puebla Conference
confirmed the Medellín decision in favor of a
frank and prophetic option for the poor and
described structures of injustice as a “social
sin.”
91. Charity has the power to change reality; it
is a genuine force for change in history. It is
the source that must inspire and guide every
effort to “resolve the structural causes of
poverty,” [91] and to do so with urgency. It is
my hope that we will see more and more
“politicians capable of sincere and effective
dialogue aimed at healing the deepest roots —
and not simply the appearances — of the evils in
our world.” [92]
For “it is a matter of hearing the cry of
entire peoples, the poorest peoples of the
earth.” [93]
92. We must continue, then, to denounce the
“dictatorship of an economy that kills,” and to
recognize that “while the earnings of a minority
are growing exponentially, so too is the gap
separating the majority from the prosperity
enjoyed by those happy few. This imbalance is
the result of ideologies that defend the
absolute autonomy of the marketplace and
financial speculation. Consequently, they reject
the right of states, charged with vigilance for
the common good, to exercise any form of
control. A new tyranny is being born, invisible
and often virtual, which unilaterally and
relentlessly imposes its own laws and rules.”
[94]
There is no shortage of theories
attempting to justify the present state of
affairs or to explain that economic thinking
requires us to wait for invisible market forces
to resolve everything. Nevertheless, the dignity
of every human person must be respected today,
not tomorrow, and the extreme poverty of all
those to whom this dignity is denied should
constantly weigh upon our consciences.
93. In his Encyclical Dilexit Nos, Pope Francis
reminded us that social sin consolidates a
“structure of sin” within society, and is
frequently “part of a dominant mindset that
considers normal or reasonable what is merely
selfishness and indifference. This then gives
rise to social alienation.” [95] It then becomes
normal to ignore the poor and live as if they do
not exist. It then likewise seems reasonable to
organize the economy in such a way that
sacrifices are demanded of the masses in order
to serve the needs of the powerful. Meanwhile,
the poor are promised only a few “drops” that
trickle down, until the next global crisis
brings things back to where they were. A genuine
form of alienation is present when we limit
ourselves to theoretical excuses instead of
seeking to resolve the concrete problems of
those who suffer. Saint John Paul II had already
observed that, “a society is alienated if its
forms of social organization, production and
consumption make it more difficult to offer the
gift of self and to establish solidarity between
people.” [96]
94. We need to be increasingly committed to
resolving the structural causes of poverty. This
is a pressing need that “cannot be delayed, not
only for the pragmatic reason of its urgency for
the good order of society, but because society
needs to be cured of a sickness which is
weakening and frustrating it, and which can only
lead to new crises. Welfare projects, which meet
certain urgent needs, should be considered
merely provisional responses.” [97] I can only
state once more that inequality “is the root of
social ills.” [98] Indeed, “it frequently
becomes clear that, in practice, human rights
are not equal for all.” [99]
95. As it is, “the current model, with its
emphasis on success and self-reliance, does not
appear to favor an investment in efforts to help
the slow, the weak or the less talented to find
opportunities in life.” [100] The same questions
keep coming back to us. Does this mean that the
less gifted are not human beings? Or that the
weak do not have the same dignity as ourselves?
Are those born with fewer opportunities of
lesser value as human beings? Should they limit
themselves merely to surviving?
The worth of our societies, and our own
future, depends on the answers we give to these
questions. Either we regain our moral and
spiritual dignity or we fall into a cesspool.
Unless we stop and take this matter seriously,
we will continue, openly or surreptitiously, “to
legitimize the present model of distribution,
where a minority believes that it has the right
to consume in a way which can never be
universalized, since the planet could not even
contain the waste products of such consumption.”
[101]
96. One structural issue that cannot
realistically be resolved from above and needs
to be addressed as quickly as possible has to do
with the locations, neighborhoods, homes and
cities where the poor live and spend their time.
All of us appreciate the beauty of “those cities
which overcome paralyzing mistrust, integrate
those who are different and make this very
integration a new factor of development! How
attractive are those cities which, even in their
architectural design, are full of spaces which
connect, relate and favor the recognition of
others!” [102] Yet, at the same time, “we cannot
fail to consider the effects on people’s lives
of environmental deterioration, current models
of development and the throwaway culture.” [103]
For “the deterioration of the environment and of
society affects the most vulnerable people on
the planet.” [104]
97. All the members of the People of God have a
duty to make their voices heard, albeit in
different ways, in order to point out and
denounce such structural issues, even at the
cost of appearing foolish or naïve. Unjust
structures need to be recognized and eradicated
by the force of good, by changing mindsets but
also, with the help of science and technology,
by developing effective policies for societal
change.
