MESSAGE OF HIS HOLINESS POPE FRANCIS
FOR THE 2023 WORLD DAY OF THE POOR
19 November 2023, Thirty-third Sunday in
Ordinary Time
“Do not turn your face away from anyone who is
poor” (Tob 4:7)
1. This, the seventh annual World Day of the
Poor, is a fruitful sign of the Father’s mercy
and a support for the lives of our communities.
As its celebration becomes more and more rooted
in the pastoral life of the Church, it enables
us to discover ever anew the heart of the
Gospel. Our daily efforts to welcome the poor
are still not enough. A great river of poverty
is traversing our cities and swelling to the
point of overflowing; it seems to overwhelm us,
so great are the needs of our brothers and
sisters who plead for our help, support and
solidarity. For this reason, on the Sunday
before the Solemnity of Jesus Christ King of the
Universe, we gather around his Table to receive
from him once more the gift and strength to live
lives of poverty and to serve the poor.
“Do not turn your face away from anyone who is
poor” (Tob 4:7). These words help us to
understand the essence of our witness. By
reflecting on the Book of Tobit, a little-known
text of the Old Testament, yet one that is
charming and full of wisdom, we can better
appreciate the message the sacred writer wished
to communicate. We find ourselves before a scene
of family life: a father, Tobit, embraces his
son, Tobias, who is about to set out on a
lengthy journey. The elderly Tobit fears that he
will never again see his son, and so leaves him
his “spiritual testament”. Tobit had been
deported to Nineveh and is now blind, and thus
doubly poor. At the same time, he remains always
certain of one thing, expressed by his very
name: “The Lord has been my good”. As a
God-fearing man and a good father, he wants to
leave his son not simply material riches, but
the witness of the right path to follow in life.
So he tells him: “Revere the Lord all your days,
my son, and refuse to sin or to transgress his
commandments. Live uprightly all the days of
your life, and do not walk in the ways of
wrongdoing” (4:5).
2. We see immediately that what the elderly
Tobit asks of his son is not simply to think of
God and to call upon him in prayer. He speaks of
making concrete gestures, carrying out good
works and practising justice. He goes on to
state this even more clearly: “To all those who
practice righteousness give alms from your
possessions, and do not let your eye begrudge
the gift when you make it” (4:7).
The words of this wise old man make us think. We
are reminded that Tobit had lost his sight after
having performed a work of mercy. As he himself
tells us, from youth he had devoted his life to
works of charity: “I performed many acts of
charity for my kindred and my people who had
gone with me in exile to Nineveh in the land of
the Assyrians… I would give my food to the
hungry and my clothing to the naked; and if I
saw the dead body of any of my people thrown out
behind the wall of Nineveh, I would bury it”
(1:3.17).
For this act of charity, the king had deprived
him of all his goods and reduced him to utter
poverty. Still, the Lord had need of Tobit; once
he regained his post as an official, he
courageously continued to do as he had done. Let
us hear his tale, which can also speak to us
today. “At our festival of Pentecost, which is
the sacred festival of weeks, a good dinner was
prepared for me and I reclined to it. When the
table was set for me and an abundance of food
was placed before me, I said to my son Tobias,
‘Go, my child, and bring whatever poor person
you may find of our people among the exiles of
Nineveh, who is wholeheartedly mindful of God,
and he shall eat together with me. I will wait
for you, until you come back’” (2:1-2). How
meaningful it would be if, on the Day of the
Poor, this concern of Tobit were also our own!
If we were to invite someone to share our Sunday
dinner, after sharing in the Eucharistic table,
the Eucharist we celebrate would truly become a
mark of communion. If it is true that around the
altar of the Lord we are conscious that we are
all brothers and sisters, how much more visible
would our fraternity be, if we shared our
festive meal with those who are in need!
Tobias did as his father told him, but he
returned with the news that a poor man had been
murdered and thrown into the market place.
Without hesitating, the elderly Tobit got up
from the table and went to bury that man.
Returning home exhausted, he fell asleep in the
courtyard; some bird droppings fell on his eyes
and he became blind (cf. 2:1-10). An irony of
fate: no good deed goes unpunished! That is what
we are tempted to think, but faith teaches us to
go more deeply. The blindness of Tobit was to
become his strength, enabling him to recognize
even more clearly the many forms of poverty all
around him. In due time, the Lord would give him
back his sight and the joy of once more seeing
his son Tobias. When that day came, we are told,
“Tobit saw his son and threw his arms around
him, and he wept and said to him, ‘I see you, my
son, the light of my eyes!’ Then he said,
‘Blessed be God, and blessed be his great name,
and blessed be all his holy angels. May his holy
name be blessed throughout all the ages. Though
he afflicted me, he has had mercy upon me. Now I
see my son Tobias’” (11:13-14).
