Speaking on the topic of the Lord’s prayer, Pope Francis has said that forgiving those who have caused pain or offense is not easy.
At his weekly general audience today, the Pontiff said that ability to forgive is “grace that we have to ask for”, because the peace offered by Christ cannot take root in a heart that is incapable of living in fraternity with others and incapable of rebuilding those bonds after being wounded.
The Pope continued his series of talks on the Mass, focusing on the Communion rite, which begins with the assembly’s recitation of the Lord’s Prayer.
He added that the Lord’s Prayer is not just any Christian prayer but is “the prayer of God’s children. It is the great prayer that Jesus taught us” because it was the very same prayer he used with God.
Calling God “our father” like Jesus did underlines how the faithful have been reborn and “regenerated” as God’s children through baptism and the Holy Spirit, the Pope said.
But, he asked, how many people go beyond a rote recitation of the prayer and truly believe and feel God is their father and the father of all of humanity when they recite the Lord’s Prayer?
“When we pray the ‘Our Father’, we connect with the Father” through the Holy Spirit, who gives people this connection and feeling of being children of God, he said.
Praying the ‘Our Father’ throughout the day helps people build their filial relationship with God and a sense of fraternity toward others, he said.
The prayer also opens a person’s heart to forgiving others as God has forgiven him or her, the Pope explained.
“Forgiving people who have offended us is not easy”, he added, so people must pray to the Lord “to teach me to forgive as you have forgiven me”. Human strength or will is not enough to be able to forgive, he said; it requires grace from the Holy Spirit.
Carol Glatz, Catholic News Service