TRUSTS IN YOU
Transcription
TRUSTS IN YOU
JESUS TRUSTS IN YOU JESUS TRUSTS IN YOU AN EXTRAORDINARY BOOK ON DIVINE MERCY ZACCHAEUS, WRITE YOUR NAME CoME DoWN QuICKLY, For ToDAY I MuST STAY AT Your houSE Lk 19:5 EE R T E RE H T TU M EN Y O V FR AD ERC N W THE E M D O H O D E E LIV H T F G M D IT O CO AN W TAbLE 143 9 OF CONTENTS FEAST OF DIVINE MERCY INTRODUCTION MESSAGE TO YOUTH 23 ST. SISTER FAUSTINA 43 ST. JOHN PAUL II 63 THE HOUR OF MERCY 135 159 THE WAY OF MERCY MEDITATION 153 THE SHRINE OF DIVINE MERCY 227 229 CHAPLET OF DIVINE MERCY X HOW DO I CONFESS? 185 CONFESSION THE SACRAMENT OF MERCY ? DIVINE MERCY QUESTIONS & ANSWERS 81 127 DIVINE MERCY IMAGE “JESUS, I TRUST IN YOU” 115 INTRODUCTION WORD FROM METROPOLITAN OF KRAKÓW TO PARTICIPANTS OF THE THE THIRTY-FIRST WORLD YOUTH DAY KRAKÓW 2016 I welcome you to the country which, through the baptism of Prince Mieszko I in 966, opened itself up to the Gospel… 10 AND ACCEPTED JESUS CHRIST AS ITS LORD AND SAVIOuR 6-40 12 WHAT IS THE RECIPE FOR HOLINESS? 22, 3 With these words from the Psalm normally sung in church on the first Sunday after Easter, known as Mercy Sunday, let me cordially welcome all participants of World Youth Day. We are grateful to the Holy Father, Pope Francis, for choosing Kraków and Poland as the place of gathering of young people from all over the world so that they can bear witness to their faith in Jesus Christ Crucified and Risen to share peace and love, goodness and kindness with all people of good will. I welcome you to Poland and to Kraków, the homeland of John Paul II. I welcome you to the country which, through the baptism of Prince Mieszko I in 966, opened itself up to the Gospel and accepted Jesus Christ as its Lord and Saviour. Fifteen hundred years ago, the foreheads of our ancestors were anointed with the waters of baptism and the sacrament’s grace filled their hearts making of them a harvest of Christ’s teaching. Therefore, Christ has been present in our history and life for over a thousand years, shaping the attitude of Poles from the Oder to the Vistula and Bug rivers, from the Tatra Mountains to the Baltic Sea. Christ suffering on the cross has become a symbol of our past, marking the history of Poland, particularly in times of wars, persecution, and the country’s occupation. Our Risen Lord was a symbol in the times of Hitler’s occupation and long years of communist subjugation. He was a source of hope and of the strength needed to persevere in following God and His rule. We invite young people from all over the world to our Polish Cenacle where we reserve an important place for the Lord’s Mother. Mary carries the title of the Queen of Poland and is venerated in numerous paintings and figures, the most famous one is the Black Madonna of Częstochowa at Jasna Góra. Apart from Mary, Poland holds hosts of Polish saints and blesseds: St. Stanislaus, bishop and martyr; St. Kinga; Bl. Salome; St. Jadwiga, who was queen; St. John of Cantius; Bl. Zofia Czeska; Bl. Stanislaus Papczyński; St. Raphael Kalinowski; St. Brother Albert Chmielowski: St. Ursula Ledóchowska and Bl. Maria Teresa Ledóchowska, who were sisters; St. Maximillian Maria Kolbe and many saint and blessed martyrs of World War II; Bl. Jerzy Popiełuszko, martyred by communist authorities; and St. Sister Faustina Kowalska and St. John Paul II, who are called Apostles of Divine Mercy. Dear young people, along with your ministers, you are coming from various parts of the world: from Europe, Africa, America, Asia, Australia and Oceania, to the homeland of John Paul Mt O GIVE THANKS TO THE LORD, FOR HE IS GOOD; HIS MERCY ENDURES FOREVER! Ps 118 (117):1 13 © DAYENU Image of Our Lady of Częstochowa Black Madonna 14 15 II in order to share your experience of faith and joy of believing in Christ. In this Polish Cenacle, we feel moved by the call that the Christ made to His disciples: “As the Father has sent me, so I send you” (Jn 20:21). Over two thousand years ago, when saying these words, Jesus showed His disciples His pierced hands and His side. He showed them wounds inflicted on Him by Roman soldiers during His ordeal. Most of all, He showed them His wounded Heart from which poured a torrent of love over the world. Gathering in Kraków’s Cenacle of Divine Mercy, we come to realize that we have been brought here by the Merciful Jesus. He has called us here and has given us courage to travel from very distant places to come here and to once again hear the proclamation of love and bear witness to God’s great love for His people. In Kraków, together with the Holy Father Pope Francis, we want to look at the image of the Merciful Jesus at the rays of light emanating from His heart onto the whole world. “The two rays – Jesus explained to St. Faustina – denote Blood and Water” (Diary, 299). We are here to once again relive this Gospel scene, depicted by St. John, and contemplate the greatest mystery of our salvation. The blood that flowed from Jesus’s pierced side (see Jn 19:34) reminds us of the Sacrifice of the Cross and the gift of the Holy Mass; and water is a symbol not just of baptism, but also of the gift of the Holy Spirit (see Jn 3:5; 4:14; 7:37-39), who enlightens our minds and hearts, showing the ways in which we are going to bring love to the world. Today, looking at the Merciful Jesus, we contemplate the mystery of Jesus, Crucified and Risen, who continuously shows us the mystery of Divine Mercy. Today, Christ says to us what He told St. Faustina: “Tell [all people], My daughter that I am love and mercy itself” (Diary, 1074). God’s Mercy pours 16 out over the whole of humanity through the sacraments of the Church. Mercy, as John Paul II wrote in encyclical Dives in Misericordia (No. 7), is “love’s second name”, indicating God’s unlimited ability to forgive our sins. We believe that Christ entrusted St. Faustina with his message of mercy so that she could pass it to the world. God gave us this message at a very difficult point in the world’s history – between World War I and World War II – at the time when humanity experienced horrific atrocities embodied by concentration camps and gulags. Jesus said to St. Faustina: “Mankind will not find peace until it returns with trust to my mercy” (Diary, 300). Thanks to St. Faustina and John Paul II – for whom we thank God – this message has become a sign of hope for humanity, like “a bridge to the third millennium”. That is how St. John Paul II referred to Divine Mercy. Gathering in Kraków, let us look at a special Apostle of Mercy, namely St. John Paul II. With courage he stood by St. Sister Faustina carrying the message of mercy to distant corners of the world. Even as a young worker at Solvay, Karol Wojtyła used to come to the sanctuary chapel in Łagiewniki to pray before the image of the Merciful Jesus. Later on, as Archbishop of Kraków, he started the process of beatification of Sister Faustina. As Pope, he made the message of mercy the central point of his teaching. He discussed the teaching of God’s Mercy in his encyclical Dives in Misericordia – God who is rich in mercy. Canonising Sister Faustina on 30th April 2000, he established the Feast of Divine Mercy. During his apostolic visit to his home country on 17th August 2002, he entrusted the whole world to Divine Mercy. This act of entrusting became a special declaration of faith as he was convinced that God had given us the message of mercy as a sign for humanity which is losing itself in materialism. Quoting St. Faustina: “Mankind will not find peace until it 17 returns with trust to my mercy”, St. John Paul II reminded us that “the light of Divine Mercy, which the Lord in a way wished to return to the world through Sister Faustina’s charism, will illumine the way for the men and women of the third millennium” (Homily of John Paul II at the canonisation of Sister Faustina, Rome, 30th April 2000). Divine Mercy is indeed a light for the world and the whole of mankind because it reminds us that people cannot live without God’s merciful love. People simply cannot exist without God; they lose their way and become monsters for others, dangerous beasts. The message of mercy also brings in another important truth: through merciful love, a love offered unconditionally, a person opens up to another person. Overcoming loneliness, he or she builds a community: a family, a home, a community of friendship and kindness. Here, in Łagiewniki, John Paul II said: “apart from the mercy of God there is no other source of hope for mankind” (Homily at the consecration of the Sanctuary of Divine Mercy in Kraków, 17th August 2002). The spreading of the message of Divine Mercy, which the world was reminded of by St. Faustina and was shown afresh in the teaching of St. John Paul II, was continued by Pope Benedict XVI for the eight years of his pontificate, and now by Pope Francis, who in the papal bull Misericordiae Vultus has announced that this is an Extraordinary Year of Mercy. The Holy Father has emphasized that this mercy is the name of God who revealed Himself through His Son Jesus Christ. Therefore today we still need to contemplate the mystery of mercy: “It is a wellspring of joy, serenity, and peace. Our salvation depends on it. Mercy: the word reveals the very mystery of the Most Holy Trinity. Mercy: the ultimate and supreme act by which God comes to meet us” (Misericordiae Vultus, 2). Mercy discovered in God is a basic right that resides in the heart of every © DAYENU 18 19 person. It shows itself when a person looks with sincerity at his or her brother met on their journey of life. Mercy is a route connecting God with a person, because it opens up their heart giving hope of being loved eternally despite the limitations of our sin. Mercy unites people and opens them to each other. At this special place we wish to share the joy of being disciples of Christ and apostles of Divine Mercy. The Holy Father John Paul II entrusted the Church and the whole world to Divine Mercy and encouraged us to pass the message of mercy to the whole world bringing hope to men’s hearts. “Mankind will not find peace until it returns with trust to my mercy!” May those words accompany us during the World Youth Days and may they inspire us to be apostles of mercy in the contemporary world. Stanisław Cardinal Dziwisz Metropolitan of Kraków Kraków, The Feast of Presentation of the Lord, 2nd February 2016 20 21 MESSAGE TO YOUTH MESSAGE OF HIS HOLINESS POPE FRANCIS FOR THE THIRTY-FIRST WORLD YOUTH DAY 2016 “Blessed are the merciful, for they shall obtain mercy” (Mt 5:7) A YEAR ACCEPTABLE TO THE LORD Dear Young People, We have come to the last stretch of our pilgrimage to Kraków, the place where we will celebrate the 31st World Youth Day next year in the month of July. We are being guided on this long and challenging path by Jesus’ words taken from the Sermon on the Mount. We began this journey in 2014 by meditating together on the first Beatitude: “Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven” (Mt 5:3). The theme for 2015 was: “Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God” (Mt 5:8). During the year ahead, let us allow ourselves to be inspired by the words: “Blessed are the merciful, for they shall obtain mercy” (Mt 5:7). 1. The Jubilee of Mercy With this theme, the Kraków 2016 WYD forms part of the Holy Year of Mercy and so becomes a Youth Jubilee at world level. It is not the first time that an international youth gathering has coincided with a Jubilee Year. Indeed, it was during the Holy Year of the Redemption (1983/1984) that Saint John Paul II first called on young people from around the world to come together on Palm Sunday. Then, during the Great Jubilee of the year 2000, over two million young people from around 165 countries gathered in Rome for the 15th World Youth Day. I am sure that the Youth Jubilee in Kraków will be, as on those two previous occasions, one of the high points of this Holy Year! Perhaps some of you are asking: what is this Jubilee Year that is celebrated in the Church? The scriptural text of Leviticus 5 can help us to understand the meaning of a “jubilee” for the people of Israel. Every fifty years they heard the sounding of 24 a trumpet (jobel) calling them (jobil) to celebrate a holy year as a time of reconciliation (jobal) for everyone. During that time they had to renew their good relations with God, with their neighbours and with creation, all in a spirit of gratuitousness. This fostered, among other things, debt forgiveness, special help for those who had fallen into poverty, an improvement in interpersonal relations and the freeing of slaves. Jesus Christ came to proclaim and bring about the Lord’s everlasting time of grace. He brought good news to the poor, freedom to prisoners, sight to the blind and freedom to the oppressed (cf. Lk 4:18-19). In Jesus, and particularly in His Paschal Mystery, the deeper meaning of the jubilee is fully realized. When the Church proclaims a jubilee in the name of Christ, we are all invited to experience a wonderful time of grace. The Church must offer abundant signs of God’s presence and closeness, and reawaken in people’s hearts the ability to look to the essentials. In particular, this Holy Year of Mercy is “a time for the Church to rediscover the meaning of the mission entrusted to her by the Lord on the day of Easter: to be a sign and an instrument of the Father’s mercy” (Homily at First Vespers of Divine Mercy Sunday, 11th April 2015). 25 2. Merciful like the Father The motto for this Extraordinary Jubilee is “Merciful like the Father” (cf. Misericordiae Vultus, 13). This fits in with the theme of the next WYD, so let us try to better understand the meaning of divine mercy. The Old Testament uses various terms when it speaks about mercy. The most meaningful of these are hesed and rahamim. The first, when applied to God, expresses God’s unfailing fidelity to the Covenant with His people whom He loves and forgives for ever. The second, rahamim, which literally means “entrails”, can be translated as “heartfelt mercy”. This particularly brings to mind the maternal womb and helps us understand that God’s love for His people is like that of a mother for her child. That is how it is presented by the prophet Isaiah: “Can a mother forget her infant, be without tenderness for the child of her womb? Even should she forget, I will never forget you” (Is 49:15). Love of this kind involves making space for others within ourselves and being able to sympathize, suffer and rejoice with our neighbors. The biblical concept of mercy also includes the tangible presence of love that is faithful, freely given and able to forgive. In the following passage from Hosea, we have a beautiful example of God’s love, which the prophet compares to that of a father for his child: 26 The more I called them, the farther they went from me… Yet it was I who taught Ephraim to walk, who took them in my arms; I drew them with human cords, with bands of love; I fostered them like one who raises an infant to his cheeks… I stooped to feed my child.” Hos 11:1-4 28 29 EVERYTHING IN JESUS SPEAKS OF MERCY out of Egypt I called my son. INDEED, HE HIMSELF IS MERCY “When Israel was a child I loved him; Despite the child’s wrong attitude that deserves punishment, a father’s love is faithful. He always forgives His repentant children. We see here how forgiveness is always included in mercy. It is “not an abstract idea, but a concrete reality with which he reveals his love as of that of a father or a mother, moved to the very depths out of love for their child… It gushes forth from the depths naturally, full of tenderness and compassion, indulgence and mercy” (Misericordiae Vultus, 6). The New Testament speaks to us of divine mercy (eleos) as a synthesis of the work that Jesus came to accomplish in the world in the name of the Father (cf. Mt 9:13). Our Lord’s mercy can be seen especially when He bends down to human misery and shows His compassion for those in need of understanding, healing and forgiveness. Everything in Jesus speaks of mercy. Indeed, He Himself is mercy. In Chapter 15 of Luke’s Gospel we find the three parables of mercy: the lost sheep, the lost coin and the parable of the prodigal son. In these three parables we are struck by God’s joy, the joy that God feels when He finds and forgives a sinner. Yes, it is God’s joy to forgive! This sums up the whole of the Gospel. “Each of us, each one of us, is that little lost lamb, the coin that was mislaid; each one of us is that son who has squandered his freedom on false idols, illusions of happiness, and has lost everything. But God does not forget us; the Father never abandons us. He is a patient Father, always waiting for us! He respects our freedom, but he remains faithful forever. And when we come back to him, he welcomes us like children into his house, for he never ceases, not for one instant, to wait for us with love. And his heart rejoices over every child who returns. He is celebrating because he is joy. God has this joy, when one of us sinners goes to him and asks his forgiveness” (Angelus, 15th September 2013). God’s mercy is very real and we are all called to experience it firsthand. When I was seventeen years old, it happened one day that, as I was about to go out with friends, I decided to stop into a church first. I met a priest there who inspired great confidence, and I felt the desire to open my heart in Confession. That meeting changed my life! I discovered that when we open our hearts with humility and transparency, we can contemplate God’s mercy in a very concrete way. I felt certain that, in the person of that priest, God was already waiting for me even before I took the step of entering that church. We keep looking for God, but God is there before us, always looking for us, and He finds us first. Maybe one of you feels something weighing on your heart. You are thinking: I did this, I did that… Do not be afraid! God is waiting for you! God is a Father and He is always waiting for us! It is so wonderful to feel the merciful embrace of the Father in the sacrament of Reconciliation, to discover that the confessional is a place of mercy, and to allow ourselves to be touched by the merciful love of the Lord who always forgives us! You, dear young man, dear young woman, have you ever felt the gaze of everlasting love upon you, a gaze that looks beyond your sins, limitations and failings, and continues to have faith in you and to look upon your life with hope? Do you realize how precious you are to God, who has given you everything 30 out of love? Saint Paul tells us that “God proves his love for us in that, while we were still sinners, Christ died for us” (Rom 5:8). Do we really understand the power of these words? DO NOT BE AFRAID TO LOOK IN HIS EYES 31 I know how much the WYD cross means to all of you. It was a gift from Saint John Paul II and has been with you at all your World Meetings since 1984. So many changes and real conversions have taken place in the lives of young people who have encountered this simple bare cross! Perhaps you have asked yourselves the question: what is the origin of the extraordinary power of the cross? Here is the answer: Here I would recall the episode of the two thieves crucified beside Jesus. One of them is arrogant and does not admit that he is a sinner. He mocks the Lord. The other acknowledges that he has done wrong; he turns to the Lord saying: “Jesus, remember me when you come into your kingdom”. Jesus looks at him with infinite mercy and replies: “Today you will be with me in Paradise” (cf. Lk 23:32, 39-43). With which of the two do we identify? Is it with the arrogant one who does not acknowledge his own mistakes? Or is it with the other, who accepts that he is in need of divine mercy and begs for it with all his heart? It is in the Lord, who gave His life for us on the cross, that we will always find that unconditional love which sees our lives as something good and always gives us the chance to start again. 3. The amazing joy of being instruments of God’s mercy the cross is the most eloquent sign of God’s mercy! It tells us that the measure of God’s love for humanity is to love without measure! Through the cross we can touch God’s mercy and be touched by that mercy! 34 The Word of God teaches us that “it is more blessed to give than to receive” (Ac 20:35). That is why the fifth Beatitude declares that the merciful are blessed. We know that the Lord loved us first. But we will be truly blessed and happy only when we enter into the divine “logic” of gift and gracious love, when we discover that God has loved us infinitely in order to make us capable of loving like Him, without measure. Saint John says: “Beloved, let us love one another, because love is of God; everyone who loves is begotten by God and knows God. Whoever is without love does not know God, for God is love… In this is love: not that we have loved God, but that he loved us and sent his Son as expiation for our sins. Beloved, if God so loved us, we also must love one another” (1 Jn 4:7-11). 35 After this very brief summary of how the Lord bestows his mercy upon us, I would like to give you some suggestions on how we can be instruments of this mercy for others. I think of the example of Blessed Pier Giorgio Frassati. He said, “Jesus pays me a visit every morning in Holy Communion, and I return the visit in the meagre way I know how, visiting the poor”. Pier Giorgio was a young man who understood what it means to have a merciful heart that responds to those most in need. He gave them far more than material goods. He gave himself by giving his time, his words and his capacity to listen. He served the poor very quietly and unassumingly. He truly did what the Gospel tells us: “When you give alms, do not let your left hand know what your right is doing, so that your almsgiving may be secret” (Mt 6:3-4). Imagine that, on the day before his death when he was gravely ill, he was giving directions on how his friends in need should be helped. At his funeral, his family and friends were stunned by the presence of so many poor people unknown to them. They had been befriended and helped by the young Pier Giorgio. 36 I always like to link the Gospel Beatitudes with Matthew 25, where Jesus presents us with the works of mercy and tells us that we will be judged on them. I ask you, then, to rediscover the corporal works of mercy: to feed the hungry, give drink to the thirsty, clothe the naked, welcome the stranger, assist the sick, visit the imprisoned, and bury the dead. Nor should we overlook the spiritual works of mercy: to counsel the doubtful, teach the ignorant, admonish sinners, comfort the sorrowful, forgive offences, patiently bear with troublesome people, and pray to God for the living and the dead. 37 As you can see, mercy does not just imply being a “good person” nor is it mere sentimentality. It is the measure of our authenticity as disciples of Jesus, and of our credibility as Christians in today’s world. If you want me to be very specific, I would suggest that for the first seven months of 2016 you choose a corporal and a spiritual work of mercy to practice each month. Find inspiration in the prayer of Saint Faustina, a humble apostle of Divine Mercy in our times: “Help me, O Lord, that my eyes may be merciful, so that I will never be suspicious or judge by appearances, but always look for what is beautiful in my neighbours’ souls and be of help to them; (…) that my ears may be merciful, so that I will be attentive to my neighbours’ needs, and not indifferent to their pains and complaints; (…) that my tongue may be merciful, so that I will never speak badly of others, but have a word of comfort and forgiveness for all; (…) that my hands may be merciful and full of good deeds; (…) that my feet may be merciful, so that I will hasten to help my neighbour, despite my own fatigue and weariness; (…) that my heart may be merciful, so that I myself will share in all the sufferings of my neighbour” (Diary, 163). The Divine Mercy message is a very specific life plan because it involves action. One of the most obvious works of mercy, and perhaps the most difficult to put into practice, is to forgive those who have offended us, who have done us wrong or whom we consider to be enemies. “At times how hard it seems to forgive! And yet pardon is the instrument placed into our fragile hands to attain serenity of heart. To let go of anger, wrath, violence, and revenge are necessary conditions to living joyfully” (Misericordiae Vultus, 9). 38 I meet so many young people who say that they are tired of this world being so divided, with clashes between supporters of different factions and so many wars, in some of which religion is being used as justification for violence. We must ask the Lord to give us the grace to be merciful to those who do us wrong. Jesus on the cross prayed for those who had crucified Him: “Father, forgive them, they know not what they do” (Lk 23:34). Mercy is the only way to overcome evil. Justice is necessary, very much so, but by itself it is not enough. Justice and mercy must go together. How I wish that we could join together in a chorus of prayer, from the depths of our hearts, to implore the Lord to have mercy on us and on the whole world! 