Do good unto others, ditch digital addictions for Lent, pope says

Pope Francis hears the confession of a priest at the Basilica of St. John Lateran in Rome, March 7, 2019. (CNS photo/Vatican Media)

Pope Francis hears the confession of a priest at the Basilica of St. John Lateran in Rome, March 7, 2019. (CNS photo/Vatican Media)

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VATICAN CITY — Christians must persevere in generously doing good in the world, bolstered by prayer and by fighting evil in their own lives, including an addiction to digital media, Pope Francis said.

"Lent is a propitious time to resist these temptations and to cultivate instead a more integral form of human communication made up of 'authentic encounters' — face-to-face and in person," the pope said in his message for Lent, which begins March 2 for Latin-rite Catholics.

"Let us ask God to give us the patient perseverance of the farmer and to persevere in doing good, one step at a time," and to know that "the soil is prepared by fasting, watered by prayer and enriched by charity," the pope wrote.

Released by the Vatican Feb. 24, the pope's Lenten message was titled, "Let us not grow tired of doing good, for in due time we shall reap our harvest if we do not give up. So then, while we have the opportunity, let us do good to all," which is from St. Paul's Letter to the Galatians.

Christians are called to sow goodness their entire lives, but even more so during Lent, he wrote.

The first fruit "appears in ourselves and our daily lives," radiating the light of Christ to the world, he wrote. And sowing goodness "for the benefit of others frees us from narrow self-interest, infuses our actions with gratuitousness and makes us part of the magnificent horizon of God's benevolent plan."

Christians must not grow tired of praying, he wrote. "We need to pray because we need God. Thinking that we need nothing other than ourselves is a dangerous illusion."

"Let us not grow tired of uprooting evil from our lives," he added, underlining the importance of fasting and asking for forgiveness in the sacrament of penance and reconciliation.

Christians must resist "concupiscence," the tendency to sin, which is a weakness that leads to "selfishness and all evil, and finds in the course of history a variety of ways to lure men and women into sin," he wrote.

One sign of such weakness, he said, is an addiction to "digital media, which impoverishes human relationships." Lent is an opportune time to cultivate healthy communication and face-to-face encounters.

"Let us not grow tired of doing good in active charity toward our neighbors" and of giving joyfully, he wrote.

"Lent is a favorable time to seek out — and not to avoid — those in need; to reach out -- and not to ignore — those who need a sympathetic ear and a good word; to visit — and not to abandon — those who are lonely," he wrote.

"Let us put into practice our call to do good to all," he wrote, "and take time to love the poor and needy, those abandoned and rejected, those discriminated against and marginalized."

And, Pope Francis said, doing good "with love, justice and solidarity are not achieved once and for all; they have to be realized each day" and require patience, prayer and hope.

Salesian Sister Alessandra Smerilli, interim secretary of the Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human Development, was among the speakers presenting the Lenten message at a Vatican news conference.

Around the world, she said, one sees the "winds of war, after decades of reckless rearmament," a deadly pandemic, increasing inequalities and fundamental problems with economic and social systems.

But, she said, "God believes in the Earth and cares for it in the same way that a farmer does not abandon his land," so in his message, Pope Francis is inviting people "to be that fertile soil that creates the conditions for the seeds to grow" and create something "different from the present."

Italian Cardinal Francesco Montenegro, a dicastery member and retired archbishop of Agrigento, said bringing about these changes requires a different way of facing problems.

People must not turn their back and believe someone else will take care of things but must know "each one of us can do something" and must look for where there is a need and see others as brothers and sisters, he said.

Communities break down without this kind of loving concern and action, he said, and if everyone were to contribute, creating a "network of love, acceptance and mutual integration, then we will discover a more human world will be possible."

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