Pope Francis: Be like St. Augustine and examine the story of your life

Courtney Mares   By Courtney Mares for CNA

 

Pope Francis at the general audience, Oct. 19, 2022 — and St. Augustine of Hippo in a painting by Philippe de Champaigne, ca. 1650. / Daniel Ibáñez / CNA // Wikimedia (CC0). See CNA article for full slideshow. 

Rome Newsroom, Oct 19, 2022 / 03:59 am (CNA).

Saint Augustine’s Confessions recount the 4th-century bishop’s spiritual conversion from his restless youth to finding peace in Christ.

Pope Francis has recommended that everyone can benefit from a similar personal examination of their own life story.

Speaking at his Wednesday general audience on Oct. 19, the pope said that “rereading one’s life … allows us to notice the little miracles that the good Lord works for us every day.”

Joyful pilgrims at the general audience at the Vatican's St. Peter's Square, Oct. 19, 2022. Daniel Ibáñez / CNA
Joyful pilgrims at the general audience at the Vatican’s St. Peter’s Square, Oct. 19, 2022. Daniel Ibáñez / CNA

“Our life is the most precious ‘book’ that is given to us, a book that unfortunately many do not read, or rather they do so too late, before dying. And yet, it is precisely in that book that one finds what one pointlessly seeks elsewhere,” he said.

“Saint Augustine, a great seeker of the truth, had understood this just by rereading his life, noting in it the silent and discreet, but incisive, steps of the presence of the Lord.”

The pope highlighted a passage from book 10 of Augustine’s Confessions, where the Doctor of the Church wrote:

Late have I loved you, O Beauty ever ancient, ever new, late have I loved you. You were within me, but I was outside, and it was there that I searched for you. In my unloveliness, I plunged into the lovely things which you created. You were with me, but I was not with you.

Saint Augustine’s words are an invitation to “cultivate an interior life in order to find what you are looking for,” the pope observed.

Pope Francis prays at the general audience, Oct. 19, 2022. Daniel Ibáñez / CNA
Pope Francis prays at the general audience, Oct. 19, 2022. Daniel Ibáñez / CNA

Pope Francis said that reflecting on one’s own story also means recognizing the presence of “toxic elements” in one’s past and how to avoid repeating mistakes.

“Discernment is the narrative reading of the good times and the dark times, of the consolations and desolations that we experience in the course of our life. In discernment, it is the heart that speaks to us about God, and we must learn to understand its language,” he said.

The pope recommended studying the lives of the saints to help recognize how God acts in a person’s life.

“Because God’s style is discreet,” he said. “God likes to be hidden, discrete. He does not impose; it is like the air we breathe—we do not see it but it allows us to live, and we realize this only when it is missing.”

Pilgrims from Haiti, Indonesia, Croatia, Poland, Ireland, Denmark, Norway, Belgium, Canada, the United States, Switzerland, and the Democratic Republic of Congo were present in St. Peter’s Square for the pope’s sixth general audience dedicated to the theme of personal discernment.

General audience at the Vatican's St. Peter's Square, Oct. 19, 2022. Daniel Ibáñez / CNA
General audience at the Vatican’s St. Peter’s Square, Oct. 19, 2022. Daniel Ibáñez / CNA

At the end of the audience, Pope Francis asked for prayers for “martyred Ukraine.” He also offered up a prayer intention for the victims of severe flooding in Nigeria, where more than 600 people died from the natural disaster, according to local officials.

The pope also reminded the crowd that the month of October is dedicated to Our Lady of the Rosary.

“I would like to invite you to look to the Mother of God with childlike confidence, drawing from her example and intercession the strength to move forward,” Pope Francis said.


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3 Comments

  1. From the “Confessions” we also read a good examination for some clericalists within the Church as an institution…St. Augustine writes of a “sickness of the mind”:

    “…it is no monstrous thing partly to will a thing and partly not to will it, but it is a sickness of the mind. Although it is supported by truth, it does not wholly rise up, since it is heavily encumbered by habit. Therefore, there are two wills, since one of them is not complete, and what is lacking in one of them is present in the other (Bk 8, ch. 9:21)….
    “Therefore, it is rent asunder by grievous hurt as long as it prefers the first because of its truth but does not put away the other because of habit” (Bk 8, ch 10:24).

    The perennial and universal Catholic Church, “rent asunder” by sickly accommodation toward the debased German synodal way, under Marx, Batzing, Grech, Hollerich & Co. Except for the progressive pretense and the maliferous stench, “nothing is new under the sun” (Ecclesiastes 1:9).

  2. Job 31:28: if you would repress the Traditional Mass for the inadequacy of its adherents then you also must repress the Novus Ordo for the inadequacy of its adherents. There would be 5 things there:

    1. unjust repression
    2. mercilessness
    3. attack on the Mass
    4. hypocrisy
    5. indiscretion.

  3. The incredible Saint Augustine has been an inspiration to the young and to the young at heart. Saint Monica and Saint Augustine – Pray for us.

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