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By Tiziana
Campisi
A good book opens the mind, stimulates the heart, and
prepares us for life, Pope Francis writes in a letter to future priests, but also all pastoral workers and Christians will
appreciate "reading novels and poems as part of one’s path to personal
maturity."
With his letter on the role of literature in
formation, written on 17 July and published Sunday, 4 August, Pope Francis aims
to encourage "a renewed love for reading" and above all "to
propose a radical change of course" in the preparation of candidates for
the priesthood, so that more space is given to reading literary works. Because
literature can educate "the hearts and minds of pastors" to "the
free and humble exercise of our use of reason" and to "a fruitful
recognition of the variety of human languages," thus broadening human
sensitivity and leading to greater spiritual openness.
Moreover, the task of believers, and of priests in
particular, is to touch the hearts of contemporary people so that they may be
moved and open before the proclamation of the Lord Jesus, and in all this
"the contribution that literature and poetry can offer is of incomparable
value."
Beneficial effects of reading
In his letter Pope Francis first emphasises the
beneficial effects of a good book that can "provide an oasis that keeps us
from other choices that are less wholesome," and when "in moments of
weariness, anger, disappointment or failure, when prayer itself does not help
us find inner serenity," can help us get through difficult moments and
"find peace of mind".
People used to dedicate themselves to reading more
often "before our present unremitting exposure to social media, mobile
phones and other devices", observes the Pope, who points out that in an
audiovisual product, although more complete, "the time allowed for
‘enriching’ the narrative or exploring its significance is usually quite
restricted", while reading a book the reader is much more active. A
literary work is “a living and ever fruitful text.”
It happens, in fact, that in reading, the reader is
enriched by what is received from the author, and this enables him to make the
richness of his own person flourish.
Devoting time to literature
While it is positive that "some seminaries have
reacted to the obsession with ‘screens’ and with toxic, superficial and violent
fake news, by devoting time and attention to literature,” to reading and
discussing books, new or old, that have much to say, Pope Francis acknowledges
that in general those in formation for ordained ministry may not have enough
time to dedicate to literature, sometimes considered "a ‘minor art’ that
need not belong to the education of future priests and their preparation for
pastoral ministry."
"Such an approach is unhealthy", says the
Pope, and can lead to "serious intellectual and spiritual impoverishment
of future priests", who thus do not have privileged access which
literature grants to the very heart of human culture and, more specifically, to
the heart of every individual". Because, in practice, literature has to do
with what each of us desires from life, he writes, and it enters into an
intimate relationship with our concrete existence and all its tensions, desires
and meanings.
Encountering Jesus
In order to "respond adequately to many people’s
thirst for God, lest they try to satisfy it with alienating solutions or with a
disembodied Jesus", believers and priests, in proclaiming the Gospel, must
endevour so that "everyone be able to encounter Jesus Christ made
flesh, made man, made history." One must never lose sight of the
“flesh” of Jesus Christ, the Pope recommends, "that flesh made of
passions, emotions and feelings, words that challenge and console, hands that
touch and heal, looks that liberate and encourage, flesh made of hospitality,
forgiveness, indignation, courage, fearlessness; in a word, love".
For this reason, Pope Francis underscores that
"familiarity with literature can make future priests and all pastoral
workers all the more sensitive to the full humanity of the Lord Jesus, in which
his divinity is wholly present".
The full text of the Letter of Pope Francis on the
role of literature in formation can be found here.
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