(Vatican Radio) Pope Francis on Saturday evening presided at the Vigil of the Marian Jubilee taking place in St. Peter’s Square. The Jubilee began on Friday, which was the feast of Our Lady of the Rosary, and the highlight of Saturday’s event was the recitation of the Glorious Mysteries of the Rosary.
 “From the earliest centuries, Mary has been invoked as Mother of Mercy,” Pope Francis said.
 “The prayer of the rosary is, in many ways, the synthesis of the history of God’s mercy, which becomes a history of salvation for all who let themselves be shaped by grace,” – the Holy Father continued – “Through prayer and meditation on the life of Jesus Christ, we see once more his merciful countenance, which he shows to everyone in all the many needs of life.  Mary accompanies us along this journey, pointing to her Son who radiates the very mercy of the Father.”
  
 The full prepared text of Pope Francis for the Vigil of the Marian Jubilee is below
  
 Dear Brothers and Sisters,
             In this Vigil we have pondered the fundamental moments of the life of Jesus in company with Mary.  In mind and heart, we have returned to the time of the fulfilment of Christ’s mission in the world.  The  Resurrection , as a sign of the extreme love of the Father who restores everything to life and as a foreshadowing of our future state.  The  Ascension , as a sharing in the Father’s glory, where even our humanity finds a privileged place.   Pentecost , as the expression of the Church’s mission in history until the end of time, under the guidance of the Holy Spirit.  In the last two mysteries, we have also contemplated the Virgin Mary in the  glory of heaven .  From the earliest centuries, Mary has been invoked as Mother of Mercy.
             The prayer of the rosary is, in many ways, the synthesis of the history of God’s mercy, which becomes a history of salvation for all who let themselves be shaped by grace.  The mysteries we have contemplated are concrete events by which God’s intervention on our behalf develops.  Through prayer and meditation on the life of Jesus Christ, we see once more his merciful countenance, which he shows to everyone in all the many needs of life.  Mary accompanies us along this journey, pointing to her Son who radiates the very mercy of the Father.  She is truly  Hodegetria , the Mother who points to the path we are called to take in order to be true disciples of Jesus.  In each mystery of the rosary, we feel her closeness and we contemplate her as the first disciple of her Son, for she does the Father’s will (cf.  Lk  8:19-21).
             Praying the rosary does not remove us from the problems of life.  On the contrary, it demands that we immerse ourselves in the history of each day, so as to grasp the signs of Christ’s presence in our midst.  Whenever we contemplate an event, a mystery of the life of Christ, we are asked to reflect on how God comes into our own lives, so as to be able to welcome him and follow him.  In this way, we discover how we can follow Christ by serving our brothers and sisters.  By accepting and making our own certain outstanding events in the life of Jesus, we share in his work of evangelization, so that God’s Kingdom can increase and spread in the world.  We are disciples, but also missionaries, bringing Christ wherever he asks us to be present.  So we cannot keep the gift of his presence within us.  On the contrary, we are called to share with everyone his love, his tenderness, his goodness and his mercy.  It is the joy of sharing that stops at nothing, for it brings a message of freedom and salvation.
             Mary helps us to understand what it means to be a disciple of Christ.  Eternally chosen to be his Mother, she learned to become his disciple.  Her first act was to  listen  to God.  She obeyed the message of the Angel and opened her heart to receive the mystery of divine motherhood.  She followed Jesus, listening to every word that issued from his lips (cf.  Mk  3:31-35).  She kept all those things in her heart (cf.  Lk  2:19) and became the living memory of the signs worked by God’s Son to awaken our faith.  But is not enough simply to listen.  That is certainly the first step, but listening then needs to be translated into concrete action.  The disciple truly puts his life at the service of the Gospel.