3. We may well ask where Tobit found the courage
and the inner strength that enabled him to serve
God in the midst of a pagan people and to love
his neighbour so greatly that he risked his own
life. That of Tobit is a remarkable story: a
faithful husband and a caring father, he was
deported far from his native land, where he
suffered unjustly, persecuted by the king and
mistreated by his neighbours. Despite being such
a good man, he was put to the test. As sacred
Scripture often teaches us, God does not spare
trials to those who are righteous. Why? It is
not to disgrace us, but to strengthen our faith
in him.
Tobit, in his time of trial, discovers his own
poverty, which enables him to recognize others
who are poor. He is faithful to God’s law and
keeps the commandments, but for him this is not
enough. He can show practical concern for the
poor because he has personally known what it is
to be poor. His advice to Tobias thus becomes
his true testament: “Do not turn your face away
from anyone who is poor” (4:7). In a word,
whenever we encounter a poor person, we cannot
look away, for that would prevent us from
encountering the face of the Lord Jesus. Let us
carefully consider his words: “from anyone who
is poor”. Everyone is our neighbour. Regardless
of the colour of their skin, their social
standing, the place from which they came, if I
myself am poor, I can recognize my brothers or
sisters in need of my help. We are called to
acknowledge every poor person and every form of
poverty, abandoning the indifference and the
banal excuses we make to protect our illusory
well-being.
4. We are living in times that are not
particularly sensitive to the needs of the poor.
The pressure to adopt an affluent lifestyle
increases, while the voices of those dwelling in
poverty tend to go unheard. We are inclined to
neglect anything that varies from the model of
life set before the younger generation, those
who are most vulnerable to the cultural changes
now taking place. We disregard anything that is
unpleasant or causes suffering, and exalt
physical qualities as if they were the primary
goal in life. Virtual reality is overtaking real
life, and increasingly the two worlds blend into
one. The poor become a film clip that can affect
us for a moment, yet when we encounter them in
flesh and blood on our streets, we are annoyed
and look the other way. Haste, by now the daily
companion of our lives, prevents us from
stopping to help care for others. The parable of
the Good Samaritan (cf. Lk 10:25-37) is not
simply a story from the past; it continues to
challenge each of us in the here and now of our
daily lives. It is easy to delegate charity to
others, yet the calling of every Christian is to
become personally involved.
5. Let us thank the Lord that so many men and
women are devoted to caring for the poor and the
excluded; they are persons of every age and
social status who show understanding and
readiness to assist the marginalized and those
who suffer. They are not superheroes but “next
door neighbours”, ordinary people who quietly
make themselves poor among the poor. They do
more than give alms: they listen, they engage,
they try to understand and deal with difficult
situations and their causes. They consider not
only material but also spiritual needs; and they
work for the integral promotion of individuals.
The Kingdom of God becomes present and visible
in their generous and selfless service; like the
seed that falls on good soil, it takes root in
their lives and bears rich fruit (cf. Lk
8:4-15). Our gratitude to these many volunteers
needs to find expression in prayer that their
testimony will increasingly prove fruitful.
6. On this, the sixtieth anniversary of the
encyclical Pacem in Terris, we do well to take
to heart the following words of Pope Saint John
XXIII: “Every human being enjoys the right to
life, to bodily integrity and to the means
necessary for the proper development of life,
including food, clothing, shelter, medical care,
rest, and, finally, the necessary social
services. In consequence, every individual has
the right to be looked after in the event of ill
health; disability stemming from work; widowhood
and forced unemployment; as well as in other
cases when, through no fault of his own, he or
she is deprived of the means of livelihood” (ed.
Carlen, No. 11).
How much still needs to be done for this to
become a reality, not least through a serious
and effective commitment on the part of
political leaders and legislators! For all the
limitations and at times the failures of
politics in discerning and serving the common
good, may the spirit of solidarity and
subsidiarity continue to grow among citizens who
believe in the value of voluntary commitment to
serving the poor. Certainly there is a need to
urge and even pressure public institutions to
perform their duties properly, yet it is of no
use to wait passively to receive everything
“from on high”. Those living in poverty must
also be involved and accompanied in a process of
change and responsibility.