It must never be forgotten that the
Gospel message has to do not only with an
individual’s personal relationship with the
Lord, but also with something greater: “the
Kingdom of God (cf. Lk 4:43); it is about loving
God who reigns in our world. To the extent that
he reigns within us, the life of society will be
a setting for universal fraternity, justice,
peace and dignity. Both Christian preaching and
life, then, are meant to have an impact on
society. We are seeking God’s Kingdom.” [105]
98. Finally, in a document that was not
initially well received by everyone, we find a
reflection that remains timely today: “The
defenders of orthodoxy are sometimes accused of
passivity, indulgence, or culpable complicity
regarding the intolerable situations of
injustice and the political regimes which
prolong them. Spiritual conversion, the
intensity of the love of God and neighbor, zeal
for justice and peace, the Gospel meaning of the
poor and of poverty, are required of everyone,
and especially of pastors and those in positions
of responsibility. The concern for the purity of
the faith demands giving the answer of effective
witness in the service of one’s neighbor, the
poor and the oppressed in particular, in an
integral theological fashion.” [106]
The poor as subjects
99. The life of the universal Church was
enriched by the discernment of the Aparecida
Conference, in which the Latin American bishops
made clear that the Church’s preferential option
for the poor “is implicit in the Christological
faith in the God who became poor for us, so as
to enrich us with his poverty.” [107] The
Aparecida Document situates the Church’s mission
in the present context of a globalized world
marked by new and dramatic imbalances. [108] In
their Final Message, the bishops wrote: “The
stark differences between rich and poor invite
us to work with greater commitment to being
disciples capable of sharing the table of life,
the table of all the sons and daughters of the
Father, a table that is open and inclusive, from
which no one is excluded. We therefore reaffirm
our preferential and evangelical option for the
poor.” [109]
100.
At the same time, the Document, taking up
a theme treated in earlier Conferences of the
Latin American episcopate, insists on the need
to consider marginalized communities as subjects
capable of creating their own culture, rather
than as objects of charity on the part of
others. This means that such communities have
the right to embrace the Gospel and to celebrate
and communicate their faith in accord with the
values present within their own cultures. Their
experience of poverty gives them the ability to
recognize aspects of reality that others cannot
see; for this reason, society needs to listen to
them.
The same holds true for the Church, which
should regard positively their “popular”
practice of the faith.
A fine passage from the Aparecida
Document can help us reflect on this point and
our proper response: “Only the closeness that
makes us friends enables us to appreciate deeply
the values of the poor today, their legitimate
desires, and their own manner of living the
faith… Day by day, the poor become agents of
evangelization and of comprehensive human
promotion: they educate their children in the
faith, engage in ongoing solidarity among
relatives and neighbors, constantly seek God,
and give life to the Church’s pilgrimage. In the
light of the Gospel, we recognize their immense
dignity and their sacred worth in the eyes of
Christ, who was poor like them and excluded
among them. Based on this experience of faith,
we will share with them the defense of their
rights.” [110]
101. All this entails one aspect of the option
for the poor that we must constantly keep in
mind, namely that it demands of us an attitude
of attentiveness to others.
“This loving attentiveness is the
beginning of a true concern for their person
which inspires me effectively to seek their
good. This entails appreciating the poor in
their goodness, in their experience of life, in
their culture, and in their ways of living the
faith. True love is always contemplative, and
permits us to serve the other not out of
necessity or vanity, but rather because he or
she is beautiful above and beyond mere
appearances… Only on the basis of this real and
sincere closeness can we properly accompany the
poor on their path of liberation.” [111] For
this reason, I express my heartfelt gratitude to
all those who have chosen to live among the
poor, not merely to pay them an occasional visit
but to live with them as they do. Such a
decision should be deemed one of the highest
forms of evangelical life.
102. In light of this, it is evident that all of
us must “let ourselves be evangelized” [112] by
the poor and acknowledge “the mysterious wisdom
which God wishes to share with us through them.”
[113] Growing up in precarious circumstances,
learning to survive in the most adverse
conditions, trusting in God with the assurance
that no one else takes them seriously, and
helping one another in the darkest moments, the
poor have learned many things that they keep
hidden in their hearts. Those of us who have not
had similar experiences of living this way
certainly have much to gain from the source of
wisdom that is the experience of the poor. Only
by relating our complaints to their sufferings
and privations can we experience a reproof that
can challenge us to simplify our lives.
CHAPTER FIVE
A CONSTANT CHALLENGE
103. I have chosen to recall the age-old history
of the Church’s care for the poor and with the
poor in order to make clear that it has always
been a central part of her life. Indeed, caring
for the poor is part of the Church’s great
Tradition, a beacon as it were of evangelical
light to illumine the hearts and guide the
decisions of Christians in every age. That is
why we must feel bound to invite everyone to
share in the light and life born of recognizing
Christ in the faces of the suffering and those
in need. Love for the poor is an essential
element of the history of God’s dealings with
us; it rises up from the heart of the Church as
a constant appeal to the hearts of the faithful,
both individually and in our communities. As the
Body of Christ, the Church experiences the lives
of the poor as her very “flesh,” for theirs is a
privileged place within the pilgrim people of
God. Consequently, love for the poor — whatever
the form their poverty may take — is the
evangelical hallmark of a Church faithful to the
heart of God. Indeed, one of the priorities of
every movement of renewal within the Church has
always been a preferential concern for the poor.
In this sense, her work with the poor
differs in its inspiration and method from the
work carried out by any other humanitarian
organization.
