MESSAGE OF HIS HOLINESS POPE FRANCIS
FOR THE FIRST WORLD CHILDREN’S DAY
25-26 May 2024
Dear Children!
Your first World Day, which will be held in Rome
on 25-26 May this year, is fast approaching.
That is why I thought of sending you a Message.
I am happy that you will be able to read it and
I thank all those responsible for passing it on
to you.
I want to speak to each of you, dear children,
because, as the Bible teaches us, and as Jesus
showed so often, “you are precious” in God’s
eyes (Is 43:4).
At the same time, I am addressing this Message
to all of you, because all children, everywhere,
are a sign of every person’s desire to grow and
flourish. You remind us that we are all
children, brothers and sisters. We would not be
alive unless others brought us into this world,
nor could we grow without having others to love
and from whom to receive love (cf. Fratelli
Tutti, 95).
All of you, girls and boys, are a source of joy
for your parents and your families, but also for
our human family and for the Church, in which
each of us is like a link in a great chain
stretching from the past to the future and
covering the whole earth. That is why I
encourage you to pay attention to the stories of
grown-ups: your moms and dads, your grandparents
and great grandparents. And not to forget all
those other children and young people who are
already battling illness and hardship, in
hospital or at home, and those who even now are
being cruelly robbed of their childhood. I think
of children who are victims of war and violence,
those experiencing hunger and thirst, those
living on the streets, those forced to be
soldiers or to flee as refugees, separated from
their parents, those prevented from going to
school, and those who fall prey to criminal
gangs, drugs or other forms of slavery and
abuse. Let us listen to their voices. We need to
hear those voices, for amid their sufferings
they remind us of reality, with their tearful
eyes and with that tenacious yearning for
goodness that endures in the hearts of those who
have truly seen the horror of evil.
Dear young friends, in order for us and our
world to grow and flourish, it is not enough to
be united with one another; we need, above all
else, to be united with Jesus. From him we
receive a great deal of courage. He is always
close to us, his Spirit goes before us and
accompanies us on all the world’s pathways.
Jesus told us: “Behold, I make all things new”
(Rev 21:5); this is the theme I have chosen for
your first World Day. These words invite us to
become as clever as children in grasping the new
realities stirred up by the Spirit, both within
us and around us. With Jesus, we can dream of
the renewal of our human family and work for a
more fraternal society that cares for our common
home. This starts with little things, like
saying hello to others, asking permission,
begging pardon, and saying thank you. Our world
will changed if we all begin with these little
things, without being ashamed to take small
steps, one at a time. The fact that we are small
reminds us that we are also frail and need one
another as members of one body (cf. Rom 12:5; 1
Cor 12:26).
That is not all. The fact is that we cannot be
happy all by ourselves, because our joy
increases to the extent that we share it. Joy is
born of gratitude for the gifts we have received
and which we share in turn and it grows in our
relationships with others. When we keep the
blessings we have received to ourselves, or
throw tantrums to get this or that gift, we
forget that the greatest gift that we possess is
ourselves, one another: all of us, together, are
“God’s gift.” Other gifts are nice, but only if
they help us to be together. If we don’t use
them for that purpose, we will always end up
being unhappy; they will never be enough.
Instead, when we are all together, everything is
different! Think of your friends, and how great
it is to spend time with them: at home, at
school, in the parish and the playground,
everywhere. Playing, singing, discovering new
things, having fun, everyone being together and
excluding no one. Friendship is wonderful and it
grows only in this way: through sharing and
forgiving, with patience, courage, creativity
and imagination, without fear and without
prejudice.
Now, I am going to share a special secret with
you. If we really want to be happy, we need to
pray, to pray a lot, to pray every day, because
prayer connects us directly to God. Prayer fills
our hearts with light and warmth; it helps us to
do everything with confidence and peace of mind.
Jesus constantly prayed to the Father. Do you
know what Jesus called him? In his language, he
simply called him “Abba”, which means “Daddy”
(cf. Mk 14:36). Let’s do the same thing! We will
always feel that Jesus is close to us. He
himself promised us that, when he said, “For
where two or three are gathered in my name,
there am I in the midst of them” (Mt 18:20).
Dear children, you may know that in May, many of
us will be together in Rome, to be together with
children from all over the world. To prepare
well for this, I would ask all of you to pray
the same prayer that Jesus taught us – the Our
Father. Recite it every morning and every
evening, in your families too, together with
your parents, brothers, sisters and
grandparents. But not just by saying the words!
Think about those words that Jesus taught us. He
is calling us and he wants us to join actively
with him, on this World Children’s Day, to
become builders of a new, more humane, just and
peaceful world. Jesus, who offered himself on
the Cross to gather all of us together in love,
who conquered death and reconciled us with the
Father, wants to continue his work in the Church
through us. Think about this, especially those
of you who are preparing to receive First
Communion.
God has loved us from all eternity (cf. Jer
1:5). He looks upon us with the eyes of a loving
father and a gentle mother. He never forgets us
(cf. Is 49:15) and every day he accompanies us
and renews us with his Spirit.
Together with the Most Blessed Virgin Mary and
Saint Joseph, let us pray in these words:
Come, Holy Spirit,
show us your beauty,
reflected in the faces
of children all over the the world.
Come, Jesus,
you who make all things new,
who are the way that leads us to the Father,
come and remain with us always.
Amen.
Rome, Saint John Lateran, 2 March 2024
FRANCIS
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