MESSAGE OF HIS HOLINESS POPE FRANCIS
FOR LENT 2025
Let us journey together in hope
Dear brothers and sisters,
We begin our annual pilgrimage of Lent in faith
and hope with the penitential rite of the
imposition of ashes. The Church, our mother and
teacher, invites us to open our hearts to God’s
grace, so that we can celebrate with great joy
the paschal victory of Christ the Lord over sin
and death, which led Saint Paul to exclaim:
“Death has been swallowed up in victory. Where,
O death, is your victory? Where, O death, is
your sting?” ( 1 Cor 15:54-55). Indeed, Jesus
Christ, crucified and risen, is the heart of our
faith and the pledge of our hope in the Father’s
great promise, already fulfilled in his beloved
Son: life eternal (cf. Jn 10:28; 17:3). [1]
This Lent, as we share in the grace of the
Jubilee Year, I would like to propose a few
reflections on what it means to journey together
in hope, and on the summons to conversion that
God in his mercy addresses to all of us, as
individuals and as a community.
First of all, to journey. The Jubilee motto,
“Pilgrims of Hope”, evokes the lengthy journey
of the people of Israel to the Promised Land, as
recounted in the Book of Exodus. This arduous
path from slavery to freedom was willed and
guided by the Lord, who loves his people and
remains ever faithful to them. It is hard to
think of the biblical exodus without also
thinking of those of our brothers and sisters
who in our own day are fleeing situations of
misery and violence in search of a better life
for themselves and their loved ones. A first
call to conversion thus comes from the
realization that all of us are pilgrims in this
life; each of us is invited to stop and ask how
our lives reflect this fact. Am I really on a
journey, or am I standing still, not moving,
either immobilized by fear and hopelessness or
reluctant to move out of my comfort zone? Am I
seeking ways to leave behind the occasions of
sin and situations that degrade my dignity? It
would be a good Lenten exercise for us to
compare our daily life with that of some migrant
or foreigner, to learn how to sympathize with
their experiences and in this way discover what
God is asking of us so that we can better
advance on our journey to the house of the
Father. This would be a good “examination of
conscience” for all of us wayfarers.
Second, to journey together. The Church is
called to walk together, to be synodal. [2]
Christians are called to walk at the side
of others, and never as lone travellers. The
Holy Spirit impels us not to remain
self-absorbed, but to leave ourselves behind and
keep walking towards God and our brothers and
sisters. [3] Journeying together means
consolidating the unity grounded in our common
dignity as children of God (cf. Gal 3:26-28). It
means walking side-by-side, without shoving or
stepping on others, without envy or hypocrisy,
without letting anyone be left behind or
excluded. Let us all walk in the same direction,
tending towards the same goal, attentive to one
another in love and patience.
This Lent, God is asking us to examine whether
in our lives, in our families, in the places
where we work and spend our time, we are capable
of walking together with others, listening to
them, resisting the temptation to become
self-absorbed and to think only of our own
needs. Let us ask ourselves in the presence of
the Lord whether, as bishops, priests,
consecrated persons and laity in the service of
the Kingdom of God, we cooperate with others.
Whether we show ourselves welcoming, with
concrete gestures, to those both near and far.
Whether we make others feel a part of the
community or keep them at a distance. [4] This,
then, is a second call to conversion: a summons
to synodality.
Third, let us journey together in hope, for we
have been given a promise. May the hope that
does not disappoint (cf. Rom 5:5), the central
message of the Jubilee, [5] be the focus of our
Lenten journey towards the victory of Easter. As
Pope Benedict XVI taught us in the Encyclical
Spe Salvi, “the human being needs unconditional
love.
He needs the certainty which makes him
say: ‘neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor
principalities, nor things present, nor things
to come, nor powers, nor height, nor depth, nor
anything else in all creation, will be able to
separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus
our Lord’ ( Rom 8:38-39)”. [6] Christ, my hope,
has risen! [7]
He lives and reigns in glory. Death has
been transformed into triumph, and the faith and
great hope of Christians rests in this: the
resurrection of Christ!
This, then, is the third call to conversion: a
call to hope, to trust in God and his great
promise of eternal life. Let us ask ourselves:
Am I convinced that the Lord forgives my sins?
Or do I act as if I can save myself? Do I long
for salvation and call upon God’s help to attain
it? Do I concretely experience the hope that
enables me to interpret the events of history
and inspires in me a commitment to justice and
fraternity, to care for our common home and in
such a way that no one feels excluded?
Sisters and brothers, thanks to God’s love in
Jesus Christ, we are sustained in the hope that
does not disappoint (cf. Rom 5:5). Hope is the
“sure and steadfast anchor of the soul”. [8] It
moves the Church to pray for “everyone to be
saved” ( 1 Tim 2:4) and to look forward to her
being united with Christ, her bridegroom, in the
glory of heaven. This was the prayer of Saint
Teresa of Avila: “Hope, O my soul, hope. You
know neither the day nor the hour. Watch
carefully, for everything passes quickly, even
though your impatience makes doubtful what is
certain, and turns a very short time into a long
one” ( The Exclamations of the Soul to God,
15:3). [9]
May the Virgin Mary, Mother of Hope, intercede
for us and accompany us on our Lenten journey.
Rome, Saint John Lateran, 6 February 2025
Memorial of St Paul Miki and Companions,
martyrs.
FRANCIS
__________________________
[1] Cf. Encyclical Letter Dilexit Nos (24
October 2024), 220 .
[2] Cf. Homily for the Mass and Canonization of
Giovanni Battista Scalabrini and Artemide Zatti,
9 October 2022.
[3] Ibid.
[4] Ibid.
[5] Cf. Bull Spes Non Confundit , 1.
[6] Encyclical Letter Spe Salvi (30 November
2007), 26.
[7] Cf.
Easter Sequence.
[8] Cf.
Catechism of the Catholic Church , 1820.
[9]
Ibid, 1821.
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