Faith always wants to move, reach out to others, pope says

A person who has faith wants to share it and that involves reaching out to people, Pope Francis explained as he continued his audience talks about sharing the Good News.

Faith always wants to move, reach out to others, pope says

Young flag twirlers and drummers line the path to the stage as Pope Francis rides in the popemobile in St. Peter's Square at the Vatican for his weekly general audience Nov. 8, 2023. (CNS photo/Lola Gomez)

VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- Like keeping a bicycle upright when riding it, a balanced life of faith is possible only in motion, Pope Francis said.

"If you stop, it does not stay up," he said Nov. 8 at his weekly general audience, explaining the importance of sharing the Gospel with all people by the example of one's life and in words and acts of charity.

Since Jan. 11, Pope Francis has been using his general audiences to teach about "zeal" for evangelization, choosing a different person each week to hold up as an example.

For his talk on how the call to share the Gospel is a call to go out to the people who need to hear it, the pope pointed to Madeleine Delbrel, a sainthood candidate who lived 1904-1964 and was a social worker, writer and mystic, who spent more than 30 years living in a poor neighborhood on the outskirts of Paris.

Pope Francis prays
Pope Francis prays during his weekly general audience Nov. 8, 2023, in St. Peter’s Square at the Vatican. (CNS photo/Lola Gomez)

Coming to faith only in her 20s, Delbrel then chose "a life entirely given to God, in the heart of the church and in the heart of the world, simply sharing in fraternity the life of the people on the street," the pope said.

She summarized her "spirituality of the bicycle" in a poetic prayer to Jesus that said: "You have chosen us to stay in a strange balance, a balance that can be achieved and maintained only in movement, only in momentum. A bit like a bicycle, which does not stay upright unless its wheels turn. ... We can stay upright only by going forward, moving, in a surge of charity."

Pope Francis said Delbrel also teaches fellow Christians that they evangelize themselves as they seek to share the Gospel with others.

Her life is a reminder that "in every personal or social situation and circumstance of our lives, the Lord is present and calls us to inhabit our time, to share the lives of others, to mingle with the joys and sorrows of the world," the pope said. "In particular, it teaches us that even secularized environments are helpful for conversion, because contact with non-believers provokes the believer to a continuous revision of his or her way of believing and to rediscover faith in its essentiality."

The pope prayed that Delbrel would "teach us to live this faith 'in motion,' let us say, this fruitful faith that every act of faith makes an act of charity in the proclamation of the Gospel."

 

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Continuing his audience talks on evangelization, Pope Francis holds up the example of Madeleine Delbrel, a French candidate for sainthood.

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