"In old age they will still bear fruit"
(Psalm 92:15)


Second World Day for Grandparents and the Elderly

 

On Sunday, July 24, 2022, the Second World Day for Grandparents and the Elderly will be celebrated throughout the universal Church. The theme chosen by the Holy Father for the occasion is "In old age they will still bear fruit" (Psalm 92:15) and intends to emphasize how grandparents and the elderly are a value and a gift both for society and for ecclesial communities.

World Day for Grandparents and the Elderly
Pope's words in Canada to commemorate the World Day for Grandparents and the Elderly

  During his trip to Canada, Pope Francis devoted some of his reflections to grandparents and the elderly. This attention is driven by the fact that this week is the celebration of the Second ...

World Day for Grandparents and the Elderly
A celebration as vast as the world

  Now in its second year, the World Day for Grandparents and the Elderly is beginning to characterize many dioceses all over the world. In addition to the Vatican celebration, presided over in ...

Elderly and Grandparents
All dioceses, parishes and ecclesial communities are called to celebrate this Day, whose theme is "In old age they will still bear fruit" (Ps. 92:15)

  (Vatican City 14/07/2022) The second edition of the World Day for Grandparents and the Elderly 2022 will be celebrated worldwide on July 24. All dioceses, parishes and ecclesial communities are ...

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Care for grandparents and the elderly: laying the foundations of a long-range pastoral work that will engage us for decades to come.

  (Vatican City - May 30, 2022) The Dicastery for Laity, Family and Life today released to the public a pastoral kit with instructions for the celebration of the Second World Day for ...

Elderly
Presentation of the Message for the second World Day for Grandparents and the Elderly

Today, May 10, Pope Francis' Message for the World Day for Grandparents and the Elderly 2022 was presented with the theme “In old age they will still bear fruit” (Ps 92:15). The Holy Father addresses ...

Elderly
Presentation of the Message of the Holy Father Francis for the II World Day for Grandparents and the Elderly

  On Tuesday, May 10, 2022, at 11:30 a.m., the Holy See Press Office will hold a Press Conference to present the Message of the Holy Father Francis for the Second World Day for Grandparents ...

The Elderly
A first meeting of the Dicastery with the episcopal conferences and associations most committed to the pastoral care of the elderly was held online

  After the announcement of the theme chosen by the Holy Father, "In old age they will still bear fruit" (Ps. 92:14), the work for the preparation of the second edition of World Day for ...

Elderly
This is the theme chosen by the Holy Father for the II World Day for Grandparents and the Elderly 2022

  On Sunday, July 24, 2022, the Second World Day for Grandparents and the Elderly will be celebrated throughout the universal Church. The theme chosen by the Holy Father for the occasion is ...

The Elderly
Celebrating the World Day for Grandparents and the Elderly all over the world

"I invite you to celebrate this Day in every community and to visit grandparents and the elderly, those who are most alone" said Pope Francis after Sunday’s Angelus and all over the world ...

Elderly
The Holy Father’s words after the Angelus

Pope Francis, who was unable to attend the liturgy in St. Peter's in person, wanted to personally greet the grandparents and elderly who had just participated in the celebration of the first Day ...

Elderly
Liturgy in St. Peter's for the first World Day of Grandparents and the Elderly

For many of the 2,000 elderly people present in St. Peter's last Sunday, celebrating the first World Day of Grandparents and the Elderly was the first opportunity for them to leave the forced ...

Elderly
The official prayer of the first World Day for Grandparents and the Elderly recited by Pope Francis in a video

In preparation for the upcoming World Day of Grandparents and the Elderly, the Dicastery for Laity, Family and Life is making a video available in which grandparents and the elderly from all over the ...

Elderly
Vittorio Scelzo's intervention in "Vita Pastorale" on the occasion of the World Day for Grandparents and the Elderly.

"Establishing the World Day for Grandparents and the Elderly should be read in light of other positions expressed during Pope Francis’ pontificate. He moves from a broad conception of the holy ...

The Elderly
Press conference for the World Day for Grandparents and the Elderly and the Holy Father’s Message

"After such a difficult year there is a great need to celebrate, together, grandparents and grandchildren, young and old." With these words, Card. Farrell, Prefect of the Dicastery for the ...

Message of His Holiness Pope Francis for the second World Day for Grandparents and the Elderly

 

24 July 2022

 

"In old age they will still bear fruit" (Psalm 92:15)

 

Dear Friends,

            "In old age they will still bear fruit" (Ps 92:15). These words of the Psalmist are glad tidings, a true “gospel” that we can proclaim to all on this second World Day for Grandparents and the Elderly.  They run counter to what the world thinks about this stage of life, but also to the attitude of grim resignation shown by some of us elderly people, who harbour few expectations for the future.