104. No Christian can regard the poor simply as
a societal problem; they are part of our
“family.” They are “one of us.” Nor can our
relationship to the poor be reduced to merely
another ecclesial activity or function. In the
words of the Aparecida Document, “we are asked
to devote time to the poor, to give them loving
attention, to listen to them with interest, to
stand by them in difficult moments, choosing to
spend hours, weeks or years of our lives with
them, and striving to transform their
situations, starting from them. We cannot forget
that this is what Jesus himself proposed in his
actions and by his words.” [114]
The Good Samaritan, once again
105. The dominant culture at the beginning of
this millennium would have us abandon the poor
to their fate and consider them unworthy of
attention, much less our respect. Pope Francis,
in his Encyclical Fratelli Tutti, challenged us
to reflect on the parable of the Good Samaritan
(cf. Lk 10:25-37), which presents the different
reactions of those confronted by the sight of a
wounded man lying on the road.
Only the Good Samaritan stops and cares
for him. Pope Francis went on to ask each of us:
“Which of these persons do you identify with?
This question, blunt as it is, is direct and
incisive. Which of these characters do you
resemble? We need to acknowledge that we are
constantly tempted to ignore others, especially
the weak.
Let us admit that, for all the progress
we have made, we are still ‘illiterate’ when it
comes to accompanying, caring for and supporting
the most frail and vulnerable members of our
developed societies. We have become accustomed
to looking the other way, passing by, and
ignoring situations until they affect us
directly.” [115]
106. It is important for us to realize that the
story of the Good Samaritan remains timely even
today. “If I encounter a person sleeping
outdoors on a cold night, I can view him or her
as an annoyance, an idler, an obstacle in my
path, a troubling sight, a problem for
politicians to sort out, or even a piece of
refuse cluttering a public space. Or I can
respond with faith and charity, and see in this
person a human being with a dignity identical to
my own, a creature infinitely loved by the
Father, an image of God, a brother or sister
redeemed by Jesus Christ. That is what it is to
be a Christian! Can holiness somehow be
understood apart from this lively recognition of
the dignity of each human being?” [116] What did
the Good Samaritan do?
107. These questions become all the more urgent
in light of a serious flaw present in the life
of our societies, but also in our Christian
communities. The many forms of indifference we
see all around us are in fact “signs of an
approach to life that is spreading in various
and subtle ways. What is more, caught up as we
are with our own needs, the sight of a person
who is suffering disturbs us.
It makes us uneasy, since we have no time
to waste on other people’s problems. These are
symptoms of an unhealthy society. A society that
seeks prosperity but turns its back on
suffering. May we not sink to such depths! Let
us look to the example of the Good Samaritan.”
[117] The final words of the Gospel parable —
“Go and do likewise” ( Lk 10:37) — represent a
mandate that every Christian must daily take to
heart.
An inescapable challenge for the Church today
108. At a particularly critical time in the
history of the Church in Rome, when the imperial
institutions were collapsing under the pressure
of the barbarian invasions, Pope Saint Gregory
the Great felt it necessary to remind the
faithful: “Every minute we can find a Lazarus if
we seek him, and every day, even without
seeking, we find one at our door. Now beggars
besiege us, imploring alms; later they will be
our advocates... Therefore do not waste the
opportunity of doing works of mercy; do not
store unused the good things you possess.” [118]
Gregory courageously denounced contemporary
forms of prejudice against the poor, including
the belief that they were responsible for their
plight: “Whenever you see the poor doing
something reprehensible, do not despise or
discredit them, for the fire of poverty is
perhaps purifying their sinful actions, however
slight they be.” [119] Not infrequently, our
prosperity can make us blind to the needs of
others, and even make us think that our
happiness and fulfillment depend on ourselves
alone, apart from others. In such cases, the
poor can act as silent teachers for us, making
us conscious of our presumption and instilling
within us a rightful spirit of humility.
109. While it is true that the rich care for the
poor, the opposite is no less true.
This is a remarkable fact confirmed by
the entire Christian tradition. Lives can
actually be turned around by the realization
that the poor have much to teach us about the
Gospel and its demands. By their silent witness,
they make us confront the precariousness of our
existence. The elderly, for example, by their
physical frailty, remind us of our own
fragility, even as we attempt to conceal it
behind our apparent prosperity and outward
appearance. The poor, too, remind us how
baseless is the attitude of aggressive arrogance
with which we frequently confront life’s
difficulties. They remind us how uncertain and
empty our seemingly safe and secure lives may
be. Here again, Saint Gregory the Great has much
to tell us: “Let no one consider himself secure,
saying, ‘I do not steal from others, but simply
enjoy what is rightfully mine.’ The rich man was
not punished because he took what belonged to
others, but because, while possessing such great
riches, he had become impoverished within. This
was indeed the reason for his condemnation to
hell: in his prosperity, he preserved no sense
of justice; the wealth he had received made him
proud and caused him to lose all sense of
compassion.” [120]
110. For us Christians, the problem of the poor
leads to the very heart of our faith.
