MESSAGE OF HIS HOLINESS POPE FRANCIS
FOR THE 61st WORLD DAY OF PRAYER FOR VOCATIONS
[21 April 2024]
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Called to sow seeds of hope and to build peace
Dear brothers and sisters!
Each year, the World Day of Prayer for Vocations
invites us to reflect on the precious gift of
the Lord’s call to each of us, as members of his
faithful pilgrim people, to participate in his
loving plan and to embody the beauty of the
Gospel in different states of life. Hearing that
divine call, which is far from being an imposed
duty – even in the name of a religious ideal –
is the surest way for us to fulfil our deepest
desire for happiness. Our life finds fulfilment
when we discover who we are, what our gifts are,
where we can make them bear fruit, and what path
we can follow in order to become signs and
instruments of love, generous acceptance, beauty
and peace, wherever we find ourselves.
This Day, then, is always a good occasion to
recall with gratitude to the Lord the faithful,
persevering and frequently hidden efforts of all
those who have responded to a call that embraces
their entire existence. I think of mothers and
fathers who do not think first of themselves or
follow fleeting fads of the moment, but shape
their lives through relationships marked by love
and graciousness, openness to the gift of life
and commitment to their children and their
growth in maturity. I think of all those who
carry out their work in a spirit of cooperation
with others, and those who strive in various
ways to build a more just world, a more solidary
economy, a more equitable social policy and a
more humane society. In a word, of all those men
and women of good will who devote their lives to
working for the common good. I think too of all
those consecrated men and women who offer their
lives to the Lord in the silence of prayer and
in apostolic activity, sometimes on the fringes
of society, tirelessly and creatively exercising
their charism by serving those around them. And
I think of all those who have accepted God’s
call to the ordained priesthood, devoting
themselves to the preaching of the Gospel,
breaking open their own lives, together with the
bread of the Eucharist, for their brothers and
sisters, sowing seeds of hope and revealing to
all the beauty of God’s kingdom.
To young people, and especially those who feel
distant or uncertain about the Church, I want to
say this: Let Jesus draw you to himself; bring
him your important questions by reading the
Gospels; let him challenge you by his presence,
which always provokes in us a healthy crisis.
More than anyone else, Jesus respects our
freedom. He does not impose, but proposes. Make
room for him and you will find the way to
happiness by following him. And, should he ask
it of you, by giving yourself completely to him.
A people on the move
The polyphony of diverse charisms and vocations
that the Christian community recognizes and
accompanies helps us to appreciate more fully
what it means to be Christians. As God’s people
in this world, guided by his Holy Spirit, and as
living stones in the Body of Christ, we come to
realize that we are members of a great family,
children of the Father and brothers and sisters
of one another. We are not self-enclosed islands
but parts of a greater whole.
In this sense, the World Day of Prayer
for Vocations has a synodal character: amid the
variety of our charisms, we are called to listen
to one another and to journey together in order
to acknowledge them and to discern where the
Spirit is leading us for the benefit of all.
At this point in time, then, our common journey
is bringing us to the Jubilee Year of 2025. Let
us travel as pilgrims of hope towards the Holy
Year, for by discovering our own vocation and
its place amid the different gifts bestowed by
the Spirit, we can become for our world
messengers and witnesses of Jesus’ dream of a
single human family, united in God’s love and in
the bond of charity, cooperation and fraternity.
This Day is dedicated in a particular way to
imploring from the Father the gift of holy
vocations for the building up of his Kingdom:
“Ask the Lord of the harvest to send out
labourers into his harvest” (Lk 10:2). Prayer –
as we all know – is more about listening to God
than about talking to him. The Lord speaks to
our heart, and he wants to find it open, sincere
and generous.
His Word became flesh in Jesus Christ,
who reveals to us the entire will of the Father.
In this present year, devoted to prayer and
preparation for the Jubilee, all of us are
called to rediscover the inestimable blessing of
our ability to enter into heartfelt dialogue
with the Lord and thus become pilgrims of hope.
For “prayer is the first strength of hope. You
pray and hope grows, it moves forward. I would
say that prayer opens the door to hope. Hope is
there, but by my prayer I open the door”
(Catechesis, 20 May 2020).