4. Kraków is expecting us! Only a few months are left before we meet in Poland. Kraków, the city of Saint John Paul II and Saint Faustina Kowalska, is waiting for us with open arms and hearts. I believe that Divine Providence led us to the decision to celebrate the Youth Jubilee in that city which was home to those two great apostles of mercy in our times. John Paul II realized that this is the time of mercy. At the start of his pontificate, he wrote the encyclical Dives in Misericordia. In the Holy Year 2000 he canonized Sister Faustina and instituted the Feast of Divine Mercy, which now takes place on the Second Sunday of Easter. In 2002 he personally inaugurated the Divine Mercy Shrine in Kraków and entrusted the world to Divine Mercy, in the desire that this message would reach all the peoples of the earth and fill their hearts with hope: “This spark needs to be lighted by the grace of God. This fire of mercy needs to be passed on to the world. In the mercy of God the world will find peace and mankind will find happiness!” (Homily at the Dedication of the Divine Mercy Shrine in Kraków, 17th August 2002). 39 Dear young people, at the Shrine in Kraków dedicated to the merciful Jesus, where He is depicted in the image venerated by the people of God, Jesus is waiting for you. He has confidence in you and is counting on you! He has so many things to say to each of you… Do not be afraid to look into His eyes, full of infinite love for you. Open yourselves to His merciful gaze, so ready to forgive all your sins. A look from Him can change your lives and heal the wounds of your souls. His eyes can quench the thirst that dwells deep in your young hearts, a thirst for love, for peace, for joy and for true happiness. Come to Him and do not be afraid! Come to Him and say from the depths of your hearts: “Jesus, I trust in You!”. Let yourselves be touched by His boundless mercy, so that in turn you may become apostles of mercy by your actions, words and prayers in our world, wounded by selfishness, hatred and so much despair. Carry with you the flame of Christ’s merciful love – as Saint John Paul II said – in every sphere of your daily life and to the very ends of the earth. In this mission, I am with you with my encouragement and prayers. I entrust all of you to Mary, Mother of Mercy, for this last stretch of the journey of spiritual preparation for the next WYD in Kraków. I bless all of you from my heart. DO YOU WANT TO HAVE A SELFIE WITH POPE FRANCIS? (insert your photo here) FRANCIS From the Vatican, 15th August 2015 Solemnity of the Assumption of the B.V. Mary 40 41 ST. SISTER FAUSTINA 42 SHE wAS NOT bORN A SAINT bUT SHE MATURED TO SANCTITY I She was common and simple yet extraordinary. She had a strong personality and great sensitivity. Intelligent despite her lack of education. She was a mystic with her feet firmly on the ground. She was not born a saint but she matured to sanctity. This is Sister Faustina. 46 desire The life mission of Faustina Kowalska was to remind the Church and the world that God’s greatest attribute is mercy. She was given this mission by Jesus on the night of Sunday 22nd February 1931. Faustina, who was a sister in the Congregation of the Sisters of Our Lady of Mercy, was living in the convent in Płock, over a hundred kilometers from Warsaw. She was in her cell when suddenly she saw Jesus. He was standing before her with one arm raised for blessing, and the other touching the gown at His chest. “From beneath the garment, slightly drawn aside at the breast there were emanating two large rays, one red, the other one pale. In silence I kept my gaze fixed on the Lord; my soul was struck with awe, but also with great joy” – she wrote in her Diary (No. 47). After a while Jesus said to her: “Paint an image according to the pattern you see, with the signature: Jesus, I trust in You. I desire that this image be venerated, first in your chapel and [then] throughout the world. I promise that the soul that will venerate this image will not perish. I also promise victory over [its] enemies already here on earth, especially at the hour of death. I myself will defend it as My own glory.” (Diary, 47-48). The Divine Mercy image depicting Jesus as seen by Faustina that night in 1931 in her convent cell is now known all over the world and millions of people give glory to the God of Mercy. However, the journey leading to this point was long and took many, sometimes dramatic years, even after Faustina’s death, to be known to the world. From 22nd February 1931 until her death in 1938, Sister Faustina had visions in which Jesus was gradually revealing to her the complete essence of Divine Mercy, and told her about new ways in which to worship God’s Mercy. When her revelations of the Divine Mercy started, Sister Faustina was 26 years old. By then, she had been at the Congregation of the Sisters of Our Lady of Mercy for six years. Before joining the Congregation her name was Helena. She was born in Głogowiec, a few dozen kilometers from Łódź, on 25th August 1905. She was the third of ten children of Marianna and Stanisław Kowalski. The family was very poor and struggled to make ends meet, living off a few acres of poor soil and whatever income their father made as an occasional carpenter. Even as a sevenyear-old girl Helena felt a calling to a kind of life which she described as more perfect, as at that stage she did not yet know about the existence of consecrated life. Because of her poverty she could not get an education, she completed only three years of primary school. At the age of 15 or 16, she started working as a maid, initially in Aleksandrów near Łódź, and then in Łódź. Throughout that time she discovered consecrated life and did not give up the thought of joining a convent. She asked her parents’ permission to do so several times but they kept refusing her request. Later on her mother explained that the reason was a lack of money for a dowry or at least enough to pay for a set of clothing which back then was required by monastic congregations. Apart from this, as Helena was an exceptionally good child, her parents saw themselves being cared for by her in their old age. What also mattered was the fact that working as a maid in a city, Helena would send most of her wages back home. However, Jesus Himself demanded that Helena’s vocation be fulfilled. It happened in Łódź in June 1924, on a warm Sunday afternoon. Helena, a girl of medium-height, with grey eyes, a pretty smile, beautiful voice, with a slightly freckled complexion, and long, thick, reddish hair which she wore in a plait, went to a dance with her friends at Wenecja Park. For the occasion she wore a pink dress with frills. She started dancing with a young man when Jesus stood next to her. 49 He was “racked with pain, stripped of His clothing, all covered with wounds” (Diary, 9). He asked the girl reproachfully: „ HOW LONG SHALL I PUT UP WITH YOU AND HOW LONG WILL YOU KEEP PUTTING ME OFF? 50 Helena immediately stopped dancing and left the party; she ran to a church nearby where she heard in her heart that she was to go to Warsaw without delay as there she would find a congregation that would accept her. Helena who, until that point complied with her parents’ will, now did not hesitate for a minute. She knew that she had to act against their will in order to carry out what God intended for her. However, another year passed before she joined the Congregation of the Sisters of Our Lady of Mercy in Warsaw. This year was a time to test the strength of Helena’s calling for the superiors of the congregation. Over that year, Helena worked as a maid in Ostrówek near Warsaw, saving money to pay for her trousseau. She joined the convent in Warsaw on 1st August 1925. After a few months she received a habit and the name Maria Faustina. She spent the two-year noviciate at Łagiewniki, where she made her vows (of chastity, poverty and obedience). In 1933 she also professed her perpetual vows over there. Seen from the outside, Faustina’s life was no different from anyone else’s. Due to her lack of education and dowry, she belonged to a second monastic choir whose sisters undertook physical chores (division into choirs was abolished only after World War II). Faustina was a cook, a gardener, she sold bakery products, and towards the end of her life she was on duty at the convent gates. She liked baking cakes most of all and making grand gateaux. Faustina was obedient to her superiors and was frequently moved from one convent to another to do manual labor. Over the thirteen years of her monastic life, she lived in eight monasteries, sometimes returning to the ones she had lived in before; she stayed at Łagiewniki, Warszawa, Vilnus, Płock, Derdy, Walendów, Kiekrz and Biała. She spent the longest time in Łagiewniki where she passed away on 5th October 1938, after suffering for several years from tuberculosis in her lungs and in her bones. 52 SHE LIKED BAKING CAKES MOST OF ALL AND MAKING GRAND GATEAUX 53 The most important things in Faustina’s life were happening in her spiritual life. She was chosen by God to proclaim the truth about Divine Mercy to the Church and to the world, a truth which was by no means new. Faustina was one of the greatest mystics in the history of the Church. She achieved the highest mystical state possible for a human being on earth. At the beginning of this journey, she experienced what is known as a dark night, a period in one’s spiritual life when a soul feels rejected by God and the senses and the spirit are purified of the desires of this world. In Faustina’s case this period did not last long. For Faustina, this period was a year and a half, while for instance, in the case of blessed Mother Teresa, her night of the soul lasted for half a century. After the dark night Sister Faustina swiftly moved through the next stages of mystical life until her soul attained union with God in a mystical marriage. The decisive moment which marked the deepening of her mystical life was when she expressed her consent saying ‘yes’ to God, herself becoming a sacrifice for sinners. In her Diary Faustina complained on several occasions that physical language cannot describe what a human soul experiences when it is immersed in God; nevertheless she described her experiences in a very emotional way. She noted down in her Diary what she learned about the essence of Divine Mercy while experiencing those mystical states. She also wrote down what Jesus told her in her visions; she had as many as 82 of them! These visons can be summarized in the following words: God is prepared to forgive a person, even the person’s worst sin, and the only thing required of that person is to cut with evil and turn to God with trust. 54 dark night 55 8 2 Faustina knew that the One who appeared to her and spoke to her was Jesus. However, most of her superiors whom she told about the message of Divine Mercy, as Jesus wanted, did not believe her. She was advised to avoid those visions which were considered to be the outcome of fantasizing and hysteria. This, as well as the unfair judgments of some other sisters who did not understand Faustina’s spiritual ‘otherness’, was the reason for her moral suffering. It was not until the autumn of 1932, which was a year and a half after she had her first vision about the Divine Mercy, that Faustina met a priest, Fr. Edmund Elter, who confirmed that her visions were of a supernatural nature. The greatest helper of Sister Faustina’s message of Divine Mercy was Fr. Michał Sopoćko, whom she met at the convent in Vilnius, Lithuania. By examining the depth of her spiritual life, the sincerity of her intentions, and her mental health by having her examined by himself and professionals, Fr. Sopoćko, became Faustina’s spiritual director. It was on his orders that she started keeping her diary where she wrote down her mystical experiences. Her Diary is a great hymn of praise to Divine Mercy. It was also on orders from Fr. Sopoćko, with Faustina’s involvement, that Eugeniusz Kazimirowski, a Vilnius artist, painted the first image of the Merciful Jesus with the words: “Jesus, I trust in You” in 1934 the way Sister Faustina first saw Jesus in 1931 (the painting in Łagiewniki renowned all over the world was painted in 1943 by Adolf Hyła). In September 1935, Jesus gave Faustina the words of the Chaplet to the Divine Mercy and in October 1937 He told her about the Prayer at the Hour of Divine Mercy. Sister Faustina suffered for a long time because she was unable to implement Jesus’s orders expressed in 1931, and then repeated several times, for the Church to establish a celebration of Divine Mercy on the first Sunday after Easter (as was 56 57 introduced by John Paul II in 2000). Despite that, she was at peace when she died. She possessed many spiritual gifts including foretelling the future (e.g. she foretold her own canonization), she knew that despite great difficulties, the cult of Divine Mercy would survive and develop (a ban by the Apostolic See against spreading the cult of the Divine Mercy in the forms passed by Sister Faustina lasted from 1958 to 1978). Faustina wrote that “There will come a time when this work, which God is demanding so very much, will be as though utterly undone. And then God will act with great power, which will give evidence of its authenticity” (Diary, 378). Faustina was a mystic but she knew that it was not this that determined her sanctity: “My sanctity and perfection consist in the close union of my will with the will of God” (Diary, 1107). John Paul II beatified Sister Faustina in 1993, and in 2000 she was canonized. A casket with her reliquary is kept at the Convent Chapel in Łagiewniki where Faustina would pray over several years. It is stored on the altar behind the paining of Merciful Jesus with a caption “Jesus, I trust in you”. Ewa K. Czaczkowska FAUSTINA WAS ONE OF THE GREATEST MYSTICS IN THE HISTORY OF THE CHURCH Ewa K. Czaczkowska – journalist, historian, senior lecturer at the Institute for Media Education and Journalism at UKSW; author of books including Sister Faustina (translated into English, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, French, Croatian and Slovak), Miracles of Saint Faustina, and The Pope who believed. How Karol Wojtyla persuaded the Church to accept the devotion to Divine Mercy. 58 59 A little child came and woke me up. (…) The child (…) said to me, “look at the sky” And when I looked at the sky I saw the stars and the moon shining. Then the child asked me, “Do you see this moon and these stars?” When I said yes, he spoke these words to me, “These stars are the souls of faithful Christians, and the moon is the souls of religious.” Diary, 424 60 61 ST. JOHN PAUL II HIS FINAL COMING from here there must go forth the spark which will prepare the world for May the binding promise of the Lord Jesus be fulfilled: 64 65 1920 John Paull II was first referred to as “an apostle of Divine Mercy” by Pope Benedict XVI during the Angelus prayer on 30th March 2008. The Pope rightly noted that John Paul II’s entire life and papal teachings revolved around the mystery of Divine Mercy. The mission of “the Pope from a distant country” was service to “the truth of God, mankind and peace in the world”. Benedict XVI also noted the exceptional coincidence of the Pope’s death occurring on the eve of Divine Mercy Sunday. 1. Karol Wojtyła’s long journey Karol Wojtyła was born in Wadowice on 18th May 1920 as the second son of Karol Wojtyła and Emilia née Kaczorowska. His father was a retired military man and his mother was a seamstress by trade. Karol had an older brother, Edmund, who was a doctor, and sister Olga, who died soon after she was born. In his childhood Karol was usually called Lolek – a diminutive form of his name. In 1929, when he was 9, his mother Emilia passed away followed by his brother Edmund three years later. Karol first attended primary school and then middle school in Wadowice where he developed an interest in poetry and theatre. He was an altar boy at the parish church, a scout, played football, went skiing, hiked through the countryside, and went on pilgrimages with his father to the Marian Shrine in Kalwaria Zebrzydowska. In September 1938, having passed secondary school exams, he and his father moved to Kraków where he studied Polish at the Department of Philosophy at the Jagiellonian University. On the outbreak of World War II on 1st September 1939, universities in Poland were closed down and he was forced to undertake manual labour in the German chemical factory, Solvay. 66 In 1940, he participated in prayer meetings led by Jan Tyranowski where he read letters of John of the Cross. On 18th February 1941 Karol Wojtyła’s father passed away after a long illness. During the war, many of his Jewish friends from Wadowice and Kraków were arrested by the German occupying army and taken to the concentration camp in Auschwitz. At the end of 1942 and beginning of 1943, when he was praying at the convent church of the Congregation of the Sisters of Our Lady of Mercy in Łagiewniki, Karol discovered the devotion to the Divine Mercy. He saw the painting of Merciful Jesus by A dolf Hyła for the first time and he learned the Chaplet of Divine Mercy. During World War II, together with Tadeusz Kotlarczyk, he set up Teatr Rapsodyczny, where he was an actor. During the war Karol Wojtyła worked hard to support himself. He performed at the theatre and wrote poetry and plays. In 1942, when death at the hands of German invaders was a daily threat, Karol decided to join seminary. He studied philosophy and theology at the underground seminary in Kraków. On 17th January 1945, when Kraków was liberated by the Red Army, he moved into the seminary and continued his theological studies. 1929 ‘19 38 1939 ‘46 2. Service to the Church in Kraków On 1st November 1946, Karol Wojtyła was ordained as a priest by the Metropolitan of Kraków, Cardinal Adam Stefan Sapieha. On 2nd November he celebrated his first Holy Mass at St. Leonard’s Crypt at Wawel Cathedral. In November 1946, he went to Rome ‘40 1941 1948 1945 to study theology. He studied at the Pontifical University of Saint Thomas Aquinas (Angelicum) in Rome. He successfully defended his doctoral thesis “The Doctrine of Faith According to St. John of the Cross”. On his return from his studies in July 1948, Karol Wojtyła started working as an assistant priest at Niegowić parish (40 km from Kraków). In August 1949, he was transferred to the Parish of St. Florian in Kraków, where he worked until 1951 as the student chaplain. In 1952, Fr. Karol Wojtyła was working to prepare his thesis that would promote him to the level of assistant professor. At that period he also dedicated a lot of time to journalism by writing philosophical and theological essays. He was a lecturer in ethics and moral theology at the Seminary in Kraków. For a year he was a professor at the Catholic University in Lublin. He taught ethics of marriage, humanity, and freedom. On 4th July 1958, Karol Wojtyła was appointed a coadjutor bishop of the Archdiocese of Kraków. The guiding motto that he chose for his episcopal ministry was Totus Tuus (which in Latin means Totally Thine) taken from St. Louis-Marie Grignion de Montfort’s book True Devotion to Mary. This motto, which has to do with the theme “spiritual servitude”, is understood as a voluntary and complete surrendering of his life to the service to the Church and to the spiritual motherhood of Mother of God. This was a constant throughout his life. Bishop Karol Wojtyła participated in the Second Vatican Council (1962-1965). On 13th January 1964 he was appointed Metropolitan Archbishop of Kraków and on 26th June 1967 he became a cardinal. As the Bishop of the Archdiocese of Kraków he visited parishes and convents, maintained numerous contacts with people of science, culture and art. In 1965, he started the beatification process of Sister Faustina Kowalska. He con- 1949 1951 tinued to publish poetry and plays like The Jeweller’s Shop and Radiance of Fatherhood. In 1969, he published an anthropological monograph Person and Act, and in 1972 he also published a book on the Second Vatican Council. He researched philosophical traditions (classic Greek ethics, St. Thomas Aquinas, phenomenology) as well as the Bible and mysticism (St. John of the Cross). On 16th October 1978 Cardinal Karol Wojtyła was elected as Pope and took the name of John Paul II. He was the first Pope from Poland and the first Bishop of Rome who was not Italian in 455 years (since the pontificate of Hadrian VI). 3. The Pilgrim Pope A key characteristic of John Paul II’s pontificate were pilgrimages. His first apostolic visit was to Mexico in 1979. Here, he taught that politicians of Catholic countries should not forget about human rights, religious freedom and human dignity while in power. When he returned to Rome he published his first encyclical Towards Christ, the Redeemer of Man (1979). In this encyclical, he depicted Christ as man’s only redeemer. In June 1979, the Pope went to his first apostolic visit to Poland, where he famously said, “Let your Spirit descend and renew the face of the earth, the face of this land”. The Gospel message preached by John Paul II contributed to the fall of communism in the European countries of the Eastern Bloc. In November 1979, the Pope visited Turkey, where he met with the Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople. This was the first step towards establishing ecumenism between the East and the West. In 1980, John Paul II published his second encyclical, which was about God ‘52 1958 1943 ‘4 2 '65 1967 1978 who is rich in mercy, Dives in Misericordia, which pointed to Divine Mercy, the feature that would distinguish his pontificate. On 13th May 1981, during a general audience in St. Peter’s Square in Rome, at 5:19pm, John Paul II was shot by Turkish gunman, Mehmet Ali Ağca. The attack took place on the anniversary of the Fatima revelations of 1917. The Pope was convinced that the Mother of God shielded him with her cloak against danger. He survived the shooting, but he shed his blood for Christ. A year later John Paul II was attacked again. The Pope was attacked with a bayonet by Juan María Fernández y Krohn, but did not suffer any serious injuries. On 27th October 1986, John Paul II initiated an ecumenical gathering in Assisi, where representatives of many religions prayed for peace in the world. In addition, he was the first successor of St. Peter who visited a synagogue in Rome (1986). After the overthrow of communism in the 1990’s, John Paul II made numerous pilgrimages to those countries in the world which were experiencing wars and conflicts, in particular to Africa and the Balkans, as a pilgrim of peace. He received Fidel Castro in the Vatican and himself visited Cuba (1998). John Paul II led the Church and the world into the new millennium. In the jubilee year of 2000, he visited the Holy Land. During his visit he went to Yad Vashem Institute, a memorial to the victims of the Holocaust, and he prayed by the Western Wall. In 1999, the Pope kissed the Quran brought to him by Muslim imams as a gift. In 2000, during his trip to Egypt he met with Sunni sheik, Grand Imam of al-Azhar in Cairo. In 2000, as the first Pope ever, he entered the Umayyad Mosque in Damascus. The pontificate of John Paul II is regarded as the longest after the pontificate of St. Peter and Bl. Pius IX. He was Pope for 26 and a half years (9666 days). The personal 70 let your spirit descend and renew THE FACE OF THE EARTH, THE FACE OF THIS LAND beatified 1338 people, and canonized 482 appointed 231 cardinals at 9 consistories and 1 cardinal in pectore wrote 14 encyclicals wrote a great number of apostolic letters and also 15 apostolic exhortations as a poet and playwright published the poem Roman Triptych the Church of England has not recognized the authority of the Vatican. He was also the first Pope to have visited the White House. Despite his best efforts he was not able to make an apostolic pilgrimage to Russia due to the unwillingness of the Moscow Patriarch who accused the Vatican of proselytism. As Pope, John Paul II most frequently visited Poland (8 times), USA (7 times), and France (7 times). John Paul II was renowned for his meetings with the youth at the World Youth Days, nine of which he attended. During his pontificate John Paul II beatified 1338 people and canonized 482 people. He appointed 231 cardinals at nine consistories. He also appointed one cardinal in pectore whose name has never been disclosed. John Paul II passed away on 2nd April 2005 at 9:37pm, on the 9666th day of his pontificate, on the eve of the Feast of Divine Mercy. The Pope’s funeral took place on Friday 8th April 2005. A simple coffin of cypress wood (the symbol of eternity) was visits of John Paul II over 100 visits around Italy 104 countries assistant of John Paul II throughout the whole pontificate was Fr. Stanisław Dziwisz, who is the present Cardinal Metropolitan of Kraków. Apostolic pilgrimages were a characteristic feature of the pontificate of John Paul II. He visited 104 countries on all continents and made 100 trips throughout Italy. Many places he visited had never seen a Pope before. For instance, he was the first Pope to visit Great Britain where, since 1534, 72 9 meetings at World Youth Days 8 visits to Poland 7 visits to France 7 visits to the USA placed directly on St. Peter’s Square. The Holy Mass was concelebrated by a few thousand cardinals, bishops and patriarchs of Eastern Catholic Churches. The Mass was led by the College Dean, Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger. There were 300,000 faithful in the St. Peter’s Square, 200 presidents and prime ministers, and representatives of world religions including Muslim clergy and Jewish rabbis. All over Rome, 5 million people, including 1.5 million Poles, gathered around screens set up in the city. Many mourners were holding banners with the Italian phrase santo subito (saint now). John Paul’s II coffin was placed in the crypt of John XXIII in the Vatican grottoes. Since his death, he has been referred to as John Paul the Great. In the history of the Church, only three popes have had this epithet: Leon I, Nicolas I and Gregory I. This epithet was first used in the homily of cardinal Angelo Sodano at the requiem mass in the St. Peter’s Square on Sunday 3rd April 2005, the day after John Paul II passed away. It was also used in news and current affairs programs by large American TV stations (“John Paul the Great” – CNN, Fox News, ABC, CBS). The successor of John Paul II, Benedict XVI used this epithet in the homily at his papal inauguration. The beatification of John Paul II took place in Rome on 1st May 2011, on the Feast of Divine Mercy. He was then canonized by Pope Francis on 27th April 2014. John Paul II is the patron saint of the World Youth Day. John Paul II dedicated a lot of time to the unity of Christian churches. Throughout his pontificate, he sought closer relationship with Protestant and Orthodox churches. He testified to his work in the cause of ecumenism in the encyclical published in 1995, Ut Unum Sint. 74 John Paul II gave the Church 14 encyclicals. In these encyclicals, he considered the following themes: important dogmatic, moral and social issues of contemporary man and of the world. He wrote a great number of apostolic letters on the dignity of women, celebrating Sunday, Ss Cyril and Methodius, the Jubilee of the Year 2000, priestly ordination, the rosary, 15 apostolic exhortations on the family, catechesis, reconciliation and penance, the consecrated life, the laity, the life and service of priests, and apostolic constitutions on reform of Roman Curia and the code of canon law. The Pope, who was both a poet and playwright, also published the poem Roman Triptych during his pontificate. 