MESSAGE OF HIS HOLINESS POPE FRANCIS
FOR LENT 2022
“Let us not grow tired of doing good, for in due
time we shall reap our harvest,
if we do not give up. So then, while we have the
opportunity,
let us do good to all”
(Gal 6:9-10)
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
Lent is a favourable time for personal and
community renewal, as it leads us to the paschal
mystery of the death and resurrection of Jesus
Christ. For our Lenten journey in 2022, we will
do well to reflect on Saint Paul’s exhortation
to the Galatians: “Let us not grow tired of
doing good, for in due time we shall reap our
harvest, if we do not give up. So then, while we
have the opportunity (kairós), let us do good to
all” (Gal 6:9-10).
1. Sowing and reaping
In these words, the Apostle evokes the image of
sowing and reaping, so dear to Jesus (cf. Mt
13). Saint Paul speaks to us of a kairós: an
opportune time for sowing goodness in view of a
future harvest. What is this “opportune time”
for us? Lent is certainly such an opportune
time, but so is our entire existence, of which
Lent is in some way an image. [1] All too often
in our lives, greed, pride and the desire to
possess, accumulate and consume have the upper
hand, as we see from the story of the foolish
man in the Gospel parable, who thought his life
was safe and secure because of the abundant
grain and goods he had stored in his barns (cf.
Lk 12:16-21). Lent invites us to conversion, to
a change in mindset, so that life’s truth and
beauty may be found not so much in possessing as
in giving, not so much in accumulating as in
sowing and sharing goodness.
The first to sow is God himself, who with great
generosity “continues to sow abundant seeds of
goodness in our human family” (Fratelli Tutti,
54). During Lent we are called to respond to
God’s gift by accepting his word, which is
“living and active” (Heb 4:12). Regular
listening to the word of God makes us open and
docile to his working (cf. Jas 1:21) and bears
fruit in our lives. This brings us great joy,
yet even more, it summons us to become God’s
co-workers (cf. 1 Cor 3:9). By making good use
of the present time (cf. Eph 5:16), we too can
sow seeds of goodness. This call to sow goodness
should not be seen as a burden but a grace,
whereby the Creator wishes us to be actively
united with his own bountiful goodness.
What about the harvest? Do we not sow seeds in
order to reap a harvest? Of course! Saint Paul
points to the close relationship between sowing
and reaping when he says: “Anyone who sows
sparsely will reap sparsely as well, and anyone
who sows generously will reap generously as
well” (2 Cor 9:6). But what kind of harvest are
we talking about? A first fruit of the goodness
we sow appears in ourselves and our daily lives,
even in our little acts of kindness. In God, no
act of love, no matter how small, and no
“generous effort” will ever be lost (cf.
Evangelii Gaudium, 279). Just as we recognize a
tree by its fruits (cf. Mt 7:16, 20), so a life
full of good deeds radiates light (cf. Mt
5:14-16) and carries the fragrance of Christ to
the world (cf. 2 Cor 2:15). Serving God in
freedom from sin brings forth fruits of
sanctification for the salvation of all (cf. Rom
6:22).
In truth, we see only a small portion of the
fruits of what we sow, since, according to the
Gospel proverb, “one sows, while another reaps”
(Jn 4:37). When we sow for the benefit of
others, we share in God’s own benevolent love:
“it is truly noble to place our hope in the
hidden power of the seeds of goodness we sow,
and thus to initiate processes whose fruits will
be reaped by others” (Fratelli Tutti, 196).
Sowing goodness for the benefit of others frees
us from narrow self-interest, infuses our
actions with gratuitousness, and makes us part
of the magnificent horizon of God’s benevolent
plan.
The word of God broadens and elevates our
vision: it tells us that the real harvest is
eschatological, the harvest of the last, undying
day. The mature fruit of our lives and actions
is “fruit for eternal life” (Jn 4:36), our
“treasure in heaven” (Lk 12:33; 18:22). Jesus
himself uses the image of the seed that dies in
the ground in order to bear fruit as a symbol of
the mystery of his death and resurrection (cf.
Jn 12:24); while Saint Paul uses the same image
to speak of the resurrection of our bodies:
“What is sown is perishable, but what is raised
is imperishable; what is sown is contemptible
but what is raised is glorious; what is sown is
weak, but what is raised is powerful; what is
sown is a natural body, and what is raised is a
spiritual body” (1 Cor 15:42-44). The hope of
resurrection is the great light that the risen
Christ brings to the world, for “if our hope in
Christ has been for this life only, we are of
all people the most pitiable. In fact, however,
Christ has been raised from the dead, as the
first-fruits of all who have fallen asleep” (1
Cor 15:19-20). Those who are intimately united
to him in love “by dying a death like his” (Rom
6:5) will also be united to his resurrection for
eternal life (cf. Jn 5:29). “Then the upright
will shine like the sun in the kingdom of their
Father” (Mt 13:43).
2. “Let us not grow tired of doing good”
Christ’s resurrection enlivens earthly hopes
with the “great hope” of eternal life, planting
the seed of salvation in our present time (cf.
