Pope Benedict XVI spoke to children inGuanajuato, Mexico on Saturday,
24th March 2012 and exhorted them to be messengers
of peace. (full text follows) Dear Young People, I am happy to be able
to meet with you and to see your smiling faces as you fill this beautiful square.
You have a very special place in the Pope’s heart. And in these moments, I would
like all the children of Mexico to know this, especially those who have to bear the
burden of suffering, abandonment, violence or hunger, which in recent months, because
of drought, has made itself strongly felt in some regions. I am grateful for this
encounter of faith, and for the festive and joyful presence expressed in song. Today
we are full of jubilation, and this is important. God wants us to be happy always.
He knows us and he loves us. If we allow the love of Christ to change our heart,
then we can change the world. This is the secret of authentic happiness. This
place where we stand today has a name which expresses the yearning present in the
heart of each and every person: “la paz”, Peace. This is a gift which comes from
on high. “Peace be with you” (Jn 20:21). These are the words of the Risen
Lord. We hear them during each Mass, and today they resound anew in this place, with
the hope that each one of you will be transformed, becoming a sower and messenger
of that peace for which Christ offered his life. The disciple of Jesus does not
respond to evil with evil, but is always an instrument of good instead, a herald of
pardon, a bearer of happiness, a servant of unity. He wishes to write in each of
your lives a story of friendship. Hold on to him, then, as the best of friends. He
will never tire of speaking to those who always love and who do good. This you will
hear, if you strive in each moment to be with him who will help you in more difficult
situations. I have come that you may know my affection. Each one of you is a
gift of God to Mexico and to the world. Your family, the Church, your school and
those who have responsibility in society must work together to ensure that you receive
a better world as your inheritance, without jealousies and divisions. That is
why I wish to lift up my voice, inviting everyone to protect and to care for children,
so that nothing may extinguish their smile, but that they may live in peace and look
to the future with confidence. You, my dear young friends, are not alone. You
can count on the help of Christ and his Church in order to live a Christian lifestyle.
Participate in Sunday Mass, in catechesis, in apostolic works, looking for occasions
of prayer, fraternity and charity. Blessed Cristóbal, Antonio and Juan, the child
martyrs of Tlaxcala, lived this way, and knowing Jesus, during the time of the initial
evangelization of Mexico, they discovered that there is no greater treasure than he.
They were children like you, and from them we can learn that we are never too young
to love and serve. How I would like to spend more time with all of you, but the time
has already come for me to go. We will remain close in prayer. So I invite you to
pray continually, even in your homes; in this way, you will experience the happiness
of speaking about God with your families. Pray for everyone, and also for me. I
will pray for all of you, so that Mexico may be a place in which everyone can live
in serenity and harmony. I bless all of you from my heart and I ask you to bring
the affection and blessing of the Pope to your parents, brothers and sisters, and
other loved ones. May the Virgin accompany you. Thank you very much, my dear young
friends.xxxxxxx
Our correspondent Philippa Hitchen with the Pope
reports: Whenever and wherever Pope Benedict XVI meets children, there is always
cause for joy and celebration. Yesterday evening in Mexico was no exception. How
do you capture in a few words the excitement and enthusiasm of several thousand Mexican
school kids who’ve been waiting impatiently all day for their first sight of the Pope?
How do you describe the electric atmosphere of the crowds crammed into the appropriately
named Peace Square, with bands playing their favourite folk songs and the great bells
of the 17th century neo-classical Basilica ringing out to welcome him to Guanajuato?
There
couldn’t be a more picturesque setting for his first meeting with the Mexican faithful
than this city of narrow cobbled streets and brightly painted colonial houses clustered
around the steep hillsides. Declared a UNESCO heritage site in 1988, the city grew
rich becauses of the nearby silver mines and then became a hotbed for the national
independence movement of the early 19th century. Home to the state governor’s palace,
it was inside this imposing two storey building with pale pink stone facade that the
Pope met privately with Mexican President Felipe Calderon, discussing shared concerns
about poverty, arms reduction and education, before stepping out onto the balcony
to greet his young fans gathered below.
When he was finally able to make himself
heard above the bells and the songs, he espressed his heartfelt gratitude for the
festive and joyful welcome, but he also spoke about the suffering of so many children
in this country, plagued with growing levels of conflict and violence. He said he
prays especially for those who bear the burden of abandonment, violence or hunger
which has been on the increase in some drought ridden regions. Appealing to the young
people themselves to become messengers of Christ’s peace in their country, he also
urged everyone to protect and care for children so that they may look to the future
with confidence – a clear message to the Church here still reeling from continued
revelations about Mexico’s most notorious sex abuser, Fr Marcial Marciel, the founder
of the Legionaries of Christ. Amidst the largely positive press coverage of this visit,
at least one national daily on Saturday printed a full page condemnation of the Church
by one of Marciel’s victims. At a press conference later in the evening, papal spokesman
Fr Lombardi said that amidst the joy and enthusiasm on the faces of so many young
people here, this ongoing concern for those who’ve suffered at the hands of the clergy
is very much on the Pope’s mind.