On World Day of Poor, be poor like those you serve, Pope says

November 13, 2023 at 12:13 p.m.
Pope Francis greets Afghan refugees Qadery Abdul Razaq and his wife, Salima, during a meeting with the poor at the Basilica of St. Mary of the Angels in Assisi, Italy, Nov. 12, 2021. The visit was in preparation for the celebration of the World Day of the Poor. (CNS photo/Paul Haring).
Pope Francis greets Afghan refugees Qadery Abdul Razaq and his wife, Salima, during a meeting with the poor at the Basilica of St. Mary of the Angels in Assisi, Italy, Nov. 12, 2021. The visit was in preparation for the celebration of the World Day of the Poor. (CNS photo/Paul Haring). (Paul Haring)

By JUSTIN MCLELLAN
Osv News

VATICAN CITY CNS – To recognize and address the poverty of others, Christians must become poor like the figure of Tobit from the Hebrew Bible, Pope Francis said.

Tobit, a blind and elderly man who dedicated his life to the service of others, "can show practical concern for the poor because he has personally known what it is to be poor," the Pope wrote in his message for the November celebration of the World Day of the Poor.

The papal message was published June 13, the feast of St. Anthony of Padua, patron of the poor.

Read the Pope's message HERE.

Christians are called to "acknowledge every poor person and every form of poverty, abandoning the indifference and the banal excuses we make to protect our illusory well-being," Pope Francis wrote. "Regardless of the color of their skin, their social standing, the place from which they came, if I myself am poor, I can recognize my brothers and sisters in need of my help."

The theme for World Day of the Poor 2023 is a passage from the Book of Tobit: "Do not turn your face away from anyone who is poor."

"When we encounter a poor person, we cannot look away, for that would prevent us from encountering the face of the Lord Jesus," Pope Francis wrote.

In his message for the world day, which will be celebrated Nov. 19, Pope Francis listed an array of cultural phenomena that prevent people from caring for the poor: greater pressure to live affluently, a tendency to disregard suffering, virtual reality overtaking real life and a sense of haste that prevents people from stopping to care for others. He offered the parable of the Good Samaritan, who stops to help a man in the street beaten by robbers, to counter the hangups many people have against helping the poor.

The parable "is not simply a story from the past; it continues to challenge each of us in the here and now of our daily lives," he said. "It is easy to delegate charity to others, yet the calling of every Christian is to become personally involved."

The Pope thanked God for the men and women "of every age and social status" who devote themselves to caring for the poor and excluded, the "ordinary people who quietly make themselves poor among the poor."

Pope Francis also called for a "serious and effective commitment on the part of political leaders and legislators" to defend the rights enjoyed by all people to food, clothing, shelter, medical care, rest and social services as outlined in St. John XXIII's 1963 encyclical "Pacem in Terris" (Peace on Earth).

While recognizing the need to pressure public institutions to defend the poor, the Pope praised volunteers who serve the common good in a "spirit of solidarity and subsidiarity," saying "it is of no use to wait passively to receive everything 'from on high.'"

The Pope also pointed to the way poverty is exacerbated by inhumane working conditions, inadequate pay, the "scourge" of job insecurity and by workplace accidents resulting in death. Young people, he said, are also afflicted by a cultural poverty that destroys their self-worth and leads to frustration and even suicide.

He urged people not to fall into "rhetorical excess" or merely consider statistics when speaking of the poor, but to remember that "the poor are persons; they have faces, stories, hearts and souls."

"Caring for the poor is more than simply a matter of a hasty handout," Pope Francis said, "it calls for reestablishing the just interpersonal relationships that poverty harms."

Calling for a care for the poor marked by "Gospel realism," the Pope invited Christians to discern the genuine needs of the poor rather than their own personal hopes and aspirations.

"What the poor need is certainly our humanity, our hearts open to love," he said.


VATICAN CITY CNS – To recognize and address the poverty of others, Christians must become poor like the figure of Tobit from the Hebrew Bible, Pope Francis said.

Tobit, a blind and elderly man who dedicated his life to the service of others, "can show practical concern for the poor because he has personally known what it is to be poor," the Pope wrote in his message for the November celebration of the World Day of the Poor.

The papal message was published June 13, the feast of St. Anthony of Padua, patron of the poor.

Read the Pope's message HERE.

Christians are called to "acknowledge every poor person and every form of poverty, abandoning the indifference and the banal excuses we make to protect our illusory well-being," Pope Francis wrote. "Regardless of the color of their skin, their social standing, the place from which they came, if I myself am poor, I can recognize my brothers and sisters in need of my help."

The theme for World Day of the Poor 2023 is a passage from the Book of Tobit: "Do not turn your face away from anyone who is poor."

"When we encounter a poor person, we cannot look away, for that would prevent us from encountering the face of the Lord Jesus," Pope Francis wrote.

In his message for the world day, which will be celebrated Nov. 19, Pope Francis listed an array of cultural phenomena that prevent people from caring for the poor: greater pressure to live affluently, a tendency to disregard suffering, virtual reality overtaking real life and a sense of haste that prevents people from stopping to care for others. He offered the parable of the Good Samaritan, who stops to help a man in the street beaten by robbers, to counter the hangups many people have against helping the poor.

The parable "is not simply a story from the past; it continues to challenge each of us in the here and now of our daily lives," he said. "It is easy to delegate charity to others, yet the calling of every Christian is to become personally involved."

The Pope thanked God for the men and women "of every age and social status" who devote themselves to caring for the poor and excluded, the "ordinary people who quietly make themselves poor among the poor."

Pope Francis also called for a "serious and effective commitment on the part of political leaders and legislators" to defend the rights enjoyed by all people to food, clothing, shelter, medical care, rest and social services as outlined in St. John XXIII's 1963 encyclical "Pacem in Terris" (Peace on Earth).

While recognizing the need to pressure public institutions to defend the poor, the Pope praised volunteers who serve the common good in a "spirit of solidarity and subsidiarity," saying "it is of no use to wait passively to receive everything 'from on high.'"

The Pope also pointed to the way poverty is exacerbated by inhumane working conditions, inadequate pay, the "scourge" of job insecurity and by workplace accidents resulting in death. Young people, he said, are also afflicted by a cultural poverty that destroys their self-worth and leads to frustration and even suicide.

He urged people not to fall into "rhetorical excess" or merely consider statistics when speaking of the poor, but to remember that "the poor are persons; they have faces, stories, hearts and souls."

"Caring for the poor is more than simply a matter of a hasty handout," Pope Francis said, "it calls for reestablishing the just interpersonal relationships that poverty harms."

Calling for a care for the poor marked by "Gospel realism," the Pope invited Christians to discern the genuine needs of the poor rather than their own personal hopes and aspirations.

"What the poor need is certainly our humanity, our hearts open to love," he said.

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