MESSAGE OF HIS HOLINESS POPE FRANCIS
FOR LENT 2024
Through the Desert God Leads us to Freedom
Dear brothers and sisters!
When our God reveals himself, his message is
always one of freedom: “I am the Lord your God,
who brought you out of the land of Egypt, out of
the house of slavery” (Ex 20:2). These are the
first words of the Decalogue given to Moses on
Mount Sinai. Those who heard them were quite
familiar with the exodus of which God spoke: the
experience of their bondage still weighed
heavily upon them. In the desert, they received
the “Ten Words” as a thoroughfare to freedom. We
call them “commandments”, in order to emphasize
the strength of the love by which God shapes his
people. The call to freedom is a demanding one.
It is not answered straightaway; it has to
mature as part of a journey. Just as Israel in
the desert still clung to Egypt – often longing
for the past and grumbling against the Lord and
Moses – today too, God’s people can cling to an
oppressive bondage that it is called to leave
behind. We realize how true this is at those
moments when we feel hopeless, wandering through
life like a desert and lacking a promised land
as our destination. Lent is the season of grace
in which the desert can become once more – in
the words of the prophet Hosea – the place of
our first love (cf. Hos 2:16-17). God shapes his
people, he enables us to leave our slavery
behind and experience a Passover from death to
life. Like a bridegroom, the Lord draws us once
more to himself, whispering words of love to our
hearts.
The exodus from slavery to freedom is no
abstract journey. If our celebration of Lent is
to be concrete, the first step is to desire to
open our eyes to reality. When the Lord calls
out to Moses from the burning bush, he
immediately shows that he is a God who sees and,
above all, hears: “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 from the Egyptians, and to bring
them up out of that land to a good and broad
land, a land flowing with milk and honey” (Ex
3:7-8). Today too, the cry of so many of our
oppressed brothers and sisters rises to heaven.
Let us ask ourselves: Do we hear that cry? Does
it trouble us? Does it move us? All too many
things keep us apart from each other, denying
the fraternity that, from the beginning, binds
us to one another.
During my visit to Lampedusa, as a way of
countering the globalization of indifference, I
asked two questions, which have become more and
more pressing: “Where are you?” (Gen 3:9) and
“Where is your brother?” (Gen 4:9). Our Lenten
journey will be concrete if, by listening once
more to those two questions, we realize that
even today we remain under the rule of Pharaoh.
A rule that makes us weary and indifferent. A
model of growth that divides and robs us of a
future. Earth, air and water are polluted, but
so are our souls. True, Baptism has begun our
process of liberation, yet there remains in us
an inexplicable longing for slavery. A kind of
attraction to the security of familiar things,
to the detriment of our freedom.
In the Exodus account, there is a significant
detail: it is God who sees, is moved and brings
freedom; Israel does not ask for this. Pharaoh
stifles dreams, blocks the view of heaven, makes
it appear that this world, in which human
dignity is trampled upon and authentic bonds are
denied, can never change. He put everything in
bondage to himself. Let us ask: Do I want a new
world? Am I ready to leave behind my compromises
with the old? The witness of many of my brother
bishops and a great number of those who work for
peace and justice has increasingly convinced me
that we need to combat a deficit of hope that
stifles dreams and the silent cry that reaches
to heaven and moves the heart of God. This
“deficit of hope” is not unlike the nostalgia
for slavery that paralyzed Israel in the desert
and prevented it from moving forward. An exodus
can be interrupted: how else can we explain the
fact that humanity has arrived at the threshold
of universal fraternity and at levels of
scientific, technical, cultural, and juridical
development capable of guaranteeing dignity to
all, yet gropes about in the darkness of
inequality and conflict.
God has not grown weary of us. Let us welcome
Lent as the great season in which he reminds us:
“I am the Lord your God, who brought you out of
the land of Egypt, out of the house of slavery”
(Ex 20:2). Lent is a season of conversion, a
time of freedom. Jesus himself, as we recall
each year on the first Sunday of Lent, was
driven into the desert by the Spirit in order to
be tempted in freedom. For forty days, he will
stand before us and with us: the incarnate Son.