Many people are afraid of old age.  They consider it a sort of disease with which any contact is best avoided.  The elderly, they think, are none of their concern and should be set apart, perhaps in homes or places where they can be cared for, lest we have to deal with their problems.  This is the mindset of the “throw-away culture”, which leads us to think that we are somehow different from the poor and vulnerable in our midst, untouched by their frailties and separated from “them” and their troubles.  The Scriptures see things differently.  A long life – so the Bible teaches – is a blessing, and the elderly are not outcasts to be shunned but living signs of the goodness of God who bestows life in abundance.  Blessed is the house where an older person lives!  Blessed is the family that honours the elderly!

Old age is not a time of life easily understood even by those of us who are already experiencing it.  Even though it eventually comes with the passage of time, no one prepares us for old age, and at times it seems to take us by surprise.  The more developed societies expend large sums on this stage of life without really helping people to understand and appreciate it; they offer healthcare plans to the elderly but not plans for living this age to the full.[1]  This makes it hard to look to the future and discern what direction to take.  On the one hand, we are tempted to ward off old age by hiding our wrinkles and pretending to be forever young, while on the other, we imagine that the only thing we can do is bide our time, thinking glumly that we cannot “still bring forth fruit”.

Retirement and grown children make many of the things that used to occupy our time and energy no longer so pressing.  The recognition that our strength is ebbing or the onset of sickness can undermine our certainties.  The fast pace of the world – with which we struggle to keep up – seems to leave us no alternative but to implicitly accept the idea that we are useless.  We can resonate with the heartfelt prayer of the Psalmist: “Do not cast me off in the time of old age; forsake me not when my strength is spent” (71:9).

Yet that same psalm – which meditates on how the Lord has been present at every stage of our lives – urges us to persevere in hope.  Along with old age and white hairs, God continues to give us the gift of life and to keep us from being overcome by evil.  If we trust in him, we will find the strength to praise him still (cf. vv. 14-20).  We will come to see that growing old is more than the natural decline of the body or the inevitable passage of time, but the gift of a long life.  Aging is not a condemnation, but a blessing!

For this reason, we ought to take care of ourselves and remain active in our later years.  This is also true from a spiritual standpoint: we ought to cultivate our interior life through the assiduous reading of the word of God, daily prayer, reception of the sacraments and participation in the liturgy.  In addition to our relationship with God, we should also cultivate our relationships with others: first of all by showing affectionate concern for our families, our children and grandchildren, but also for the poor and those who suffer, by drawing near to them with practical assistance and our prayers.  These things will help us not to feel like mere bystanders, sitting on our porches or looking out from our windows, as life goes on all around us.  Instead, we should learn to discern everywhere the presence of the Lord.[2]  Like “green olive trees in the house of God” (cf. Ps 52:10), we can become a blessing for those who live next to us.

Old age is no time to give up and lower the sails, but a season of enduring fruitfulness: a new mission awaits us and bids us look to the future.  “The special sensibility that those of us who are elderly have for the concerns, thoughts and the affections that make us human should once again become the vocation of many.  It would be a sign of our love for the younger generations”.[3]  This would be our own contribution to the revolution of tenderness,[4] a spiritual and non-violent revolution in which I encourage you, dear grandparents and elderly persons, to take an active role.

Our world is passing through a time of trial and testing, beginning with the sudden, violent outbreak of the pandemic, and then by a war that is harming peace and development on a global scale.  Nor is it a coincidence that war is returning to Europe at a time when the generation that experienced it in the last century is dying out.  These great crises risk anaesthetizing us to the reality of other “epidemics” and other widespread forms of violence that menace the human family and our common home.

All this points to the need for a profound change, a conversion, that disarms hearts and leads us to see others as our brothers or sisters.  We grandparents and elderly people have a great responsibility: to teach the women and men of our time to regard others with the same understanding and loving gaze with which we regard our own grandchildren.  We ourselves have grown in humanity by caring for others, and now we can be teachers of a way of life that is peaceful and attentive to those in greatest need.  This attitude may be mistaken for weakness or resignation, yet it will be the meek, not the aggressive and the abusive, who will inherit the earth (cf. Mt 5:5).

