Continuing his catechesis on the elderly at the weekly General Audience, Pope Francis praises the biblical heroine Judith, and suggests she can serve as an example of how to properly use the gifts God has given us.
We must celebrate all the talents and charisms of the elderly. The Holy Father stressed this message during his Wednesday General Audience in St. Peter’s Square, as he continued his series of catecheses “on the meaning and value of old age in the light of God’s Word.” He reflected this week on the Old Testament heroine Judith and all the lessons that can be learned from her. When she was young, Judith had saved her people by slaying the Assyrian general Holofernes. After this victory, she returned home and spent the rest of her life with her family.
The Holy Father suggested that Judith can serve as an example for all those older people who, in retirement, find themselves adjusting to a new chapter of life and new opportunities for personal growth. The Pope said Judith’s time of retirement had come, as it does for many people, after “an intense life of work,” of “great dedication,” or “after an adventurous existence.” Retirement can be unsettling, how to make most of it “Heroism,” the Pope pointed out, “is not only that of great events that fall under the spotlight: it is often found in the tenacity of love poured into a difficult family and on behalf of a threatened community.”
The Pope recognized that for many, the prospect of retirement coincides with a well-deserved, and much-desired, rest from demanding and tiring activities, but often it is also accompanied by trepidation, where some ask themselves: “What am I going to do now that my life will be emptied of all that has filled it for so long?” He recognized that one feels a loss after being used to everyday work, which also involves a set of relationships, the satisfaction of earning a living, the experience of having a role, a deserved consideration, a full-time job that goes beyond mere working hours. “Of course, there is the commitment, both joyful and tiring, of looking after grandchildren; but we know that today fewer and fewer children are being born, and parents are often more distant, more subject to travel, with unfavourable work and living situations,” he said.
“Sometimes they are also more reluctant to entrust grandparents with the task of bringing up their children, and only give them the time they need to care for them. There are new needs, including in the area of educational and parental relations, which require us to reshape the traditional alliance between generations.”
Impact of Grandparents Pope Francis said we should ask ourselves whether we make this effort to “reshape.” “Let us try, all together, to make them more human, more loving, more just, in the new conditions of modern societies,” he said. “For grandparents, an important part of their vocation is to support their children in their upbringing. The little ones learn the power of tenderness and respect for frailty: irreplaceable lessons, which are easier to impart and receive with grandparents. Grandparents, for their part, learn that tenderness and fragility are not just signs of decline: for young people, they are steps that make the future human.”