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ADDRESS
OF JOHN PAUL II TO THE YOUNG PEOPLE AT THE KIEL CENTER
St. Louis, January 26, 1999
Part I
Dear Young People of St. Louis, Dear Young People of the United States, Praised be Jesus Christ!
1. Your warm and enthusiastic welcome makes me very happy. It tells me
that tonight the Pope belongs to you. I have just been in Mexico City, to
celebrate the conclusion of the Synod of Bishops for America. There I had
the joy of being with many thousands of young people. And now, my joy
continues here with you, the young people of St. Louis and Missouri, and
of the whole United States.
2. We are gathered here this evening to listen to Jesus as he speaks to
us through his word and in the power of the Holy Spirit.
We have just heard the Apostle Paul say to Timothy, his young fellow
evangelizer: Train yourself for devotion (1 Tim 4:7).
These are important words for every Christian, for everyone who truly
seeks to follow the Lord and to put his words into practice. They are
especially important for you, the young people of the Church. And so you
need to ask yourselves: what training am I doing in order to live a truly
Christian life?
You all know what training is, and what it signifies. In
fact, we are here in the Kiel Center where many people train long and hard
in order to compete in different sports. Today, this impressive stadium
has become another kind of training ground not for hockey or soccer
or basketball, but for that training that will help you to live your faith
in Jesus more decisively. This is the training in devotion
that Saint Paul is referring to the training that makes it possible
for you to give yourselves without reservation to the Lord and to the work
that he calls you to do!
3. I am told that there was much excitement in St. Louis during the
recent baseball season, when two great players (Mark McGwire and Sammy
Sosa) were competing to break the home-run record. You can feel the same
great enthusiasm as you train for a different goal: the goal of following
Christ, the goal of bringing his message to the world.
Each one of you belongs to Christ, and Christ belongs to you. At Baptism
you were claimed for Christ with the Sign of the Cross; you received the
Catholic faith as a treasure to be shared with others. In Confirmation,
you were sealed with the gifts of the Holy Spirit and strengthened for
your Christian mission and vocation. In the Eucharist, you receive the
food that nourishes you for the spiritual challenges of each day.
I am especially pleased that so many of you had the opportunity today to
receive the Sacrament of Penance, the Sacrament of Reconciliation. In this
Sacrament you experience the Saviors tender mercy and love in a most
personal way, when you are freed from sin and from its ugly companion
which is shame. Your burdens are lifted and you experience the joy of new
life in Christ.
Your belonging to the Church can find no greater expression or support
than by sharing in the Eucharist every Sunday in your parishes. Christ
gives us the gift of his body and blood to make us one body, one spirit in
him, to bring us more deeply into communion with him and with all the
members of his Body, the Church. Make the Sunday celebration in your
parishes a real encounter with Jesus in the community of his followers:
this is an essential part of your training in devotion to the
Lord!
4. Dear young friends, in the Reading we have just heard, the Apostle
Paul tells Timothy: Let no one have contempt for your youth (1
Tim 4:12). He says this because youth is a marvelous gift of God.
It is a time of special energies, special opportunities and special
responsibilities. Christ and the Church need your special talents. Use
well the gifts the Lord has given you!
This is the time of your training, of your physical,
intellectual, emotional and spiritual development. But this does not mean
that you can put off until later your meeting with Christ and your sharing
in the Churchs mission. Even though you are young, the time for
action is now! Jesus does not have contempt for your youth. He
does not set you aside for a later time when you will be older and your
training will be complete. Your training will never be finished.
Christians are always in training. You are ready for what Christ wants of
you now. He wants you all of you to be light to the world,
as only young people can be light. It is time to let your light shine!
In all my travels I tell the world about your youthful energies, your
gifts and your readiness to love and serve. And wherever I go I challenge
young people as a friend to live in the light and truth of
Jesus Christ.
I urge you to let his word enter your hearts, and then from the bottom
of your hearts to tell him: Here I am Lord, I come to do your will!
(cf. Heb 10:7).
Part II
You are the light of the world. . . Your light must shine before
all (Mt 5:14.16).
Dear Young People,
1. Ask yourselves: Do I believe these words of Jesus in the Gospel?
Jesus is calling you the light of the world. He is asking you to let your
light shine before others. I know that in your hearts you want to say: Here
I am, Lord. Here I am. I come to do your will (Responsorial
Psalm; cf. Heb 10:7). But only if you are one with Jesus can
you share his light and be a light to the world.
Are you ready for this?
Sadly, too many people today are living apart from the light in a
world of illusions, a world of fleeting shadows and promises unfulfilled.
