To the formators and seminarians of the Spanish dioceses of Valencia, Orihuela-Alicante, Segorbe-Castellón, Mallorca, Menorca and Ibiza Photo: Vatican Media

Pope Francis Addresses Formators and Seminarians from the Spanish Dioceses of the Valencian Ecclesiastical Province

Words from the Pope to seminarians from the dioceses of Valencia, Orihuela-Alicante, Segorbe-Castellón, Mallorca, Menorca and Ibiza

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(ZENIT News / Vatican City, 31.01.2025).- On Thursday, January 30, Pope Francis received — in the Vatican’s Clementine Hall — the formators and seminarians of the Dioceses of the Valencian Ecclesiastical Province (Valencia, Orihuela-Alicante, Segorbe-Castellón, Mallorca, Menorca and Ibiza). The seminarians were accompanied by their Bishops. He expressed to all his grief for the victims of the DANA storm and said that “being a priest is being another Christ, it is making oneself mud in the weeping of the people, and when you see broken people, because in Valencia there are broken people, people whose lives have been broken into pieces, offer them pieces of yourselves.”

In an emotional address, the Pontiff said: “It is not easy to express to you my feeling, thinking of the Christmas festivities, undoubtedly atypical, with that experience that ‘God became mud’ in you. A pain and a grief that, despite its harshness, opens us to hope, since by forcing us to hit rock bottom and leave behind everything that seemed to sustain us, it permits us to go beyond. It is not something we can do by ourselves; it is an immense darkness that you have experienced and are experiencing.”

The Pope encouraged the seminarians and priests to imitate the solidarity that has been lived in the affected areas. “I think of the selfless help given by so many people, the eyes of the people full of dedication, capable of enlightening us with God’s tenderness. It is in this field that you are required to work. The DANA is not an anomalous phenomenon that we simply hope does not repeat itself; it is the extrapolation of what is lived by every human being who must face a loss and who feels alone, disorientated and in need of solid support to be able to carry on.”

Pope Francis made reference to the Jubilee Year, which has begun this year, with the motto Pilgrims of Hope. “We are already in this Year of Grace, which I wanted to dedicate to hope, and which you will live in all its strength, contemplating these words,” and he stressed that “hope” is not “optimism.” “’Optimism’ is a light expression, whereas hope is something else. We cannot take lightly people’s suffering and try to console them with convenient phrases and do-goodism. Our hope has a name, Jesus, that God who did not feel disgust at our mud and who, instead of saving us from the mud, became mud for us. And being a priest is being another Christ, it is making oneself mud in the weeping of the people, and when you see broken people, because in Valencia there are broken people, people whose lives have been broken into pieces, offer them pieces of yourselves, as Christ does in the Eucharist. Please, give of yourselves freely, because everything you have, you have received freely, do not forget gratuity.”

Here is the Holy Father’s full address, which was followed by plenty of time for questions and answers.

* * *

Dear brothers in the episcopate,
Dear seminarians and formators
of the Ecclesiastical Province of Valencia

It is not easy to express to you my feeling, thinking of the Christmas festivities, undoubtedly atypical, with that experience that “God became mud” in you. A pain and a grief that, despite its harshness, opens us to hope, since by forcing us to hit rock bottom and leave behind everything that seemed to sustain us, it permits us to go beyond. It is not something we can do by ourselves; it is an immense darkness that you have experienced and are experiencing. And I think of the selfless help given by so many people, the eyes of the people full of dedication, capable of enlightening us with God’s tenderness.

It is in this field that you are required to work. The DANA is not an anomalous phenomenon that we simply hope does not repeat itself; it is the extrapolation of what is lived by every human being who must face a loss and who feels alone, disorientated and in need of solid support to be able to carry on. Jesus says it clearly: “Because the Lord has anointed me” – because you are anointed – “to bind up the broken-hearted … to announce a year of favour from the Lord” (cf. Is 61:1; Lk 4:18). We are already in this Year of Grace, which I wanted to dedicate to hope, and which you will live in all its strength, contemplating these words.

At times I have said that “hope” is not “optimism”; “optimism” is a light expression, whereas hope is something else. We cannot take lightly people’s suffering and try to console them with convenient phrases and do-goodism. Our hope has a name, Jesus, that God who did not feel disgust at our mud and who, instead of saving us from the mud, became mud for us. And being a priest is being another Christ, it is making oneself mud in the weeping of the people, and when you see broken people, because in Valencia there are broken people, people whose lives have been broken into pieces, offer them pieces of yourselves, as Christ does in the Eucharist. Please, give of yourselves freely, because everything you have, you have received freely. And please, I ask you to pray for me. Thank you.

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