4. The truth of Divine Mercy The truth about the Divine Mercy constitutes a central motif of the pontificate of John Paul II. It features in the encyclical Dives in Misericordia (God rich in mercy, 1980). Along with the encyclical Redemptor hominis (The Redeemer of man, 1979) and Dominum et vivificantem (The Lord and Giver of Life, 1983), the Pope speaks to contemporary man about God revealing himself in the history of redemption as the Holy Trinity, Father, Son and Holy Spirit. Mercy is the key to understanding the mystery of God, the mystery of man, and the mystery of the world. In these encyclicals (Dives in Misericordia, 3) John Paul II refers to the time of the Israelite’s Exodus from Egypt where God revealed His name YHWH (“I am who I am”) to explain the mystery of His name: “The LORD, the LORD, a God gracious and merciful, slow to anger and abounding in love and fidelity, continuing his love for a thousand generations, and forgiving wickedness, rebellion, and sin (…)” (Ex 34:6-7). 75 2 1 : 3 7 76 John Paul II proclaimed the second Sunday after Easter as Mercy Sunday stressing that Mercy is a chance to get to know “the true face of God and the true face of brethern” (Homily at the canonization of Sister Faustina, Rome, 30th April 2005). The message of mercy reminds us of the dignity and value of each person. Mercy also helps those who are lost among the various ideologies and ideas of the 20th and 21st centuries find a way to God. In the mystery of Divine Mercy, a Christian will find the true face of God, who is close to man, and also the true face of the man, who is in need of mercy and is ready to show mercy. In his apostolic letter, Novo Millennio Ineunte published at the turn of the third millennium (6th January 2001), John Paul II wrote about the need to develop the vision of mercy, or the ability to see the world in the context of God’s unlimited love. On August 17th, 2002 during the consecration of Basilica of Divine Mercy in Kraków-Łagiewniki, John Paul II entrusted the world to Divine Mercy and set the Church a task to familiarize the world with the Divine Mercy: “Today, therefore, in this Shine, I wish solemnly to entrust the world to Divine Mercy. I do so with the burning desire that the message of God’s merciful love, proclaimed here through Saint Faustina, may be made known to all the peoples of the earth and fill their hearts with hope. May this message radiate from this place to our beloved homeland and throughout the world. May the binding promise of the Lord Jesus be fulfilled: from here there must go forth the spark which will prepare the world for his final coming.” This spark of mercy is now brought to the world by Pope Francis, who has announced 2016 as the Jubilee Year of Mercy. Fr. Jan Machniak 77 HE (…) DID NOT SPARE HIS OWN SON John Paul II tells us that mercy is a template of God’s love for man and it includes every “shade of love”. It is fatherly love, patient, forgiving, kind and compassionate. Every person can discover God in nature and in the cosmos through God’s “invisible attributes” (Rom 1:20) and can discover God in their own life history as a good and forgiving Father. The full revelation of God’s love was embodied in Jesus Christ. Jesus revealed the Merciful God in the parables about the lost sheep and lost coin (Lk 15:1-10), and in particular in the parable of the prodigal son (Lk 15:11-32). The story first shows the greatness of fatherly love, ready to forgive and to lavish gifts on his son again. John Paul II focuses on the dignity of the prodigal son, which, thanks to the Father’s mercy, shines anew. The full revelation of Divine Mercy is in the death and resurrection of Christ. The Paschal mystery shows the greatness of God’s love for man as “He (…) did not spare his own Son” (Rom 8:32). Through the mystery of the cross, God reveals the depth of His love, which exists in the creation of man and in the act of Redemption. God’s mercy can be encountered in sacraments, in particular those of penance and in the Eucharist, in which a Christian touches God’s merciful love. The Church undertakes the mission of proclaiming Divine Mercy through declaring the truth that God is Mercy and by venerating Divine Mercy. The second task of Christ’s disciples is to act mercifully and the third way of bearing witness to God is to pray for mercy for the world. During the canonization of Sister Faustina Kowalska in Rome on 30th April 2000, John Paul II announced the message of mercy to the whole world. At the same time he reminded us that Divine Mercy provides mankind with the opportunity to be renewed; he referred to the Diary: “Mankind will not have peace until it turns to the Fount of My Mercy” (Diary, 699). Fr. Prof. Jan Machniak – graduate of Polish Studies from the Jagiellonian University (1976-1980) and from the Seminary of the Archdiocese of Kraków; ordained a priest in 1985, spiritual theology studies in Rome (1986-1990); spiritual director of the Seminary of the Archdiocese of Kraków (1991-1995); professor of spiritual theology at the Pontifical University of John Paul II in Kraków; author of many books on spirituality, preacher, chaplain in St. John’s Church in Kraków (Sisters of the Presentation of the Blessed Virgin Mary), rector of the International Academy of Divine Mercy; participant of World Youth Day in Buenos Aires (1987), Częstochowa (1991), Paris (1997), Rome (2000), and Cologne (2005). 78 79 DIVINE MERCY QUESTIONS & ANSWERS 80 81 There are questions to which you won’t find answers… 82 … ON THE WEB 83 HAPPINESS Discovering that we are loved ALL PEOPLE, REGARDLESS OF THEIR CULTURE, RELIGION OR PLACE OF BIRTH, WANT TO BE LOVED. IT IS ONLY WHEN YOU FEEL LOVED THAT YOU CAN BE HAPPY. CHRISTIANITY OFFERS US SOMETHING GREATER THAN AN IMPRESSION OF LOVE – IT GIVES US CERTAINTY THAT THERE IS SOMEONE WHO LOVES US SO MUCH. WE ARE NOT BORN WITH THIS CERTAINTY, THOUGH. WE OFTEN ARRIVE AT IT GRADUALLY. WE SEARCH, ASK QUESTIONS AND FINALLY FIND THE ANSWER IN GOD’S MERCY. IS WHAT WE THINK ABOUT GOD THE ACTUAL TRUTH ABOUT HIM? If a person’s heart were a room full of paintings and if we took a picture illustrating God from everyone’s heart, we could create a very diverse art gallery. Some of the paintings would amaze us, some other could scare us away. The story of our lives shapes different images of God in our hearts. For example, if we had too demanding parents who constantly controlled us, we can think that God is like them. If we didn’t get enough attention from our family when we were children, we can think that God cares little about us as well. If we grew up with the constant fear of punishment for our mistakes, we are likely to be afraid of God, who will be a strict judge in our eyes. Was sagt Gott selbst über sich? 84 WHAT DOES GOD SAY ABOUT HIMSELF? God introduces Himself to us already in the first books of the Old Testament by saying: “The LORD, the LORD, a God gracious and merciful, slow to anger and abounding in love and fidelity (…) forgiving wickedness, rebellion and sin (…)” (Ex 34:6-7). It is these characteristics of God that we can see in His reactions to the choices people have made throughout the history of the world. His reaction to Adam and Eve’s sin was the promise of Christ’s coming and our salvation. When God saw the suffering of the Israelites in Egypt, He called Moses to lead them out of slavery. When they were complaining while wandering through the desert, He showed them His patience and care and provided them with food and drink. He has cared in the same way for the next generations and so is He taking care of us today. “God is love” (1 Jn 4:8,16); therefore, anything He does results from His love. Is there anything like unconditional love? You cannot love more than rahamim. This Hebrew word occurs frequently in the Bible as a name for God’s love for us. Rahamim is the deepest, intimate, tender and totally unconditional love. God loves us more than even the best mother. He cannot give up on loving us! Can we be certain that this love will never change? God’s hesed is irrevocable. This Hebrew term is used in the Bible to mean God’s mercy towards us. Hesed means faithful love, which makes us feel safe. Regardless of our actions, God will always love us. 85 The Lord is merciful and gracious (…) He does not deal with us according to our sins, nor repay us according to our iniquities. Ps 103:8.10 DO WE NEED TO DESERVE GOD’S MERCY? We put a lot of effort into looking good. We work overtime to afford fashionable things. We can spend plenty of time choosing the best picture for our Facebook profile. We do it all to be accepted, to feel loved. God accepts us the way we are, despite our shortcomings and weaknesses. He sees our helplessness in many situations and takes pity on us. He sees perfectly what we sometimes try to hide from people and what we are afraid of in ourselves. Nevertheless, He loves us. It does not mean, however, that we do not need to act at all. God loves us because we are His children but when we start looking for Him consciously, He grants us even more graces and gifts, which help us improve ourselves on our way to sainthood. WHERE DO OUR FRIENDS, THE NIAGARA FALLS OR POWER IN THE LIGHT BULB COME FROM? When we think about God’s mercy, we tend to associate it solely with forgiveness, but we need to realize that what is good and beautiful is a gift from the merciful Father as well. He wants us to be happy so He gives us friends! He wants to amaze us with beauty so He has created so many wonders of nature! He wants us to enjoy a better life in this world so He gives inspiration to inventors! God is our Father, we are His children. He takes care of our everyday life. In doing so, He shows His mercy to us. 86 87 How do we know that God wants us to be happy? When we love somebody, we want him or her to be happy. God loves us. If we have any doubts as to whether He wants us to be happy, it means that we still have a false picture of Him in our minds. Knowing about our doubts, God decided to give us the greatest proof of His merciful love. We will discuss it in the next section. THE SAVED ONES What Jesus did for us OUR STORY TAKES ITS ROOTS IN THE GARDEN OF EDEN, WHERE EVERYTHING WAS BEAUTIFUL, PURE AND DELIGHTFUL. THERE WAS NO FEAR, HATRED, ILLNESS, OR DEATH. THERE WAS ONLY FREEDOM. AT SOME POINT, ADAM AND EVE, DECEIVED BY SATAN, CHOSE EVIL, WHICH BROUGHT AN END TO THE HARMONY OF THE WONDROUS WORLD CREATED BY GOD. FROM THAT MOMENT ON, EVERYTHING HAS BEEN POISONED BY SIN. HOWEVER, THE ANSWER OF THE MERCIFUL FATHER TO ADAM AND EVE’S DISOBEDIENCE WAS HIS PROMISE OF CHRIST’S COMING AND OUR SALVATION. Did God go mad? THEY HAVE WASHED THEIR ROBES AND MADE THEM WHITE IN THE BLOOD OF THE LAMB. rev 7:14 © DAYENU 88 If a friend told us that he wanted to become an ant, we would probably think that he went crazy. The difference between a man and this little creature is so huge that it is virtually impossible to imagine someone having such a wish. Therefore, it is so difficult to understand that God decided to become man! The Creator of Heaven and Earth, the King of the Universe, the One who is not limited by time or space (because He created them) becomes a little helpless baby! In no other religion has God become so close to us, men. Some people believe that God’s incarnation is sufficient proof of His crazy love for us, but He took a step further, some claim that a step too far. 89 wAS IT POSSIbLE TO DO MORE? We are able to do great things out of love. We can sit long hours by the bed of a sick person, travel thousands of kilometers to meet the person we love even for a while, give up our dreams, spend all our savings to help somebody. Jesus offered His life out of love for us, He gave it for everyone of us! DID JESUS HAVE TO DIE? Every action has some consequences. The same applies to our sins, although very often we cannot see their consequences immediately, or we can notice only some of them. No person, even the strongest or the holiest one, would not be able to bear the consequences of their sins. Jesus had to do it for us. He had to because He loves us, because He is Love and Mercy. He did not do it because somebody forced Him but because He wanted to do it for us. This is the greatest mercy we have ever experienced: Jesus gave His life for us, sinners. He saved us! (…) consider My Sorrowful Passion in all its immensity. Consider it as if it had been undertaken for your sake alone. 90 IF MY DEATH HAS NOT CONvINCED YOU OF MY LOvE, WHAT WILL? Diary, 1761, 580 ARE wE REALLY THAT bAD THAT wE NEED TO bE SAVED? Every sin is a rejection of God and harm we inflict on ourselves. The drama of many sins is that they leave us with wounds which may stay hidden for a long time. Sometimes, we hear stories of people who have had a car crash and are badly injured but are in a state of shock and can walk many kilometers, for example with a broken leg, without feeling any pain. They can walk bleeding until they lose consciousness. Similarly, we are often unable to see the wounds resulting from our sins. We need a saviour because we all have some hidden wounds which can lead to death… eternal death! Jesus is our Saviour. ARE THERE PEOPLE wHO DO NOT SIN? “I haven’t killed anybody, I haven’t stolen anything, I go to church on Sunday…” It is common for people who are away from God and lead a bad life to claim that they do not have any sins. They are really unable to see them. And it would suffice to “switch on the light”… Nobody is without sin. The closer we are to God, the better we can see the truth about ourselves. Mercy is like light which, falling on our life, makes us see the darkness in it, too. Bp. Grzegorz Ryś 91 Can people be divided into smaller and bigger sinners? There are people who let themselves be deceived by Satan in their lives and committed grave sins. Some other struggle with their venial sins. Are the ones better than the others? We are all sinners and debtors of the merciful God. He forgives those who have grave sins, and protects other people from committing them. Both result from His grace and mercy. Can God be merciful and just at the same time? Many people become very indignant when God shows His mercy towards wrongdoers. They will ask: Where is justice? Some others comfort themselves with the thought: I can sin because the merciful God will forgive me everything any way. They all misinterpret God’s justice and mercy, most commonly by treating them as two opposites. They believe that there is room for either mercy or justice. However, in fact, the two go hand in hand because both mercy and justice result from God’s love. The best illustration thereof is the cross of Jesus Christ. It was on this cross that justice was done for our sins – the punishment for sins is death and Jesus died for us voluntarily. It is also through Christ’s cross that God showed us the greatest mercy – He forgave us everything and opened us the way to Heaven. Mercy without justice is the mother of dissolution; justice without mercy is cruelty. St. Thomas Aquinas 92 Where can we find the merciful God? If Jesus appeared before us today and invited us to follow Him, what would be our answer? Some might say: “Great, but not today. I need a bit of time to get ready.” We tend to believe that to meet God we need to be perfect or, at least, we should not have any bigger shortcomings or weaknesses. And maybe this is the reason why we meet Him so rarely. He looks for us “on the ground floor” and we are “on the 10th floor”. We put on attractive masks to make a good impression on Him but it is our real face that draws Him, even if it is scarred. You do not need to wear any make-up when you come to meet the merciful God. We truly encounter Him only if we acknowledge the truth about ourselves. Where does the merciful God act? For the last 2,000 years, the merciful God has been saving us through the sacraments. He stays invisible to our senses – we cannot see Him, we cannot hear Him, but He is present there and He acts! He is constantly saving us from trouble, especially by means of two sacraments of “everyday use”: confession and the Eucharist. In confession, God removes the dirt of our sins, and, in the Eucharist, He gives Himself to us, He gives us life and the strength to lead a good life. Have you already met the enemy of the merciful God? Enemy, foe, the master of lies and illusion is Satan. We encounter him in all the situations which are supposed to raise doubts in our hearts, destroy our faith in God’s love for us and stop us from believing in the possibility of returning to God and being forgiven. He wants us to stop believing in God’s mercy. If we trust in God’s constant love despite our 93 sins, Satan is helpless. Therefore, he attacked St. Faustina so brutally, especially when she wrote in her Diary about the Divine Mercy. He tried to intimidate her, force her to stop writing. He had a feeling that what she was writing would help many people find the way back to God in the future. Why is there so much “buzz” around mercy now? God is always the same, invariable, always merciful. The whole Bible, the sacred tradition, the experience of thousands of saints tell us about God’s mercy. However, it has not always been that obvious to us. The twentieth century witnessed acts of unprecedented atrocity. The wars and the totalitarian systems led to the death of many innocent people. It was at that time that God decided to remind us about His mercy through St. Faustina. Nowadays, the evil takes different forms, destroying people more secretly, but there are equally many victims, if not more. Today, evil is presented as something good, and sin as freedom. Faced with a growing number of dangers, man needs God’s mercy more than ever. Be constantly on the watch, for many souls will turn back from the gates of hell and worship My mercy. Diary, 639 94 What will the years ahead bring us? (…) We are not given to know. However, it is certain that in addition to new progress there will unfortunately be no lack of painful experiences. But the light of divine mercy, which the Lord in a way wished to return to the world through Sister Faustina’s charism, will illumine the way for the men and women of the third millennium. St. John Paul II What is the Message of Mercy? The Diary of St. Faustina Kowalska is the most frequently translated Polish book. It contains all the words that Jesus directed at the whole world through St. Faustina. We refer to them as the Message of the Divine Mercy. It is in this message that God reminds us about His great love and encourages us to trust Him and to be merciful towards other people. (…) I intend today to pass this message on to the new millennium. I pass it on to all people, so that they will learn to know ever better the true face of God and the true face of their brethren. St. John Paul II Who is the apostle of mercy? The closest disciples of Jesus, the 12 men he called, were not His only apostles. Jesus also sent other apostles (apostle means “one who is sent away”). In the 20th century, He 95 entrusted the special mission of proclaiming God’s mercy to a woman – Sister Faustina. She was supposed to remind all the people about the Divine Mercy and proclaim it through acts, words and prayer. By means of St. Faustina’s Diary, Jesus also encourages us to proclaim God’s great mercy. You do not need to be a priest or a trained journalist. All He asks us for is to testify about Him in our everyday life, to notice the presence of the merciful God in everyday situations and to trust that He will lead us. We also need to become merciful towards our brethren. We can proclaim His mercy in everyday conversations by sharing our experiences with others. We can also help other people notice the presence of God in their lives and encourage them to trust Him, especially in difficult situations. FILLED WITH PEACE AS OFTEN AS YOU WANT TO MAKE ME HAPPY, SPEAK TO THE WORLD ABOUT MY GREAT AND UNFATHOMABLE MERCY. Why is it important to trust God? Diary, 164 96 Those who decided to trust God HOW BEAUTIFUL THE WORLD WOULD BE IF EVERYBODY HAD PEACE IN THEIR HEARTS! THE TRUTH IS THAT WE ALL LONG FOR PEACE AND MISS IT. MANY PEOPLE LOOK FOR INNER PEACE IN VARIOUS RELAXATION TECHNIQUES, MEDITATION, ALCOHOL AND DRUGS, WHICH MAKE US FORGET ABOUT OUR PROBLEMS FOR A MOMENT. ALL THESE METHODS SEEM TO WORK PERFECTLY AND GIVE US RELIEF FOR A WHILE, BUT THEY LEAD TO DEVASTATING CONSEQUENCES IN THE LONG RUN. THEY ARE SUPPOSED TO HELP US BUT, IN FACT, THEY ONLY MAKE MATTERS WORSE. HOWEVER, THERE IS SOMEBODY WHO KNOWS HOW TO REGAIN INNER PEACE. SOMEBODY WHO KNOWS THE FATHER AND KNOWS THAT HE IS LOVE. AND THERE IS ONLY ONE ANSWER TO THIS LOVE – TRUST, WHICH LEADS US TO A COMPLETE PEACE. God encourages us to trust Him as many as 365 times in the Bible by saying: “do not fear”, “peace be with you”, “do not be afraid”… In St. Faustina’s Diary, we can often find these words of encouragement and comfort, along with the reason why we can live without fear. Jesus repeats many times: “I am with you”. His closeness should be the source of deep peace and release us from any fears. It all depends, however, on whether we will trust Him since we are able to trust only somebody whom we know very well. 97 HOw CAN wE COME TO KNOw GOD? It is actually incredible that we, people, can get to know God! He wants to be discovered by us, He wants to stay close to us! Therefore, Jesus stayed with us in the sacraments, through which we can experience His closeness in a special way and learn to know Him better and better. Every prayer is a special meeting with God and a time to discover the truth about Him. It is also incredibly important to read the Bible, where God speaks to us about Himself. We can also learn to know Him better when we look back at our lives – we discover that He has been present in our lives, He loves us and constantly acts in our everyday life. The more I come to know Him, the more ardently, the more fiercely I love Him (…). Diary, 231 wHAT DOES IT MEAN TO TRUST GOD? We often think that trusting God means having hope that He will fulfill our dreams. In fact, this attitude is often reflected in our prayers: we present God a list of our wishes. However, to truly trust God is to accept His plan for our life and to believe that it is the best plan possible. Sometimes, we can have the impression that we do not trust God because we cannot feel it. Trust is not a feeling. It is a conscious choice of a pathway which we decide to follow listening to Christ’s words. 