             So it is that the Virgin Mary went immediately to Elizabeth to help her in her pregnancy (cf.  Lk  1:39-56).  In Bethlehem she gave birth to the Son of God (cf.  Lk  2:1-7).  In Cana she showed her concern for two young spouses (cf.  Jn  2:1-11).  At Golgotha she did not flee pain but stood beneath the cross of Jesus and, by his will, became the Mother of the Church (cf.  Jn  19:25-27).  After the resurrection, she encouraged the apostles assembled in the Upper Room as they awaited the Holy Spirit who would make them fearless heralds of the Gospel (cf.  Acts  1:14).  Throughout her life, Mary did everything that the Church is asked to do in perennial memory of Christ.  In her faith, we learn to open our hearts to obey God; in her self-denial, we see the importance of tending to the needs of others; in her tears, we find the strength to console those experiencing pain.  In each of these moments, Mary expresses the wealth of divine mercy that reaches out to all in their daily needs.
             This evening let us invoke our loving heavenly Mother with the oldest prayer that Christians have addressed to her, especially at times of trouble and martyrdom.  Let us invoke her, in the certainty of being aided by her maternal mercy, so that she, “glorious and blessed”, can be a protection, help and blessing for us all the days of our life:
              “We fly to your protection, holy Mother of God.  Scorn not our petitions in the hour of need.  O glorious and blessed Virgin, deliver us always from every peril”.
 (from Vatican Radio)…
Dear Brothers and Sisters,   In
 this Vigil we have pondered the fundamental moments of the life of Jesus in
 company with Mary.  In mind and heart, we
 have returned to the time of the fulfilment of Christ’s mission in the
 world.  The  Resurrection , as a sign of the extreme love of the Father who
 restores everything to life and as a foreshadowing of our future state.  The  Ascension ,
 as a sharing in the Father’s glory, where even our humanity finds a privileged
 place.   Pentecost , as the expression of the Church’s mission in history
 until the end of time, under the guidance of the Holy Spirit.  In the last two mysteries, we have also
 contemplated the Virgin Mary in the  glory
 of heaven .  From the earliest
 centuries, Mary has been invoked as Mother of Mercy.   The
 prayer of the rosary is, in many ways, the synthesis of the history of God’s
 mercy, which becomes a history of salvation for all who let themselves be
 shaped by grace.  The mysteries we have
 contemplated are concrete events by which God’s intervention on our behalf
 develops.  Through prayer and meditation
 on the life of Jesus Christ, we see once more his merciful countenance, which
 he shows to everyone in all the many needs of life.  Mary accompanies us along this journey,
 pointing to her Son who radiates the very mercy of the Father.  She is truly  Hodegetria , the Mother who points to the path we are called to take
 in order to be true disciples of Jesus.
 In each mystery of the rosary, we feel her closeness and we contemplate
 her as the first disciple of her Son, for she does the Father’s will (cf.  Lk  8:19-21).   Praying
 the rosary does not remove us from the problems of life.  On the contrary, it demands that we immerse
 ourselves in the history of each day, so as to grasp the signs of Christ’s
 presence in our midst.  Whenever we
 contemplate an event, a mystery of the life of Christ, we are asked to reflect
 on how God comes into our own lives, so as to be able to welcome him and follow
 him.  In this way, we discover how we can
 follow Christ by serving our brothers and sisters.  By accepting and making our own certain
 outstanding events in the life of Jesus, we share in his work of
 evangelization, so that God’s Kingdom can increase and spread in the
 world.  We are disciples, but also
 missionaries, bringing Christ wherever he asks us to be present.  So we cannot keep the gift of his presence
 within us.  On the contrary, we are
 called to share with everyone his love, his tenderness, his goodness and his
 mercy.  It is the joy of sharing that
 stops at nothing, for it brings a message of freedom and salvation.   Mary
 helps us to understand what it means to be a disciple of Christ.  Eternally chosen to be his Mother, she
 learned to become his disciple.  Her
 first act was to  listen  to God.  She obeyed the message of the Angel and
 opened her heart to receive the mystery of divine motherhood.  She followed Jesus, listening to every word
 that issued from his lips (cf.  Mk  3:31-35).  She kept all those things in her heart (cf.  Lk  2:19) and became the living memory of
