?At the General Audience the Pope recalls that everyone is precious in the eyes of God – A reserve of gold and silver
We are all
 “precious gems in the the hands of the good and merciful Father”. Moreover, we
 are “his personal ‘reserve of gold and silver’, such as King David stated he
 had given for the construction of the Temple”. This evocative image was offered
 by Pope Francis on Wednesday, 27 January, at the General Audience dedicated to
 the theme of the Jubilee of Mercy, read in the light of the Bible. With the
 faithful who gathered in St Peter’s Square, the Pontiff expanded on the passage
 from the Book of Exodus (2:23-25) in which the Lord hears the cry of his people
 and establishes a covenant with them. The following is a translation of the
 Holy Father’s address, which he delivered in Italian.
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
Good morning!
In Sacred Scripture, God’s mercy is present along the entire
 history of the people of Israel.
 With his mercy,
 the Lord accompanies the journey of the Patriarchs, gives them children despite
 being barren, leads them on paths of grace and reconciliation, as demonstrated
 by the story of Joseph and his brothers (cf. Gen ch. 37-50). I think of the
 many brothers and sisters in a family who are distant and do not speak to each
 other. This Year of Mercy is a good opportunity to meet again, embrace, forgive
 and forget the bad things. But as we know, in Egypt life is hard for the
 people. It is precisely when the Israelites are about to give in to
 resignation, that the Lord intervenes and works salvation.

 One reads in the
 Book of Exodus: “In the course of those many days the King of  Egypt died. And the people of Israel groaned
 under their bondage, and cried out for help, and their cry under bondage came
 up to God. And God heard their groaning, and God remembered his covenant with
 Abraham, with Isaac, and with Jacob. And God saw the people of Israel, and God
 knew their condition” (2:23-25). Mercy cannot remain indifferent to the
 suffering of the oppressed, to the cry of those who are subjected to violence,
 reduced to slavery, condemned to death. It is a painful reality that afflicts
 every era, including ours, and which often makes us feel powerless, tempted to
 harden our heart and thing of something else. However, God “is not indifferent”
 (Message for the Celebration of the 2016 World Day of Peace, n. 1). He does not
 look away from our human pain. The God of mercy responds and takes care of the
 poor, of those who cry out in desperation. God listens and intervenes in order
 to save, raising men able to hear the groan of suffering and to work in favour
 of the oppressed.
 And so begins the
 story of Moses as the mediator of liberation for the people. He confronts the
 Pharaoh to convince him to let Israel depart; and he then leads the people, across
 the Red Sea and the desert, toward freedom. Moses — whom just after his birth,
 divine mercy saved from death in the waters of the Nile — becomes the mediator
 of that very mercy, allowing the people to be born to liberty, saved from the
 waters of the Red Sea. In this Year of Mercy we too can do this work of acting
 as mediators of mercy with the works of mercy in order to approach, to give
 relief, to create unity. So many good things can be done.
 God’s mercy
 always operates to save. It is quite the opposite of the work of those who
 always act to kill: for example, those who wage war. The Lord, through his
 servant Moses, guides Israel in the desert as if Israel were a son, educates
 the people to the faith and makes a covenant with Israel, creating a bond of
 the strongest love, like that of a father with his child and of a groom with
 his bride.
 Divine mercy goes
 that far. God offers a special, exclusive, privileged relationship of love.
 When he gives instructions to Moses regarding the covenant, he says: “if you
 will obey my voice and keep my covenant, you shall be my own possession among
 all peoples; for all the earth is mine, and you shall be to me a kingdom of
 priests and a holy nation” (Ex 19:5-6).
 Of course, God
 already possesses all the earth because he created it; but his people become
 for him a different, special possession: his personal “reserve of gold and
 silver” such as King David stated he had given for the construction of the
 Temple.
 So we become thus
 for God, by accepting his covenant and letting ourselves be saved by him. The
 Lord’s mercy renders man precious, like a personal treasure that belongs to
 him, which he safeguards and with which he is well pleased.
 These are the
 wonders of divine mercy, which reaches complete fulfillment in the Lord Jesus,
 in the “new and eternal covenant” consummated in his blood, which destroys our
 sin with forgiveness and renders us definitively Children of God (cf. 1 Jn
 3:1), precious gems in the the hands of the good and merciful Father. And as we
 are Children of God and have the opportunity to have this legacy — that of
 goodness and mercy — in comparison to others, let us ask the Lord that in this
 Year of Mercy we too may do merciful things; let us open our heart in order to
 reach everyone with the works of mercy, to work the merciful legacy that God
 the Father showed toward us.