98 In spite of everything, Jesus, I trust in You in the face of every interior sentiment which sets itself against hope. Do what You want with me; I will never leave you, because You are the source of my life. Diary, 24 HOw CAN wE bE CERTAIN THAT GOD’S PLAN IS bETTER THAN OURS? Every inventor knows best what to do with the device he or she has created to make it work perfectly. They give a detailed description in the manual so that the user knows what can and cannot be done with the device. God is our Creator. He knows us better than we do ourselves. He knows what is good and what is bad for us. He knows every person’s abilities and how to use them best. He wants us to be happy. Therefore, He leaves us hints and advice as to what to choose for our benefit. HOw CAN wE CHECK wHETHER wE REALLY TRUST GOD? We can check the temperature of our body with a thermometer. We can check our language skills with a specially-designed test. But how can we check whether we trust God? What we need to do is to analyze our everyday choices and see whether they are in accordance with God’s will or not. 99 How to live in accordance with God’s will? God has left us hints how to live. We can find them in the Bible (especially, the Ten Commandments and the Eight Beatitudes). He also speaks to us through the Church, through the inspiration of the Holy Spirit, through everyday events and our meetings with other people. The moment we discover what God wants from us, He gives us some directions how to fulfill His calling in our lives. He also speaks to us through our everyday experiences. We can stay indifferent to His words, we can reject them, or accept them as a gift from our best friend, Jesus. Can I choose what I want? One of the biggest gifts we received from God is freedom. His gift is irreversible – we will always be free, we will always be able to choose what we want. If somebody wants to trust God, they will always be looking for His will and trying to understand what He wants from them, believing that God wants the best for them. This quest requires a lot of effort and engagement every day since we often have difficulties recognizing God’s will straight away. The choice between good and evil is obvious, but the choice between good and good seems more complex. In such a case, we might need to talk to somebody who will help us understand what God will like better. What will happen if I choose a different way from the one God intended for me? When we choose a way which is against God’s will, we commit sin. And this way leads us to death. God says, “I have set before you life and death (…) therefore choose life (…)” (Deut 30:19). God never stops taking care of us. Even when we do not follow His way, He stays by our side wherever we are. In our lives, we often choose a different way from the one intended for us by God. For example, Saul of Tarsus initially chose the way of violence against Christians. He was travelling to Damascus to persecute them. And it was at that time that God decided to call Him to become an apostle. Saul became one of the most zealous Christians because he experienced the great mercy of God, who turned a persecutor into His trusted friend. God straightens our crooked paths and is able to notice goodness in us despite our bad choices. Trust is a dynamic reality. God’s will is not a strict mathematical plan to follow but a wonderful story that we can co-create with Him. God is like GPS. He tells us where to go, but if I choose a different way (…) than Him, He says with the same, calm voice, “You’ve changed the route. I’m creating a new route, then.” Fr. Wojciech Ziółek SJ All things are lawful for me, but not all things are helpful. 1 Cor 6:12 101 Will trust in God protect us from suffering? Let’s imagine the following situation: a beautiful young student prays for a good future husband. After some time, she meets her dream boyfriend at a meeting of the youth chaplaincy. They fall in love with each other and he asks her to marry him. Two days after their engagement, the young man dies in a car crash. Could the merciful God include such a horrible event in His best plan for our life? After all, He never inflicts suffering on people. But sometimes He allows it. Trust is not about understanding everything that happens to us. To trust is to be certain that God is with us in our suffering and wants to carry us through it. The logic of mercy does not consist in protecting us from suffering but it consists in deriving good from the most difficult experiences. The best illustration thereof is the life of Jesus. His Passion and death led to His resurrection, which brought us salvation. part of God’s plan of salvation. We can learn from her how to trust God in the difficult moments of our lives. We can also ask Mary for help. Many saints came to trust God completely by doing so. What is the best way of showing God that we trust Him? Jesus has shown us this way. All His life, He was looking for His Father’s will and followed it. We can see it best in Christ’s prayer in the Garden of Gethsemane. Despite the great fear of immense suffering, He said to the Father: “Father, if you are willing, remove this chalice from me; nevertheless not my will, but yours, be done” (Lk 22:42). With His trust, Jesus opened the doors of Heaven for us. We also participate in Christ’s mission of salvation if we trust God and let Him act in our lives. Such trust is the manifestation of the greatest love. By choosing what God wants from us we become filled with peace. When my soul is in anguish, I think only in this way: Jesus is good and full of mercy, and even if the ground were to give way under my feet, I would not cease to trust in Him. Diary, 1192 Who can teach us how to trust in God? In fact, any saint who let himself or herself be led by God, can serve as an example of trust for us. However, the most remarkable example of completing God’s will is Mary’s life. At the Annunciation, she said “yes” to God and did not stop trusting Him, even when she was standing by the cross, on which her only Son was dying. She believed that this was What place does Jesus have in your life? 102 © DAYENU last second first on the couch 103 THE HAPPY ONES Those who love Love everyone out of love for Me, even your greatest enemies, so that My mercy may be fully reflected in your heart. Diary, 1695 JESUS SHOWED US THE WAY TO HAPPINESS IN THE SERMON ON THE MOUNT. HIS WORDS “BLESSED ARE THE MERCIFUL, FOR THEY SHALL OBTAIN MERCY” (MT 5:7) ENCOURAGE US TO LOVE OTHER PEOPLE. ONLY WHEN WE LOVE CAN WE DISCOVER THE MYSTERY OF HAPPINESS. Merciful – what does it mean? People tend to think that a merciful person is “a weakling” who starts crying the moment they see suffering. Sometimes, people think that mercy exists only in the sphere of emotions and feelings. However, when we look at Jesus and the saints, we can easily understand that the merciful person is the one who loves and therefore acts – reacts in a concrete way trying to fight the consequences of evil. Are charity events a manifestation of mercy? There are plenty of people in the world who suffer and need help. Fortunately, there are also many warm-hearted people who devote their time, strength and money to help the needy ones. However, what they do is not necessarily an act of mercy. We need to ask about their intentions. If they act out of their love for Jesus, then their actions are an example of mercy. 104 Can we be merciful from time to time? It is not possible to love somebody in the morning and to stop loving them in the evening. If it happens, it means that this is not a true love. The same applies to mercy, which grows roots in people’s hearts so that it fills their thoughts, words and actions. Such people love and therefore act, out of mercy. The mercy becomes their lifestyle. Be always merciful as I am merciful. Diary, 1695 What is the price of mercy? The original sin is a wound that we are all born with. It makes us prone to selfishness, to focusing on our needs more than on other people. However, if we become fascinated by Jesus, we want to follow Him and a desire arises in our hearts to love others as much as Jesus loves them. When we decide to turn to the merciful lifestyle, we declare war on our instincts and selfishness. Mercy comes at a price, it can be difficult since it requires us to choose what demands a greater effort. 105 Is every good deed really good? Generally speaking, prayer is a good thing. But what if we pray on an exam day for our teacher to get sick and stay home? It is good to help a friend who is short of money. But what if we lend him the money that we have stolen from our parents? It is a great thing to volunteer for a local organization. But what if somebody else needs to do our household chores for us? Any good deed needs to have good intentions (e.g. a prayer for somebody to be well), be performed only with good means (e.g. I lend somebody my own money) and in certain circumstances (e.g. I can help a local organization after fulfilling my duties first). Who will take care of us? Are there any situations when it is impossible to be merciful? In some circumstances, we feel at first glance that our hands are tied and we cannot do anything. It is easy to find an excuse then and go back to our own business. However, people with the vision of mercy will not give up that quickly. They will look for new ways, new ideas how to help a person in need. First, they will try to take some action. If this turns out to be impossible, they will try to help the person with the words of support, comfort or forgiveness. Sometimes, however, even this is not possible. Then we can always turn to prayer – yet another way to show our mercy. Is giving money to a beggar an act of mercy? The experience of many people who chose to be merciful in their lives shows that when we give ourselves to others, we receive much more in return. Mercy makes us abandon the rather sad notion of self-sufficiency and the fearful focus on ourselves. It transfers us into a fascinating world of interpersonal relationships. It is in this world that we experience love and generosity. We see that when we give, we receive even more in return. It is more blessed to give than to receive. Walking down a busy street in a big city, we often see people asking us for money. How do we react? Some of us give them money knowing that we will not solve their problem. In fact, it will help them only for a while. Therefore, it is more important to stop by a person in need and start a conversation to come to know them better. Sometimes, a simple conversation is worth more than the money we could offer. It is also important to pray for these people. Ac 20:35 106 107 When somebody is hungry, do not give them a fish, give them a fishing rod and teach them to fish. ARE THERE ANY GLASSES THAT ALLOw US TO SEE wHAT IS GOOD? When we read on the Internet about a man who killed somebody, we tend to think that he is a cruel person, a dangerous criminal, possibly from a dysfunctional family. This might be true, but it is not the entire truth about him. It is extremely difficult to see his positive sides if we are confronted solely with the evil he has done. What we need is a pair of special “glasses” which would allow us to look at people the way God does. He is able to find what is good in us under many layers of evil. We can learn from Him to look at people this way. The merciful God does not pretend that He cannot see evil, but He focuses on what is good in us. In spite of our sins, He looks at us with love and can notice beauty in us. who did evil to us. In this way, we liberate ourselves from the burden of our pain, and we give a person who hurt us a chance to change since only the experience of mercy can thoroughly transform a person. We resemble God most when we forgive our neighbors. Diary, 1148 wHY DO I HAVE TO bE MERCIFUL? Happy are those who can see how generous God has been towards them. Our lives, constant care, help in any situation, forgiveness of any sin – we receive it all from God for free! Happy are those who experience God’s mercy and show mercy to their brethren. They are happy also because through being merciful they become similar to God. “Be merciful, even as your Father is merciful” (Lk 6:36). HOw TO bE MERCIFUL TOwARDS SOMEbODY wHO HAS HURT US? Whenever we say Our Father, we repeat the phrase “and forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those who trespass against us.” Jesus consciously asked us to repeat these words in the most basic Christian prayer – He wants to remind us every day that we need forgiveness. God is always generous with forgiveness and expects us to be equally merciful towards other people. Mercy manifests itself best in our ability to forgive. And whether we forgive somebody is our conscious choice. We decide not to do evil to somebody 108 109 CALLING FOR MERCY Praying for mercy for us and the whole world WE ALL NEED GOD’S MERCY. HE LIFTS US UP WHEN WE FALL. HE GIVES US STRENGTH TO LEAD A GOOD LIFE. HE GIVES US HOPE FOR HEAVEN. WE NEED TO PRAY BECAUSE IT IS IN THE PRAYER THAT WE CAN MEET THE MERCIFUL GOD. THIS MEETING TRANSFORMS US. THANKS TO OUR PRAYER, GOD TRANSFORMS THE LIFE OF OTHER PEOPLE AS WELL. IT HAS AN INFLUENCE ON THE DESTINY OF THE WHOLE WORLD. WE KNOW ABOUT IT FROM ST. FAUSTINA’S DIARY. IT IS THROUGH HER THAT JESUS SHOWED US NEW WAYS OF MEETING HIM AND ASKING FOR MERCY. 110 How can we pray for mercy? Whenever we praise God’s mercy, thank Him for His goodness, apologize to Him for our sins, or ask Him for help, we show Him our trust. If we follow His will while taking everyday decisions, we give Him concrete proof of our trust. And when we experience His mercy, a desire arises in our hearts to act in the same way towards other people. Trust and mercy are two straight ways which lead us to God and open us for His mercy. Sr. M. Gaudia Skass, Sr. M. Emanuela Gemza 111 DO YOU KNOW WHO WAS THE GREATEST ADVOCATE OF DIVINE MERCY? CONNECT THE BLACK DOTS TO FIND OUT THE ANSWER DIVINE MERCY IMAGE “JESUS, I TRUST IN YOU” 114 115 WHAT IS THE STORY OF THIS IMAGE? The image of the Divine Mercy is the only portrait in the history of Christianity that was commissioned by Jesus Himself. Christ appeared to St. Faustina on 22nd February 1931 during her stay in the Polish city of Płock. In her Diary, the nun recorded everything she had seen, and her description served as a guide for the first image of Merciful Jesus, which was painted in 1934 in Vilnius, where it can be found to date. However, the most renowned Divine Mercy image is displayed in the convent chapel of the Congregation of the Sisters of Our Lady of Mercy at the Shrine of the Divine Mercy in Kraków-Łagiewniki. The miraculous image was painted by Polish painter Adolf Hyła. 2. 1. WHAT IS THE 7. SYMBOLIC MEANING OF 3. THE PAINTING? 6. 1. eyes 4. 2. the right HAND, RAISED IN BLESSING 3. the left HAND ON HIS HEART The image of Merciful Jesus is not His “photograph”. Therefore, we can find different versions of this painting around the world. They all fulfill Christ’s desire, provided that they are painted in accordance with the description in the Diary. 4. rays 5. feet 6. white garment God bestows graces on those who pray before this image with trust and imitate Jesus by showing mercy to other people. Jesus said to St. Faustina, “I promise that the soul that will venerate this image will not perish. I also promise victory over its enemies already here on earth, especially at the hour of death. I Myself will defend it as My own glory” (Diary, 48). Jesus fulfills His promises and we see miracles happen all over the world! 116 7. DARK BACKGROUND 5. 8. THE INSCRIPTION “JESUS, I TRUST IN YOU” 8. 117 2. THE RIGHT HAND RAISED IN BLESSING 1. EYES Any encounter begins with exchanging looks. Jesus said to Sister Faustina, “My gaze from this image is like My gaze from the cross” (Diary, 326). What is the look of somebody who offered his life for us out of love? It is important to remember what happened on Golgotha. Anyone who looks at the painting and meets Christ’s gaze can experience the same feelings as people back then on Golgotha: love, acceptance, forgiveness, infinite care and mercy, which bridges the great abyss between the sinner and the Holy God. Dear young people, at the Shrine in Kraków dedicated to the merciful Jesus, where He is depicted in the image venerated by the people of God, Jesus is waiting for you. (…) Do not be afraid to look into His eyes, full of infinite love for you. Open yourselves to His merciful gaze, so ready to forgive all your sins. Upon a closer look, we notice a nail wound on this hand. The One whom we condemned to death is raising His hand not to take revenge on us but to bless us. Jesus taught the same to Sister Faustina: “If someone causes you trouble, think what good you can do for the person who caused you to suffer” (Diary, 1760). Mercy is a love that we do not deserve. The experience of such love helps us get closer to God. Love your enemies, do good to those who hate you, bless those who curse you, pray for those who abuse you. Lk 6:27-28 Pope Francis 118 119 3. THE LEFT HAND ON HIS HEART This hand points at the most important element in the picture – the pierced heart of Jesus. It is in the heart that feelings, thoughts and decisions are born. It is there that the decision about love is made. In His heart, Jesus made a decision to offer His life for us. I DO NOT WANT TO PUNISH ACHING MANKIND, BUT I DESIRE TO HEAL IT, PRESSING IT TO MY MERCIFUL HEART. Diary, 1588 4. RAyS MY HEART OVERFLOWS WITH GREAT MERCY FOR SOULS, AND ESPECIALLY FOR POOR SINNERS. IF ONLY THEY COULD UNDERSTAND THAT I AM THE BEST OF FATHERS TO THEM AND THAT IT IS FOR THEM THAT THE BLOOD AND WATER FLOWED FROM MY HEART (…) Diary, 367 120 The left hand touches the heart, which we cannot see in the painting. Yet, we can see two rays streaming out of it. Jesus told Sister Faustina that “the pale ray stands for the Water which makes souls righteous. The red ray stands for the Blood which is the life of souls” (Diary, 299). In short, the two rays denote water and blood, which streamed out of Christ’s pierced heart. “The Water which makes souls righteous” is a symbol of the sacrament of baptism and confession, and of the gifts of the Holy Spirit, whose biblical symbol is water as well. “The Blood which is the life of the souls” symbolizes the Eucharist. Jesus Christ is present in the sacraments and it is through them that He shows us His greatest mercy: He forgives us our sins and gives Himself to us. 5. FEET Christ’s feet also carry traces of His immense suffering. Though wounded by our sins, Jesus does not cease to look for us. He makes the first move towards us, like the loving father from the parable of the prodigal son (Lk 15:11-32). He does not wait for us to become holy, perfect and converted. He roams the world in search of the weak to help them come to Him by themselves. BUT WHILE HE WAS YET AT A DISTANCE, HIS FATHER SAW HIM AND HAD COMPASSION, AND RAN AND EMBRACED HIM AND KISSED HIM. Lk 15:20 121 6. WHITE GARMENT Jesus is wearing a white garment, which symbolizes His resurrection. His body bears traces of suffering but the white robe illustrates His victory over death. These remarkable events from Christ’s life are the ultimate manifestation of the Divine Mercy towards man. 7. DARK BACKGROUND The dark background behind the light figure of Jesus Christ is an accurate depiction of the circumstances in which Jesus appeared to Faustina in 1931 – she saw Him in the evening. However, it also carries a symbolic meaning in that it illustrates the darkness of our sins. And into this darkness – the sphere of our life filled with pain and fear – comes the resurrected Jesus – the conqueror of death – to bring us hope for forgiveness. I HAVE COME AS LIGHT INTO THE WORLD, THAT WHOEVER BELIEVES IN ME MAY NOT REMAIN CHRIST (…) HAS REVEALED IN HIS RESURRECTION THE FULLNESS OF THE LOVE THAT THE FATHER HAS FOR HIM AND, IN HIM, FOR ALL PEOPLE. St. John Paul II 122 IN DARKNESS. Jn 12:46 123 8. THE INSCRIPTION “JESUS, I TRUST IN YOU” Jesus told St. Faustina that He wanted these words to be written on the painting. They open people’s hearts to the Divine Mercy. They are also an answer to His infinite love. COME TO HIM AND DO NOT BE AFRAID! COME TO HIM AND SAY FROM THE DEPTHS OF YOUR HEARTS: “JESUS, I TRUST IN YOU!”. LET YOURSELVES BE TOUCHED BY HIS BOUNDLESS MERCY, SO THAT IN TURN YOU MAY BECOME APOSTLES OF MERCY BY YOUR ACTIONS, WORDS AND PRAYERS IN OUR WORLD, WOUNDED BY SELFISHNESS, HATRED AND SO MUCH DESPAIR. Pope Francis Sr. M. Gaudia Skass, Sr. M. Emanuela Gemza 125 CHAPLET OF DIVINE MERCY 126 127 WHAT IS THE CHAPLET OF THE DIVINE MERCY? PER LA SUA DOLOROSA PASSIONE... For the sake of His sorrowful Passion… It is a special prayer dictated by Jesus Himself. He is the author of the Chaplet. This prayer reminds us that Jesus loved us so much that He offered His life to free us from slavery to sin. It also makes us realize that we sorely need God’s mercy. We need it and the whole world needs it. How do we know about this prayer? Por Su dolorosa Pasión… St. Faustina recorded the words of the Chaplet in her Diary on 13th September 1935 in Vilnius. Two years later, the first pictures with the Chaplet of the Divine Mercy were printed in Kraków. Shortly afterwards, Divine Mercy images spread all over the world. What is most important in this prayer? Pela sua dolorosa Paixão... DURCH SEIN SCHMERZHAFTES LEIDEN... Par Sa douloureuse passion… These are only several of many languages in which people throughout the world recite the Divine Mercy Chaplet, a special prayer given to us by Jesus Himself. And when we say this prayer with trust, miracles happen. 128 It is trust. To trust is to agree to anything that God wants for us and the world and to believe that what He wants is best for us. To ask with trust also means to wait patiently with the faith that God will answer our prayer at the best moment and in the best possible way. In what circumstances did Jesus dictate the Chaplet to St. Faustina? “In the evening, when I was in my cell, I saw an Angel, the executor of divine wrath. He was clothed in a dazzling robe, his face gloriously bright, a cloud beneath his feet. From the cloud, bolts of thunder and flashes of lightning were springing into his hands; and from his hand they were going forth, and only then were they striking the earth. When I saw this sign of divine wrath which was about to strike the earth (…) I began to implore the Angel to hold off for a few moments, and the world would do penance. But my plea 129 And these “words heard interiorly” were what we know today as the Chaplet. “As I was praying in this manner, I saw the Angel’s helplessness: he could not carry out the just punishment which was rightly due for sins. Never before had I prayed with such inner power as I did then.” (Diary, 474). What time of the day should we say the Chaplet? Many people associate the Chaplet of the Divine Mercy with 3pm, the Hour of Mercy. However, Jesus has never said what time we should recite the prayer. He only asked Sister Faustina to say it frequently. As a matter of fact, we can say this prayer any time day or night! 3pm THE HOUR OF MERCY Did Jesus make any special promises regarding the Chaplet? Jesus promised that to those who say the Chaplet He would grant anything they ask for (that is anything in compliance with God’s will). He wants to give us everything we need, everything we ask for! But the words of the Chaplet do not work miracles the moment we utter them. In fact, they prompt us to change our lives. What God expects from us is our trust and mercy shown to our neighbors. The Chaplet can be likened to a double door through which we can enter the treasury of God’s promises and receive everything! Jesus also promised the grace of happy and peaceful death (“happy” means in the state of the sanctifying grace and without anxiety and fear) to those who would recite the Chaplet throughout their lives. This promise is also given to the dying by whose side somebody will recite this prayer. In Poland, you can receive a plenary indulgence (under the usual conditions) for reciting the Chaplet in a church or a chapel. When this chaplet is said by the bedside of a dying person, God’s anger is placated, unfathomable mercy envelops the soul (…). Diary, 811 131 IT PLEASES ME TO GRANT EVERYTHING THEY ASK OF ME BY SAYING THE CHAPLET. Diary, 1541 was a mere nothing in the face of the divine anger. (…) At that very moment I felt in my soul the power of Jesus’ grace, which dwells in my soul. (…) I found myself pleading with God for the world with words heard interiorly” (Diary, 474). wHAT DO wE ACTUALLY SAY IN THE CHAPLET? ETERNAL FATHER… From the very beginning of the prayer, we address God as our Father. And when we say to Him “Father! Dad!”, we invoke His merciful love. In this way, we proclaim that He is a good, loving Father, who waits for all his children, even the lost ones. He waits for every one of us. … I offer You the body and blood… Soul and Divinity of Your dearly beloved Son, our Lord Jesus Christ… These words remind us of Jesus Christ’s real presence in the Eucharist. He offers Himself to His Father for the salvation of the world. We can consciously join His self-offering. When we recite the words of the Chaplet, we refer to our role in the Eucharist, where we make a spiritual offering while the priest celebrates the sacrament at the altar. … In atonement for our sins, and those of the whole world For the sake of His sorrowful Passion… These few words remind us how greatly Jesus suffered for our sins. We stand before the Father and invoke Christ’s redemptive offering to ask God for mercy. The sorrowful Passion of Christ is the ultimate manifestation of God’s mercy. “For God so loved the world that he gave his only-begotten Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life” (Jn 3:16). … Have mercy on us and on the whole world We repeat this phrase many times because we know that we all sorely need Lord’s mercy. We are aware of our sins and weaknesses and therefore we are pleading for mercy. We are praying not only for forgiveness of our sins but also for anything that would help us lead a better life. As we ask God for His mercy, we proclaim our faith in His tender love, goodness and care for every one of us. We pray for mercy not only for ourselves and our families, but for the whole world. This prayer opens up our hearts – we stop concentrating on ourselves and begin to notice other people’s needs. In the Chaplet, we pray for the whole world: for the living and the dead. Do we have anything that we could offer God to expiate our sins? Could we perform any good works to compensate for our evil deeds? Without Christ’s help, we are not able to offer anything to God. Sr. M. Gaudia Skass, Sr. M. Emanuela Gemza 132 “For the wages of sin is death” (Rom 6:23). Yet, we do not die since Jesus took upon Himself our sins and our death. It was Him that paid our debt. And this prayer reminds us thereof. 