Pope Francis at 1st Jubilee Audience says "Begin Again" in Hope - "I encourage you to live well the Jubilee year, which offers the possibility of drawing from the treasure of grace and mercy"


In his first Saturday, January 11, Jubilee Audience, Pope Francis highlights the Jubilee as a time for a new beginning, rooted in the transformative power of God’s Kingdom, drawing on the example of John the Baptist, a "great prophet of hope.”
JUBILEE AUDIENCE
FULL TEXT ADDRESS OF THE HOLY FATHER
In the Vatican's Audience Hall on Saturday, 11 January 2025
_________________________________
To hope is to begin again – John the Baptist
Dear brothers and sisters, good morning!
Many of you are here in Rome as “pilgrims of hope”. This morning, we are starting the Saturday Jubilee audiences, which will ideally welcome and embrace all those who are coming from all over the world in search of a new beginning. Indeed, the Jubilee is a new beginning, the possibility for everyone to start anew from God. With the Jubilee we start a new life, a new phase.

On these Saturdays I would like to highlight, from time to time, some aspects of hope. It is a theological virtue, the Catechism tells us. And in Latin, virtus means “strength”; thus, it is a strength that comes from God. Hope, therefore, is not a habit or a character trait – that you either have or you don’t – but a strength to be asked for. That is why we make ourselves pilgrims: we come to ask for a gift, to start again on life’s journey.

We are about to celebrate the Feast of the Baptism of Jesus, and this makes us think about that great prophet of hope, John the Baptist. Jesus said something wonderful about him: that he is the greatest among those born of women (cf. Lk 7:28). We understand then why so many people flocked to him, longing for a new beginning, longing to start over. And the Jubilee helps us in this. The Baptist appeared truly great, he appeared credible in his personality. Just as we today pass through the Holy Door, so John proposed to cross the river Jordan, entering the Promised Land as Joshua had done the first time. To begin again, to receive the land all over again, like the first time. Sisters and brothers, this is the word: begin again. Let us put this in our heads and let us all say together: “begin again”. Let us say it together: begin again! [all repeat several times] There, don't forget this: begin again

Jesus, however, immediately after that great compliment, adds something that makes us think: “I tell you, among those born of women, no one is greater than John; yet the least in the kingdom of God is greater than he” (v. 28). Hope, brothers and sisters, is everything in this qualitative step. It does not depend on us, but on the Kingdom of God. Here is the surprise: welcoming the Kingdom of God leads us to a new order of greatness. Our world, all of us, we need this! And us, what must we do? [Everyone: “Begin again!”]. Do not forget this.

When Jesus utters those words, the Baptist is in jail, full of questions. We too bring many questions on our pilgrimage, because there are many “Herods” who still oppose the Kingdom of God. Jesus, however, shows us the new path, the path of the Beatitudes, which are the surprising law of the Gospel. Let us ask ourselves, then: do I have within me a true desire to start again? Think about it, each one of you: inside myself, do I want to begin again? Do I want to learn from Jesus who is truly great? The least, in the Kingdom of God, is great. Because we must … [Everyone: “Begin again!”].

From John the Baptist, then, we learn to recreate ourselves. Hope for our common home – this Earth of ours, so abused and wounded – and the hope for all human beings resides in the difference of God. His greatness is different. And let us start again from this originality of God, which shone in Jesus and which now binds us to serve, to love fraternally, to acknowledge ourselves as small. And to see the least, to listen to them and to be their voice. Here is the new beginning, our Jubilee. And so we must… [Everyone: “Begin again!”]. Thank you.

_________________

Special greetings:

I greet the English-speaking pilgrims and offer my cordial good wishes that the Jubilee will be for all of you a season of spiritual renewal and growth in the joy of the Gospel. Upon you and your families I gladly invoke God’s blessings of wisdom, strength and peace.

I extend a cordial welcome to the Italian-speaking pilgrims. In particular, I greet the faithful of Chieti-Vasto accompanied by their Archbishop, a great theologian; the young “Knights of the Grail”; the Vincentian Volunteers, the Associations of Friends of Italian Museums; the groups of the Municipio V of Rome.

I affectionately welcome the Officials of the Grand Council of the Canton of Ticino.

Finally, my thoughts go to the young people, the sick, the elderly and newlyweds. I encourage you to live well the Jubilee year, which offers the possibility of drawing from the treasure of grace and mercy entrusted by God to the Church. And dear brothers, dear sisters, let us pray for peace. Let us never forget that war is a defeat, always! Let us pray for the countries at war, that peace may come.

And to all my blessing!

Comments