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Pope Leo XIV greets visitors and pilgrims from the popemobile in St Peter’s Square before his weekly general audience yesterday (CNS/Lola Gomez)

In today’s fast-paced world, with pressure to deliver results and efficiency, Pope Leo XIV said yesterday that many have been stripped of their serenity and ability to live. Source: Catholic Review.

“The authentic approach of the heart does not consist in possessing the goods of this world, but in achieving what can fill it completely; namely, the love of God, or rather, God who is love,” the Pope said during his weekly general audience in St Peter’s Square.

Furthermore, he said one can feel restless despite completing countless tasks, “because we are not machines, we have a heart; indeed, we can say that we are a heart.”

Continuing his series of audience talks on “Jesus our hope,” the Pope focused on turning toward God and his love as the answer to this restlessness. Jesus’s incarnation, passion, death and resurrection give us a foundation of hope, the Pope said.

“Dear friends, here is the secret of the movement of the human heart: returning to the source of its being, delighting in the joy that never fails, that never disappoints,” the Pope said. 

“No one can live without a meaning that goes beyond the contingent, beyond what passes away. The human heart cannot live without hope, without knowing that it is made for fullness, not for want.” 

To overcome the “vortex that overwhelms us,” Pope Leo pointed to St Matthew, saying that life’s true treasure is the heart rather than achievements or the goods of this world. 

“It is therefore in the heart that true treasure is kept, not in earthly safes, not in large financial investments, which today more than ever before are out of control and unjustly concentrated at the bloody price of millions of human lives and the devastation of God’s creation,” he said in his main catechesis in Italian.

He went on to refer to St Augustine, who said that hearts will remain restless until they are with the Lord.

“That restlessness is not arbitrary and disordered; it is oriented toward heaven, whose doors are open to us thanks to the incarnation, passion, death and resurrection of Jesus Christ,” the Pope said in his English-language remarks.

FULLS TORY

Rather than chasing productivity, turn to God to resolve restlessness, Pope says (By Josephine Peterson, OSV News via Catholic Review)