MESSAGE OF HIS HOLINESS POPE FRANCIS
FOR LENT 2023
Lenten Penance and the Synodal Journey
Dear brothers and sisters!
The Gospels of Matthew, Mark and Luke all
recount the episode of the Transfiguration of
Jesus. There we see the Lord’s response to the
failure of his disciples to understand him.
Shortly before, there had been a real clash
between the Master and Simon Peter, who, after
professing his faith in Jesus as the Christ, the
Son of God, rejected his prediction of the
passion and the cross. Jesus had firmly rebuked
him: “Get behind me, Satan! You are a scandal to
me, because you do not think according to God,
but according to men!” (Mt 16:23). Following
this, “six days later, Jesus took with him
Peter, James and John his brother and led them
away to a high mountain” (Mt 17:1).
The Gospel of the Transfiguration is proclaimed
every year on the Second Sunday of Lent. During
this liturgical season, the Lord takes us with
him to a place apart. While our ordinary
commitments compel us to remain in our usual
places and our often repetitive and sometimes
boring routines, during Lent we are invited to
ascend “a high mountain” in the company of Jesus
and to live a particular experience of spiritual
discipline – ascesis – as God’s holy people.
Lenten penance is a commitment, sustained by
grace, to overcoming our lack of faith and our
resistance to following Jesus on the way of the
cross. This is precisely what Peter and the
other disciples needed to do. To deepen our
knowledge of the Master, to fully understand and
embrace the mystery of his salvation,
accomplished in total self-giving inspired by
love, we must allow ourselves to be taken aside
by him and to detach ourselves from mediocrity
and vanity. We need to set out on the journey,
an uphill path that, like a mountain trek,
requires effort, sacrifice and concentration.
These requisites are also important for the
synodal journey to which, as a Church, we are
committed to making. We can benefit greatly from
reflecting on the relationship between Lenten
penance and the synodal experience.
In his “retreat” on Mount Tabor, Jesus takes
with him three disciples, chosen to be witnesses
of a unique event. He wants that experience of
grace to be shared, not solitary, just as our
whole life of faith is an experience that is
shared. For it is in togetherness that we follow
Jesus. Together too, as a pilgrim Church in
time, we experience the liturgical year and Lent
within it, walking alongside those whom the Lord
has placed among us as fellow travellers. Like
the ascent of Jesus and the disciples to Mount
Tabor, we can say that our Lenten journey is “synodal”,
since we make it together along the same path,
as disciples of the one Master. For we know that
Jesus is himself the Way, and therefore, both in
the liturgical journey and in the journey of the
Synod, the Church does nothing other than enter
ever more deeply and fully into the mystery of
Christ the Saviour.
And so we come to its culmination. The Gospel
relates that Jesus “was transfigured before
them; his face shone like the sun and his
clothes became white as light” (Mt 17:2).This is
the “summit”, the goal of the journey. At the
end of their ascent, as they stand on the
mountain heights with Jesus, the three disciples
are given the grace of seeing him in his glory,
resplendent in supernatural light. That light
did not come from without, but radiated from the
Lord himself. The divine beauty of this vision
was incomparably greater than all the efforts
the disciples had made in the ascent of Tabor.
During any strenuous mountain trek, we must keep
our eyes firmly fixed on the path; yet the
panorama that opens up at the end amazes us and
rewards us by its grandeur. So too, the synodal
process may often seem arduous, and at times we
may become discouraged. Yet what awaits us at
the end is undoubtedly something wondrous and
amazing, which will help us to understand better
God’s will and our mission in the service of his
kingdom.
The disciples’ experience on Mount Tabor was
further enriched when, alongside the
transfigured Jesus, Moses and Elijah appeared,
signifying respectively the Law and the Prophets
(cf. Mt 17:3). The newness of Christ is at the
same time the fulfilment of the ancient covenant
and promises; it is inseparable from God’s
history with his people and discloses its deeper
meaning. In a similar way, the synodal journey
is rooted in the Church’s tradition and at the
same time open to newness. Tradition is a source
of inspiration for seeking new paths and for
avoiding the opposed temptations of immobility
and improvised experimentation.
The Lenten journey of penance and the journey of
the Synod alike have as their goal a
transfiguration, both personal and ecclesial. A
transformation that, in both cases, has its
model in the Transfiguration of Jesus and is
achieved by the grace of his paschal mystery. So
that this transfiguration may become a reality
in us this year, I would like to propose two
“paths” to follow in order to ascend the
mountain together with Jesus and, with him, to
attain the goal.
The first path has to do with the command that
God the Father addresses to the disciples on
Mount Tabor as they contemplate Jesus
transfigured. The voice from the cloud says:
“Listen to him” (Mt 17:5). The first proposal,
then, is very clear: we need to listen to Jesus.
Lent is a time of grace to the extent that we
listen to him as he speaks to us. And how does
he speak to us? First, in the word of God, which
the Church offers us in the liturgy. May that
word not fall on deaf ears; if we cannot always
attend Mass, let us study its daily biblical
readings, even with the help of the internet. In
addition to the Scriptures, the Lord speaks to
us through our brothers and sisters, especially
in the faces and the stories of those who are in
need. Let me say something else, which is quite
important for the synodal process: listening to
Christ often takes place in listening to our
brothers and sisters in the Church. Such mutual
listening in some phases is the primary goal,
but it remains always indispensable in the
method and style of a synodal Church.
On hearing the Father’s voice, the disciples
“fell prostrate and were very much afraid. But
Jesus came and touched them, saying, ‘Rise, and
do not be afraid.’ And when the disciples raised
their eyes, they saw no one else but Jesus
alone” (Mt 17:6-8). Here is the second proposal
for this Lent: do not take refuge in a
religiosity made up of extraordinary events and
dramatic experiences, out of fear of facing
reality and its daily struggles, its hardships
and contradictions. The light that Jesus shows
the disciples is an anticipation of Easter
glory, and that must be the goal of our own
journey, as we follow “him alone”.
Lent leads to Easter: the “retreat” is
not an end in itself, but a means of preparing
us to experience the Lord’s passion and cross
with faith, hope and love, and thus to arrive at
the resurrection. Also on the synodal journey,
when God gives us the grace of certain powerful
experiences of communion, we should not imagine
that we have arrived – for there too, the Lord
repeats to us: “Rise, and do not be afraid”. Let
us go down, then, to the plain, and may the
grace we have experienced strengthen us to be
“artisans of synodality” in the ordinary life of
our communities.
Dear brothers and sisters, may the Holy Spirit
inspire and sustain us this Lent in our ascent
with Jesus, so that we may experience his divine
splendour and thus, confirmed in faith,
persevere in our journey together with him,
glory of his people and light of the nations.
Rome, Saint John Lateran, 25 January, Feast of
the Conversion of Saint Paul
FRANCIS
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