Unlike Pharaoh, God does not want subjects, but
sons and daughters. The desert is the place
where our freedom can mature in a personal
decision not to fall back into slavery. In Lent,
we find new criteria of justice and a community
with which we can press forward on a road not
yet taken.
This, however, entails a struggle, as the book
of Exodus and the temptations of Jesus in the
desert make clear to us. The voice of God, who
says, “You are my Son, the Beloved” (Mk 1:11),
and “You shall have no other gods before me” (Ex
20:3) is opposed by the enemy and his lies.
Even more to be feared than Pharaoh are
the idols that we set up for ourselves; we can
consider them as his voice speaking within us.
To be all-powerful, to be looked up to by all,
to domineer over others: every human being is
aware of how deeply seductive that lie can be.
It is a road well-travelled. We can become
attached to money, to certain projects, ideas or
goals, to our position, to a tradition, even to
certain individuals. Instead of making us move
forward, they paralyze us. Instead of encounter,
they create conflict. Yet there is also a new
humanity, a people of the little ones and of the
humble who have not yielded to the allure of the
lie. Whereas those who serve idols become like
them, mute, blind, deaf and immobile (cf. Ps
114:4), the poor of spirit are open and ready: a
silent force of good that heals and sustains the
world.
It is time to act, and in Lent, to act also
means to pause. To pause in prayer, in order to
receive the word of God, to pause like the
Samaritan in the presence of a wounded brother
or sister. Love of God and love of neighbour are
one love. Not to have other gods is to pause in
the presence of God beside the flesh of our
neighbour. For this reason, prayer, almsgiving
and fasting are not three unrelated acts, but a
single movement of openness and self-emptying,
in which we cast out the idols that weigh us
down, the attachments that imprison us. Then the
atrophied and isolated heart will revive. Slow
down, then, and pause! The contemplative
dimension of life that Lent helps us to
rediscover will release new energies. In the
presence of God, we become brothers and sisters,
more sensitive to one another: in place of
threats and enemies, we discover companions and
fellow travelers. This is God’s dream, the
promised land to which we journey once we have
left our slavery behind.
The Church’s synodal form, which in these years
we are rediscovering and cultivating, suggests
that Lent is also a time of communitarian
decisions, of decisions, small and large, that
are countercurrent. Decisions capable of
altering the daily lives of individuals and
entire neighbourhoods, such as the ways we
acquire goods, care for creation, and strive to
include those who go unseen or are looked down
upon. I invite every Christian community to do
just this: to offer its members moments set
aside to rethink their lifestyles, times to
examine their presence in society and the
contribution they make to its betterment. Woe to
us if our Christian penance were to resemble the
kind of penance that so dismayed Jesus. To us
too, he says: “Whenever you fast, do not look
dismal, like the hypocrites, for they disfigure
their faces so as to show others that they are
fasting” (Mt 6:16). Instead, let others see
joyful faces, catch the scent of freedom and
experience the love that makes all things new,
beginning with the smallest and those nearest to
us. This can happen in every one of our
Christian communities.
To the extent that this Lent becomes a time of
conversion, an anxious humanity will notice a
burst of creativity, a flash of new hope. Allow
me to repeat what I told the young people whom I
met in Lisbon last summer: “Keep seeking and be
ready to take risks. At this moment in time, we
face enormous risks; we hear the painful plea of
so many people. Indeed, we are experiencing a
third world war fought piecemeal. Yet let us
find the courage to see our world, not as being
in its death throes but in a process of giving
birth, not at the end but at the beginning of a
great new chapter of history. We need courage to
think like this” ( Address to University
Students, 3 August 2023). Such is the courage of
conversion, born of coming up from slavery. For
faith and charity take hope, this small child,
by the hand. They teach her to walk, and at the
same time, she leads them forward. [1]
I bless all of you and your Lenten journey.
Rome, Saint John Lateran, 3 December 2023, First
Sunday of Advent.
FRANCIS
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[1] Cf. CH. PÉGUY, The Portico of the Mystery of
the Second Virtue.
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