MESSAGE OF HIS HOLINESS POPE FRANCIS
FOR WORLD MISSION DAY 2024
20 October 2024
Go and invite everyone to the banquet (cf. Mt
22:9)
Dear brothers and sisters!
The theme I have chosen for this year’s World
Mission Day is taken from the Gospel parable of
the wedding banquet (cf. Mt 22:1-14). After the
guests refused his invitation, the king, the
main character in the story, tells his servants:
“Go therefore to the thoroughfares, and invite
to the marriage feast as many as you find” (v.
9). Reflecting on this key passage in the
context of the parable and of Jesus’ own life,
we can discern several important aspects of
evangelization. These appear particularly timely
for all of us, as missionary disciples of
Christ, during this final stage of the synodal
journey that, in the words of its motto,
“Communion, Participation, Mission”, seeks to
refocus the Church on her primary task, which is
the preaching of the Gospel in today’s world.
1.“Go and invite!” Mission as a tireless going
out to invite others to the Lord’s banquet
In the king’s command to his servants we find
two words that express the heart of the mission:
the verbs “to go out” and “to invite”.
As for the first, we need to remember that the
servants had previously been sent to deliver the
king’s invitation to the guests (cf. vv. 3-4).
Mission, we see, is a tireless going out to all
men and women, in order to invite them to
encounter God and enter into communion with him.
Tireless! God, great in love and rich in mercy,
constantly sets out to encounter all men and
women, and to call them to the happiness of his
kingdom, even in the face of their indifference
or refusal. Jesus Christ, the Good Shepherd and
messenger of the Father, went out in search of
the lost sheep of the people of Israel and
desired to go even further, in order to reach
even the most distant sheep (cf. Jn 10:16). Both
before and after his resurrection, he told his
disciples, “Go!”, thus involving them in his own
mission (cf. Lk 10:3; Mk 16:15). The Church, for
her part, in fidelity to the mission she has
received from the Lord, will continue to go to
the ends of the earth, to set out over and over
again, without ever growing weary or losing
heart in the face of difficulties and obstacles.
I take this opportunity to thank all those
missionaries who, in response to Christ’s call,
have left everything behind to go far from their
homeland and bring the Good News to places where
people have not yet received it, or received it
only recently. Dear friends, your generous
dedication is a tangible expression of your
commitment to the mission ad gentes that Jesus
entrusted to his disciples: “Go and make
disciples of all nations” (Mt 28:19). We
continue to pray and we thank God for the new
and numerous missionary vocations for the task
of evangelization to the ends of the earth.
Let us not forget that every Christian is called
to take part in this universal mission by
offering his or her own witness to the Gospel in
every context, so that the whole Church can
continually go forth with her Lord and Master to
the “crossroads” of today’s world. “Today’s
drama in the Church is that Jesus keeps knocking
on the door, but from within, so that we will
let him out! Often we end up being an
‘imprisoning’ Church which does not let the Lord
out, which keeps him as ‘its own’, whereas the
Lord came for mission and wants us to be
missionaries” (Address to Participants in the
Conference organized by the Dicastery for the
Laity, Family and Life, 18 February 2023). May
all of us, the baptized, be ready to set out
anew, each according to our state in life, to
inaugurate a new missionary movement, as at the
dawn of Christianity!
To return to the king’s command in the parable,
the servants are told not only to “go”, but also
to “invite”: “Come to the wedding!” (Mt 22:4).
Here we can see another, no less important,
aspect of the mission entrusted by God. As we
can imagine, the servants conveyed the king’s
invitation with urgency but also with great
respect and kindness. In the same way, the
mission of bringing the Gospel to every creature
must necessarily imitate the same “style” of the
One who is being preached. In proclaiming to the
world “the beauty of the saving love of God made
manifest in Jesus Christ who died and rose from
the dead” (Evangelii Gaudium, 36), missionary
disciples should do so with joy, magnanimity and
benevolence that are the fruits of the Holy
Spirit within them (cf. Gal 5:22). Not by
pressuring, coercing or proselytizing, but with
closeness, compassion and tenderness, and in
this way reflecting God’s own way of being and
acting.