133 THE HOUR OF MERCY There is more merit to 1 hour of meditation on My sorrowful Passion than there is to a whole year of flagellation that draws blood. Diary, 369 Ecce Homo, Adam Chmielowski (Brother Albert) Museum of the Ecce Homo Sanctuary of St. Brother Albert in Kraków Each day there is a moment during the day that reminds us of Divine Mercy. It reminds us of the event which changed the course of history. It is the hour in which Jesus sacrificed His life for us showing us the greatest mercy. That is why 3 o’clock is called the Hour of Mercy. wHY SHOULD wE PRAY AT 3PM? When we love someone, we want to be with them forever, especially if they suffer. At the Hour of Mercy we are with Jesus in His greatest suffering: when he was suffering and dying on the cross. He asks us through St. Sister Faustina to meet Him in prayer every day at the time of his agony. AS OFTEN AS YOU HEAR THE CLOCK STRIKE THE THIRD HOUR IMMERSE YOURSELF COMPLETELY IN MY MERCY ADORING AND GLORIFYING IT; INVOKE ITS OMNIPOTENCE FOR THE wHOLE wORLD, AND PARTICULARLY FOR POOR SINNERS. Diary, 1572 DO wE NEED TO PRAY FOR THE wHOLE HOUR? A prayer at the Hour of Mercy is the prayer at the time of Jesus’s dying and a brief prayer at 3pm exactly is sufficient. Regardless of where we are, when we check the time and see it is 3pm, all that is required is a moment of contemplation, a few words to Jesus expressing trust in His great mercy. 138 AT THREE O’CLOCK IMPLORE MY MERCY, ESPECIALLY FOR SINNERS, AND, IF ONLY FOR A bRIEF MOMENT, IMMERSE YOURSELF IN MY PASSION, PARTICULARLY IN MY AbANDONMENT AT THE MOMENT OF AGONY. Diary, 1320 DO wE NEED TO PRAY THE CHAPLET OF DIVINE MERCY AT 3PM? In St. Sister Faustina’s Diary it is not indicated that Jesus asks us to pray the Chaplet of Divine Mercy at the Hour of Mercy. Of course we can say the Chaplet at 3pm, as we can at any time of the day or night. If we pray the Chaplet at another time, then we do not have to make the prayer of the Hour of Mercy. We can join those two prayers and after contemplating Jesus’s suffering at 3pm, the Chaplet should be prayed. This is how we pray at the Sanctuary of Divine Mercy in Kraków-Łagiewniki and other places. HOw TO PRAY AT THE HOUR OF MERCY? At this special moment of meeting with Jesus, you can visualize standing at the cross. You can thank Jesus for His great love, for His merciful comapssion of our weakness, and for 139 forgiving us our sins. We know that the sacrifice of His life has opened up for us the whole divine treasury. By calling on the merits of His suffering, we can ask for anything believing we are going to receive what is best. DOES JESUS MAKE ANY SPECIAL PROMISES IN CONNECTION wITH THE HOUR OF MERCY? On the cross Jesus gave us everything, he gave us Himself. Likewise at each meeting at the Hour of Mercy He offers us a great deal more. He promised that we can request anything for ourselves and others. He will grant this request for us if it is within God’s will for our lives. IN THIS HOUR I wILL REFUSE NOTHING TO THE SOUL THAT MAKES A REQUEST OF ME IN VIRTUE OF MY PASSION. Diary, 1320 TRY Y OUR b EST T CROS O MA S IN T KE TH HIS H AND I E STA O U R (…) F YOU TIONS ; ARE N OF TH OF TH O E T AbL E CRO E S TO M S, THEN AKE T AT LE HE ST AST S FOR A ATION TEP IN MOM S T O E T N HE CH AND A T APEL DORE , IN TH MY H E bLE EART, SSED wHIC AND S SACR H IS FUL AMEN HOUL L OF M D YOU T, TO ST E b R E UNA CY; EP INT b O LE THE C IMME HAPE RSE Y L O , U HAPP RSELF EN TO IN PR AYER bE, IF THER ONLY E, wH F O R A bR Diary, ERE Y IEF IN 1572 OU STAN T. 140 ExAMPLES OF INSPIRATION FOR PRAYERS AT THE HOUR OF MERCY Picture yourself at Golgotha. You are standing by the Cross. You are looking at Jesus, who is dying out of love for you. Your eyes meet. What do you wish to say to Him? In your mind, you can stand by the cross with all your weakness, with your sin, with your pain. You can tell Him about anything, because He is God who knows suffering and can understand your pain. Without accusation, without judgment, he reaches out with his pierced hand from the cross to help you rise. Take the cross in your hand. Contemplate Jesus’s loneliness at the time He most needed someone’s presence, understanding, and love. Contemplate His loneliness in many brothers and sisters suffering, abandoned, and ridiculed. Talk to Him about your loneliness. Try to notice in the sea of suffering His great Divine Mercy. Sr. M. Gaudia Skass, Sr. M. Emanuela Gemza 141 FEAST OF DIVINE MERCY 142 143 AND THAT IS TRUST THE GRACES OF MY MERCY ARE DRAwN bY MEANS OF Diary, 1578 , Y L E N ONSSEL O VE 144 145 GOD IS ALWAYS MERCIFUL. EVERY DAY, NO MATTER WHERE WE ARE, HE SHOWS US HIS LOVE. HE WANTED, HOWEVER, A SPECIAL DAY WHEN WE PRAISE HIS MERCY. A DAY IN WHICH EVERY SINNER – I.E. EACH OF US – HAS A CHANCE TO LEAVE THEIR PAST IN THE ARMS OF THE MERCIFUL GOD AND START EVERYTHING ANEW. 146 When is this special day? The Feast of Divine Mercy is celebrated on the first Sunday after Easter, the last day of the Octave of Easter. Whose idea was it? St. Sister Faustina wrote down in her Diary the words of Jesus asking us to celebrate this feast 14 times. It was Jesus who stated the exact time and manner of celebrating Divine Mercy. Who established this feast? St. John Paul II devoted his life to the continuation of the mission of St. Sister Faustina. On the day of her canonization, 30th April 2000, he announced the Feast of Divine Mercy for the whole Church, fulfilling Jesus’s wish. 147 Why does Jesus want this feast? The merciful God is present in our history. He can see our struggle and the sins that destroy us. He tries to rescue us in any possible way and that is why He has given us the Feast of Mercy. I DESIRE THAT THE FEAST OF MERCY BE A REFUGE AND SHELTER FOR ALL SOULS, AND ESPECIALLY FOR POOR SINNERS. Diary, 699 Are there any general promises made by Jesus in connection with the Feast of Mercy? ON THAT DAY THE VERY DEPTHS OF MY TENDER MERCY ARE OPEN. I POUR OUT A WHOLE OCEAN OF MY GRACES UPON THOSE SOULS WHO APPROACH THE FOUNT OF MY MERCY. THE SOUL THAT WILL GO TO CONFESSION AND RECEIVE HOLY COMMUNION SHALL OBTAIN COMPLETE FORGIVENESS OF SINS AND PUNISHMENT. Diary, 699 On the Feast of Mercy, God wants to give us anything we trustfully ask of Him. He also wants to give us things that are going to be good for us! He also promises a special grace: “the complete forgiveness of sins and punishment”, which means on that day our hearts can become pure, like on the day of our baptism. The only thing that one needs to do is to be in a state of divine grace (after confession and detached from the sin) and receive Jesus in Holy Communion. We can also expect in our daily life that if we try to trust in God and show mercy to others, we can expect Jesus’s promises to be fulfilled and our hearts will be open to receive great graces. 148 149 How to prepare to this feast? This special day is the day of God’s great generosity. To have one’s heart open and prepared to receive all graces offered by Him, one needs to prepare well for it. Jesus himself suggested beginning a novena on Good Friday which involves saying the Chaplet of Divine Mercy for nine days. BY THIS NOVENA, I WILL GRANT EVERY POSSIBLE GRACE TO SOULS. Diary, 796 How to extend this celebration? This day is a great undertaking for the whole Church. Seeing the merciful love of God makes us want to share the goodness of our Father in heaven with others. Jesus asks that we spread the message of mercy which He passed on to St. Faustina, not only on the Feast of Mercy, but also every day of our lives. Great graces are promised to those who undertake this task. Sr. M. Gaudia Skass, Sr. M. Emanuela Gemza 150 SOULS THAT SPREAD THE HONOUR OF MY MERCY I SHIELD THROUGH THEIR ENTIRE LIVES AS A TENDER MOTHER HER INFANT, AND AT THE HOUR OF DEATH I WILL NOT BE A JUDGE FOR THEM, BUT THE MERCIFUL SAVIOUR. Diary, 1075 THE SHRINE OF DIVINE MERCY 152 153 The merciful God is everywhere. We can pray to Him anywhere. Why is it then that every year around 2 million pilgrims from over 90 countries come to the Shrine of Divine Mercy in Kraków? Among them there are those who have been deeply touched by St. Faustina’s Diary. Others were touched by a testament of someone who had received a special grace at this place and they wanted to come here too. Still others are brought to the Shrine in the hope of God’s miraculous intervention into their entangled lives. There are many reasons but behind each of them there is desire for God. I HAVE COME TO ŁAGIEWNIKI (...). I AM CONVINCED THAT THIS IS THE SPECIAL PLACE CHOSEN BY GOD TO SOW THE GRACE OF HIS MERCY. St. John Paul II Why is this place so special? The convent in the district of Łagiewniki in Kraków used to be one of many homes of the Congregation of the Sisters of Our Lady of Mercy. The sisters prayed here, worked, and praised the Lord in their daily lives. At some point this daily life became a place where God’s special grace was at work – St. Faustina Kowalska joined the Congregation in Kraków. Ever since then, the convent in Łagiewniki has been a site of numerous revelations that are important for us and for the whole world. It is from this place that the message of Divine Mercy has spread over all continents. Jesus chose this place so that here people can experience His presence and grace in a special way. Where to go first? The history of this place started with the convent chapel, which is the heart of the Shrine. This is where St. Faustina prayed, this is where she saw Jesus and spoke to Him on many occasions. The painting of Merciful Jesus by Adolf Hyła has hung in the chapel since World War II. In the 1960’s, Sister Faustina’s remains were moved here. Very soon the chapel became the site of many miracles. People come from all over the world to pray here and receive many graces and experience God’s presence in a special way. Why is the Shrine called the world centre for veneration of Divine Mercy? In 1938, St. Faustina passed away in the convent in Kraków. People from all over the world make pilgrimages to her tomb. Thanks to her they learn the message of Divine Mercy, which changes their lives. Here they pray before the painting of the Merciful Jesus renowned for bestowing grac- 154 155 es; visitors to the Shrine have taken holy cards and copies of the painting to the most distant corners of the world. Through these acts, they experience God’s merciful love; they join St. Faustina’s mission by spreading the message of Mercy to everyone. The greatest accomplishments of this mission are owed to St. John Paul II. In the 1980’s, it was he who called the Shrine “the capital of Divine Mercy.” He was aware of how special this place was. He used to go to Łagiewniki during World War II, when he worked at a nearby quarry. Later on, he often prayed here as a priest and then as the bishop of Kraków. As Pope, he beatified and canonized Sister Faustina and established the Feast of Divine Mercy (on the second Sunday of Easter) for the whole Church. Later, he made two pilgrimages to the Shrine of Divine Mercy GOD, MERCIFUL FATHER (...) BEND DOWN TO US SINNERS, HEAL OUR WEAKNESS, CONQUER ALL EVIL, AND GRANT THAT ALL THE PEOPLES OF THE EARTH MAY EXPERIENCE YOUR MERCY. IN YOU, THE TRIUNE GOD, MAY THEY EVER FIND THE SOURCE OF HOPE. St. John Paul II 156 in Kraków and, during his last pilgrimage, he consecrated the Basilica and entrusted the whole world to Divine Mercy. What other important places are worth visiting at the Shrine? Near the convent chapel, there is the Basilica building with its tower visible from many spots in Kraków and nearby areas. Confession is held at the Basilica daily from morning until evening and many people take this opportunity to go to confession. In the lower part of the Basilica, people come to pray at the chapels, which have interior décor that has been developed by artists from several countries. The Italian, Hungarian, Ukrainian, Slovak and German chapels show that, through St. Sister Faustina, Jesus passed His message of mercy to the whole world. Next to the Basilica, there is the Chapel of Perpetual Adoration where the prayer for mercy for the world and each human being has been in continuous progress since 2005. Sr. M. Gaudia Skass, Sr. M. Emanuela Gemza Sr. M. Gaudia Skass – sister from the Congregation of the Sisters of Our Lady of Mercy, graduate of the Warsaw Academy of Fine Arts (department of painting), proclaims Divine Mercy in many different ways, some examples can be found on the Internet, including on the YouTube channel Faustyna 2016. Sr. M. Emanuela Gemza – sister from the Congregation of the Sisters of Our Lady of Mercy, trained musician and teacher, has been serving the Divine Mercy Sanctuary in Kraków for a few years. 157 THE WAY OF MERCY MEDITATION 158 159 1 , HAVINGT U O Y F AN O LOS WHAT M EEP, IF HE HAS SH UNDRED AH ? 160 OF THEM, ETY-NINE IN N E H T E V EA DOES NOT L IN THE WILDERNESS, ER THE ONE T F A O G D N A INDS IT? F E H IL T N U ST, Lk 15:4 WHICH IS LO 161 The spread of the devotion of the Divine Mercy has resulted in new forms of worship. One of them is “The Way of Mercy”, in which we meditate on the life of Jesus, discovering the truth that Jesus manifests God’s mercy from the moment of His incarnation up to His ascension into Heaven and offering us the opportunity of eternal life. Below you will find one of the forms in which “The Way of Mercy” can be celebrated. Opening Prayer Merciful Jesus, we are about to walk a unique way, the Way of Mercy. We want to follow Your steps and contemplate Your words: “Blessed are the merciful, for they shall obtain mercy.” We are going to reflect on the events recorded in the Gospel which demonstrate how merciful You are. We want to become like You, Lord Jesus. On this Way of Mercy, we are accompanied by Mary and the Apostles of the Divine Mercy: St. Faustina and St. John Paul II. Lord Jesus Christ, we are following Your footprints that You left when You proclaimed Father’s love, healed the sick, cast out demons, forgave sins, raised the dead to life and when You offered Your life for our salvation. Fill us with Your Spirit for the time of this prayer. May Your Spirit reveal to us the beauty of Your merciful love: starting from the moment of Your conception in the womb of the Virgin Mary, through your youthful years and adulthood, when you set off from Nazareth with the mission of mercy, ending with Golgotha and the joyful day of Your resurrection. 162 MEDITATION 1 Merciful Jesus Comes To Do the Will of the Father Consequently, when Christ came into the world, he said, “Sacrifices and offerings you have not desired, but a body have you prepared for me; in burnt offerings and sin offerings you have taken no pleasure. Then I said, ‘Behold, I have come to do your will, O God,’ as it is written of me in the roll of the book.” (Heb 10:5-7) Merciful Jesus, I adore God’s mercy in the mystery of Your incarnation, when You became man in Mary’s womb. You were obedient to the Father and came to earth to bring salvation to everyone. St. Faustina wanted to fulfil God’s will in her life. She said, “I want to live in the spirit of faith. I accept everything that comes my way as given me by the loving will of God, who sincerely desires my happiness” (Diary, 1549). Lord Jesus, thank You for becoming man and showing me how I can entrust myself to God and accept His will. Please help me recognize what God wants from me in my everyday life. HYMN: Misericordias Domini in aeternum cantabo. MEDITATION 2 Merciful Jesus Becomes Close To Humanity And while they were there, the time came for her to be delivered. And she gave birth to her first-born son and wrapped him in swaddling cloths, and laid him in a manger, because there was no place for them in the inn. And in that region there were shepherds out in the field, keeping watch over their flock by night. And an angel of the Lord appeared to them, and the glory of the Lord shone around them, and they were filled with fear. And the angel said to them, “Be 163 not afraid; for behold, I bring you good news of a great joy which will come to all the people; for to you is born this day in the city of David a Saviour, who is Christ the Lord. And this will be a sign for you: you will find a baby wrapped in swaddling cloths and lying in a manger.” (Lk 2:6-12) Merciful Jesus, by Your birth in poverty You became closer to us. Sister Faustina wrote in her Diary: „When I arrived at Midnight Mass, from the very beginning I steeped myself in deep recollection, during which time I saw the stable of Bethlehem filled with great radiance. (…) after a while, I was left alone with the Infant Jesus who stretched out His little hands to me, and I understood that I was to take Him in my arms. Jesus pressed His head against my heart and gave me to know, by His profound gaze, how good He found it to be next to my heart” (Diary, 1442). Lord Jesus, thank You for Your birth in Bethlehem. Help me experience Your presence and love. May Your care and love be felt by those who are deprived of family home, warmth, presence of another person, safety or peace. Please come to my heart as You came to earth in Bethlehem. HYMN: Misericordias Domini in aeternum cantabo. MEDITATION 3 Jesus Proclaims the Mission of Mercy And he came to Nazareth, where he had been brought up; and he went to the synagogue, as was his custom, on the Sabbath day. And he stood up to read; and there was given to him the book of the prophet Isaiah. He opened the book and found the place where it was written, “The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he has anointed me to preach good news to the poor. He has sent me to proclaim release to the captives and recovering of sight to the blind, to set at liberty those who are oppressed, to proclaim the acceptable year of the Lord.” And he closed the book, and gave it back to the attendant, and sat down; and the eyes of all in the synagogue were fixed on him. And he began to say to them, “Today this Scripture has been fulfilled in your hearing.” And all spoke well of him, and wondered at the gracious words which proceeded out of his mouth; and they said, “Is not this Joseph’s son?” (Lk 4:16-22) Merciful Jesus, in the synagogue in Nazareth, You read the words from the book of the prophet Isaiah, who anticipated Your mission of mercy among people. You came to tell us that God is good and merciful. Sister Faustina wrote down Your words: “I desire that the whole world know My infinite mercy” (Diary, 687). “My mercy is greater than your sins and those of the entire world. Who can measure the extent of my goodness?” (Diary, 1485). Lord Jesus, thank You for healing the sick, opening the eyes of the blind, breaking the fetters of evil, restoring freedom to the enslaved, bringing hope to the sorrowful. Help me give testimony to Your love. I want to proclaim Your mercy to the 164 165 world through my good deeds and prayer so that I can make the doubtful believe, the resigned regain their hope, and the lonely and rejected receive love. HYMN: Misericordias Domini in aeternum cantabo. MEDITATION 4 Jesus Looks For Sinners on the Peripheries of Life Now the tax collectors and sinners were all drawing near to hear him. And the Pharisees and the scribes murmured, saying, “This man receives sinners and eats with them.” So he told them this parable: “What man of you, having a hundred sheep, if he has lost one of them, does not leave the ninety-nine in the wilderness, and go after the one which is lost, until he finds it? And when he has found it, he lays it on his shoulders, rejoicing. And when he comes home, he calls together his friends and his neighbors, saying to them, ‘Rejoice with me, for I have found my sheep which was lost.’ Just so, I tell you, there will be more joy in heaven over one sinner who repents than over ninety-nine righteous persons who need no repentance.” (Lk 15:1-7) Merciful Jesus, You are a friend to every one of us, and You unceasingly look for those who have gone astray in their lives. Sister Faustina reminds us about Your words: “(…) be willing to talk openly with your God of mercy who wants to speak words of pardon and lavish his graces on you. How dear your soul is to Me! (…) I never reject a contrite heart. Your misery has disappeared in the depths of My mercy. (…) You will give me pleasure if you hand over to me all 166 your troubles and griefs. I shall heap upon you the treasures of My grace” (Diary, 1485). Lord Jesus, thank You for letting me give all my sins and weaknesses to You. Take me into Your arms like a lost sheep and hug me. Help me trust in You. HYMN: Misericordias Domini in aeternum cantabo. MEDITATION 5 Jesus Shows His Compassion to the Hungry Then Jesus called his disciples to him and said, “I have compassion on the crowd, because they have been with me now three days, and have nothing to eat; and I am unwilling to send them away hungry, lest they faint on the way.” And the disciples said to him, “Where are we to get bread enough in the desert to feed so great a crowd?” And Jesus said to them, “How many loaves have you?” They said, “Seven, and a few small fish.” And commanding the crowd to sit down on the ground, he took the seven loaves and the fish, and having given thanks he broke them and gave them to the disciples, and the disciples gave them to the crowds. And they all ate and were satisfied; and they took up seven baskets full of the broken pieces left over. Those who ate were four thousand men, besides women and children. (Mt 15:32-39) Merciful Jesus, You give me everything I need. You know all my needs, even the simplest ones in everyday life, but You also wait for my deeds of mercy. Sister Faustina recorded in her Diary: “Jesus came to the main entrance today, under the guise of a poor young man. This young man, emaciated, barefoot and bareheaded, and with his clothes in tatters, 167 was frozen because the day was cold and rainy. He asked for something hot to eat. (…) As I was taking the bowl from him, he gave me to know that He was the Lord of heaven and earth. (…) I heard these words in my soul: My daughter, the blessings of the poor who bless me as they leave this gate have reached My ears. (…) and this is why I came down from My throne – to taste the fruits of your mercy” (Diary, 1312). “From that moment on, there was stirred up in my heart an even purer love toward the poor and the needy” (Diary, 1313). Lord Jesus, thank You for coming to me in every person I meet. Teach me not to be indifferent towards the needy. Help me understand that the things I can offer them are not as important as me spending time and sharing Your love with them. Lord Jesus, whatever I do for another person, I do for You. HYMN: Misericordias Domini in aeternum cantabo. MEDITATION 6 Jesus Show His Mercy To The Suffering While he was in one of the cities, there came a man full of leprosy; and when he saw Jesus, he fell on his face and begged him, “Lord, if you will, you can make me clean.” And he stretched out his hand, and touched him, saying, “I will; be clean.” And immediately the leprosy left him. And he charged him to tell no one; but “go and show yourself to the priest, and make an offering for your cleansing, as Moses commanded, for a proof to the people.” But so much the more the report went abroad concerning him; and great multitudes gathered to hear and to be healed of their infirmities. But he withdrew to the wilderness and prayed. (Lk 5:12-16) 168 Merciful Jesus, You show compassion towards the suffering. In the Gospel, we can find many stories about Your encounters with the physically and spiritually sick, the blind, the deaf, the paralyzed and those possessed by demon. Sister Faustina recorded Your words directed at a suffering soul: „I see that you suffer much and that you do not have even the strength to converse with me. So I will speak to you. Even though your sufferings were very great, do not lose heart or give in to despondency. (…) Tell me about everything, be sincere in dealing with Me, reveal all the wounds of your heart. I will heal them, and your suffering will become a source of your sanctification” (Diary, 1487). Lord Jesus, thank You for Your compassion. Please help me remember these words when I feel depressed. Help me discover Your presence when I am struck by an unexpected illness or when I experience painful events or rejection. Teach me how to be compassionate and stand by those who suffer. HYMN: Misericordias Domini in aeternum cantabo. MEDITATION 7 Jesus Forgives Sins By The Power Of His Mercy Then turning toward the woman he said to Simon, “Do you see this woman? I entered your house, you gave me no water for my feet, but she has wet my feet with her tears and wiped them with her hair. You gave me no kiss, but from the time I came in she has not ceased to kiss my feet. You did not anoint my head with oil, but she has anointed my feet with ointment. Therefore I tell you, her sins, which are many, are forgiven, for she loved much; but he who is forgiven little, loves little.” And he said to her, “Your sins are forgiven.” 