Pope Francis "It’s the greeting of the Risen Christ, who gives us peace: “Peace be with you!” FULL TEXT + Video

Before the Regina Coeli:
 Dear Brothers and Sister, good morning!
At the center of this third Sunday of Easter is the experience of the Risen One made by His disciples, all together. This is evidenced especially by the Gospel, which introduces us once again in the Cenacle, where Jesus manifests Himself to His Apostles, addressing this greeting to them: “Peace be with you!” (Luke 24:36). It’s the greeting of the Risen Christ, who gives us peace: “Peace be with you!” It’s about interior peace, as well as that peace established in relations with people.
The episode narrated by the evangelist Luke emphasizes a lot the realism of the Resurrection. Jesus isn’t a ghost. In fact, it’s not about an apparition of Jesus’ spirit, but of His real presence with a risen body.
Jesus realizes that the Apostles are disturbed on seeing Him, that they are disconcerted because the reality of the Resurrection is inconceivable to them. They think they see a ghost, but the Risen Jesus isn’t a ghost, He is a man with body and soul. Therefore, to convince them, He says to them: “See my hands and my feet — He makes them see the wounds — that it is I myself; handle me, and see; for a spirit has not flesh and bones as you see that I have” (v. 39). And because, the Gospel also says something interesting: The joy was so great that they has within that they couldn’t believe this joy: No, it can’t be! It can’t be so!
So much joy isn’t possible! And, to convince them Jesus says to them: “Have you anything here to eat?” (v. 41). They offer him broiled fish; Jesus takes it and eats it before them, to convince them.
Jesus’ insistence on the reality of His Resurrection illumines the Christian perspective on the body: the body isn’t an obstacle or a prison of the soul. God has created the body, and man isn’t complete except in the union of body and soul. Jesus, who has overcome death and has risen in body and soul, makes us understand that we must have a positive idea of our body. It can become the occasion or instrument of sin; however, sin isn’t caused by the body, but rather by our moral weakness. The body is a stupendous gift of God, destined, in union with the soul, to express in fullness His image and likeness. Therefore, we are called to have great respect and care of our body and that of others.
Every offense or wound or violence to our neighbour’s body, is an insult to God the Creator! My thought goes, in particular, to the children, the women <and> the elderly mistreated in body. In these persons’ flesh we find the body of Christ. Jesus, wounded, derided, slandered, humiliated, scourged <and> crucified . . . Jesus has taught us love. A love that, in His Resurrection, has shown itself more powerful than sin and death, and He wants to rescue all those that experience in their own body the slaveries of our times.
In a world where too many times arrogance prevails against the weakest and a materialism <exists> that suffocates the spirit, today’s Gospel calls us to be persons able to look in depth, full of wonder and great joy, for having encountered the Risen Lord. It call sus to be persons that know how to receive and value the novelty of life that He sows in history, to orient it to new Heavens and a new earth.  May the Virgin Mary, to whose maternal intercession we entrust ourselves with confidence, support us on this path.
[Original text: Italian]  [Blog Entry SHARE of ZENIT’s translation by Virginia M. Forrester]

  After the Regina Coeli:
 Dear Brothers and Sisters,
Proclaimed Blessed today in Vohipeno, Madagascar, is the martyr Luciano Botovasoa, father of a family, coherent witness of Christ to the heroic giving of his life. Arrested and killed for having expressed his wish to remain faithful to the Lord and to the Church, he represents for all of us an example of charity and of fortitude in the faith.
I am profoundly disturbed by the present world situation, in which, notwithstanding the instruments at the disposition of the International Community, there is difficulty in agreeing to a common action in favour of peace in Syria and in other regions of the world. . While I pray incessantly for peace, and I invite all persons of good will to continue doing so, I appeal again to all political leaders, so that justice and peace prevail.
I received with grief the news of the killing of three men kidnapped at the end of March on the border between Ecuador and Colombia. I pray for them and for their families, and I am close to the dear Ecuadorian people, encouraging them to go forward united and peacefully, with the help of the Lord and of His Most Holy Mother.
I entrust to your prayer persons such as Vincent Lambert in France, little Alfie Evans in England, and others in several countries who live, sometimes for a long time, in a state of grave illness, assisted medically for their primary needs. They are delicate situations, very painful and complex.  Let us pray so that every sick <person> is always respected in his dignity and cared for in a way adapted to his condition, with the harmonious contribution of the family, of doctors and of other health workers, with great respect for life.
I greet you all affectionately, pilgrims from Italy and from so many places of the world: the families, parish groups, schools <and> Associations. I greet, in particular, the faithful of California, as well as those of Arluno Pontelongo, Scandicci, Genoa-Pegli and Vibo Valentia; the children of the “Daughters of Jesus” School of Modena and the “Friends of Paul VI” group of Pescara.
I wish you all a happy Sunday. And please, don’t forget to pray for me.
Have a good lunch and goodbye!
[Original text: Italian]  [Blog Entry SHARE of ZENIT’s translation by Virginia M. Forrester]

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