Dear brothers and sisters, Today's Gospel presents the
beginning of Jesus' preaching in Galilee. Saint Mark highlights that Jesus
began to preach "after John had been arrested" (1,14). Precisely in
this moment in which the prophetic voice of the Baptizer, who announced the
coming of the Kingdom of God, is silenced by Herod, Jesus begins to walk the
streets of his land to bring to all, especially the poor, "the Gospel of
God." Jesus' announcement is similar to that of John, with the major
difference that Jesus does not indicate that another is to come: it is Jesus
Himself who is the fulfillment of the promise; He is the "good news"
to believe in, to receive and to communicate to men and women of all time, so
that they also entrust to Him their existence. Jesus Christ Himself is the
living Word and He is active in history: he who listens to Him and follows Him
will enter the Kingdom of God.
Jesus is the fulfillment of the divine promise because
it is He who gives mankind
the Holy Spirit, the
"living water" that quenches our restless heart that thirsts for
life, love, freedom, peace: that thirsts for God. He revealed Himself to the
Samaritan woman, who He met at Jacob's well, to whom He said: "Give me
to drink" (Jn.4, 7).
These very words of Christ, addressed to the Samaritan [woman], were the theme
of the annual Week of Prayer
for Christian Unity , which
concludes today. This evening, with the faithful of the diocese of Rome
and with the representatives of the various Churches and ecclesial communities,
we will meet in the Basilica of St. Paul Outside-the-Walls to pray fervently to
the Lord, so that he strengthens our commitment to the unity of all believers
in Christ. It is an ugly thing that Christians are divided. But Jesus wants us
to be united. One body! Our sins, our history have divided us. For this we must
pray that the Spirit unites us again.
God, who made Himself man, had our thirst, not only of
water, but above all the thirst of a full life, free from the slavery of evil
and death. At the same time, with His incarnation God has placed His thirst, because God also thirsts, in
the heart of mankind: Jesus of Nazareth. Therefore, in the heart of Christ,
human and divine thirst meets. And the desire
for the unity of his disciples belongs
to this thirst. We find it expressed in the prayers raised to the Father before
the Passion: "So that they all may be one" (Jn. 17,21). That is what
Jesus wanted, the unity of all. The devil, as we know, is the father of
division. He is one that always divides, always makes war and does so much
evil. May Jesus' thirst increasingly
become our thirst! We continue, therefore, to pray and strive for the
full unity of the Disciples of Christ, in the certainty that He Himself is at
our side and sustains us with the strength of His Spirit so that this goal can
be reached. And we entrust this, our prayer, to the maternal intercession of
the Virgin Mary, Mother of Christ and Mother of the Church so that She, like a
good Mother, may unite us.
Dear brothers and sisters, I follow with deep concern
the escalation of fighting in eastern Ukraine, which continues to cause many
casualties among the civilian population. As I assure you of my prayers for all
who suffer, I renew a heartfelt appeal so that efforts for dialogue can resume
and an end to all hostilities.
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