Selected quotes of Pope Benedict XVI offered daily for prayer and reflection….

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The Beatitudes
 


'Blessed are the peacemakers, for they will be called children of God'.
Who are those who work for peace? They are all those who, day after day, try to vanquish evil through good, with the strength of truth, with the arms of prayer and forgiveness, with the job done honestly and well, with scientific research that serves life, with works of corporal and spiritual charity. The peacemakers are many but they make no noise. Like leaven in dough, they make humanity grow according to God's plan.

 
Angelus Address
St Peters Square
1 January 2013

 
 
 
The Beatitudes
 


The Beatitudes are the transposition of the Cross and Resurrection into discipleship. They mirror the life of the Son of God who let himself even be persecuted and despised until he was condemned to death so that salvation might be given to men and women.

 
Angelus Address
St Peter's Square
30 January 2011

 
 
 
The Beatitudes
 


The Beatitudes are a new program of life, to free oneself from the false values of the world and to open oneself to the true goods, present and future. Indeed, when God comforts, he satisfies the hunger for righteousness, he wipes away the tears of those who mourn, which means that, as well as compensating each one in a practical way, he opens the Kingdom of Heaven.

 
Angelus Address
St Peter's Square
30 January 2011

 
 
 
The Beatitudes
 


Jesus, the new Moses, “takes his seat on the cathedra of the mountain and proclaims “blessed” the poor in spirit, those who mourn, the merciful, those who hunger for righteousness, the pure in heart, the persecuted (cf. Mt 5:3-10). It is not a new ideology, but a teaching that comes from on high and touches the human condition, the condition that the Lord, in becoming flesh, wished to assume in order to save it. The Beatitudes are a new program of life, to free oneself from the false values of the world and to open oneself to the true goods, present and future. Indeed, when God comforts, he satisfies the hunger for righteousness, he wipes away the tears of those who mourn, which means that, as well as compensating each one in a practical way, he opens the Kingdom of Heaven.

 
Angelus Address
St Peter's Square
30 January 2011