169 Then those who were at table with him began to say among themselves, “Who is this, who even forgives sins?” And he said to the woman, “Your faith has saved you; go in peace.” (Lk 7:44-50) Merciful Jesus, I am dear and precious in Your eyes. Whenever I fall, I can always count on Your forgiveness. Sister Faustina wrote down Your words in her Diary: “I perform works of mercy in every soul. The greater the sinner, the greater the right he has to My mercy” (Diary, 723). “Know that as often as you come to Me, humbling yourself and asking My forgiveness, I pour out a superabundance of graces on your soul, and your imperfection vanishes before My eyes, and I see only your love and your humility. You lose nothing but gain much…” (Diary, 1293). Jesus, thank You for not allowing my wrongdoings close the path to You. Help me cherish Your mercy, which forgives my sins. Help me to never doubt Your love and Your readiness to forgive my sins. Please strengthen my faith that it is You who waits for me in the confessional to forgive my sins and hug me lovingly to Your Heart. HYMN: Misericordias Domini in aeternum cantabo. MEDITATION 8 Jesus Reveals God’s Tenderness and Patience I will arise and go to my father, and I will say to him, “Father, I have sinned against heaven and before you; I am no longer worthy to be called your son; treat me as one of your hired servants.” And he arose and came to his father. But while he was yet at a distance, his father saw him and had compassion, and ran and embraced him and kissed him. And the son said to him, “Father, I have sinned against heaven and before you; I am no longer worthy to be called your son.” But the father said to his servants, “Bring quickly the best robe, and put it on him; and put a ring on his hand, and shoes on his feet; and bring the fatted calf and kill it, and let us eat and make merry; for this my son was dead, and is alive again; he was lost, and is found.” And they began to make merry. (Lk 15:18-24) Merciful Jesus, thank You for telling me about the Father. I really need to know that God is my Father, that He is a father who loves me and always waits for me. Sister Faustina wrote down Your words: “My Heart overflows with great mercy for souls, and especially for poor sinners. If only they could understand that I am the best of Fathers to them (…)” (Diary, 367). “With My mercy, I pursue sinners along all their paths, and My Heart rejoices when they return to Me. I forget the bitterness with which they fed My Heart and rejoice at their return” (Diary, 1728). Lord Jesus, thank You for Your open arms, in which I can feel safe and loved. Please help me never doubt that God is tender and merciful, that He always waits for my return. I have the 170 171 best Father in the world, whose Heart is always open for me. In His eyes, I am precious and unique. I am His beloved child. HYMN: Misericordias Domini in aeternum cantabo. MEDITATION 9 Jesus Raises the Dead to Life Then Mary, when she came where Jesus was and saw him, fell at his feet, saying to him, “Lord, if you had been here, my brother would not have died.” When Jesus saw her weeping, and the Jews who came with her also weeping, he was deeply moved in spirit and troubled; and he said, “Where have you laid him?” They said to him, “Lord, come and see.” Jesus wept. So the Jews said, “See how he loved him!” But some of them said, “Could not he who opened the eyes of the blind man have kept this man from dying?” Then Jesus, deeply moved again, came to the tomb; it was a cave, and a stone lay upon it. Jesus said, “Take away the stone.” Martha, the sister of the dead man, said to him, “Lord, by this time there will be an odor, for he has been dead four days.” Jesus said to her, “Did I not tell you that if you would believe you would see the glory of God?” So they took away the stone. And Jesus lifted up his eyes and said, “Father, I thank you that you have heard me. I knew that you always hear me, but I have said this on account of the people standing by, that they may believe that you sent me.” When he had said this, he cried with a loud voice, “Laz’arus, come out.” The dead man came out, his hands and feet bound with bandages, and his face wrapped with a cloth. Jesus said to them, “Unbind him, and let him go.” (Jn 11:32-44) 172 Merciful Jesus, You have the power to bring the dead to life. Not only do You bring those who have suffered a physical death to life, but You also bring those who suffer a spiritual death from their sins back to life. You said to St. Faustina that the greatest miracles take place in the Sacrament of Reconciliation. You told her, “To avail oneself of this miracle, it is not necessary to go on a great pilgrimage (…) it suffices to come with faith to the feet of My representative and to reveal to him one’s misery, and the miracle of Divine Mercy will be fully demonstrated. Were a soul like a decaying corpse so that from a human standpoint, there would be no [hope of] restoration and everything would already be lost, it is not so with God. The miracle of Divine Mercy restores that soul in full” (Diary, 1448). Lord Jesus, thank You for Your mercy, which gives me a new life. Please help me see Your presence in everyday situations, especially where there is no solution from a human standpoint. Please teach me to trust in Your mercy, which helps me and which gives me hope in the situations that are hopeless to a human mind. Give me a strong faith so that I may believe that, for You, everything is possible. HYMN: Misericordias Domini in aeternum cantabo. MEDITATION 10 Jesus leaves His disciples the Testament of Mercy This is my commandment, that you love one another as I have loved you. Greater love has no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends. You are my friends if 173 you do what I command you. No longer do I call you servants, for the servant does not know what his master is doing; but I have called you friends, for all that I have heard from my Father I have made known to you. You did not choose me, but I chose you and appointed you that you should go and bear fruit and that your fruit should abide; so that whatever you ask the Father in my name, he may give it to you. This I command you, to love one another. If the world hates you, know that it has hated me before it hated you. (Jn 15:12-18) Merciful Jesus, You are always present among us in the Eucharist. You remind us that we should love one another as You have loved us. Sister Faustina was with You in the Cenacle, the room where the Last Supper took place, during one of her prayers. She wrote, “During this hour of prayer, Jesus allowed me to enter the Cenacle (…). I was most deeply moved when, before the Consecration, Jesus raised His eyes to heaven and entered into a mysterious conversation with His Father. It is only in eternity that we shall really understand that moment. His eyes were like two flames; His face was radiant, white as snow; His whole personage full of majesty, His soul full of longing. At the moment of Consecration, love rested satiated – the sacrifice fully consummated. Now only the external ceremony of death will be carried out – external destruction; the essence (of it) is in the Cenacle” (Diary, 684). Lord Jesus, thank You for coming to me in every Eucharist and strengthening me with Your presence. I am not able to offer my life for my friends yet, but I can learn from You how to give others my prayers, presence, and service. May every Eucharist 174 change my everyday life so that I can become more merciful and more like You. HYMN: Misericordias Domini in aeternum cantabo. MEDITATION 11 Jesus Reveals the Difficult Beauty of Mercy Then Pilate took Jesus and scourged him. And the soldiers plaited a crown of thorns, and put it on his head, and clothed him in a purple robe; they came up to him, saying, “Hail, King of the Jews!” and struck him with their hands. Pilate went out again, and said to them, “Behold, I am bringing him out to you, that you may know that I find no crime in him.” So Jesus came out, wearing the crown of thorns and the purple robe. Pilate said to them, “Here is the man!” When the chief priests and the officers saw him, they cried out, “Crucify him, crucify him!” Pilate said to them, “Take him yourselves and crucify him, for I find no crime in him.” (Jn 19:1-6) Merciful Jesus, Your suffering shows me how much You love me. You want me to love other people in the same way. St. Faustina recorded Your words: “Have great love for those who cause you suffering. Do good to those who hate you. (…) It is not always within your power to control your feelings. You will recognize that you have love if, after having experienced annoyance and contradiction, you do not lose your peace, but pray for those who have made you suffer and wish them well” (Diary, 1628). Lord Jesus, thank You for suffering for me. Please teach me to love those who I struggle to love. Help me understand true forgiveness and give me courage to forgive. Teach me how to 175 pray for those who have hurt me and those whom I have ever hurt in my life. HYMN: Misericordias Domini in aeternum cantabo. MEDITATION 12 Jesus Gives Us Mary as the Mother of Mercy So the soldiers did this. But standing by the cross of Jesus were his mother, and his mother’s sister, Mary the wife of Clopas, and Mary Mag’dalene. When Jesus saw his mother, and the disciple whom he loved standing near, he said to his mother, “Woman, behold, your son!” Then he said to the disciple, “Behold, your mother!” And from that hour the disciple took her to his own home. (Jn 19:25-27) Merciful Jesus, thank You for giving me Your Mother, who always takes care of me. St. Faustina received the grace of seeing Mary and talking to Her. She wrote, “Then I saw the Blessed Virgin, unspeakably beautiful. She came down from the altar to my kneeler, held me close to herself and said to me, I am Mother to you all, thanks to the unfathomable mercy of God. Most pleasing to Me is that soul which faithfully carries out the will of God” (Diary, 449). Lord Jesus, thank You for giving me Your Mother, Mary. Please help me grow closer to her and love her. She knows the mystery of the Divine Mercy best since she knows Your Heart. I can learn from her how to be merciful, how to trust God, and how to fulfil His will. HYMN: Misericordias Domini in aeternum cantabo. 176 MEDITATION 13 Jesus Opens the Fountain of Mercy to Us Since it was the day of Preparation, in order to prevent the bodies from remaining on the cross on the Sabbath (for that Sabbath was a high day), the Jews asked Pilate that their legs might be broken, and that they might be taken away. So the soldiers came and broke the legs of the first, and of the other who had been crucified with him; but when they came to Jesus and saw that he was already dead, they did not break his legs. But one of the soldiers pierced his side with a spear, and at once there came out blood and water. He who saw it has borne witness – his testimony is true, and he knows that he tells the truth – that you also may believe. For these things took place that the Scripture might be fulfilled, “Not a bone of him shall be broken.” (Jn 19:31-36) Merciful Jesus, You offered Your life on the cross out of love for me. You often told St. Faustina about Your great love: “I have opened My Heart as a living fountain of mercy. Let all souls draw life from it. Let them approach this sea of mercy with great trust” (Diary, 1520). “For you I descended from heaven to earth; for you I allowed myself to be nailed to the cross; for you I let my Sacred Heart be pierced with a lance, thus opening wide the source of mercy for you. Come, then, with trust to draw graces from this fountain” (Diary, 1485). Lord Jesus, thank You for Your cross. Please let me never forget the way to Golgotha. It is there that the fountain of mercy springs up. You are mercy, Jesus. Hide me and my loved ones in Your pierced Heart. Teach me to always defend the sign of the Cross as the sign that shows us how much You love us. HYMN: Misericordias Domini in aeternum cantabo. 177 MEDITATION 14 Jesus Brings Mercy in His Holy Wounds Now Thomas, one of the Twelve, called the Twin, was not with them when Jesus came. So the other disciples told him, “We have seen the Lord.” But he said to them, “Unless I see in his hands the print of the nails, and place my finger in the mark of the nails, and place my hand in his side, I will not believe.” Eight days later, his disciples were again in the house, and Thomas was with them. The doors were shut, but Jesus came and stood among them, and said, “Peace be with you.” Then he said to Thomas, “Put your finger here, and see my hands; and put out your hand, and place it in my side; do not be faithless, but believing.” Thomas answered him, “My Lord and my God!” Jesus said to him, “You have believed because you have seen me. Blessed are those who have not seen and yet believe.” (Jn 20:24-29) Merciful Jesus, You rose from the dead and brought peace to us all. This truth is illustrated in the image that You asked St. Faustina to paint. You showed me your wounds, which are a cure for my soul and spoke to me through St. Faustina by saying, “From all My wounds, like from streams, mercy flows for souls, but the wound in My Heart is the fountain of unfathomable mercy. From this fountain spring all graces for souls” (Diary, 1190). “Listen, My child, to what I desire to tell you. Come close to My wounds and draw from the Fountain of Life whatever your heart desires” (Diary, 1485). Lord Jesus, thank You for Your resurrection. Grant me a strong faith in Your victory over death and in Your resurrection. I worship Your holy wounds, which are the signs of Your merciful love for me. Help me share with others the love which You 178 pour into my heart. Although I cannot see You with my eyes, I believe in Your presence and that You wait for me in any person in need. HYMN: Misericordias Domini in aeternum cantabo. MEDITATION 15 Jesus Will Come To Reward the Merciful Then the King will say to those at his right hand, “Come, O blessed of my Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world; for I was hungry and you gave me food, I was thirsty and you gave me drink, I was a stranger and you welcomed me, I was naked and you clothed me, I was sick and you visited me, I was in prison and you came to me.” Then the righteous will answer him, “Lord, when did we see you hungry and feed you, or thirsty and give you drink? And when did we see you a stranger and welcome you, or naked and clothe you? And when did we see you sick or in prison and visit you?” And the King will answer them, “Truly, I say to you, as you did it to one of the least of these my brethren, you did it to me.” (Mt 25:34-40) Pope Francis reminds us that the love Jesus teaches us is based on deeds. There is no Christianity without merciful deeds. Theoretical lessons about mercy, or new philosophies are not nearly as important as concrete gestures of love. “Dear brothers and sisters, this is how the Church is Mother, by teaching her children works of mercy. She learned this manner from Jesus, she learned that this is what’s essential for salvation. It’s not enough to love those who love us. Jesus says that pagans do this. It’s not enough to do good to those who do good to us. To change the world for the better it is 179 necessary to do good to those who are not able to return the favour, as the Father has done with us, by giving us Jesus. How much have we paid for our redemption? Nothing, totally free! Doing good without expecting anything in return. This is what the Father did with us and we must do the same. Do good and carry on! How beautiful it is to live in the Church, in our Mother Church who teaches us these things which Jesus taught us. Let us thank the Lord, who has given us the grace of having the Church as Mother, she who teaches us the way of mercy, which is the way of life. Let us thank the Lord.” (Pope Francis, General Audience, 10th September 2014) Closing prayer Lord Jesus, thank You for the time we have spent together walking the Way of Mercy. We believe that there is only one aim of this journey, that is to fix our gaze on You, Merciful Jesus, so that we can become like You. We want our hands, feet, hearts, thoughts and desires to be merciful like Yours. May it happen, Lord. Amen. Sr. M. Salwatricze Musiał, Fr. Marek Hajdyła Sr. M. Salwatricze Musiał – sister from the Congregation of the Sisters of Our Lady of Mercy; born in Kraków; utilized her education in theological-pedagogical studies in her work with girls at the House of Mercy and with pilgrims arriving in Łagiewniki; involved in the formation of the international “Faustinum” Association and the Apostolic Movement of the Divine Mercy; in her missionary service in America, Africa and the Middle East, she led catechesis for children and young people, ministered to the sick, soldiers, and prisoners; she is currently working at the Divine Mercy Spirituality Center in Rome. Fr. Marek Hajdyła – director of the Central Events Department of the Organizational Committee of the World Youth Day 2016, the parish priest of the Church of St. Jadwiga the Queen in Kraków. 180 181 Tell aching mankind to snuggle close to My merciful Heart, and I will fill it with peace. Tell [all people] My daughter that I am Love and Mercy itself. Diary, 1074 CONFESSION THE SACRAMENT OF MERCY 184 THOSE wHO ARE wELL PRESCRIPTION Word of the Lord Bible Provider wYD HAVE NO NEED OF A PHYSICIAN, 2016 Patient KRAKÓw bUT THOSE wHO ARE SICK Come to me, all who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest Mt 11:28 Mt 9:12 signature The whole Bible tells us about God’s mercy, which can be characterized as a true, beautiful, perfect, tender and self-denying love of the Father to His children. 188 One of the liturgical prayers says that God’s almighty power expresses itself best in His forgiveness and pity for us, that is, His power is best expressed in His mercy. The whole Bible tells us about God’s mercy, which can be characterized as a true, beautiful, perfect, tender and self-denying love of the Father to His children. This is the fatherly love towards the child who has gone away from the father’s home and, as noted by Pope Francis, “has squandered his freedom on false idols, illusions of happiness, and has lost everything.” But, as the Pope adds, “God does not forget us, the Father never abandons us. He is a patient father, always waiting for us! He respects our freedom, but he remains faithful forever. And when we come back to Him, he welcomes us like children into His house, for He never ceases, not for one instant, to wait for us with love. And His heart rejoices over every child who returns. He is celebrating because there is joy. God has this joy when one of us sinners goes to Him and asks His forgiveness.” OUR ReTURN TO THe lOVING FATHeR TAKeS PlAce IN THe SAcRAmeNT OF PENANCE AND RECONCILIATION. Before we discuss the sacrament of confession, we need to ask ourselves the question “What is sin?” and realize that it is the biggest tragedy that can ever happen in our lives. However, to fully understand the tragedy of sin and God’s forgiveness as the only way to return to Him, we need to realize first who God is, how much He loves us and how beautiful life is if God is in it and we are obedient to Him, our Father. This truth is best illustrated in the biblical story of Eden and the fall of Adam and Eve. Undoubtedly, we can all identify ourselves with them. “You are not my Father anymore, and I am not Your child” Now the serpent was more subtle than any other wild creature that the Lord God had made. But the Lord God called to the man, and said to him, He said to the woman, { Did God say, “You shall not eat of any tree of the garden”? } And the woman said to the serpent, { We may eat of the fruit of the trees of the garden; but God said, “You shall not eat of the fruit of the tree which is in the midst of the garden, neither shall you touch it, lest you die.” { But the serpent said to the woman, { 190 You will not die. For God knows that when you eat of it your eyes will be opened, and you will be like God, knowing good and evil. So when the woman saw that the tree was good for food, and that it was a delight to the eyes, and that the tree was to be desired to make one wise, she took of its fruit and ate; and she also gave some to her husband, and he ate. Then the eyes of both were opened, and they knew that they were naked; and they sewed fig leaves together and made themselves aprons. And they heard the sound of the Lord God walking in the garden in the cool of the day, and the man and his wife hid themselves from the presence of the Lord God among the trees of the garden. } And he said, { { Where are you? } I heard the sound of you in the garden, and I was afraid, because I was naked; and I hid myself. } Who told you that you were naked? Have you eaten of the tree of which I commanded you not to eat? } He said, { The man said, { The woman whom you gave to be with me, she gave me fruit of the tree, and I ate. } 191 tHen tHe Lord God said to tHe woman, { To be in somebody’s likeness and after somebody’s image means to be somebody’s son. By saying that } What is this that you have done? MAN wAS CREATED tHe woman said, { The serpent beguiled me, and I ate. } tHe Lord God said to tHe serpent, { Because you have done this, cursed are you above all cattle, and above all wild animals; upon your belly you shall go, and dust you shall eat all the days of your life. (Gen 3:1-14) } The book of Genesis says that Adam was created in the image of God and after God’s likeness. It means that man resembles God; consequently, he will only be happy if he gives himself to others by loving others. Man will feel fulfilled if he builds strong relationships with other people as the three persons of God commune with one another: the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit. Man also resembles God in his freedom and intellect. The truth about man being a reflection of God is amply illustrated in another passage from the Book of Genesis, where Adam becomes the father of Seth, a son in his own likeness, after his image (cf. Gen 5:3). The passage features the same expressions as the ones used to indicate the resemblance between God and His creation, Adam. IN GOD’S LIKENESS AND AFTER HIS IMAGE, THE bOOK OF GENESIS TELLS US THAT MAN IS THE CHILD OF GOD, AND GOD IS HIS FATHER. 192 193 SABBATH In the story of Creation, God rested on the seventh day. This day is called by Jews “Sabbath”. On this day, we celebrate the fact that God entered a covenant with man, making him His child and part of His family. When God made the covenant with Adam, He had to set some conditions since a covenant is a type of contract in which two parties commit themselves to observing specific rules. God promised Adam absolute happiness, eternal life filled with love because He loved him. th day AND TO SAY “I LOVE YOU” MEANS TO EXPRESS THE WISH “I WANT YOU TO LIVE ETERNALLY.” This strong father-child relationship is emphasized many times in the Bible by means of covenants that God makes between Himself and man. In the old times, when somebody entered a covenant with another person, it meant that he made this person a part of his family. To make a covenant means to say “You belong to my family, we are of one blood.” 