7. In addition, we must once more acknowledge
new forms of poverty, as well as those described
earlier. I think in particular of peoples caught
up in situations of war, and especially children
deprived of the serene present and a dignified
future. We should never grow accustomed to such
situations. Let us persevere in every effort to
foster peace as a gift of the risen Lord and the
fruit of a commitment to justice and dialogue.
Nor can we ignore those forms of speculation in
various sectors, which have led to dramatic
price increases that further impoverish many
families. Earnings are quickly spent, forcing
sacrifices that compromise the dignity of every
person. If a family has to choose between food
for nourishment and medical care, then we need
to pay attention to the voices of those who
uphold the right to both goods in the name of
the dignity of the human person.
Then too how can we fail to note the ethical
confusion present in the world of labour? The
inhumane treatment meted out to many male and
female laborers; inadequate pay for work done;
the scourge of job insecurity; the excessive
number of accident-related deaths, often the
result of a mentality that chooses quick profit
over a secure workplace… We are reminded of the
insistence of Saint John Paul II that “the
primary basis of the value of work is man
himself… However true it may be that man is
destined for work and called to it, in the first
place, work is ‘for man’ and not man ‘for work’”
(Laborem Exercens, 6).
8. This list, deeply troubling in itself, only
partially accounts for the situations of poverty
that are now part of our daily lives. I cannot
fail to mention in particular an increasingly
evident form of poverty that affects young
people. How much frustration and how many
suicides are being caused by the illusions
created by a culture that leads young people to
think that they are “losers”, “good for
nothing”. Let us help them react to these malign
influences and find ways to help them grow into
self-assured and generous men and women.
When speaking of the poor, it is easy to fall
into rhetorical excess. It is also an insidious
temptation to remain at the level of statistics
and numbers. The poor are persons; they have
faces, stories, hearts and souls. They are our
brothers and sisters, with good points and bad,
like all of us, and it is important to enter
into a personal relation with each of them.
The Book of Tobit teaches us to be realistic and
practical in whatever we do with and for the
poor. This is a matter of justice; it requires
us to seek out and find one another, in order to
foster the harmony needed for the community to
feel itself as such. Caring for the poor is more
than simply a matter of a hasty hand-out; it
calls for reestablishing the just interpersonal
relationships that poverty harms. In this way,
“not turning our face away from anyone who is
poor” leads us to enjoy the benefits of mercy
and charity that give meaning and value to our
entire Christian life.
9. May our concern for the poor always be marked
by Gospel realism. Our sharing should meet the
concrete needs of the other, rather than being
just a means of ridding ourselves of superfluous
goods. Here too, Spirit-led discernment is
demanded, in order to recognize the genuine
needs of our brothers and sisters and not our
own personal hopes and aspirations. What the
poor need is certainly our humanity, our hearts
open to love. Let us never forget that “we are
called to find Christ in them, to lend our voice
to their causes, but also to be their friends,
to listen to them, to speak for them and to
embrace the mysterious wisdom which God wishes
to share with us through them” (Evangelii
Gaudium, 198). Faith teaches us that every poor
person is a son or daughter of God and that
Christ is present in them. “Just as you did it
to one of the least of these who are members of
my family, you did it to me” (Mt 25:40).
10. This year marks the 150th anniversary of the
birth of Saint Therese of the Child Jesus. In a
page of her autobiography, Story of a Soul, she
tells us: “I have come to realize that perfect
charity means putting up with other people’s
faults, not being at all taken aback by their
faults, being edified by the smallest acts of
virtue that we see practised. But above all, I
have come to realize that charity must not
remain locked in the depths of one’s heart: ‘No
one’, Jesus says, ‘lights a candle to put it
under a bushel basket, but puts it on a
candle-stand, so that it can give light to
everyone in the house’. For me, that candle
represents the charity that must give light and
bring joy not only to those dearest to me, but
to everyone in the house, with the exception of
none” (Ms C, 12r°).
In this house of ours, which is the world,
everyone has a right to experience the light of
charity; no one must be deprived of that light.
May the steadfast love of Saint Therese stir our
hearts on this World Day of the Poor, and help
us not to “turn our face away from anyone who is
poor”, but to keep it always focused on the
human and divine face of Jesus Christ our Lord.
Rome, Saint John Lateran, 13 June 2023
Memorial of St. Anthony of Padua, Patron of the
Poor.
FRANCIS
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