BENEDICT XVI, Spe Salvi, 3; 7). Bitter
disappointment at shattered dreams, deep concern
for the challenges ahead and discouragement at
the poverty of our resources, can make us
tempted to seek refuge in self-centredness and
indifference to the suffering of others. Indeed,
even our best resources have their limitations:
“Youths grow tired and weary, the young stumble
and fall” (Is 40:30). Yet God “gives strength to
the weary, he strengthens the powerless… Those
who hope in the Lord will regain their strength,
they will soar on wings like eagles; though they
run they will not grow weary, though they walk
they will never tire» (Is 40:29, 31). The Lenten
season calls us to place our faith and hope in
the Lord (cf. 1 Pet 1:21), since only if we fix
our gaze on the risen Christ (cf. Heb 12:2) will
we be able to respond to the Apostle’s appeal,
“Let us never grow tired of doing good” (Gal
6:9).
Let us not grow tired of praying. Jesus taught
us to “pray always without becoming weary” ( Lk
18:1). We need to pray because we need God.
Thinking that we need nothing other than
ourselves is a dangerous illusion. If the
pandemic has heightened the awareness of our own
personal and social fragility, may this Lent
allow us to experience the consolation provided
by faith in God, without whom we cannot stand
firm (cf. Is 7:9). No one attains salvation
alone, since we are all in the same boat, amid
the storms of history; [2] and certainly no one
reaches salvation without God, for only the
paschal mystery of Jesus Christ triumphs over
the dark waters of death. Faith does not spare
us life’s burdens and tribulations, but it does
allow us to face them in union with God in
Christ, with the great hope that does not
disappoint, whose pledge is the love that God
has poured into our hearts through the Holy
Spirit (cf. Rom 5:1-5).
Let us not grow tired of uprooting evil from our
lives. May the corporal fasting to which Lent
calls us fortify our spirit for the battle
against sin. Let us not grow tired of asking for
forgiveness in the Sacrament of Penance and
Reconciliation, knowing that God never tires of
forgiving. [3] Let us not grow tired of fighting
against concupiscence, that weakness which
induces to selfishness and all evil, and finds
in the course of history a variety of ways to
lure men and women into sin (cf. Fratelli Tutti,
166). One of these is addiction to the digital
media, which impoverishes human relationships.
Lent is a propitious time to resist these
temptations and to cultivate instead a more
integral form of human communication ( ibid.,
43) made up of “authentic encounters” ( ibid.,
50), face-to-face and in person.
Let us not grow tired of doing good in active
charity towards our neighbours. During this
Lent, may we practise almsgiving by giving
joyfully (cf. 2 Cor 9:7). God who “supplies seed
to the sower and bread for food” (2 Cor 9:10)
enables each of us not only to have food to eat,
but also to be generous in doing good to others.
While it is true that we have our entire life to
sow goodness, let us take special advantage of
this Lenten season to care for those close to us
and to reach out to our brothers and sisters who
lie wounded along the path of life (cf. Lk
10:25-37). Lent is a favourable time to seek out
– and not to avoid – those in need; to reach out
– and not to ignore – those who need a
sympathetic ear and a good word; to visit – and
not to abandon – those who are lonely. Let us
put into practice our call to do good to all,
and take time to love the poor and needy, those
abandoned and rejected, those discriminated
against and marginalized (cf. Fratelli Tutti,
193).
3. “If we do not give up, we shall reap our
harvest in due time”
Each year during Lent we are reminded that
“goodness, together with love, justice and
solidarity, are not achieved once and for all;
they have to be realized each day” (ibid., 11).
Let us ask God to give us the patient
perseverance of the farmer (cf. Jas 5:7), and to
persevere in doing good, one step at a time. If
we fall, let us stretch out our hand to the
Father, who always lifts us up. If we are lost,
if we are misled by the enticements of the evil
one, let us not hesitate to return to God, who
“is generous in forgiving” (Is 55:7). In this
season of conversion, sustained by God’s grace
and by the communion of the Church, let us not
grow tired of doing good. The soil is prepared
by fasting, watered by prayer and enriched by
charity. Let us believe firmly that “if we do
not give up, we shall reap our harvest in due
time” and that, with the gift of perseverance,
we shall obtain what was promised (cf. Heb
10:36), for our salvation and the salvation of
others (cf. 1 Tim 4:16). By cultivating
fraternal love towards everyone, we are united
to Christ, who gave his life for our sake (cf. 2
Cor 5:14-15), and we are granted a foretaste of
the joy of the kingdom of heaven, when God will
be “all in all” (1 Cor 15:28).
May the Virgin Mary, who bore the Saviour in her
womb and “pondered all these things in her
heart” (Lk 2:19), obtain for us the gift of
patience. May she accompany us with her maternal
presence, so that this season of conversion may
bring forth fruits of eternal salvation.
Rome, Saint John Lateran, 11 November, 2021,
Memorial of Saint Martin, Bishop.
FRANCIS
[1] Cf. SAINTAUGUSTINE, Serm. 243, 9,8; 270, 3;
En. in Ps. 110, 1.
[2] Cf. Extraordinary Moment of Prayer presided
over by Pope Francis (27 March 2020).
[3] Cf. Angelus, 17 March 2013.
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