194 From man, God demanded obedience. Not because He was a tyrant or a totalitarian ruler but because the obedience guaranteed man’s happiness. Therefore, God gave man a garden and some tasks related to it. Adam was supposed to till (Hebrew ‘abodah’) and keep it (Hebrew ‘shamar’). It is important to point out that back in the ancient times these tasks were assigned to the firstborn son. He was supposed to cultivate his father’s land and keep the livestock. God entrusted man with what a father would entrust his firstborn son. He was only for- 195 bidden from doing one thing. He was not allowed to eat fruit of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil. Observing these conditions guaranteed continuity of the covenant and being a member of God’s family. However, Adam broke the covenant and committed sin. Why did Adam succumb to Satan’s temptation and commit sin if he had everything he needed and was absolutely happy? After all, God gave him everything in the garden and made him His son. Why did Adam break the covenant with God despite all the gifts he received from Him? There are different possible answers. Maybe he was selfish and wanted to have more for himself. Satan said, “There is one thing that you did not receive from God and I will give it to you: you will come to know good and evil. There is a tree that God left only for Himself, He does not want to give it to you, but you will get it from me.” Maybe this explains the sin of the first man? And maybe the answer can be found in the subtlety of the Hebrew words used to recount the story of Creation and the original sin? Important linguistic subtleties can be found in God’s warning against the consequences of eating fruit from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil. God said to Adam that he would die if he tried this fruit. However, it is extremely difficult to translate the Hebrew expression used at this point in the Bible without a lengthy footnote. What the Hebrew version literally says is that Adam will “die-die” if he picks fruit of that tree. Another literal translation would be “you will die of death”. What does it mean, then? In Hebrew, it is possible to form comparatives of adjectives and nouns to emphasize that something is the best or most remarkable. For example, there is a book in the Bible the name of which is literally translated into English as “the Song of Songs”, i.e. the most beautiful and extraordinary song, better than any other. Similarly, a particularly 196 dramatic death would be referred to as “death-death” or with the phrase “you will die-die”. In their comments on this fragment of the Bible, Jewish rabbis explain that God wanted to make man aware of the two kinds of death: physical death, i.e. death of the body, AND THE SPIRITUAL DEATH, I.E. A MUCH WORSE ONE, WHICH SEPARATES MAN FROM THE FATHER, ALIENATES HIM FROM GOD, THE SOURCE OF LIFE. When man decided to pick fruit from the tree of knowledge of good and evil, he suffered the worst death, the spiritual one. Satan enters the stage with a show of lies and illusions. From the very beginning, there is no truth in what he says since he starts the conversation by asking, “Did God say, ‘You shall not eat of any tree of the garden’?” (Gen 3:1). After a while he lies again, “If you eat the fruit of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, you will not die” (cf. Gen 3:4). And God said, “You will die.” Then Satan tells another lie, “For God knows that when you eat of it your eyes will be opened, and you will be like God, knowing good and evil” (Gen 3:5). Herein lies the essence of any sin: man decides to take God’s place. Committing sin is like telling God, “You are not my God anymore, I am the god now.” And the problem is that the place we have robbed God of belongs only to Him and we do not know how to act once we are there. Whenever we try playing God, it ends in a disaster for us. 197 Committing sin is like telling God, “You are not my God anymore, I am the god now. 198 The moment Eve tries to take God’s place, the look in her eyes changes and – as we read in the Book of Genesis – she begins to notice that “the tree was good for food, and that it was a delight to the eyes” (Gen 3:6). Before the meeting with the serpent, Adam and Eve did not see anything special or attractive in that tree. But after the conversation with Satan, their eyes open and they see that the fruit of that tree is good for food and delicious and it will bring them the knowledge promised by the serpent. That is why they choose to eat it. Of course, we could ask, “What is wrong about it? After all, it might be a good thing to know good and evil! If we know good and evil, we can distinguish between them, choose good and resist evil. So what is devilish about it?” The answer is that God did not want any evil to exist in the world. Satan tries to make Adam and Eve believe that God does not want them to taste fruit of that tree because He wants to leave it only for Himself. This is not true. God does not want man to come to know evil since He only wants us to experience good things. Evil is not a creation of God, it was not meant for man. But Satan is cunning and tries to tell man, “You will know both good and evil.” He does not say, “You will be completely evil, you will only commit sins. You will stumble through the swamp of sin. You will be a moral degenerate.” He does not say anything like that! What he is trying to say is, “Generally, be good but allow some evil in your life from time to time. Do something bad sometimes. Introduce evil into your life and mix it with good.” He knows perfectly well that hardly anybody would succumb to such a temptation. Therefore, he expects us to do both good and evil in our life. To confuse man even more, Satan starts to present Adam and Eve anything that is evil as good. He is well aware that no sane person would choose evil, which debases and destroys us. Nobody consciously chooses something that is bad for them. We choose evil because it seems good, because we think we can benefit from it. The devilish temptation presents evil as something pleasant, as delicious fruit. Evil seems very innocent, then. Satan says to Eve that their eyes will be open. Yet what happens is quite the opposite. Adam becomes completely blind because he stops seeing what he saw before, he stops seeing that God loves him boundlessly, that God wants the best for him, that God is thinking all the time what to do to make Adam happy. We also need to look from a different angle at the conversation between the serpent and Eve. Actually, we need to note that there was no conversation between the serpent and Adam. Adam does not even exchange a word with Satan. It is only Eve that talks to him. Adam is silent, he doesn’t say a word although it is his duty to guard the garden from undesirable guests, one of whom is undoubtedly Satan. What made Adam stop protecting the garden? The Hebrew word nahash, which is translated in this fragment of the Bible as “the serpent”, occurs later in the Bible as well. However, in 199 other instances, the word is translated in some English versions as “dragon” or “sea monster”. So, in fact, Adam meets face to face with a dragon, which might sound more serious than a meeting with “a serpent”. It is possible, then, to imagine Adam standing there petrified at the serpent which makes him think of a dragon, or even a sea monster. ADAm meeTS FAce TO FAce wITH A DRAGON he breaks the covenant and enters death-death. To break the covenant with God means to break the close bond with the Father. When we commit sin, we are telling God, “You are not my Father anymore, and I am not Your son.” We are telling the Father who created us and gave us His world to live in that we do not want to live here anymore, that we want to follow our own rules. The last word of the sinner is always “I am god.” We say, “I am taking your place now”, to God, the highest of all authorities, who deserves worship, primacy, respect, obedience and love. This is the actual evil behind any sin – the dethronement of God, telling Him that we do not desire His love anymore, that we do not want Him to be our Father. What does Adam actually do in this situation? He stops loving. In other words, he prefers submitting himself to the serpent and following Satan’s directions to obeying the covenant that God made with him, to protecting Eve and the garden from undesirable guests. He is concentrated on himself, on his safety, desires and stops thinking about anything else. breaking the covenant with God results in the loss of the godly life and the deathdeath, i.e. the life which is not a life anymore. Adam loses sight of the Creator and Eve and, in this way, 200 201 Mercy – the tender love of God Luckily, sin does not have the last word. The last word belongs to God. When we say to God, “You are not my Father”, He shows us His fatherly love through His beloved Son, Jesus Christ, our Saviour. His love is illustrated by another biblical story – the parable of the Good Samaritan. The parable proves that God is not indifferent to us. In fact, He is genuinely interested in us. His mercy does not allow Him to pass by our lives, our suffering and the greatest tragedy of our life – our sins. He will do everything to heal our wounds, raise us when we fall and bring joy back to our lives. He will do everything to let us experience His mercy through Jesus Christ. © DAYENU LOADING... 202 Jesus replied, A man was going down from Jerusalem to Jericho, and he fell among robbers, who stripped him and beat him, and departed, leaving him half dead. Now by chance a priest was going down that road; and when he saw him he passed by on the other side. So likewise a Levite, when he came to the place and saw him, passed by on the other side. But a Samaritan, as he journeyed, came to where he was; and when he saw him, he had compassion, and went to him and bound up his wounds, pouring on oil and wine; then he set him on his own beast and brought him to an inn, and took care of him. And the next day he took out two denarii and gave them to the innkeeper, saying, “Take care of him; and whatever more you spend, I will repay you when I come back.” (Lk 10:30-35) 203 „ The parable shows us what happens to a man who has committed a sin, which plunges him further and further into an abyss. The sin strips him of his dignity so that now he is lying completely naked by the road. In the long run, sin robs us of our freedom and enslaves us. In the ancient times, a naked man must have been a slave because free people wore clothes. We become slaves because we are not able to resign from our sin anymore. Even when we do not want to sin again, we fall again and again. A priest and a Levite – the people who are theoretically devoted to God – pass by the man. But if they really knew God, they would know that He was merciful and they would show their mercy to the naked man. Eventually, a Samaritan checks whether the man is alive. He is travelling so he must be in a hurry but he stops by the beaten man. He could check if he was alive and leave him with the hope that somebody else would take care of him. He could think about his own safety – “If this man was beaten here, those who attacked him must be still somewhere around and can assault me as well.” But the Samaritan does not look for excuses. He decides to help the man. He binds up his wounds, disinfects them with wine and soothes them with oil. He could leave him at this point if he wanted. But he sets the man on his animal, which means that, from now on, he himself needs to walk and takes him to an inn. Now, he could say, “I have done my bit, take care of him now, I am leaving.” But he chooses to stay with him all night to take care of him, and in the morning, he gives money to the innkeeper and says, “Take 743 m.a.s.l. JERICHO All too often, we find it difficult to understand the parable of the Good Samaritan because we tend to compare ourselves to the Good Samaritan and ask ourselves, “Am I like him?” We ask ourselves how we would react if we passed by a wounded man. Would we stop? Would we bandage his wounds? Undoubtedly, these are very important questions. After all, Jesus encourages the lawyer whom he told the parable, and us all, to go and act like the Good Samaritan. But who is actually the Samaritan from Christ’s parable? The Greek Fathers of the Church explain that we should not identify ourselves with the Good Samaritan. In fact, we are epitomized by the man who has been robbed, beaten and left half dead by the road. We need to identify ourselves with him and see Jesus as the Good Samaritan. We are lying by the road as a result of our sins. The parable says that the man was going down from Jerusalem to Jericho. As noted by the Fathers of the Church, the fact that the man was travelling between these two towns has a deeply symbolic meaning. Jerusalem was the religious center of Israel, the holy city, the place of the presence of God. The fact that the man was going down from Jerusalem means that he was going away from God’s presence and he began to plunge into sin. He was on his way to Jericho. The way leading from Jerusalem to Jericho is very steep. The man is going down, he is plunging further and further into the abyss of his sins. Finally, he arrives in Jericho, one of the lowest cities in the world (270 meters below sea level). JERUSALEM 270 m.b.s.l. care of him, I will pay for everything.” In this way, he shows the stranger his great tenderness and mercy. The most difficult thing to understand in this parable is that the Good Samaritan shows his mercy to a Jew. Samaritans and Jews hated each other. The hatred between them was so intense that when a Samaritan drank water from a cup, a Jew could not even touch this cup because he considered it unclean. And who is that man lying by the road? It is you, wounded by your sin. You are this enemy of God. You are an enemy of Jesus, for whom He shows so much love and tenderness. Now you might be thinking to yourself, “How is it possible? I am His friend.” But are you sure? Do you know that it is because of your and my sins that Jesus died? I killed Jesus with my sin! It is my fault. When I come to a confessional and confess all my sins, I acknowledge that with them I killed the Son of God. This is my responsibility. But God forgives us for killing His beloved Son. We are all equal in this respect. There are no light or unimportant sins. If you know that Jesus died for your sins, how can you say that you do not sin, that you do not have anything to confess? Is somebody who is guilty of another person’s death their friend or enemy? When you face God knowing that His beloved Son died for your sins, are you not His enemy? And what is His attitude towards you, the one who is guilty of His Son’s death? He shows you tenderness, love and care. When you come to confession, God binds up your wounds because He knows that you have been defeated by sin. He soothes your pain with oil and disinfects your wounds with wine. He grants you anew His grace restoring your dignity as the child of God and freeing you from 206 s lavery. Then, He takes you in His arms, brings you to an inn to feed you with His Body and Blood. Finally, He tells you, “I LOVE YOU. I DO NOT REMEMBER WHAT YOU DID ANYMORE. I HAVE FORGIVEN YOU. ENJOY YOUR LIFE TO THE FULLEST!” This is God’s mercy, which manifests itself in Jesus Christ, epitomized by the Good Samaritan. The Sacrament of Mercy The parable of the Good Samaritan reflects what happens in the sacrament of mercy. It is through confession that we turn from God’s enemy to God’s beloved child. Through our sins, whether they were actions or words, we show God that He is not our God anymore. He is not our Father and we do not want to be his children anymore. Now, in the sacrament of mercy, we become again God’s dear children. He forgives our trespasses, hugs us to His heart, and gives us a new lease of life. In the sacrament of confession, God also grants us eternal life so that we can stay close to Him forever. Pope Francis wrote about it as follows: “It is so wonderful to feel the merciful embrace of the Father in the sacrament of Reconciliation, to discover that the confessional is a place of mercy, and to 207 allow ourselves to be touched by the merciful love of the Lord who always forgives us!” Why do I need confession? Why do I need to go to confession to receive God’s forgiveness? Why do I have to come to a priest and tell him about the bad things that I have done? Is it not enough to kneel down in the church and talk to God in my heart with a deep sense of regret? No, it is not enough because God’s usual way of acting in the Church, in which our sins are justified and forgiven, is the sacrament of penance and reconciliation. Two thousand years ago, Jesus was healing people, touching them, raising them up and telling them, “I forgive you your sins.” As stated by St. Leo the Great, a pope from the 5th century, “What was visible in our Redeemer has now passed into His Mysteries” (Sermones, 74, 2: PL 54, 398A). It means that two thousand years ago Jesus was healing and forgiving people in person, and nowadays He heals us and forgives us by means of the sacraments. Where should we confess our sins? The best place for confession is the sacred space of the church and the confessional. Of course, it can happen that we confess our sins in a different place, e.g. in a parish house or in a different place devoted to God. This way the sacrament of reconciliation takes place within the community of the Church. It means that when we kneel down in front of God, we ask our brothers and sisters to pray for us and seek reconciliation with them as well because, with our sins, we have hurt the whole Church. My sin is not my 208 private thing. We are all mysteriously interconnected. Therefore, in the sacrament of confession, we reconcile ourselves with both God and the whole community of the Church. Why is the Sacrament of Reconciliation a Ritual? When we come to confession, we follow a special ritual. Though it might look artificial at first sight, this process of confession proves very helpful. For the confessor, it is important that the penitent starts by saying a couple of words about themselves, his/her age and his/her status in life (whether he/ she is a layperson, a priest, a friar or a sister, whether he/she is married or single etc.). It is also essential to mention the time of his/her last confession and whether he/she received the absolution. With small variations between individual cultures, the confession of sins ends with the special formula with which the penitent expresses sorrow for his/her sins and resolves to amend his/her life. We ask God to forgive us our sins through the ministry of the priest who hears our confession and grants us absolution. By means of this short process, we declare to God that 209 we have fulfilled all the necessary conditions for a valid confession, which are traditionally referred to as the five things necessary (steps) for a good confession. How to confess our sins? During the sacrament of reconciliation, we have to confess all mortal sins. Mortal sins are sins of grave matter committed with full knowledge and deliberate consent. We commit a mortal sin when we know that a given act is a sin and we make a free choice to commit it. When all these factors are fulfilled, we speak of a mortal sin. While confessing mortal sins, the penitent needs to be precise so that the priest can understand what sin we refer to. The penitent needs to indicate how many times, how often, and in what circumstances he/she committed a sin. Of course, we do not need to give an exact number of the sins which we commit regularly. It suffices to state the frequency the sin has been committed since your last reconciliation. However, you need to be more precise in the case of grave sins. Also, we should describe what the sin consisted of (which does not mean, however, that we have to recount in detail the very act of committing the sin). 210 Examination of conscience – recognize the truth about yourself The first step to a good confession is the examination of conscience. A well-conducted examination of conscience is already half of the success. What is the examination of conscience? I like imagining a mirror where I can compare myself to Jesus Christ. It is a mirror which shows me the whole truth about myself. It clearly shows what is evil in myself, what I need to reject and what I need to change in my life. However, this mirror also reflects my beauty and good qualities. It reflects how I imitate Jesus in my life. The examination of conscience does not consist in focusing solely on your sins and weaknesses. Its goal is to recognize the truth EXAMINATION OF about yourself, which makes CONSCIENCE this step of preparing for confession a truly liberating expeIS RECOGNIZING rience. THE LIBERATING The examination of conscience TRUTH. is a form of judgment that we pronounce on ourselves. It is our conscience and mind that pass this judgment. It is important to understand what is meant by “judgment” in this sense. St. John of the Cross said, “As we prepare to leave this life, we will be judged in love” (Words of Light and Love, 57). During the examination of conscience, we judge ourselves in love of God. Therefore, we examine our conscience with the power from the Holy Spirit, which turns this step of the preparation for the confession into a prayer. 211 To examine your conscience, you can use an examination of conscience that is found in a prayer book or in other materials. These reflections are meant to help you see where you have loved God and others well and where you have failed to love God and love your neighbour since your last confession (you will find such help in this booklet as well). Do not put off the examination of conscience until the time of confession. Give yourself time to reflect on your actions. One thing that you can do is make an examination of conscience a part of your daily prayers. For example, you can do an examination of conscience during your evening prayers. This allows you to reflect on how many good things you have managed to do and in what circumstances you have sinned during your day. Ignatius of Loyola, one of the greatest experts on examinations of consciences in the history of the Church, believed that the examination of conscience should begin with thanksgiving. We need to discover the presence of God in our lives and realize how God’s grace has assisted us. St. Ignatius said that we should not move to analyzing our sins without giving thanks first. The examination of conscience is not meant to help us see our sins! No, I am not mistaken. The examination helps us see the truth about ourselves. Our sins constitute only part of the truth about us. Nobody in the world is totally evil. We need to be able to see both good and evil in ourselves. It is only in the light of God’s presence and His love that you can see how sin separates you from God and how much you hurt Him with your trespasses. I am sorry that I have taken God’s place During confession, we express contrition, or sorrow, for our sins. It is the second step of a good confession. We often have a problem here as we tend to treat this act of contrition on an emotional level. However, contrition is not an emotion that we experience, but has more to do with our will and reason, because we can consciously make different choices than those dictated by emotions. We tend to associate contrition with the sphere of feelings because of expressions like “feel sorrow.” But in this case, it is not important if we feel sorrow; it is essential that we express our contrition. There is a big difference between feeling and expressing this sorrow, this contrition. We distinguish between perfect and imperfect contrition. Perfect contrition is a repentance for sin that is motivated by my love for God or, to be more precise, by God’s love for me. I regret that I have offended God with my sin. I know that with my sin I have taken the place of God in my life, I “eclipsed” Him, I robbed Him of His glory and position which He deserves, I have hurt Him and broken the bond between us. I regret because I have hurt Him who loves me so much. This is the perfect contrition. By contrast, the imperfect contrition is the sorrow that I feel because of the consequences of my sin or because I am afraid of the punishment for my sin and that I can miss my eternal prize, Heaven. The imperfect contrition is sufficient to be granted absolution. Do your best to amend your life During the sacrament of confession, we also resolve to change our lives. However, it is not enough to make a resolution in the confessional. God expects us to do our best 212 213 to improve our lives. To do that, we need to realize that we have done evil and know why it happened (the examination of conscience). Only then can we consider what to do in order to eliminate this sin from our lives. For example, if we see that we do not devote any time to God, we need to allocate ourselves a set time each day to pray. Otherwise, the promise we make at the confessional is empty. If we do not know what to change in our lives, it means that we have not given it enough thought and, in fact, we have not resolved to change. The promise to amend our lives requires actions, not words. Spiritual paralysis You might forget some of your sins during confession. Do not worry about it. God knows your heart and your sorrow. He also forgives you the sins that have escaped your memory during confession or the examination of your conscience. If you forgot to mention a grave sin, declare it at the next confession. Of course, there is a fundamental difference between “I don’t remember” and “I didn’t say”. A conscious concealment of sins makes the confession invalid and despite the formal absolution your sins are not forgiven because you