Saint John Paul II taught that the
preferential option for the poor, namely the
Church’s love for the poor, “is essential for
her and a part of her constant tradition, and
impels her to give attention to a world in which
poverty is threatening to assume massive
proportions in spite of technological and
economic progress.” [121]
For Christians, the poor are not a
sociological category, but the very “flesh” of
Christ. It is not enough to profess the doctrine
of God’s Incarnation in general terms. To enter
truly into this great mystery, we need to
understand clearly that the Lord took on a flesh
that hungers and thirsts, and experiences
infirmity and imprisonment. “A poor Church for
the poor begins by reaching out to the flesh of
Christ. If we reach out to the flesh of Christ,
we begin to understand something, to understand
what this poverty, the Lord’s poverty, actually
is; and this is far from easy.” [122]
111. By her very nature the Church is in
solidarity with the poor, the excluded, the
marginalized and all those considered the
outcast of society. The poor are at the heart of
the Church because “our faith in Christ, who
became poor, and was always close to the poor
and the outcast, is the basis of our concern for
the integral development of society’s most
neglected members.” [123] In our hearts, we
encounter “the need to heed this plea, born of
the liberating action of grace within each of
us, and so it is not a matter of a mission
reserved only to a few.” [124]
112. At times, Christian movements or groups
have arisen which show little or no interest in
the common good of society and, in particular,
the protection and advancement of its most
vulnerable and disadvantaged members. Yet we
must never forget that religion, especially the
Christian religion, cannot be limited to the
private sphere, as if believers had no business
making their voice heard with regard to problems
affecting civil society and issues of concern to
its members. [125]
113. Indeed, “any Church community, if it thinks
it can comfortably go its own way without
creative concern and effective cooperation in
helping the poor to live with dignity and
reaching out to everyone, will also risk
breaking down, however much it may talk about
social issues or criticize governments. It will
easily drift into a spiritual worldliness
camouflaged by religious practices, unproductive
meetings and empty talk.” [126]
114. Nor is it a question merely of providing
for welfare assistance and working to ensure
social justice. Christians should also be aware
of another form of inconsistency in the way they
treat the poor. In reality, “the worst
discrimination which the poor suffer is the lack
of spiritual care… Our preferential option for
the poor must mainly translate into a privileged
and preferential religious care.” [127] Yet,
this spiritual attentiveness to the poor is
called into question, even among Christians, by
certain prejudices arising from the fact that we
find it easier to turn a blind eye to the poor.
There are those who say: “Our task is to pray
and teach sound doctrine.” Separating this
religious aspect from integral development, they
even say that it is the government’s job to care
for them, or that it would be better not to lift
them out of their poverty but simply to teach
them to work. At times, pseudo-scientific data
are invoked to support the claim that a free
market economy will automatically solve the
problem of poverty. Or even that we should opt
for pastoral work with the so-called elite,
since, rather than wasting time on the poor, it
would be better to care for the rich, the
influential and professionals, so that with
their help real solutions can be found and the
Church can feel protected. It is easy to
perceive the worldliness behind these positions,
which would lead us to view reality through
superficial lenses, lacking any light from
above, and to cultivate relationships that bring
us security and a position of privilege.
Almsgiving today
115. I would like to close by saying something
about almsgiving, which nowadays is not looked
upon favorably even among believers.
Not only is it rarely practiced, but it
is even at times disparaged. Let me state once
again that the most important way to help the
disadvantaged is to assist them in finding a
good job, so that they can lead a more dignified
life by developing their abilities and
contributing their fair share. In this sense,
“lack of work means far more than simply not
having a steady source of income.
Work is also this, but it is much, much
more.
By working we become a fuller person, our
humanity flourishes, young people become adults
only by working. The Church’s social doctrine
has always seen human work as a participation in
God’s work of creation that continues every day,
also thanks to the hands, mind and heart of the
workers.” [128] On the other hand, where this is
not possible, we cannot risk abandoning others
to the fate of lacking the necessities for a
dignified life. Consequently, almsgiving
remains, for the time being, a necessary means
of contact, encounter and empathy with those
less fortunate.
116. Those inspired by true charity know full
well that almsgiving does not absolve the
competent authorities of their responsibilities,
eliminate the duty of government institutions to
care for the poor, or detract from rightful
efforts to ensure justice.
Almsgiving at least offers us a chance to
halt before the poor, to look into their eyes,
to touch them and to share something of
ourselves with them. In any event, almsgiving,
however modest, brings a touch of pietas into a
society otherwise marked by the frenetic pursuit
of personal gain. In the words of the Book of
Proverbs: “Those who are generous are blessed,
for they share their bread with the poor”
(22:9).
117. Both the Old and New Testaments contain
veritable hymns in praise of almsgiving: “Be
patient with someone in humble circumstances,
and do not keep him waiting for your alms…
Store up almsgiving in your treasury, and
it will rescue you from every disaster” (Sir
29:8,12). Jesus himself adds: “Sell your
possessions, and give alms. Make purses for
yourselves that do not wear out, an unfailing
treasure in heaven, where no thief comes near
and no moth destroys” (Lk 12:33).