Pilgrims of hope and builders of peace
Yet what does it mean to be pilgrims? Those who
go on pilgrimage seek above all to keep their
eyes fixed on the goal, to keep it always in
their mind and heart. To achieve that goal,
however, they need to concentrate on every step,
which means travelling light, getting rid of
what weighs them down, carrying only the
essentials and striving daily to set aside all
weariness, fear, uncertainty and hesitation.
Being a pilgrim means setting out each day,
beginning ever anew, rediscovering the
enthusiasm and strength needed to pursue the
various stages of a journey that, however tiring
and difficult, always opens before our eyes new
horizons and previously unknown vistas.
This is the ultimate meaning of our Christian
pilgrimage: we set out on a journey to discover
the love of God and at the same time to discover
ourselves, thanks to an interior journey
nourished by our relationships with others. We
are pilgrims because we have been called: called
to love God and to love one another. Our
pilgrimage on this earth is far from a pointless
journey or aimless wandering; on the contrary,
each day, by responding to God’s call, we try to
take every step needed to advance towards a new
world where people can live in peace, justice
and love. We are pilgrims of hope because we are
pressing forward towards a better future,
committed at every step to bringing it about.
This is, in the end, the goal of every vocation:
to become men and women of hope. As individuals
and as communities, amid the variety of charisms
and ministries, all of us are called to embody
and communicate the Gospel message of hope in a
world marked by epochal challenges. These
include the baneful spectre of a third world war
fought piecemeal; the flood of migrants fleeing
their homelands in search of a better future;
the burgeoning numbers of the poor; the threat
of irreversibly compromising the health of our
planet. To say nothing of all the difficulties
we encounter each day, which at times risk
plunging us into resignation or defeatism.
In our day, then, it is decisive that we
Christians cultivate a gaze full of hope and
work fruitfully in response to the vocation we
have received, in service to God’s kingdom of
love, justice and peace. This hope – Saint Paul
tells us – “does not disappoint” (Rom 5:5),
since it is born of the Lord’s promise that he
will remain always with us and include us in the
work of redemption that he wants to accomplish
in the heart of each individual and in the
“heart” of all creation. This hope finds its
propulsive force in Christ’s resurrection, which
“contains a vital power which has permeated this
world.
Where all seems to be dead, signs of the
resurrection suddenly spring up. It is an
irresistible force. Often it seems that God does
not exist: all around us, we see persistent
injustice, evil, indifference and cruelty. But
it is also true that in the midst of darkness
something new always springs to life and sooner
or later produces fruit” (Evangelii Gaudium,
276). Again, the Apostle Paul tells us that, “in
hope we were saved” (Rom 8:24). The redemption
accomplished in the paschal mystery is a source
of hope, a sure and trustworthy hope, thanks to
which we can face the challenges of the present.
To be pilgrims of hope and builders of peace,
then, means to base our lives on the rock of
Christ’s resurrection, knowing that every effort
made in the vocation that we have embraced and
seek to live out, will never be in vain.
Failures and obstacles may arise along
the way, but the seeds of goodness we sow are
quietly growing and nothing can separate us from
the final goal: our encounter with Christ and
the joy of living for eternity in fraternal
love. This ultimate calling is one that we must
anticipate daily: even now our loving
relationship with God and our brothers and
sisters is beginning to bring about God’s dream
of unity, peace and fraternity. May no one feel
excluded from this calling! Each of us in our
own small way, in our particular state of life,
can, with the help of the Spirit, be a sower of
seeds of hope and peace.
The courage to commit
In this light, I would say once more, as I did
at World Youth Day in Lisbon: “Rise up!” Let us
awaken from sleep, let us leave indifference
behind, let us open the doors of the prison in
which we so often enclose ourselves, so that
each of us can discover his or her proper
vocation in the Church and in the world, and
become a pilgrim of hope and a builder of peace!
Let us be passionate about life, and commit
ourselves to caring lovingly for those around
us, in every place where we live. Let me say it
again: “Have the courage to commit!” Father
Oreste Benzi, a tireless apostle of charity,
ever on the side of the poor and the
defenseless, used to say that no one is so poor
as to have nothing to give, and no one is so
rich as not to need something to receive.
Let us rise up, then, and set out as pilgrims of
hope, so that, as Mary was for Elizabeth, we too
can be messengers of joy, sources of new life
and artisans of fraternity and peace.
Rome, Saint John Lateran, 21 April 2024, Fourth
Sunday of Easter.
FRANCIS
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