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REGINA COELI
Sunday 14 May 1989
FORTITUDE
1. "Come, Holy
Spirit!". Dear brothers and sisters, this is the invocation which
insistently and confidently arises from the whole Church today, the Solemnity
of Pentecost: Come, Holy Spirit, come and
"on us who evermore Thee
confess and thee adore, With thy sevenfold gifts descend" (Sequence of
Pentecost).
Among these gifts of the
Spirit there is one on which I wish to dwell this morning: the gift of
Fortitude. In our time many extol physical force, to the extent of also
approving the extreme forms of violence. In fact, man has daily experience of
his own weakness, especially in the spiritual and moral sphere, yielding to
the impulses of internal passions and external pressures.
2. Precisely to resist
these multiple stimuli, it is necessary to have the virtue of fortitude, which
is one of the four cardinal virtues on which the whole structure
of the moral life rests. It is the virtue by which one does not compromise in
fulfilling one's duty.
This virtue finds little
room in a society in which surrender and accommodation on the one hand, and
domination and toughness on the other, are widespread in economic, social and
political relations. Timidity and aggressiveness are two forms of lack of
fortitude which are often found in human behaviour; they result repeatedly in
the distressing sight of one who is weak and cowardly towards the powerful, or
of one who is arrogant and overbearing towards the defenceless.
3. Perhaps today as
never before the moral virtue of fortitude needs the support of the
corresponding gift of the Holy Spirit. The gift of Fortitude is a supernatural
impulse which gives strength to the soul, not only on exceptional occasions
such as that of martyrdom, but also in normal difficulties: in the struggle to
remain consistent with one's principles: in putting up with insults and unjust
attacks: in courageous perseverance on the path of truth and uprightness,
in spite of lack of understanding and hostility.
When, like Jesus in
Gethsemane, we experience "the weakness of the flesh" (cf. Mt
26:41; Mk 14:38), or rather, of human nature subject to physical and
psychological infirmities, we should ask the Holy Spirit for the gift of
Fortitude to remain firm and decisive on the path of goodness. Then we will be
able to repeat with St Paul: "For the sake of Christ, then, I am content
with weaknesses, insults, hardships, persecutions, and calamities; for when I
am weak, then I am strong" (1 Cor 12:10).
4. There are many of
Christ's followers - pastors and faithful, priests, religious, and laity,
engaged in every area of apostolic and social work who in all times, including
our own, have experienced and experience martyrdom of body and spirit, in
intimate union with the Mother of Sorrows beside the Cross. All have been
victorious thanks to this gift of the Spirit.
Let us ask Mary, whom we
now greet as Queen of Heaven, to obtain for us the gift of Fortitude in all
the vicissitudes of life and at the hour of death.
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