Pope at Angelus: God is with you in your most difficult times
By Linda Bordoni
Pope Francis opened his Sunday Angelus address by expressing his profound gratitude to all for their affection, care, friendship, and prayerful support during his time at Rome's Gemelli Hospital. The Pope returned to the Vatican on Friday after release from the hospital.
Last Sunday the weekly rendez-vous with believers and pilgrims in St. Peter’s Square could not go ahead as the Holy Father recovered from abdominal surgery performed in Rome’s Gemelli Hospital on 7 June.
But his speedy recovery led to his dismissal from the hospital on Friday morning, and on Sunday, at noon, he appeared at the window of the Apostolic Palace to pray the Angelus and greet his flock.
The Lord is in our midst
Taking his cue from the Gospel of Matthew (Mt 10:7), in which Jesus sends the Apostles forth to proclaim that the kingdom of heaven is at hand, he noted that the fact that “His lordship of love, has come near” and is in our midst is “the fundamental reality of life.”
“Indeed, if the God of heaven is close, we are not alone on earth, and even in difficulty we do not lose faith,” he said.
Explaining that God is a father who knows his children and loves them, the Pope assured the faithful that “even when you travel on steep and rugged paths, even when you fall and struggle to get up again and get back on track,” the Lord is close.
With God everything becomes familiar and secure
Inviting believers to stay with the image of a loving father who takes his child by the hand making the world, that appears “large and mysterious,” familiar and secure, the Pope invited them to go out and proclaim God’s vicinity.
“If we want to be good apostles, we must be like children,” the Holy Father said, allowing the Father to transform our hearts and give us that joy and that peace that we ourselves cannot attain.
Perform deeds of love and hope
The way to proclaim that God is near, the Pope continued, is not “by saying many words, but performing many deeds of love and hope in the name of the Lord.”
Pope Francis concluded inviting the faithful to ask themselves whether they believe and confide in God, whether they listen to the Word and partake of the Sacraments; whether they know how to instil courage in others and be close to those who suffer and are alone.
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