2. “To the marriage feast”. The eschatological
and Eucharistic dimension of the mission of
Christ and the Church.
In the parable, the king asks the servants to
bring the invitation to his son’s wedding
banquet. That banquet is a reflection of the
eschatological banquet. It is an image of
ultimate salvation in the Kingdom of God,
fulfilled even now by the coming of Jesus, the
Messiah and Son of God, who has given us life in
abundance (cf. Jn 10:10), symbolized by the
table set with succulent food and with fine
wines, when God will destroy death forever (cf.
Is 25:6-8).
Christ’s mission has to do with the fullness of
time, as he declared at the beginning of his
preaching: “The time is fulfilled, and the
kingdom of God is at hand” (Mk 1:15). Christ’s
disciples are called to continue this mission of
their Lord and Master. Here we think of the
teaching of the Second Vatican Council on the
eschatological character of the Church’s
missionary outreach: “The time for missionary
activity extends between the first coming of the
Lord and the second…, for the Gospel must be
preached to all nations before the Lord shall
come (cf. Mk 13:10)” (Ad Gentes, 9).
We know that among the first Christians
missionary zeal had a powerful eschatological
dimension. They sensed the urgency of the
preaching of the Gospel. Today too it is
important to maintain this perspective, since it
helps us to evangelize with the joy of those who
know that “the Lord is near” and with the hope
of those who are pressing forward towards the
goal, when all of us will be with Christ at his
wedding feast in the kingdom of God. While the
world sets before us the various “banquets” of
consumerism, selfish comfort, the accumulation
of wealth and individualism, the Gospel calls
everyone to the divine banquet, marked by joy,
sharing, justice and fraternity in communion
with God and with others.
This fullness of life, which is Christ’s gift,
is anticipated even now in the banquet of the
Eucharist, which the Church celebrates at the
Lord’s command in memory of him. The invitation
to the eschatological banquet that we bring to
everyone in our mission of evangelization is
intrinsically linked to the invitation to the
Eucharistic table, where the Lord feeds us with
his word and with his Body and Blood. As
Benedict XVI taught: “Every Eucharistic
celebration sacramentally accomplishes the
eschatological gathering of the People of God.
For us, the Eucharistic banquet is a real
foretaste of the final banquet foretold by the
prophets (cf. Is 25:6-9) and described by the
New Testament as ‘the marriage-feast of the
Lamb’ (Rev 19:9), to be celebrated in the joy of
the communion of the saints” (Sacramentum
Caritatis, 31).
Consequently, all of us are called to experience
more intensely every Eucharist, in all its
dimensions, and particularly its eschatological
and missionary dimensions. In this regard, I
would reiterate that “we cannot approach the
Eucharistic table without being drawn into the
mission which, beginning in the very heart of
God, is meant to reach all people” (ibid., 84).
The Eucharistic renewal that many local Churches
are laudably promoting in the post-Covid era
will also be essential for reviving the
missionary spirit in each member of the
faithful. With how much greater faith and
heartfelt enthusiasm should we recite at every
Mass: “We proclaim your death, O Lord, and
profess your resurrection, until you come
again”!
In this year devoted to prayer in preparation
for the Jubilee of 2025, I wish to encourage all
to deepen their commitment above all to take
part in the celebration of Mass and to pray for
the Church’s mission of evangelization. In
obedience to the Saviour’s command, she does not
cease to pray, at every Eucharistic and
liturgical celebration, the “Our Father”, with
its petition, “Thy kingdom come”. In this way,
daily prayer and the Eucharist in particular
make us pilgrims and missionaries of hope,
journeying towards everlasting life in God,
towards the nuptial banquet that God has
prepared for all his children.