 the signs worked by God’s Son to awaken our faith.  But is not enough simply to listen.  That is certainly the first step, but
 listening then needs to be translated into concrete action.  The disciple truly puts his life at the
 service of the Gospel.   So
 it is that the Virgin Mary went immediately to  Elizabeth to help her in her pregnancy (cf.  Lk  1:39-56).  In  Bethlehem
 she gave birth to the Son of God (cf.  Lk  2:1-7).  In  Cana she
 showed her concern for two young spouses (cf.  Jn  2:1-11).  At  Golgotha she did not flee pain but stood beneath the
 cross of Jesus and, by his will, became the Mother of the Church (cf.  Jn  19:25-27).  After the resurrection, she encouraged the
 apostles assembled in the Upper Room as they awaited the Holy Spirit who would
 make them fearless heralds of the Gospel (cf.  Acts  1:14).  Throughout her
 life, Mary did everything that the Church is asked to do in perennial memory of
 Christ.  In her faith, we learn to open
 our hearts to obey God; in her self-denial, we see the importance of tending to
 the needs of others; in her tears, we find the strength to console those
 experiencing pain.  In each of these
 moments, Mary expresses the wealth of divine mercy that reaches out to all in
 their daily needs.   This
 evening let us invoke our loving heavenly Mother with the oldest prayer that
 Christians have addressed to her, especially at times of trouble and
 martyrdom.  Let us invoke her, in the
 certainty of being aided by her maternal mercy, so that she, “glorious and
 blessed”, can be a protection, help and blessing for us all the days of our
 life:    “We fly to your protection, holy Mother of
 God.  Scorn not our petitions in the hour
 of need.  O glorious and blessed Virgin,
 deliver us always from every peril”….
(Vatican Radio) Pope Francis has sent a video-message to the participants of the “Manos Abiertas” [Open Hands] Encounter taking place in Santa Fe, Argentina.
 The voluntary association was founded in 1992 by Father Ángel Rossi, SJ, with the motto “To love and to serve.” The theme of this year’s meeting is “Mercy: A journey from the heart to the hands.”
 In his video-message, Pope Francis brought up two stories from the New Testament: The parable of the Good Samaritan, and the story of the raising of the son of the Widow of Nain.
 “The heart, which in the Good Samaritan is like that of Jesus, was touched by misery: The misery he saw there, the misery of that widowed mother whom Jesus saw, that misery of pain and the misery of the beaten man who was seen by the Samaritan,” – Pope Francis said – “The heart is united with the misery of another and that’s mercy.”
 The Pope said mercy is not the same thing as having pity.
 “When the misery of the other comes into my heart, I feel mercy; which is not the same as to have pity, pity is another feeling,” – the Holy Father said – “I can feel pity when I see a  wounded animal or such a situation, but mercy is another feeling:  It is when the misery of another, or a situation of pain or misery, gets into my heart, and I permit the situation to touch my heart.  I say this: It is an outward journey, the journey of misery to the heart. And this is the path: It is not mercy if it is not of the heart, a heart wounded by the misery of another.”
 He also said mercy is not mere philanthropy.
 “It is distinct from having good feelings; this is not mercy, it is having good feelings,” – Pope Francis explained – “It is distinct from hands-on philanthropy, which is not mercy: It is good, it is good, philanthropy is not a bad thing, but it is not mercy, which is another thing. Mercy is the journey of misery to my heart, taken up by my heart, that moves my heart; and sometimes it moves so much that the heart becomes like a compass at the North Pole, and does not know where to stop, because of what it feels.”
 The Pope then explained how to tell the difference between mercy and pity.
 “First you must ask for the grace to have mercy; it is a grace, and we must ask it of the Lord,” he said.
 “The only way to have mercy is to yourself recognize your own sin, and be forgiven by the Lord;  through recognizing sin and forgiveness,” – Pope Francis continued. – “You can be merciful only if you truly feel that you have received the mercy of the Lord, otherwise you cannot be merciful … and having received mercy, you will be merciful.”
 The Holy Father said this is the return journey, “from the heart to the hands.”
 “Stop torturing yourself over what wounded your heart, both by others and yourself,” Pope Francis said. “Let yourself receive mercy and begin the return trip, and with your hands give mercy to others, spreading mercy and love.”
 (from Vatican Radio)…
Bulletin for 10/09/2016