Pope Francis: the holiness of John XXIII a great gift for the Church
(Vatican Radio) In a letter to the local newspaper of Bergamo, the hometown of John
XXIII, Pope Francis described the holiness of Pope Roncalli as a “great gift for the
Church”.
The letter to the “Bergamo Echo” the paper with which John Paul XXIII
collaborated when he was a young priest is addressed to “Dear friends of Bergamo”
– not only to those who belong to the Church, but to the whole civil community.
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He writes
– Pope Francis says – to thank the Lord for the “great gift” that John XXIII’s holiness
is for the universal Church and as an encouragement to “safeguard the memory of the
land in which it flourished, a land where the deep faith of the people is expressed
on a daily basis, a land where families are poor but united in the love of the Lord,
where communities are capable of sharing in simplicity”.
“I know how much you
love Pope John, and how much he loved his homeland” writes Pope Francis – “From the
day of his election to the papacy, the name of Bergamo and of Sotto il Monte where
he was born on 25 November 1881 – became familiar across the world. And still today,
more than fifty years afterwards, they are associated to his smiling face and to his
fatherly tenderness”.
Pope Francis points out that since the times of John
XXIII the world has changed and Christians face new challenges. However – he says
–“his legacy can still provide inspiration to a Church that is called to live the
sweet and comforting joy of evangelization, it can accompany every man who is on a
journey, it can be the ‘drinking well of the village’ where everyone can draw the
fresh water of the Gospel. The renewal proposed by the Second Vatican Council opened
the road - he said – and it is a special joy that the canonization of Pope Roncalli
takes place together with that of the blessed John Paul II, who brought forward that
renewal during his long pontificate”.
The Pope says he is certain that civil
society will also be able to find inspiration in the life of Pope Roncalli and in
the environment which generated him, in the search for new ways to build a culture
of cohabitation based on the evergreen values of fraternity and solidarity.
“I
ask you to pray for me” – Pope Francis concluded – “while I pray for all of you, especially
for those who are suffering and for those who are sick – recalling the city Hospital
that you have dedicated to Pope John – and for the diocesan seminary, which was so
dear to his heart”.