118. Saint John Chrysostom is known for saying:
“Almsgiving is the wing of prayer.
If you do not provide your prayer with
wings, it will hardly fly.” [129] In the same
vein, Saint Gregory of Nazianzus concluded one
of his celebrated orations with these words: “If
you think that I have something to say, servants
of Christ, his brethren and co-heirs, let us
visit Christ whenever we may; let us care for
him, feed him, clothe him, welcome him, honor
him, not only at a meal, as some have done, or
by anointing him, as Mary did, or only by
lending him a tomb, like Joseph of Arimathea, or
by arranging for his burial, like Nicodemus, who
loved Christ half-heartedly, or by giving him
gold, frankincense and myrrh, like the Magi
before all these others. The Lord of all asks
for mercy, not sacrifice... Let us then show him
mercy in the persons of the poor and those who
today are lying on the ground, so that when we
come to leave this world they may receive us
into everlasting dwelling places.” [130]
119. Our love and our deepest convictions need
to be continually cultivated, and we do so
through our concrete actions. Remaining in the
realm of ideas and theories, while failing to
give them expression through frequent and
practical acts of charity, will eventually cause
even our most cherished hopes and aspirations to
weaken and fade away. For this very reason, we
Christians must not abandon almsgiving. It can
be done in different ways, and surely more
effectively, but it must continue to be done. It
is always better at least to do something rather
than nothing. Whatever form it may take,
almsgiving will touch and soften our hardened
hearts. It will not solve the problem of world
poverty, yet it must still be carried out, with
intelligence, diligence and social
responsibility. For our part, we need to give
alms as a way of reaching out and touching the
suffering flesh of the poor.
120. Christian love breaks down every barrier,
brings close those who were distant, unites
strangers, and reconciles enemies. It spans
chasms that are humanly impossible to bridge,
and it penetrates to the most hidden crevices of
society. By its very nature, Christian love is
prophetic: it works miracles and knows no
limits.
It makes what was apparently impossible
happen. Love is above all a way of looking at
life and a way of living it. A Church that sets
no limits to love, that knows no enemies to
fight but only men and women to love, is the
Church that the world needs today.
121. Through your work, your efforts to change
unjust social structures or your simple,
heartfelt gesture of closeness and support, the
poor will come to realize that Jesus’ words are
addressed personally to each of them: “I have
loved you” (Rev 3:9).
Given in Rome, at Saint Peter’s, on 4 October,
the Memorial of Saint Francis of Assisi, in the
year 2025, the first of my Pontificate.
LEO PP. XIV
_________________________________
[1] Francis, Encyclical Letter Dilexit Nos (24
October 2024), 170: AAS 116 (2024), 1422.
[2] Ibid ., 171: AAS 116 (2024), 1422-1423.
[3] Francis, Apostolic Exhortation Gaudete et
Exsultate (19 March 2018), 96: AAS 110 (2018),
1137.
[4] Francis, Audience with Representatives of
the Communications Media (16 March 2013): AAS
105 (2013), 381.
[5] J. Bergoglio - A. Skorka , Sobre el cielo y
la tierra, Buenos Aires 2013, 214.
[6] Paul VI, Homily at the Mass for the Last
Public Session of the Second Vatican Ecumenical
Council (7 December 1965): AAS 58 (1966), 55-56.
[7] Cf. Francis, Apostolic Exhortation Evangelii
Gaudium (24 November 2013), 187: AAS 105 (2013),
1098.
[8] Ibid., 212: AAS 105 (2013), 1108.
[9] Francis, Encyclical Letter Fratelli Tutti (3
October 2020), 23: AAS 112 (2020), 977.
[10] Ibid., 21: AAS 112 (2020), 976.
[11] Council of the European Communities ,
Decision (85/8/EEC) on Specific Community Action
to Combat Poverty (19 December 1984), Art. 1(2):
Official Journal of the European Communities,
No. L 2/24.
[12] Cf. John Paul II, Catechesis (27 October
1999): L’Osservatore Romano, 28 October 1999, 4.
[13] Francis, Apostolic Exhortation Evangelii
Gaudium (24 November 2013), 197: AAS 105 (2013),
1102.
[14] Cf. Francis, Message for the 5th World Day
of the Poor (13 June 2021), 3: AAS 113 (2021),
691: “Jesus not only sides with the poor; he
also shares their lot.
This is a powerful lesson for his
disciples in every age.”
[15] Francis, Apostolic Exhortation Evangelii
Gaudium (24 November 2013), 186: AAS 105 (2013),
1098.
[16] Francis, Apostolic Exhortation Gaudete et
Exsultate (19 March 2018), 95: AAS 110 (2018),
1137.
[17] Ibid ., 97: AAS 110 (2018), 1137.
[18] Francis, Apostolic Exhortation Evangelii
Gaudium (24 November 2013), 194: AAS 105 (2013),
1101.
[19] Francis, Audience with Representatives of
the Communications Media (16 March 2013): AAS
105 (2013), 381.
[20] Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Dogmatic
Constitution Lumen Gentium, 8.
[21] Francis, Apostolic Exhortation Evangelii
Gaudium (24 November 2013), 48: AAS 105 (2013),
1040.