One fruit that we are called to bring forth is protecting the world.  “Our grandparents held us in their arms and carried us on their knees”;[5] now is the time for us to carry on our own knees – with practical assistance or with prayer alone – not only our own grandchildren but also the many frightened grandchildren whom we have not yet met and who may be fleeing from war or suffering its effects.  Let us hold in our hearts – like Saint Joseph, who was a loving and attentive father – the little ones of Ukraine, of Afghanistan, of South Sudan…

Many of us have come to a sage and humble realization of what our world very much needs: the recognition that we are not saved alone, and that happiness is a bread we break together.  Let us bear witness to this before those who wrongly think that they can find personal fulfilment and success in conflict.  Everyone, even the weakest among us, can do this.  The very fact that we allow ourselves to be cared for – often by people who come from other countries – is itself a way of saying that living together in peace is not only possible, but necessary.

Dear grandparents, dear elderly persons, we are called to be artisans of the revolution of tenderness in our world!  Let us do so by learning to make ever more frequent and better use of the most valuable instrument at our disposal and, indeed, the one best suited to our age: prayer.  “Let us too become, as it were, poets of prayer: let us develop a taste for finding our own words, let us once again take up those taught by the word of God”.[6]  Our trustful prayer can do a great deal: it can accompany the cry of pain of those who suffer, and it can help change hearts.  We can be “the enduring ‘chorus’ of a great spiritual sanctuary, where prayers of supplication and songs of praise sustain the community that toils and struggles in the field of life”.[7]

The World Day of Grandparents and the Elderly is an opportunity to proclaim once more, with joy, that the Church wants to celebrate together with all those whom the Lord – in the words of the Bible – has “filled with days”.  Let us celebrate it together!  I ask you to make this Day known in your parishes and communities; to seek out those elderly persons who feel most alone, at home or in residences where they live.  Let us make sure that no one feels alone on this day.  Expecting a visit can transform those days when we think we have nothing to look forward to; from an initial encounter, a new friendship can emerge.  Visiting the elderly who live alone is a work of mercy in our time!

Let us ask Our Lady, Mother of Tender Love, to make all of us artisans of the revolution of tenderness, so that together we can set the world free from the spectre of loneliness and the demon of war.

To all of you, and to your loved ones, I send my blessing and the assurance of my closeness and affection.  And I ask you, please, not to forget to pray for me!

 

Rome, Saint John Lateran, 3 May 2022, Feast of the Apostles Philip and James

 

[1] Catechesis on Old Age – 1. The Grace of Time and the Covenant of the Ages of Life (23 February 2022).

[2] Catechesis on Old Age – 5. Fidelity to God’s Visitation for the Next Generation (30 March 2022).

[3] Catechesis on Old Age – 3. Old Age, A Resource for Lighthearted Youth (16 March 2022).

[4] Catechesis on Saint Joseph – 8. Saint Joseph, Father of Tenderness (19 January 2022).

[5] Homily at the Mass for the World Day for Grandparents and the Elderly (25 July 2021).

[6] Catechesis on the Family – 7. Grandparents (11 March 2015).

[7] Ibid.

 

General Audience of 24 August 2022 - Catechesis On Old Age: 18. The labour pains of creation. The story of the creature as a mystery of gestation

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General Audience of 17 August 2022: Catechesis on Old Age - 17. The "Ancient of days". Old age is a reassurance regarding the destination to a life that never dies again

Arabic  - English  - French  - German  - Italian  - Polish  - Portuguese  - Spanish ]

General Audience of 10 August 2022 - Catechesis on Old Age: 16. “I go to prepare a place for you”. Old age, a time projected towards fulfilment

Arabic  - English  - French  - German  - Italian  - Polish  - Portuguese  - Spanish ]

General Audience, 22 June 2022 - Catechesis on Old Age: 15. Peter and John

Arabic  - English  - French  - German  - Italian  - Polish  - Portuguese  - Spanish ]

General Audience, 15 June 2022 - Catechesis on Old Age: 14. The joyful service of faith that is learned in gratitude (cf. Mk 1, 29-31)

Arabic  - English  - French  - German  - Italian  - Polish  - Portuguese  - Spanish ]

General Audience, 8 June 2022 - Catechesis on Old Age: 13. Nicodemus. “How can a man be born when he is old?” (Jn 3:4)

Arabic  - Croatian  - English  - French  - German  - Italian  - Polish  - Portuguese  - Spanish ]

General Audience, 1st June 2022 - Catechesis on Old Age: 12. "Forsake me not when my strength is spent" (Ps 71:9)

Arabic  - Croatian  - English  - French  - German  - Italian  - Polish  - Portuguese  - Spanish ]

