Message of the Holy Father Francis for World
Missionary Day, 25.01.2023
The following is the Holy Father Francis’
Message for the 97th World Missionary Day, to be
held on Sunday 22 October 2023 on the theme:
“Hearts on fire, feet on the move” (cf. Lk
24:13-35):
Message of the Holy Father
Dear brothers and sisters!
For this year’s World Mission Sunday, I have
chosen a theme inspired by the story of the
disciples on the way to Emmaus, in the Gospel of
Luke (cf. 24:13-35): “Hearts on fire, feet on
the move”. Those two disciples were confused and
dismayed, but their encounter with Christ in the
word and in the breaking of the bread sparked in
them the enthusiastic desire to set out again
towards Jerusalem and proclaim that the Lord had
truly risen. In the Gospel account, we perceive
this change in the disciples through a few
revealing images: their hearts burned within
them as they heard the Scriptures explained by
Jesus, their eyes were opened as they recognized
him and, ultimately, their feet set out on the
way. By meditating on these three images, which
reflect the journey of all missionary disciples,
we can renew our zeal for evangelization in
today’s world.
1. Our hearts burned within us “when he
explained the Scriptures to us”. In missionary
activity, the word of God illumines and
transforms hearts.
On the road from Jerusalem to Emmaus, the hearts
of the two disciples were downcast, as shown by
their dejected faces, because of the death of
Jesus, in whom they had believed (cf. v. 17).
Faced with the failure of the crucified Master,
their hopes that he was the Messiah collapsed
(cf. v. 21).
Then, “as they were talking and discussing
together, Jesus himself drew near and walked
with them” (v. 15). As when he first called the
disciples, so now, amid their bewilderment, the
Lord takes the initiative; he approaches them
and walks alongside them. So too, in his great
mercy, he never tires of being with us, despite
all our failings, doubts, weaknesses, and the
dismay and pessimism that make us become
“foolish and slow of heart” (v. 25), men and
women of little faith.
Today, as then, the Risen Lord remains close to
his missionary disciples and walks beside them,
particularly when they feel disoriented,
discouraged, fearful of the mystery of iniquity
that surrounds them and seeks to overwhelm them.
So, “let us not allow ourselves to be robbed of
hope!” (Evangelii Gaudium, 86). The Lord is
greater than all our problems, above all if we
encounter them in our mission of proclaiming the
Gospel to the world. For in the end, this
mission is his and we are nothing more than his
humble co-workers, “useless servants” (cf. Lk
17:10).
I desire to express my closeness in Christ to
all the men and women missionaries in the world,
especially to those enduring any kind of
hardship. Dear friends, the Risen Lord is always
with you. He sees your generosity and the
sacrifices you are making for the mission of
evangelization in distant lands. Not every day
of our lives is serene and unclouded, but let us
never forget the words of the Lord Jesus to his
friends before his Passion: “In the world you
will have tribulations, but be courageous: I
have conquered the world!” (Jn 16:33).
After listening to the two disciples on the road
to Emmaus, the risen Jesus, “beginning with
Moses and all the prophets, explained to them
what was said in all the Scriptures concerning
himself” (Lk 24:27). The hearts of the disciples
thrilled, as they later confided to each other:
“Were not our hearts burning within us while he
spoke to us on the way and opened the Scriptures
to us?” (v. 32). Jesus is himself the living
Word, who alone can make our hearts burn within
us, as he enlightens and transforms them.
In this way, we can better understand Saint
Jerome’s dictum that “ignorance of the
Scriptures is ignorance of Christ” (Commentary
on Isaiah, Prologue). “Without the Lord to
introduce us, it is impossible to understand
sacred Scripture in depth; yet the opposite is
equally true: without sacred Scripture, the
events of Jesus’ mission and of his Church in
the world remain indecipherable” (Aperuit Illis,
1). It follows that knowledge of Scripture is
important for the Christian life, and even more
so for the preaching of Christ and his Gospel.
Otherwise, what are you passing on to others if
not your own ideas and projects? A cold heart
can never make other hearts burn!
So let us always be willing to let ourselves be
accompanied by the Risen Lord as he explains to
us the meaning of the Scriptures. May he make
our hearts burn within us; may he enlighten and
transform us, so that we can proclaim his
mystery of salvation to the world with the power
and wisdom that come from his Spirit.
2. Our eyes were “opened and recognized him” in
the breaking of the bread. Jesus in the
Eucharist is the source and summit of the
mission.
The fact that their hearts burned for the word
of God prompted the disciples of Emmaus to ask
the mysterious Wayfarer to stay with them as
evening drew near. When they gathered around the
table, their eyes were opened and they
recognized him when he broke the bread. The
decisive element that opened the eyes of the
disciples was the sequence of actions performed
by Jesus: he took the bread, blessed it, broke
it and gave it to them. Those were the usual
gestures of the head of a Jewish household, but,
performed by Jesus Christ with the grace of the
Holy Spirit, they renewed for his two table
companions the sign of the multiplication of the
loaves and above all that of the Eucharist, the
sacrament of the sacrifice of the cross. Yet at
the very moment when they recognized Jesus in
the breaking of the bread, “he vanished from
their sight” (Lk 24:31). Here we can recognize
an essential reality of our faith: Christ, who
breaks the bread, now becomes the bread broken,
shared with the disciples and consumed by them.
He is seen no longer, for now he has entered the
hearts of the disciples, to make them burn all
the more, and this prompts them to set out
immediately to share with everyone their unique
experience of meeting the Risen Lord. The risen
Christ, then, is both the one who breaks the
bread and, at the same time, the bread itself,
broken for us. It follows that every missionary
disciple is called to become, like Jesus and in
him, through the working of the Holy Spirit, one
who breaks the bread and one who is broken bread
for the world.