[22] In this chapter, some of these witnesses
are being put forward. This is not being done in
an exhaustive manner but rather to demonstrate
that care for the poor has always characterized
the presence of the Church in the world. A more
in-depth reflection on the attention given to
those most in need can be found in the following
book: V. Paglia, Storia della povertà, Milan
2014.
[23] Cf. Ambrose, De officiis ministrorum I,
cap. 41, 205-206: CCSL 15, Turnhout 2000, 76-77;
II, cap. 28, 140-143: CCSL 15, 148-149.
[24] Ibid., II, cap. 28, 140: CCSL 15, 148.
[25] Ibid.
[26] Ibid., II, cap. 28, 142: CCSL 15, 148.
[27] Ignatius of Antioch, Epistula ad Smyrnaeos,
6, 2: SC 10bis, Paris 2007, 136-138.
[28] Polycarp, Epistula ad Philippenses, 6, 1:
SC 10bis, 186.
[29] Justin, Apologia prima, 67, 6-7: SC 507,
Paris 2006, 310.
[30] John Chrysostom, Homiliae in Matthaeum, 50,
3: PG 58, Paris 1862, 508.
[31] Ibid. 50, 4: PG 58, 509.
[32] John Chrysostom, Homilia in Epistula ad
Hebraeos, 11, 3 : PG 63, Paris 1862, 94.
[33] John Chrysostom, Homilia II De Lazaro, 6:
PG 48, Paris 1862, 992.
[34] Ambrose, De Nabuthae, 12, 53: CSEL 32/2,
Prague-Vienna-Leipzig 1897, 498.
[35] Augustine, Enarrationes in Psalmos, 125,
12: CSEL 95/3, Vienna 2001, 181.
[36] Augustine, Sermo LXXXVI, 5: CCSL 41Ab,
Turnhout 2019, 411-412.
[37] Pseudo-Augustine, Sermo CCCLXXXVIII, 2: PL
39, Paris 1862, 1700.
[38] Cyprian, De mortalitate, 16: CCSL 3A,
Turnhout 1976, 25.
[39] Francis, Message for the 30th World Day of
the Sick (10 December 2021), 3: AAS 114 (2022),
51.
[40] Camillus de Lellis, Rule of the Order of
Ministers of the Sick, 27: M. Vanti (ed.),
Scritti di San Camillo de Lellis, Milan 1965,
67.
[41] Louise de Marillac, Letter to Sisters
Claudia Carré and Maria Gaudoin (28 November
1657): E. Charpy (ed.), Sainte Louise de
Marillac. Écrits, Paris 1983, 576.
[42] Basil the Great, Regulae fusius tractatae,
37, 1: PG 31, Paris 1857, 1009 C-D.
[43] Regula Benedicti, 53, 15: SC 182, Paris
1972, 614.
[44] John Cassian, Collationes, XIV, 10: CSEL
13, Vienna 2004, 410.
[45] Benedict XVI, Catechesis (21 October 2009):
L’Osservatore Romano, 22 October 2009, 1.
[46] Cf. Innocent III, Bull Operante divinae
dispositionis – Primitive Rule of the
Trinitarians (17 December 1198), 2: J.L.
Aurrecoechea – A. Moldón (eds.), Fuentes
históricas de la Orden Trinitaria (s. XII-XV),
Córdoba 2003, 6: “All things, from whatever
lawful source they may come, the brothers are to
divide them into three equal parts.
Insofar as two parts will be sufficient,
the works of mercy are to be performed from
them, as well as providing for a moderate
sustenance for themselves and their necessary
household members.
The third part is to be reserved for the
ransom of captives who are incarcerated for the
faith of Christ.”
[47] Cf. Constitutions of the Mercedarian Order,
n. 14: Orden de la Bienaventurada Virgen María
de la Merced, Regla y Constituciones, Rome 2014,
53: “To fulfill this mission, driven by charity,
we consecrate ourselves to God with a special
vow, called Redemption, by virtue of which we
promise to give our lives, if necessary, as
Christ gave his for us, to save Christians who
are in extreme danger of losing their faith in
new forms of slavery.”
[48] Cf. Saint John Baptist of the Conception,
La regla de la Orden de la Santísima Trinidad,
XX, 1: BAC Maior 60, Madrid, 1999, 90: “In this,
the poor and prisoners are like Christ, on whom
the sufferings of the world are laid... This
holy Order of the Most Holy Trinity summons them
and invites them to come and drink the water of
the Savior, which means that, if Christ hanging
on the cross was redemption and salvation for
men, the Order has taken this redemption and
wants to distribute it to the poor and save and
free the prisoners.”
[49] Cf. Saint John Baptist of the Conception,
El recogimiento interior, XL, 4: BAC Maior 48,
Madrid 1995, 689: “Free will makes man free and
master among all creatures, but, God help me,
how many are those who, by this way, become
slaves and prisoners of the devil, imprisoned
and chained by their passions and lusts.”
[50] Francis, Message for the 48th World Day of
Peace (8 December 2014), 3: AAS 107 (2015), 69.