General Audience of 25 May 2022 - Catechesis on Old Age: 11. Ecclesiastes: the uncertain night of meaning and of things in life

Arabic  - English  - French  - German  - Italian  - Polish  - Portuguese  - Spanish ]

General Audience of 18 May 2022 - Catechesis on Old Age: 10. Job. The trial of faith, the blessing of waiting

Arabic  - English  - French  - German  - Italian  - Polish  - Portuguese  - Spanish ]

General Audience of 11 May 2022 - Catechesis on Old Age: 9. Judith. Admirable in youth, a generous in old age

Arabic  - English  - French  - German  - Italian  - Polish  - Portuguese  - Spanish ]

General Audience of 4 May 2022 - Catechesis on Old Age

[ Arabic  - English  - French  - German  - Italian  - Polish  - Portuguese  - Spanish ]

General Audience of 27 April 2022 - Catechesis on Old Age - Naomi, the alliance between the generations that opens up the future

[ Arabic  - English  - French  - German  - Italian  - Polish  - Portuguese  - Spanish ]

General Audience of 20 April 2022 - Catechesis on Old Age

[ Arabic  - English  - French  - German  - Italian  - Polish  - Portuguese  - Spanish ]

General Audience of 30 March 2022 - Catechesis on Old Age

[ Arabic  - English  - French  - German  - Italian  - Polish  - Portuguese  - Spanish ]

General Audience of 23 March 2022 - Catechesis on Old Age

[ Arabic  - English  - French  - German  - Italian  - Polish  - Portuguese  - Spanish ]

General Audience of 16 March 2022 - Catechesis on Old Age

[ Arabic  - English  - French  - German  - Italian  - Polish  - Portuguese  - Spanish ]

General Audience of 2 March 2022 - Catechesis on Old Age - 2. Longevity: symbol and opportunity

[ Arabic  - English  - French  - German  - Italian  - Polish  - Portuguese  - Spanish ]

General Audience of 23 February 2022 - Catechesis on Old Age

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Prayer for the second

World Day for Grandparents and the Elderly

 

I give thanks to you, Lord,

For the blessing of a long life

For, to those who take refuge in You,

Grant always to bear fruit.

 

Forgive, O Lord,

Resignation and disillusionment,

But forsake me not

When my strength declines.

 

Teach me to look with hope

To the future you give me,

To the mission you entrust to me

And to sing your praises without end.

 

Make me a tender craftsman

Of Your revolution,

To guard with love my grandchildren

And all the little ones who seek shelter in You.

 

Protect, O Lord, Pope Francis

And grant Thy Church

To deliver the world from loneliness.

Direct our steps in the way of peace.

Amen.

 

 

 

Today, May 10, Pope Francis' message for the World Day for Grandparents and the Elderly 2022 was presented with the theme “In old age they will still bear fruit” (Ps 92:15). The Holy Father addresses his generation to remind them that those in old age have an important mission in life. They are called to be “artisans of the revolution of tenderness” and to “set the world free from the spectre of loneliness and the demon of war”. Furthermore, the Pope invites them to rediscover this stage as “the gift of a long life.” 

The Dicastery for Laity, Family and Life indicates two ways to live the World Day for Grandparents and the Elderly: to celebrate in every parish a Mass dedicated to the elderly and to reach out those who are not visited. Moreover, in his Message, the Pope affirms that “visiting the elderly who live alone is a work of mercy in our time.” 

During the press conference, the logo of the World Day was also presented, which shows an embrace in its core, a symbol of the encounter and dialogue between generations (a detailed explanation of its meaning can be watched in this video). 

In addition to Card. Kevin Farrell, Prefect of the Dicastery for Laity, Family and Life, and Dr. Vittorio Scelzo, in charge of the pastoral care of the elderly, Giancarla Panizza and Maria Francis explained how the ideas contained in the Message are paths that every community can live in its concrete reality. Giancarla Panizza is an elderly woman who collaborated with her town in northern Italy to welcome refugees from Ukraine. From Bangalore, Maria Francis recounted how, during the month of July 2021, she promoted and organized visits by young people to lonely elderly people in many places in India on the occasion of the first World Day.

 

"In old age they will still bear fruit" (Psalm 92:15) is the theme chosen by the Holy Father for the 2nd World Day for Grandparents and the Elderly. 

 

The Holy Father addresses his generation to remind them that those in old age have an important mission in life. They are called to be “artisans of the revolution of tenderness” and to “set the world free from the spectre of loneliness and the demon of war”. Furthermore, the Pope invites them to rediscover this stage as “the gift of a long life.”

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