Feeding the hungry is an ethical imperative,
the Pope told his General Audience today
While donation campaigns and
charitable contributions for the needy are important, true Christian charity
involves a more personal touch, Pope Francis has said.
Coming face to face with the
poor may pose a challenge and tempt people to turn the other way and give in to
“the habit of fleeing from needy people and not approach them or disguise a bit
the reality of the needy,” the Pope said during his general audience in St
Peter’s Square.
“Poverty in the abstract
does not challenge us. It may make us think, it may make us complain, but when
you see poverty in the flesh of a man, a woman or a child; this (certainly)
challenges us!” he said.
The square was packed with
thousands of people, many of whom attended the October 16 canonisation Mass of
seven new saints. Among the pilgrims was a group from the Pope’s native
Argentina who sang folk music and dressed in traditional ponchos.
After his address, the Pope
greeted the group and blessed a life-sized statue of newly canonised saint, St
Jose Gabriel del Rosario Brochero.
The statute depicted the
“gaucho priest” seated on his mule, his means of transportation when traveling
thousands of miles to minister to the poor and the sick.
In a new series of talks on
works of mercy, the Pope reflected on the first corporal work of mercy –
feeding the hungry – which he said was important in confronting real
“situations of urgent need.”
Although images of extreme
poverty can move people to initiate important works of charity and generous
donations, it “does not directly involve us.”
When a poor person “knocks
on the door of our house, it is very different because we are no longer facing
an image but are personally involved,” he explained.
“In these instances, what is
my reaction? Do I turn away? Do I move on? Or do I stop to talk and take an
interest? If you do this, there will always be someone who says, ‘This one is
crazy, talking to a poor person,'” the Pope said.
Recalling St James’
affirmation that “faith without works is dead,” Pope Francis said that
Christians cannot “delegate” feeding the hungry to others and helping the needy
through words and deeds.
Jesus’ command to his
disciples to feed the crowd prior to the multiplication of the loaves and
fishes, he added, is also “an important lesson for us.”
“It tells us that the little
that we have, if we entrust it to Jesus’ hands and share it with faith, can
turn into an overabundant wealth,” the Pope said.
Citing Pope Benedict XVI’s
encyclical “Caritas in Veritate” (“Charity in Truth”), the Pope said that
feeding the hungry is “an ethical imperative for the universal church” and a
calling for all Christians to defend the universal right to food and water,
especially for the poor and the needy.
“Our relationship with God –
a God who, through Jesus, has revealed his merciful face – involves our giving
food to the hungry and giving drink to the thirsty,” Pope Francis said.
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