[51] Francis, Meeting with Police Prison
Officers, Detainees, and Volunteers (Verona, May
18 May 2024): AAS 116 (2024), 766.
[52] Honorius III, Bull Solet annuere – Regula
bullata (29 November 1223), chap. VI: SC 285,
Paris 1981, 192.
[53] Cf. Gregory IX, Bull Sicut manifestum est
(17 September 1228), 7: SC 325, Paris 1985, 200:
“Sicut igitur supplicastis, altissimae
paupertatis propositum vestrum favore apostolico
roboramus, auctoritate vobis praesentium
indulgentes, ut recipere possessiones a nullo
compelli possitis.”
[54] Cf. S.C. Tugwell, (ed.), Early Dominicans.
Selected Writings, Mahwah 1982, 16-19.
[55] Thomas of Celano, Vita Seconda, pars prima,
cap. IV, 8: AnalFranc, 10, Florence 1941, 135.
[56] Francis, Address following the visit to the
tomb of Don Lorenzo Milani, (Barbiana, 20 June
2017), 2: AAS 109 (2017), 745.
[57] John Paul II, Address to the Participants
in the General Chapter of the Poor Clerics
Regular of the Mother of God of the Pious
Schools ( Piarists) (5 July 1997), 2:
L’Osservatore Romano, 6 July 1997, 5.
[58] Ibid.
[59] John Paul II, Homily for the Mass of
Canonization (18 April 1999): AAS 91 (1999),
930.
[60] Cf. John Paul II, Letter Iuvenum Patris (31
January 1988), 9: AAS 80 (1988), 976.
[61] Cf. Francis, Address to the Participants in
the General Chapter of the Institute of Charity
(Rosminians) (1 October 2018): L’Osservatore
Romano, 1-2 October 2018, 7.
[62] Francis, Homily for the Mass of
Canonization (9 October 2022): AAS 114 (2022),
1338.
[63] John Paul II, Message to the Congregation
of the Missionary Sisters of the Sacred Heart
(31 May 2000), 3: L’Osservatore Romano, 16 July
2000, 5.
[64] Cf. Pius XII, Papal Brief Superior Iam
Aetate (8 September 1950): AAS 43 (1951),
455-456.
[65] Francis, Message for the 105th World Day of
Migrants and Refugees (27 May 2019): AAS 111
(2019), 911.
[66] Francis, Message for the 100th World Day of
Migrants and Refugees (5 August 2013): AAS 105
(2013), 930.
[67] Teresa of Calcutta, Speech on the occasion
of the awarding of the Nobel Peace Prize (Oslo,
10 December 1979): Aimer jusqu’à en avoir mal,
Lyon 2017, 19-20.
[68] John Paul II, Address to the Pilgrims who
had come to Rome for the Beatification of Mother
Teresa (20 October 2003), 3: L’Osservatore
Romano, 20-21 October 2003, 10.
[69] Francis, Homily for the Mass and
Canonization (13 October 2019): AAS 111 (2019),
1712.
[70] John Paul II, Apostolic Letter Novo
Millennio Ineunte (6 January 2001), 49: AAS 93
(2001), 302.
[71] Francis, Apostolic Exhortation Christus
Vivit (25 March 2019), 231: AAS 111 (2019), 458.
[72] Francis, Address to Participants in the
World Meeting of Popular Movements (28 October
2014): AAS 106 (2014), 851-852.
[73] Ibid .: AAS 106 (2014), 859.
[74] Francis, Address to Participants in the
World Meeting of Popular Movements (November 5,
2016): L’Osservatore Romano, 7-8 November, 2016,
5.
[75] Ibid.
[76] John XXIII, Radio Message to all the
Christian faithful one month before the opening
of the Second Vatican Ecumenical Council (11
September 1962): AAS 54 (1962), 682.
[77] G. LERCARO, Intervention in the XXXV
General Congregation of the Second Vatican
Ecumenical Council (6 December 1962), 2: AS
I/IV, 327-328.
[78] Ibid., 4: AS I/IV, 329.
[79] Institute for Religious Sciences (ed.), Per
la forza dello Spirito. Discorsi conciliari del
Card. Giacomo Lercaro, Bologna 1984, 115.
[80] Paul VI, Address for the Solemn
Inauguration of the Second Session of the Second
Vatican Ecumenical Council (29 September 1963):
AAS 55 (1963) 857.
[81] Paul VI, Catechesis (11 November 1964):
Insegnamenti di Paolo VI, II (1964), 984.
[82] Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Pastoral
Constitution Gaudium et Spes, 69, 71.
[83] Paul VI, Encyclical Letter Populorum
Progressio (26 March 1967), 23: AAS 59 (1967),
269.
[84] Cf. ibid., 4: AAS 59 (1967), 259.
[85] John Paul II, Encyclical Letter Sollicitudo
Rei Socialis (30 December 1987), 42: AAS 80
(1988), 572.
[86] Ibid., AAS 80 (1988), 573.
[87] John Paul II, Encyclical Letter Laborem
Exercens (14 September 1981), 3: AAS 73 (1981),
584.