have not declared all of them. There is still a sin which separates you from God. A conscious concealment of sins can paralyze your soul for a long time. This paralysis may result from the fact that you are afraid to uncover the truth about yourself and acknowledge your sins. Maybe at some point in your life, you were so ashamed of certain sins that you have not confessed them at the confessional. Today you are spiritually paralyzed. Was it in your childhood? Or in your youth? Or maybe recently? Later, 214 even though you wanted to declare your sin and the fact that you had concealed it, you were even more ashamed. Now, you are ashamed of the sin itself and the fact that you have concealed it. You think, “What will the priest think of me?”, “What is my confession going to look like now?” You put off your confession and the years pass by. You try to erase the memory that you concealed your sin but your spiritual paralysis is still there. You are paralyzed regardless of whether you think about your sin or not. It keeps coming back to your mind and heart, bringing along even more evil. Unfortunately, you can also be paralyzed by sin if you were treated unfairly by your confessor. Your paralysis was born out of the sin of your confessor, who, instead of bringing you God’s mercy with his service, inflicted wounds on your heart which have stayed with you for years. Maybe you felt completely ignored, maybe he did not show you any kindness, maybe he only raised his voice and was shouting at you or even insulting you. Maybe he tackled some difficult issues without tact and Christ’s tenderness. Such an attitude, whether it was intentional or not, may have paralyzed you for years and stopped you from going to confession because you were not ready or willing to talk to a priest about your sins. Remember that you can tell God the whole truth about yourself. You do not need to fear, His mercy is incomparably bigger than your greatest sin. God will always welcome you and forgive you anything if you choose to come to Him. Penance is not a punishment for sins Absolution After a thorough examination of conscience and a sincere confession, you need to find a new direction to follow in your life. First, you have to make amends for your sins before God and your neighbours by completing your penance. Therefore, you should do your best to compensate for the harm that your sin caused to another person. For example, you should give back the things that you stole or restore the good name of the person you defamed. More often than not, the will to make amends for our sins arises spontaneously in our hearts. You will also be given penance by your confessor. It is meant to bring you closer to Jesus, who died for all our sins. Penance may take the form of prayer, offering, works of mercy, fasting, voluntary self-denial, sacrifices, service of neighbour or any concrete form meant to restore what your sin destroyed. Penance gives you a chance to make amends for your sins, grow in grace and regain your spiritual health. The confessor imposes it on you to make you look at yourself and the consequences of your sins together with God. Try to restore what your sin destroyed and, at the same time, believe that God will help you because you alone are not able to go back to all the people you hurt and all the places where you committed your sins. Finally comes the most important element of the sacrament: the formula of absolution. God, the Father of mercies, through the death and resurrection of his Son has reconciled the world to Himself and sent the Holy Spirit among us for the forgiveness of sins; through the ministry of the Church may God give you pardon and peace, and I absolve you from your sins in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit. It is important to remember who forgives our sins in the sacrament of reconciliation. It is God, our Father, and not the priest in the confessional. It is God, against whom we sinned, that grants us absolution. In this sense, it is important that He is our Father. Who is father? The father is somebody who not only loves the child, takes care of it and supports it, but, first and foremost, gives life to the child. The absolution of sins is the moment when God gives birth to us, in other words He bestows upon us His own life as if He was saying, “Live My life, I want you to live like Me, follow My ideas for your happiness, participate in My nature and in My life.” How does this birth take place? It happens through the Son of God, who died for us. He gave His life for us. At the confessional, we are kneeling in front of Jesus Christ, who says to us: “Live, and I will die, I will offer My life for you, so that you can live it.” We are forgiven by the power of the Holy Spirit, who first revealed the truth about ourselves, showed us our sin and inspired repentance and sorrow in us. The Holy Spirit infused my heart with the grace of forgiveness that flows from the 217 death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. It is illustrated by the gesture the priest makes when he pronounces the words of absolution. In this gesture, the priest raises his open hand over the penitent to invoke the power of the Holy Spirit (Greek epiclesis). Interestingly enough, the same gesture is made by the priest during every Mass, when bread and wine change into the actual Body and Blood of Christ. The priest raises his hands over bread and wine asking God to send down the Holy Spirit upon the gifts to change them. The presence of this gesture in both the confession and the Eucharist demonstrates a link between the two sacraments. In fact, the sacrament of reconciliation serves as the gateway to the Eucharist, or the Holy Communion with God. The raised hand also symbolizes a father who puts his hand on the head of his little child to make him or her feel saved and loved. This gesture also illustrates the truth about the relationship between the Father and the Son, who are united by mutual Love – the Holy Spirit. This love of the Father for His Son is bestowed upon us, “adoptive” children of God, who, through penance, become reunited with God. We can also say that during the confession God embraces us with the power of the Holy Spirit. Imagine, God hugs you and tells you, “You are my child.” 218 Confession is not psychotherapy God loves us. Therefore, He forgives us and bestows peace upon us. However, here, the word “peace” does not denote an emotional state when we feel well because the load is off our mind. Of course, we can feel like that, but this sort of peace is not the most important consequence of a valid and good confession. In fact, the sacrament of reconciliation brings us a sort of peace which can be described with the Hebrew word shalom, or the inner harmony, completeness. We achieve this harmony because we experience God’s forgiveness and know that we cannot be accused before God for our sins and that we will be saved. Now, we can stand in front of God as His servants, human beings created by the Father. He is our God, we are His humble servants with our hearts full of gratitude for everything that He did for us. Confession is not a form of psychotherapy, although this sacrament does help and heal us on the psychological level as well. The primary goal of reconciliation is not for us to feel better, remove the burden of our sins, or “spring-clean” our conscience. All this takes place secondary to the fact that reconciliation makes us realize anew that God is our Father, and we are His children, who are reborn to life – to the life that we lost through our sins. In other words, the sacrament of confession raises us from death caused by our sins back to life. Do not put off your confession until you are perfectly prepared. Despite your fear, doubts, and shame, let yourself be embraced by God’s love. 219 DON’T WAIT! STAND UP AND COME TO THE FATHER, WHO WAITS FOR YOU IN FRONT OF HIS HOUSE WITH HIS ARMS OUTSTRETCHED TO EMBRACE YOU, FORGIVE YOU, GRANT YOU A NEW LIFE AND TELL YOU, “I LOVE YOU! REGARDLESS OF WHAT HAPPENED, YOU ARE MY CHILD AND I LOVE YOU VERY MUCH.” Fr. Krzysztof Porosło Fr. Krzysztof Porosło – a priest in the Archdiocese of Kraków, student of dogmatic theology at the Theological Faculty of the University of Navarra in Pamplona (Spain), author and editor of several books on liturgy and the Bible; recordings of his sermons and spiritual exercises are available on the website www.baptysterium.pl. i died SO YOU CAN LIVE 221 © DAYENU paid BUT THAT YOU MAY KNOW THAT THE SON OF MAN HAS AUTHORITY ON EARTH TO FORGIVE SINS – HE THEN SAID TO THE PARALYTIC “RISE, TAKE UP YOUR BED AND GO HOME.” AND HE ROSE AND WENT HOME. Mt 9:6-7 225 Truly, I say to you, as you did it to one of the least of these my brethren, you did it to me. (Mt 25:40) (Diary, 723) THE GREATER THE SINNER, THE GREATER THE RIGHT HE HAS TO MY MERCY This is my commandment, that you love one another as I have loved you. (Jn 15:12) For if you forgive men their trespasses, your heavenly Father also will forgive you. (Mt 6:14) He who knows how to forgive prepares for himself many graces from God. As often as I look upon the cross, so often will I forgive with all my heart. (Diary, 390) He who trusts in My mercy will not perish, for all his affairs are Mine, and his enemies will be shattered at the base of My footstool. (Diary, 723) The soul that trusts in My mercy is most fortunate, because I Myself take care of it. (Diary, 1273) TAKE AS MUCH AS YOU LIKE I desire that the whole world know My infinite mercy. I desire to grant unimaginable graces to those souls who trust in My mercy. (Diary, 687) HOW DO I CONFESS? 228 229 COME NOW, LET US REASON TOGETHER, SAYS THE LORD: THOUGH YOUR SINS ARE LIKE SCARLET, THEY SHALL BE AS WHITE AS SNOW; THOUGH THEY ARE RED LIKE CRIMSON, THEY SHALL BECOME LIKE WOOL. Is 1:18 COLOUR A PICTURE OF YOUR SOUL. LET AREAS WITH SNOWFLAKES BE WHITE. 5 CONDITIONS FOR A GOOD CONFESSION 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. EXAMINATION OF CONSCIENCE: RECOGNIZE THE TRUTH ABOUT YOURSELF. CONTRITION: EXPRESS SORROW FOR REJECTING THE GREATEST LOVE IN THE WORLD. STRONG RESOLUTION: DO YOUR BEST TO STAY AWAY FROM SIN. SINCERE CONFESSION: CONFESS ALL YOUR SINS. SATISFACTION: TRY TO REPAIR INJURIES CAUSED BY YOUR SIN. 233 EXAMINATION OF CONSCIENCE BASED ON THE SPIRITUAL WORKS OF MERCY 1. To Admonish Sinners For me to chastise someone else for their sins, I need to know that I am a sinner myself. •Am I patient with someone who has limited knowledge or intelligence? •Am I able to explain, describe, or teach something patiently? •Am I patient with myself if I do not succeed in something or if something humiliates me? •Can I be happy for someone who knows more, is more talented or is more mature than me? 3. To Counsel The Doubtful •How do I behave when I have doubts about my faith? •Do I readily leave God behind or do I seek Him even more? •Am I aware of it? •Can I reprimand myself? •Am I humble? •Is salvation my biggest goal? •Do I want my friends to go to heaven? •Is God the one who connects us? •Am I able to maintain a dignified attitude if someone does something bad, does not respect values, or dismisses God? •Am I able to speak out? •Am I courageous in defending my beliefs and morals? •Am I able to rebuke in a calm way, without pride? •Does evil influence my desires to fit in with others? •Do I spread beauty? •Do I believe with all my strength that love, faith and hope will triumph? 2. To Instruct The Ignorant To teach the ignorant I myself need formation in faith and religious knowledge. •Do I care about my formation? •Do I frequently read the Bible, catechism, religious books and religious news? •Do I invite others to reflect with me on these values? •Am I patient when someone is less talented than myself? 234 •Do I pray for faith? •Do I only trust in God or do I trust in superstitions, fortune telling, magic, horoscopes, or non-Christian spiritualism? •Do I excessively seek more money, power, connections or human gratification? •Do I use profanities or swear words? •Am I rude to others? •Am I concerned about people who have difficulties with faith? •Do I share my faith and desire of God with them? •Do I pray for them or offer advice to them through the grace that God gives me to spread His Gospel? •Do I treat my own and others’ faith seriously? •Does faith empower my life or is it just an addition to it? 4. To Comfort The Afflicted •When I experience sadness, does the truth about Christ, who also suffers out of love for the Father and for mankind, console me? •Am I full of hope when I have difficulties, or do I quickly resort to complaining and whining? •Do I endure difficulties patiently? •Am I able to bear difficulties with love or do I run away from the issue and respond to it with despair? •When I am upset, do I become unbearable, unsociable, miserable, or angry with everything? •Do I bear difficult moments with trust? 235 •Do I kindly and patiently explain to the saddened and distraught the point of their difficulties? •Do I consider how my sin against God is greater than someone else’s sin against me? •Am I able to be with people who need someone’s presence? •Do I avoid proclaiming any harm done to me? •Am I able to be helpless like Mary standing by the cross of Jesus, but still •Am I aware that some harm may have been done involuntarily? remain with someone? •Am I sensitive to suffering, tears, pain, tragedy, and mourning? •Am I able to notice that someone is suffering because they have done something they did not mean to do? •Do I believe in the good intentions of others? 5. To Bear Wrongs Patiently •Do I cause harm to myself by not believing in others’ good intentions? • Am I patient with myself? •Do I seek reparation by resorting to insult? • Am I able to bear my failures and trials calmly? •Do I avoid defaming other people? • Am I aware that I can be hurt just as Jesus was wounded so many times? • Do I keep an appropriate distance from problems? • When I deal with problems, do I avoid being too hot-blooded, emotional, argumentative, malicious, or ironic? • Do I avoid mud-slinging and gossiping? • Do I resist the desire in my heart to seek revenge? • Am I able to use good over evil? • Do I protect myself and others against being hurt by those who treat us injustly? • If possible, do I discipline those who treat me unjustly and in this way teach him/her to take responsibility? • Do I discipline him/her in a humane, composed and merciful manner? • Do I pray for those who treat me unjustly so that they might come to know the love that God has for them better? • Do I hurt others through words or actions? • Do I humiliate others, causing them to suffer or die? • Do I hurt myself and others with suicidal thoughts or attempts to take my own life? 6. •Do I recognize that others may be experiencing frustration, disappointment, or other emotions that result in them having a bad day? 7. To Pray For The Living And The Dead •A prayer is the most intimate expression of spiritual love. Do I pray enough? •Do I set aside time for God every day? •Do I treasure my prayer or do I say it in a hurry just to appease my conscience? •Am I faithful to the Eucharist every Sunday and in my daily prayer? •Do I respect my prayer to God, i.e. praying in a position that expresses respect, dressing appropriately for church, maintaining silence once I’m there, kneeling in front of the Blessed Sacrament, etc.? •Do I remember in my prayers the Church, people close to me, family, and friends? •Do I remember those in need? •Do I pray for the deceased? •Do I help them by gaining and offering to them indulgences made available through the Church? •Do I know how to of obtain indulgences for the deceased? To Forgive Offences Willingly •Do I offer masses for the dead? •Am I a person of peace? •Do I forgive wholeheartedly? •Do I think about how much Christ has forgiven me? • Do I think that God is willing to forgive and does not get tired of doing so? 236 237 SAY SOMETHING NICE TODAY to the first 5 people you meet 238 Don’t just stand there like a sheep 239 EXAMINATION OF CONSCIENCE BASED ON THE CORPORAL WORKS OF MERCY 3. To Clothe The Naked In today’s world, nakedness is very visible through pornography and eroticism. •Do I use such materials? 1. To Feed The Hungry •Do I remember that food is God’s gift? •Do I have an appropriate diet? •Do I eat in moderation (not too much / too little)? •Do I avoid wasting food? •Do I fast? •Am I able to deny myself things during Lent? •Do I observe the spirit of fasting during fast days (in particular on Fridays)? •Do I give alms? •Do I support charitable institutions? •Do I directly support poor people I know? •Do I live in sumptuousness, possessing goods excessively? •Do I feed those hungry for love with a good word, attention, respect, or time given to them? 2. To Give Drink To The Thirsty •Can I be trusted with the protection of someone’s purity? •Do I respect the body as a temple of the Holy Spirit? •Do I succumb, willingly and without a fight, to impure thoughts about my own body (contempt, hatred, excessive cult of the body, masturbation) or someone else’s body (sexual relationships before or outside marriage, mutual fondling, rape, prostitution, licentiousness)? •Am I merciful towards myself in the genuine struggle with my weaknesses in respect of purity? •Do I continue to trust while facing temptations and trials regarding purity? •Do I realize that Jesus is my greatest purity? •Do I respect virginity? •Do I respect celibacy, the single state for the sake of the Heavenly Kingdom? •Do I desire to have a pure heart? •Do I realize that sexuality is a delicate gift of God? •Do I respect my own sexuality? •Do I shape it? •Am I sensitive towards my own and others’ sexuality? •Do I have respect for water as a resource belonging to all people? •Do I dress appropriately? •Do I avoid wasting it? •Do dress suggestively? •Do I mindlessly contaminate water/the environment? •Do I respect my own health and life? •Do I abuse alcohol? •Do I care about those in need by donating wearable clothes and shoes to •Do I encourage others to abuse alcohol? them? •Do I respect it if someone refuses to have another drink? •Do I respect those who do not drink at all? •Do I notice those who thirst not only for water but also for peace, goodness, or a smile? 240 241 CLOTHE © DAYENU the prodigal son 4. To Shelter The Homeless •Do I treat the elderly and vulnerable well? •Am I always open to receive people close to me by being tidy at home? •Do I remember that in the sick and suffering I can touch Jesus’s wounds? •Do I take care of my home by its cleanliness and appropriate décor? •Do I receive pilgrims? •Do I respect the sharing of meals with people close to me? •Am I ashamed to talk to someone who is homeless, destitute, or dirty? •Do I take care of the home of my heart? •Am I happy to give up my seat for people who are unwell? •Do I remember that those suffering embody Jesus for me? •Do I frequently touch them? •Do I consider the elderly and the sick useless? •Do I see how suffering could be redemptive? •Do I reject euthanasia? •Am I considerate, kind, and helpful? •How do I speak to people? •Do I humiliate people by my own certain style, perfectionism, or excessive attention to detail? 7. To Bury The Dead •Do I think about my death? •Am I open to life which needs the home of love? •Am I always prepared for it? •Do I respect life from the time of conception to natural death? •Do I always strive to be in a state of holy grace? 5. To Visit The Prisoner •Am I enslaved by an addiction through my own choice? •Am I a free person? •Am I independent of someone else’s bad behaviour and style? •Am free from other dependencies? •Am I entangled in problems of violence, alcohol abuse, or tobacco use? •Do I use drugs? •Do I empathize with those who are unable to overcome addictions? •Do I console them with merciful love? •Do I overwhelm them with my “flawlessness”? •Do I hold prisoners in hatred in my own mind? •Do I frequent the sacrament of reconciliation soon after committing a sin? •Do I realize that continuing to live in sin is what hurts Jesus the most? •Am I prepared every day for my life to come to an end? •Do I offer a last service to the deceased by arranging their funeral and burial place out of love? •Do I treat human remains with respect? •Do I take care of the graves of people close to me? •Do I visit them frequently? •Do I realize that a cemetery is a place of remembrance and reflection? •Do I believe in the communion of saints, resurrection of the body, and life everlasting? •Do I treat them as losers? •Do I console them, lift their spirit? •Do I pray for them? •Do I visit them in prison? 6. To Visit The Sick •When was the last time I went to visit someone ill, lonely, or elderly in hospital or in a care home? •Do I forget about these people? 244 245 3 wAYS of exercising mercy toward your neighbor: 1. by deed 2. by word 3. by prayer (Diary, 742) I demand from you deeds of mercy, which are to arise out of love for Me. You are to show mercy to your neighbors always and everywhere. You must not shrink from this or try to excuse or absolve yourself from it. (Diary, 742) 246 0 I AM GIVING YOU I wANT TO bECOME A SAINT, and I trust that God’s mercy can make a saint even out of such misery as I am. (Diary, 1333) # HOLY This is your halo – which you can cut out and proudly display. 247 bE YOU THEREFORE PERFECT, AS ALSO YOUR HEAVENLY FATHER IS PERFECT. IT bEGAN wITH RECONCILIATION, AND wITH bACON Dear Friends, We must be perfect. Is that hard, or easy? It becomes easier when we understand that perfection, holiness, consists in mercy. The first step is to allow ourselves to be looked at, forgiven, and Mt 5:48 loved by Jesus. Then we can take this merciful love to others. Then we can even become capable of loving our enemies. For divine Love knows no limits. The pontifical foundation Aid to the Church in Need (ACN) began with reconciliation, and with bacon. It was an act of heroic and merciful love, after World War II, when people forgave their former enemies and saved countless, uprooted refugees from starvation with gifts of bacon. The strength to do so came from God. Today ACN helps those in need with around 6,000 projects Father Werenfried with pig annually, in 140 different countries. Through the priests, religious, catechists and enthusiastic youth volunteers of the Church ACN seeks to bring the Merciful Love of God to every corner of our earth. “Deed, Word and Prayer“ – this is the guiding motto of ACN. The world needs our holiness, which is made visible through mercy. There is so much need and poverty in the world. Billions of people still do not know the love of God. At the same time, hundreds of thousands are persecuted and killed for their faith in Jesus. They all need our help, our voices and our prayers. “For even the strongest faith is of no avail without deeds” (Diary, 742). Like the Apostles, we are all called to go out into the whole world and become fishers of men. To catch fish, we need bait. Jesus offered his own Heart as the bait on the hook. What can we offer? PEOPLE ARE MUCH BETTER THAN WE THINK. THEY ARE ONLY AWAITING THE BURNING WORD THAT SETS THEIR HEARTS ON FIRE. Fr. werenfried van Straaten, founder of AcN 248 AID TO THE CHURCH IN NEED WWW.ACN-INTL.ORG WWW.CHANNELSOFMERCY.ORG 249 Notes Notes Notes Notes Notes Notes Original Title: Jezus ufa tobie. Inna książka o Bożym Miłosierdziu © Copyright by Archdiocese of Kraków & Wydawnictwo św. Stanisław BM Publishing Co., Kraków 2016, all rights reserved © Copyright for the English translation by Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Poland, 2016 Imprimatur of the original (Polish): Kraków Metropolitan Curia, no: 832/2016 Licensing: Fr. dr Stanisław Szczepaniec Consultations: Paul Edward Jarzembowski, Betsy Joan Palmer, United States Conference of Catholic Bishops Grafic Design: Dorota Paciorek DAYENU Illustrations and Cover Design: Monika Szybiak Layout: Kinga Kostka Typesetting: Agnieszka Kluzik Technical Editing: Agnieszka Lipińska Proofreading: ExLibro Translations Agency Photos: www.istockphoto.com/pl, Marcin Mazur, Piotr Drabik, Zygmunt Put Images used in the book: Adam Chmielowski – Ecce Homo, Rembrandt – The Return of the Prodigal Son, Pompeo Batoni – The Return of the Prodigal Son, Caravaggio – The Incredulity of Saint Thomas, Mateo Cerezo – Ecce Homo, Giuseppe Molteni – Confession, Joos van Cleve – The Virgin and Child with Angels, Christ Pantocrator, Pan Jezus Pięciorański (Five Holy Wounds) Adolf Hyła, The Miracle-Famous Image of Merciful Jesus, The Shrine of Divine Mercy in Kraków Łagiewniki © Copyright by The Congregation of the Sisters of Our Lady of Mercy Message for the XXXI WYD and fragments of writings of Pope Francis and fragments of writings of St. John Paul II © Copyright Libreria Editrice Vaticana Quotes from the Diary of St. Sister M. Faustina Kowalska used with permission ofthe Marian Fathers of the Immaculate Conception of the B.V.M. Stockbridge, MA USA Holy Bible quoted according to: The Holy Bible, Revised Standard Version, Second Catholic Edition (2006) & The New American Bible, Revised Edition ISBN: 978-83-7422-754-4 Issue: 90,000 copies Printing: Drukarnia Bałtycka Sp. z o.o. Printed in Poland. Kraków 2016