Pope Francis: God ‘Weaves Our History’

The pope’s livestreamed address, dedicated to “Paul, the true Apostle,” was the second in a new cycle of catechesis on St. Paul’s Epistle to the Galatians.

Pope Francis smiles during the general audience in the Vatican's San Damaso Courtyard on June 30, 2021.
Pope Francis smiles during the general audience in the Vatican's San Damaso Courtyard on June 30, 2021. (photo: Pablo Esparza/CNA / EWTN)

VATICAN CITY — Pope Francis said on Wednesday that the dramatic conversion of St. Paul should remind us that God has a plan for our lives.

Speaking at the general audience June 30, the pope noted that Paul experienced a “radical transformation” from a persecutor to an Apostle. 

“How often, in the face of the Lord’s great works, does the question arise: how is it possible that God uses a sinner, a frail and weak person, to do His will?” the pope asked.  

“And yet, none of this happens by chance, because everything has been prepared in God’s plan. He weaves our history, the history of each of us: He weaves our history and, if we correspond with trust to His plan of salvation, we realize it.”

The pope’s livestreamed address, dedicated to “Paul, the true Apostle,” was the second in a new cycle of catechesis on St. Paul’s Epistle to the Galatians.

/ Pablo Esparza/CNA.

/ Pablo Esparza/CNA.

He observed that Paul began the letter by reminding the Christians in Galatia, present-day Turkey, of his deep love for them. 

But Paul also recognized that the community was divided. He responded, the pope said, by underlining the novelty of the Gospel. 

“We immediately discover that Paul has a profound knowledge of the mystery of Christ. From the beginning of his Letter he does not follow the low arguments used by his detractors,” the pope said. 

“The Apostle ‘flies high’ and shows us, too, how to behave when conflicts arise within the community. Only towards the end of the Letter, in fact, is it made explicit that at the heart of the diatribe is the question of circumcision, hence of the main Jewish tradition.” 

/ Pablo Esparza/CNA.

/ Pablo Esparza/CNA.

The pope praised Paul for identifying the issue that lay beneath the dispute, rather than seeking a quick fix. 

“Paul chooses to go deeper, because what is at stake is the truth of the Gospel and the freedom of Christians, which is an integral part of it,” he said. 

“He does not stop at the surface of the problems, as we are often tempted to do in order to find an immediate solution that deludes us into thinking that we can all agree with a compromise.” 

“This is not how the Gospel works, and the Apostle chose to take the more challenging route.”

Paul reminded the Galatians that he was a true Apostle, the pope said, by telling the story of how he was called by God on the road to Damascus.  

“On the one hand, he insists in underlining that he had fiercely persecuted the Church and that he had been a ‘blasphemer, a persecutor, and a man of violence’ (1 Timothy 1: 13); on the other, he highlights God’s mercy towards him, which led him to experience a radical transformation, well known to all,” he observed.

Commenting on Paul’s journey from “a blameless observer of the Mosaic Law” to “a herald among the pagans,” the pope said: “We must never forget the time and the way in which God entered our lives: keep fixed in your heart and mind that encounter with grace, when God changed our existence.”

/ Pablo Esparza/CNA.

/ Pablo Esparza/CNA.

Concluding his catechesis, the pope said that when we are called by God, we also receive a mission that He wishes us to undertake.

“That is why we are asked to prepare ourselves seriously, knowing that it is God Himself who sends us, God himself who supports us with His grace,” he said. 

“Let us allow ourselves to be led by this awareness: the primacy of grace  transforms existence and makes it worthy of being placed at the service of the Gospel.”

/ Pablo Esparza/CNA.

/ Pablo Esparza/CNA.

A precis of the pope’s catechesis was then read out in seven languages. After each summary, he greeted members of each language group.

One of the greetings was to pilgrims from Slovakia, a country that the Vatican is considering for a possible papal visit in September. 

He said: “I greet with affection the Slovakian faithful, especially the participants in the Pilgrimage of Thanksgiving of the Eparchy of Košice, which celebrates the 350th anniversary of the miraculous weeping of the icon of Our Lady of Klokočov, led by their ordinary Archbishop Cyril Vasiľ.”

/ Pablo Esparza/CNA.

/ Pablo Esparza/CNA.

“Brothers and sisters, may this celebration of the Mother of God renew in your people the faith and the lively sense of her intercession on your journey.”

Addressing Italian speakers, the pope thanked his senior driver Renzo Cestiè, who he noted was retiring that day.

“He started working when he was 14, he came by bicycle,” the pope said. “Today he is the pope’s driver: he did all of this. An applause for Renzo and his faithfulness.”

/ Pablo Esparza/CNA.

/ Pablo Esparza/CNA.

“He is one of those people who carries the Church forward with his work, with his benevolence and with his prayer. I thank him and also take the opportunity to thank the many lay people who work with us in the Vatican,” he said.

The general audience ended with the recitation of the Our Father and the Apostolic Blessing.