Such beautiful words from our Holy Father
"We do
well to take up the dreams of our elders, so that we can prophesy in our
day and once more encounter what originally set our hearts afire.
Dreams and prophecies together. The remembrance of how our elders, our
fathers and mothers, dreamed, and the courage prophetically to carry on
those dreams.
"This attitude will make us fruitful. Most importantly, it will
protect us from a temptation that can make our consecrated life barren: the temptation of survival.
An evil that can gradually take root within us and within our
communities. The mentality of survival makes us reactionaries, fearful,
slowly and silently shutting ourselves up in our houses and in our own
preconceived notions. It makes us look back, to the glory days – days
that are past – and rather than rekindling the prophetic creativity born
of our founders’ dreams, it looks for shortcuts in order to evade the
challenges knocking on our doors today. A survival mentality robs our
charisms of power, because it leads us to “domesticate” them, to make
them “user-friendly”, robbing them of their original creative force. It
makes us want to protect spaces, buildings and structures, rather than
to encourage new initiatives. The temptation of survival makes us
forget grace; it turns us into professionals of the sacred but not
fathers and mothers, brothers and sisters of that hope to which we are
called to bear prophetic witness. An environment of survival withers
the hearts of our elderly, taking away their ability to dream. In this
way, it cripples the prophecy that our young are called to proclaim and
work to achieve. In a word, the temptation of survival turns what the
Lord presents as an opportunity for mission into something dangerous,
threatening, potentially disastrous. This attitude is not limited to
the consecrated life, but we in particular are urged not to fall into
it." --Pope Francis
Full text of Pope Francis' homily for the feast of the Presentation of the Lord
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