Scottish Catholic Education Service | SCES

Promoting and supporting Catholic Education in Scotland

  • About SCES
    • Education Structures
    • Executive Board
    • Our Team
    • Who we work with
      • CHAPS
    • Latest News
    • SCES Newsletter
  • Award Schemes
    • Caritas Award
    • Pope Francis Faith Award
  • Catholic Education
    • Catholic Education Week
    • Catholic Schools
    • CEC Open Forum
    • The Catholic School: Developing in Faith
    • 2018-Catholic Schools Good for Scotland
  • Parents
    • Catholic School Parents
    • Parent Council Contact
    • Pope Francis Loves Families
  • Religious Education
    • This Is Our Faith
    • COVID 19: R.E.& spiritual support
    • Religious Education S4 to S6
    • Planning Religious Education
    • Equality & Inclusion Learning and Teaching
    • R.E. Resources Weblinks
  • Resources
    • Useful pages on our site
    • Advent Learning
      • Advent Reflections
    • Articles of Faith
    • Daily Gospel Reflection
    • Health & Relationships Education
    • Equality & Inclusion Learning and Teaching
    • Latest resources
    • Liturgical Calendar
    • Lent & Easter
    • Thinking Faith
    • Year of Mercy
  • Teaching
    • Becoming a teacher
      • Setting Out on the Road Course
    • Church Approval
    • Career Long Professional Learning
      • CLPL Events Calendar
    • Teaching Vacancies

Daily conversion frees and saves

  • Posted on 17/02/2010
  • By:
  • in Faith Issues
  • 0 Comment
  • Home
  • Articles
  • Faith Issues
  • Daily conversion frees and saves

Daily conversion frees and saves

  • Posted on 17/02/2010
  • By: Barbara Coupar
  • in Faith Issues
  • 0 Comment

Pope Benedict XVI spoke at the General Audience on Wednesday 17 February 2010 to the significance of the Lenten season. He emphasized the importance of daily conversion for swimming “against the current” of a society that promotes a “superficial lifestyle” and “moral mediocrity.”  Lent, Pope Benedict observed, is an “acceptable and grace-filled time” in which we can better understand the words “repent and believe in the Gospel.”

The call to conversion is one to take with “extraordinary seriousness” because it “reveals and denounces the easy superficiality that often characterizes our lives,” Pope Benedict taught.

“Repentance means changing direction in the path of life,” he said emphasizing that this is “not with a small adjustment, but with a true and personal reversal.” It is going “against the current, where the ‘current’ is the superficial lifestyle… that often pulls at us, dominates us and makes us slaves of evil and, so, prisoners of moral mediocrity.”

In our conversion, the Pope explained, we shoot for the “highest measure of the Christian life” as we put our trust in the “living and personal Gospel” of Jesus Christ.

“His person is the final goal and the deep meaning of repentance… he is the road by which all are called to walk in life, letting ourselves be illuminated by his light and sustained by his strength that moves our steps.”

In this way, “it isn’t a simple moral decision that rectifies our life’s conduct, but a choice of faith that involves us entirely in the intimate communion with the living and concrete person of Jesus, noted Benedict XVI.

Repenting and believing the Gospel, the Holy Father elaborated, are expressions of the same reality and conversion, which “is the ‘yes’ of he who gives his own existence to the Gospel, responding freely to Christ who first offers himself to man as the way, truth and life, as it is He alone that frees and saves him.”

This is the meaning of the first words with which Jesus preaches the Gospel, ‘This is the time of fulfillment. The kingdom of God is at hand. Repent, and believe in the gospel,’ the Pope added.

Pope Benedict also focused on how repentance and conversion are lifelong commitments.

“Every day is a ‘acceptable’ moment, one of grace, for every day we are invited to give ourselves to Jesus, to trust in Him, to abide in Him, to share His lifestyle, to learn true love from Him, to follow Him in doing the will of the Father every day, which is the only great law of life.”

“Every day” we need to seek conversion, Pope Benedict continued, “even when we are faced with difficulties and troubles, in spite of the tiredness and the failures, including when we feel like abandoning the path of following Christ, and when we want to withdraw into ourselves, into our selfishness, without realizing that we need to open ourselves to God’s love in Christ to live the same logic of love and justice.”

The Holy Father also reflected on the meaning of the ashes distributed today. The ashes given on the first day of Lent, he said, serve as an act of renewal “of our commitment to follow Jesus, to let ourselves be transformed in His paschal mystery, to win over evil and do good, to let the ‘old man’ tied to sin die and let the ‘new man’ be born transformed in the grace of God.”

In closing, Pope Benedict invoked the protection and aid of Our Lady to accompany us in these 40 days of prayer and sincere penance so that we will be purified and “completely renewed” for Easter.

Leave a Reply
Previous Post

Our Faith is a Message of Hope to the World

Next Post

Pope's "Lectio Divina" (part 1)

Leave a Comment Cancel reply

Your email is never published nor shared. Required fields are marked (Required)

(required)

(required)

Facebook Twitter
Top

Scottish Catholic Education Service | SCES ©2020 SCES All rights reserved. Design by Media Design

Login Here

I wish to make a donation

or
This website uses cookies to improve your experience. We'll assume you're ok with this, but you can opt-out if you wish.Accept Read More

WordPress Download Manager - Best Download Management Plugin