Here it should be remembered that breaking our
material bread with the hungry in the name of
Christ is already a work of Christian mission.
How much more so is the breaking of the
Eucharistic bread, which is Christ himself, a
work of mission par excellence, since the
Eucharist is the source and summit of the life
and mission of the Church.
As Pope Benedict XVI pointed out: “We cannot
keep to ourselves the love we celebrate in the
Sacrament [of the Eucharist]. By its very
nature, it asks to be communicated to everyone.
What the world needs is the love of God, to
encounter Christ and believe in him. For this
reason the Eucharist is not only the source and
summit of the life of the Church; it is also the
source and summit of her mission: ‘An
authentically Eucharistic Church is a missionary
Church’” (Sacramentum Caritatis, 84).
In order to bear fruit we must remain united to
Jesus (cf. Jn 15:4-9). This union is achieved
through daily prayer, particularly in
Eucharistic adoration, as we remain in silence
in the presence of the Lord, who remains with us
in the Blessed Sacrament. By lovingly
cultivating this communion with Christ, the
missionary disciple can become a mystic in
action. May our hearts always yearn for the
company of Jesus, echoing the ardent plea of the
two disciples of Emmaus, especially in the
evening hours: “Stay with us, Lord!” (cf. Lk
24:29).
3. Our feet set out on the way, with the joy of
telling others about the Risen Christ. The
eternal youth of a Church that is always going
forth.
After their eyes were opened and they recognized
Jesus “in the breaking of the bread”, the
disciples “set out without delay and returned to
Jerusalem” (cf. Lk 24:33). This setting out in
haste, to share with others the joy of meeting
the Lord, demonstrates that “the joy of the
Gospel fills the heart and the whole life of
those who meet Jesus. Those who allow themselves
to be saved by him are freed from sin, from
sadness, from inner emptiness, from isolation.
With Jesus Christ, joy is always born and
reborn” (Evangelii Gaudium, 1). One cannot truly
encounter the risen Jesus without being set on
fire with enthusiasm to tell everyone about him.
Therefore, the primary and principal resource of
the mission are those persons who have come to
know the risen Christ in the Scriptures and in
the Eucharist, who carry his fire in their heart
and his light in their gaze. They can bear
witness to the life that never dies, even in the
most difficult of situations and in the darkest
of moments.
The image of “feet setting out” reminds us once
more of the perennial validity of the missio ad
gentes, the mission entrusted to the Church by
the risen Lord to evangelize all individuals and
peoples, even to the ends of the earth. Today
more than ever, our human family, wounded by so
many situations of injustice, so many divisions
and wars, is in need of the Good News of peace
and salvation in Christ. I take this opportunity
to reiterate that “everyone has the right to
receive the Gospel. Christians have the duty to
announce it without excluding anyone, not as one
who imposes a new obligation, but as one who
shares a joy, signals a beautiful horizon,
offers a desirable banquet” (Evangelii Gaudium,
14). Missionary conversion remains the principal
goal that we must set for ourselves as
individuals and as a community, because
“missionary outreach is paradigmatic for all the
Church’s activity” (ibid., 15).
As the Apostle Paul confirms, the love of Christ
captivates and impels us (cf. 2 Cor 5:14). This
love is two-fold: the love of Christ for us,
which calls forth, inspires and arouses our love
for him. A love that makes the Church, in
constantly setting out anew, ever young. For all
her members are entrusted with the mission of
proclaiming the Gospel of Christ, in the
conviction that “he died for all, so that those
who live should no longer live for themselves,
but for him who died for them and was raised
again” (v. 15). All of us can contribute to this
missionary movement: with our prayers and
activities, with material offerings and the
offering of our sufferings, and with our
personal witness. The Pontifical Mission
Societies are the privileged means of fostering
this missionary cooperation on both the
spiritual and material levels. For this reason,
the collection taken on World Mission Sunday is
devoted to the Pontifical Society for the
Propagation of the Faith.
The urgency of the Church’s missionary activity
naturally calls for an ever closer missionary
cooperation on the part of all her members and
at every level. This is an essential goal of the
synodal journey that the Church has undertaken,
guided by the key words: communion,
participation, mission. This journey is
certainly not a turning of the Church in upon
herself; nor is it a referendum about what we
ought to believe and practice, nor a matter of
human preferences. Rather, it is a process of
setting out on the way and, like the disciples
of Emmaus, listening to the risen Lord. For he
always comes among us to explain the meaning of
the Scriptures and to break bread for us, so
that we can, by the power of the Holy Spirit,
carry out his mission in the world.
Just as the two disciples of Emmaus told the
others what had taken place along the way (cf.
Lk 24:35), so too our proclamation will be a
joyful telling of Christ the Lord, his life, his
passion, his death and resurrection, and the
wonders that his love has accomplished in our
lives.
So let us set out once more, illumined by our
encounter with the risen Lord and prompted by
his Spirit. Let us set out again with burning
hearts, with our eyes open and our feet in
motion. Let us set out to make other hearts burn
with the word of God, to open the eyes of others
to Jesus in the Eucharist, and to invite
everyone to walk together on the path of peace
and salvation that God, in Christ, has bestowed
upon all humanity.
Our Lady of the Way, Mother of Christ’s
missionary disciples and Queen of Missions, pray
for us!
Rome, Saint John Lateran, 6 January 2023,
Solemnity of the Epiphany of the Lord.
FRANCIS
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