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They are easy words, rich in content, but difficult to pronounce. Pope Francis helps us understand its meaning.
Three words that seem so difficult to pronounce: permission, sorry, thank you. Pope Francis describes to us how, instead, it is so simple to use them.
The three words for a happy life
Thanks, sorry, permission: how many times have we heard them and how many times should we pronounce them. Yet we fight. At home, at the office, with friends: these are words that are so simple but that many times they put us in difficulties simply by being pronounced.
“These are three words that express three main aspects, at the base of which there is always gratitude and thanksgiving“- so says the Holy Father -“They remember the importance of respect, forgiveness and gratitude ”.
Pope Francis: “Thank you, excuse me, I’m sorry”
But to those who ask him how, especially in a relationship, how these words can be pronounced and on what occasions, Francisco answers: “Living together is an art, a patient, beautiful and fascinating journey that does not end when the two conquer each other. In fact, it is a commute, which has three main rules that can be summed up with the words: permission, that is, ‘I can’, thank you and I’m sorry.”.
The Holy Father returned yesterday, on the occasion of the Feast of the Holy Family, to underline this topic: “When a couple argue, there is a cold war at home. But remember: never end the day without apologizing“.
Its meaning
“Excuse me: it is the request to be able to enter the life of the other with respect and attention. Asking permission means knowing how to step into the lives of others with courtesy and ask their opinion on how to handle situations and relationships that concern them.
Thank you: it seems easy to pronounce this word, but it is not. We teach it to children, but then we are the ones who forget it! Gratitude is an important feeling!
I’m sorry: in life we make many mistakes, we all make them and maybe every day. The Bible says that the righteous sin seven times a day.”- explains Pope Francis.
A decalogue that is not valid only for those who are preparing, now, for the sacrament of marriage, but also for many who, after years, for those who ask for it “How can they stay together?“They simply respond with these three that the Pontiff has advised us.
Pope Francis wanted to emphasize these “three words”, precisely, yes, on the occasion of the Feast of the Holy Family, but also to announce the opening of a particular year: the “Year of the Amoris Laetitia Family“Let the family be the first school of life, but above all the first domestic Church, where faith is strengthened and shaped.
Let each family look at the example of Mary and Joseph and go on their way.
ROSALIA GIGLIANO
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