International News

Pope Calls for New Alliance, Sharing Between Young, Old

By Carol Glatz 

This is the cover of “Sharing the Wisdom of Time,” a book in which Pope Francis offers commentary on the life stories of older people throughout the world. (CNS photo/Loyola Press)

ROME (CNS) – With the launch of a new book, Pope Francis is calling for a new alliance – between young and old – to change the world.

In an effort to counteract today’s “culture of waste” that too easily marginalizes or ignores the young and the elderly, the book by Loyola Press creates a model of storytelling, dialogue, connection and reflection to help inspire these two groups to come together and rediscover older people’s lost “treasure of their wisdom.”

Packed with large full-color photographs of the elder contributors, the coffee-table-style book, titled, “Sharing the Wisdom of Time,” was released Oct. 23 at a book launch in Rome, with the pope scheduled to attend.

The 175-page book fleshes out what Pope Francis said he feels “the Lord wants me to say: that there should be an alliance between the young and old people.”

This alliance entails elders sharing their past experiences, advice, insights and dreams with younger people who are hungry for guidance and support as they prepare for their future, the pope said in the book’s preface.

Older people need to be “memory keepers,” forming a choir of praise and prayers supporting the people around them, he wrote, especially younger people, showing them the secrets to not just survival, but finding meaning and living life to the full, he said.

The pope calls on young people “to listen to and bond with their elders,” and the book offers a starter course, of sorts, offering scores of stories and wisdom from older people from 30 countries and from every walk of life: retired lawyers and engineers, farmers, garbage pickers, activists, refugees and a spiritual elder of the Lakota People in the United States.

They speak of their experiences with racism, forgiveness, imperfection, conversion, beauty and joy despite the setbacks.

The stories are spread over five thematic chapters: work, struggle, love, death and hope, and each chapter begins with the pope reflecting on each theme. People’s stories are interspersed with the pope’s own reflections on an individual’s story, showing a model of how to mine its message for nuggets of advice that may mirror or be applied to one’s own life.

The book also includes a few stories by younger people sharing, “What I learned from an elder” and how an older person acted like an anchor, offering hope, support or inspiration in their lives.

The book invites readers to find opportunities to dialogue with elders and to visit www.sharingwisdomoftime.com for ideas and suggestions on how to spearhead intergenerational conversations, events and projects at home, in their communities and their parishes.

Some of the words of wisdom by the pope in the book:

– “Failure is the source of much wisdom. No complaining allowed! It does not help. It does more harm than good.”

– “The success of life is not glory but patience. Sometimes you need a lot of it.”

– “Our God wants to join us in our history,” he said. Just being content with survival and “not wanting to make history is a parasitic attitude.”

– “Learn the wisdom of getting help. You experience the solidarity that allows your heart to dream.”

– “We can look at death and feel rich, because God lavishly ‘wastes’ his grace poured out on us.”

– “If God did not forgive sins, the world would have ceased existing a long time ago.”

– “Hypocrites will be scandalized by the miracles God works with our mistakes.”

– “Complaining rusts out the soul.”