If you look to Jesus, if you live the Truth that is Jesus, you will have
in you the light that reveals the truths and values on which to build your
own happiness, while building a world of justice, peace and solidarity.
Remember what Jesus said: I am the light of the world; those who
follow me will not walk in darkness, but will have the light of life
(cf. Jn 8:12).
Because Jesus is the Light, we too become light when we proclaim him.
This is the heart of the Christian mission to which each of you has been
called through Baptism and Confirmation. You are called to make the light
of Christ shine brightly in the world.
2. When you were little, were you sometimes afraid of the dark? Today
you are no longer children afraid of the dark. You are teenagers and young
adults. But already you realize that there is another kind of darkness in
the world: the darkness of doubt and uncertainty. You may feel the
darkness of loneliness and isolation. Your anxieties may come from
questions about your future, or regrets about past choices.
Sometimes the world itself seems filled with darkness. The darkness of
children who go hungry and even die. The darkness of homeless people who
lack work and proper medical care. The darkness of violence: violence
against the unborn child, violence in families, the violence of gangs, the
violence of sexual abuse, the violence of drugs that destroy the body,
mind and heart. There is something terribly wrong when so many young
people are overcome by hopelessness to the point of taking their own
lives. And already in parts of this nation, laws have been passed which
allow doctors to end the lives of the very people they are sworn to help.
Gods gift of life is being rejected. Death is chosen over life, and
this brings with it the darkness of despair.
3. But you believe in the light (cf. Jn 12:36)! Do not listen to
those who encourage you to lie, to shirk responsibility, to put yourselves
first. Do not listen to those who tell you that chastity is passé.
In your hearts you know that true love is a gift from God and respects his
plan for the union of man and woman in marriage. Do not be taken in by
false values and deceptive slogans, especially about your freedom. True
freedom is a wonderful gift from God, and it has been a cherished part of
your countrys history. But when freedom is separated from truth,
individuals lose their moral direction and the very fabric of society
begins to unravel.
Freedom is not the ability to do anything we want, whenever we want.
Rather, freedom is the ability to live responsibly the truth of our
relationship with God and with one another. Remember what Jesus said: you
will know the truth and the truth will set you free (Jn
8:32). Let no one mislead you or prevent you from seeing what really
matters. Turn to Jesus, listen to him, and discover the true meaning and
direction of your lives.
4. You are children of the light (cf. Jn 12:36)! You belong to
Christ, and he has called you by name. Your first responsibility is to get
to know as much as you can about him, in your parishes, in religious
instruction in your high schools and colleges, in your youth groups and
Newman Centers.
But you will get to know him truly and personally only through prayer.
What is needed is that you talk to him, and listen to him.
Today we are living in an age of instant communications. But do you
realize what a unique form of communication prayer is? Prayer enables us
to meet God at the most profound level of our being. It connects us
directly to God: Father, Son and Holy Spirit, in a constant exchange of
love.
Through prayer you will learn to become the light of the world, because
in prayer you become one with the source of our true light, Jesus himself.
5. Each of you has a special mission in life, and you are each called to
be a disciple of Christ. Many of you will serve God in the vocation of
Christian married life; some of you will serve him as dedicated single
persons; some as priests and religious. But all of you must be the light
of the world. To those of you who think that Christ may be inviting you to
follow him in the priesthood or the consecrated life I make this personal
appeal: I ask you to open your hearts generously to him; do not delay your
response. The Lord will help you to know his will; he will help you to
follow your vocation courageously.
6. Young friends, in the days and weeks and years ahead, for as long as
you remember this evening, remember that the Pope came to the United
States, to the City of St. Louis, to call the young people of America to
Christ, to invite you to follow him. He came to challenge you to be the
light of the world! The light shines in the darkness and the
darkness does not overcome it (Jn 1:5). Jesus who has
conquered sin and death reminds you: I am with you always (Mt
28:20). He says: Courage! It is I; have no fear (Mk
6:50).
On the horizon of this city stands the Gateway Arch, which often catches
the sunlight in its different colors and hues. In a similar way, in a
thousand different ways, you must reflect the light of Christ through your
lives of prayer and joyful service of others. With the help of Mary, the
Mother of Jesus, the young people of America will do this magnificently!
Remember: Christ is calling you; the Church needs you; the Pope believes
in you and he expects great things of you!
Praised be Jesus Christ!
At the end of the service some of the young people gave
the Holy Father a hockey stick and jersey. The Pope appreciated the gift and
said extemporaneously:
So, I am prepared to return once more to play hockey! But if
I will be able to, that is the question. Perhaps after this meeting I will
be a bit more ready!
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