(Vatican Radio ) Pope Francis has chosen the motto "Miserando atque eligendo", meaning
lowly but chosen; literally in Latin 'by having mercy, by choosing him'.
The
motto is one the Pope had already chosen as Bishop. It is taken from the homilies
of the Venerable Bede on Saint Matthew's Gospel relating to his vocation:"Jesus saw
the tax collector and by having mercy chose him as an Apostle saying to him : Follow
me."
This homily, which focuses on divine mercy and is reproduced in the Liturgy
of the Hours on the Feast of Saint Matthew, has taken on special significance in
the Pope's life and spiritual journey.
In fact it was on the Feast of Saint
Matthew in 1953 that a young seventeen year-old Jorge Bergoglio was touched by the
mercy of God and felt the call to religious life in the footsteps of Saint Ignatius
of Loyola.
Beyond the motto, the coat of arms has a blue field and is surmounted
by the mitre and the papal keys. On the crest itself at the centre is the symbol
of the Jesuits, a flaming sun with the three letters recalling the name and the salvific
mission of Jesus. Underneath we have two more symbols: to the right the star representing
Mary and to the left the nard flower representing Joseph.