3. “Everyone”. The universal mission of Christ’s
disciples in the fully synodal and missionary
Church
The third and last reflection concerns the
recipients of the King’s invitation: “everyone”.
As I emphasized, “This is the heart of mission:
that ‘all’, excluding no one. Every mission of
ours, then, is born from the heart of Christ in
order that he may draw all to himself” (Address
to the General Assembly of the Pontifical
Missionary Societies, 3 June 2023). Today, in a
world torn apart by divisions and conflicts,
Christ’s Gospel remains the gentle yet firm
voice that calls individuals to encounter one
another, to recognize that they are brothers and
sisters, and to rejoice in harmony amid
diversity. “God our Saviour desires everyone to
be saved and come to the knowledge of the truth”
(1 Tim 2:4). Let us never forget, then, that in
our missionary activities we are asked to preach
the Gospel to all: “Instead of seeming to impose
new obligations, [we] should appear as people
who wish to share their joy, who point to a
horizon of beauty and who invite others to a
delicious banquet” (Evangelii Gaudium, 14).
Christ’s missionary disciples have always had a
heartfelt concern for all persons, whatever
their social or even moral status. The parable
of the banquet tells us that, at the king’s
orders, the servants gathered “all whom they
found, both good and bad” (Mt 22:10). What is
more, “the poor, the crippled, the blind and the
lame” (Lk 14:21), in a word, the least of our
brothers and sisters, those marginalized by
society, are the special guests of the king. The
wedding feast of his Son that God has prepared
remains always open to all, since his love for
each of us is immense and unconditional. “God so
loved the world that he gave his only Son, so
that everyone who believes in him may not perish
but may have life eternal” (Jn 3:16). Everyone,
every man and every woman, is invited by God to
partake of his grace, which transforms and
saves. One need simply say “yes” to this
gratuitous divine gift, accepting it and
allowing oneself be transformed by it, putting
it on like a “wedding robe” (cf. Mt 22:12).
The mission for all requires the commitment of
all. We need to continue our journey towards a
fully synodal and missionary Church in the
service of the Gospel. Synodality is essentially
missionary and, vice versa, mission is always
synodal. Consequently, close missionary
cooperation is today all the more urgent and
necessary, both in the universal Church and in
the particular Churches. In the footsteps of the
Second Vatican Council and my Predecessors, I
recommend to all dioceses throughout the world
the service of the Pontifical Mission Societies.
They represent the primary means “by which
Catholics are imbued from infancy with a truly
universal and missionary outlook and [are] also
a means for instituting an effective collecting
of funds for all the missions, each according to
its needs” (Ad Gentes, 38). For this reason, the
collections of World Mission Day in all the
local Churches are entirely destined to the
universal fund of solidarity that the Pontifical
Society of the Propagation of the Faith then
distributes in the Pope’s name for the needs of
all the Church’s missions. Let us pray that the
Lord may guide us and help us to be a more
synodal and a more missionary Church (cf. Homily
for the Concluding Mass of the Ordinary General
Assembly of the Synod of Bishops, 29 October
2023).
Finally, let us lift our gaze to Mary, who asked
Jesus to perform his first miracle precisely at
a wedding feast, in Cana of Galilee (cf. Jn
2:1-12). The Lord offered to the newlyweds and
all the guests an abundance of new wine, as a
foreshadowing of the nuptial banquet that God is
preparing for all at the end of time. Let us
implore her maternal intercession for the
evangelizing mission of Christ’s disciples in
our own time. With the joy and loving concern of
our Mother, with the strength born of tenderness
and affection (cf. Evangelii Gaudium, 288), let
us go forth to bring to everyone the invitation
of the King, our Saviour. Holy Mary, Star of
Evangelization, pray for us!
Rome, Saint John Lateran, 25 January 2024, Feast
of the Conversion of Saint Paul
FRANCIS
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