[88] Benedict XVI, Encyclical Letter Caritas in
Veritate (29 June 2009), 7: AAS 101 (2009), 645.
[89] Ibid., 27: AAS 101 (2009), 661.
[90] Second General Conference of the Latin
American Bishops, Medellín Document (24 October
1968), 14, n. 7: Celam, Medellín. Conclusiones,
Lima 2005, 131-132.
[91] Francis, Apostolic Exhortation Evangelii
Gaudium (24 November 2013), 202: AAS 105 (2013),
1105.
[92] Ibid., 205: AAS 105 (2013), 1106.
[93] Ibid., 190: AAS 105 (2013), 1099.
[94] Ibid., 56: AAS 105 (2013), 1043.
[95] Francis, Encyclical Letter Dilexit Nos (24
October 2024), 183: AAS 116 (2024), 1427.
[96] John Paul II, Encyclical Letter Centesimus
Annus (1 May 1991), 41: AAS 83 (1991), 844-845.
[97] Francis, Apostolic Exhortation Evangelii
Gaudium (24 November 2013), 202: AAS 105 (2013),
1105.
[98] Ibid.
[99] Francis, Encyclical Letter Fratelli Tutti
(3 October 2020), 22: AAS 112 (2020), 976.
[100] Francis, Apostolic Exhortation Evangelii
Gaudium (24 November 2013), 209: AAS 105 (2013),
1107.
[101] Francis, Encyclical Letter Laudato Si’ (24
May 2015), 50: AAS 107 (2015), 866.
[102] Francis, Apostolic Exhortation Evangelii
Gaudium (24 November 2013), 210: AAS 105 (2013),
1107.
[103] Francis, Encyclical Letter Laudato Si’ (24
May 2015), 43: AAS 107 (2015), 863.
[104] Ibid., 48: AAS 107 (2015), 865.
[105] Francis, Apostolic Exhortation Evangelii
Gaudium (24 November 2013), 180: AAS 105 (2013),
1095.
[106] Congregation for the Doctrine of the
Faith, Instruction on Certain Aspects of the
“Theology of Liberation” (6 August 1984) XI, 18:
AAS 76 (1984), 907-908.
[107] Fifth General Conference of the Latin
American and Caribbean Bishops, Aparecida
Document, (29 June 2007), n. 392, Bogotá 2007,
pp. 179-180.
Cf. Benedict XVI, Address at the
Inaugural Session of the Fifth General
Conference of the Bishops of Latin America and
the Caribbean (13 May 2007), 3: AAS 99 (2007),
450.
[108] Cf. Fifth General Conference of the Latin
American and Caribbean Bishops, Aparecida
Document (29 June 2007), nn. 43-87, pp. 31-47.
[109] Fifth General Conference of the Latin
American and Caribbean Bishops, Final Message
(29 May 2007), n. 4, Bogotá 2007, p. 275.
[110] Fifth General Conference of the Latin
American and Caribbean Bishops, Aparecida
Document (29 June 2007), n. 398, p. 182.
[111] Francis, Apostolic Exhortation Evangelii
Gaudium (24 November 2013), 199: AAS 105 (2013),
1103-1104.
[112] Ibid., 198: AAS 105 (2013), 1103.
[113] Ibid.
[114] Fifth General Conference of the Bishops of
Latin America and the Caribbean, Aparecida
Document (29 June 2007), n. 397, p. 182.
[115] Francis, Encyclical Letter Fratelli Tutti
(3 October 2020), 64: AAS 112 (2020), 992.
[116] Francis, Apostolic Exhortation Gaudete et
Exsultate (19 March 2018), 98: AAS 110 (2018),
1137.
[117] Francis, Encyclical Letter Fratelli Tutti
(3 October 2020), 65-66: AAS 112 (2020), 992.
[118] Gregory the Great, Homilia 40, 10: SC 522,
Paris 2008, 552-554.
[119] Ibid ., 6: SC 522, 546.
[120] Ibid ., 3: SC 522, 536.
[121] John Paul II, Encyclical Letter Centesimus
Annus (1 May 1991), 57: AAS 83 (1991), 862-863.
[122] Francis, Vigil of Pentecost with the
Ecclesial Movements (18 May 2013): L’Osservatore
Romano 20-21 May 2013, 5.
[123] Francis, Apostolic Exhortation Evangelii
Gaudium (24 November 2013), 186: AAS 105 (2013),
1098.
[124] Ibid., 188: AAS 105 (2013), 1099.
[125] Cf. ibid., 182-183: AAS 105 (2013),
1096-1097.
[126] Ibid., 207: AAS 105 (2013), 1107.
[127] Ibid., 200: AAS 105 (2013), 1104.
[128] Francis, Address at the Meeting with
Representatives of the World of Labor at the
Ilva Factory in Genoa (27 May 2017): AAS 109
(2017), 613.
[129] Pseudo-Chrysostom, Homilia de Jejunio et
Eleemosyna: PG 48, 1060.
[130] Gregory Nazianzus, Oratio XIV, 40: PG 35,
Paris 1886, 910.
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