WORDS
Mexico Visit 1999
MEXICO - MEXICO CITY Jan. 26, 1999
Benito Juárez International airport
Farewell ceremony

[Official Vatican Text]
Mr. President,
Your Eminences and Brothers in the Episcopate, Distinguished Authorities,
Beloved Brothers and Sisters of Mexico,
1. The intensive, moving days I have spent with the pilgrim People of God in Mexico
have left a deep impression on me. The faces of the many persons I have met during these
days are etched on my mind. I am deeply grateful to you all for your cordial hospitality,
the genuine expression of the Mexican spirit, and especially for having been able to share
intense moments of prayer and reflection during the celebrations of Holy Mass in the
Basilica of Guadalupe and at the Hermanos Rodriguez Racetrack, during my visit to Adolfo
Lopez Mateos Hospital and at the memorable meeting with the four generations in the Azteca
Stadium.
2. I ask God to bless and reward those who have worked to make this visit possible. I
am most grateful to you, Mr. President, for your courteous words on my arrival, for
receiving me at the Presidential Residence, for all your kindness to me and for the
collaboration of the authorities.
I also extend my gratitude to Cardinal Norberto Rivera Carrera, Archbishop of Mexico
City and Primate of Mexico, as well as to the other Mexican Cardinals and Bishops and to
those who have come from across the continent and have helped make this visit so rich an
experience. My gratitude becomes a prayer as I ask heaven to shower the greatest blessings
upon this people who on so many occasions have shown their fidelity to God, to the Church
and to the Successor of St Peter. For this reason I raise my voice to heaven:
God bless you, Mexico, for the examples of humanity and faith of your people, for your
efforts to defend the family and life.
God bless you, Mexico, for your children's love and fidelity to the Church! May the men
and women who make up the rich mosaic of your different and fertile cultures find in
Christ the strength to overcome old or recent antagonisms and to regard themselves as
children of the same Father.
God bless you, Mexico, and all your indigenous peoples, whose progress and respect you
wish to promote! They are preserving their rich human and religious values and want to
work together to build a better future.
God bless you, Mexico, who strive through a fruitful and constructive dialogue to
banish forever the strife that has divided your children! May no one be excluded from this
dialogue and may it bring all your inhabitants even closer together, believers loyal to
their faith in Christ and those who are far from him. Only fraternal dialogue with
everyone will give new life to the plans for future reform desired by citizens of good
will, who belong to every religious creed and to the various political and cultural
sectors.
God bless you, Mexico, who still miss your children who have emigrated in search of
food and work! They too have helped to spread the Catholic faith in their new surroundings
and to build an America which wants to be united and fraternal, as the Bishops said during
the Synod.
God bless you, Mexico, for recognizing the religious freedom of those who worship him
within your borders! This freedom, a guarantee of stability, gives full meaning to the
other freedoms and fundamental rights.
God bless you, Mexico, for the Church in your country! The Bishops, together with the
priests, consecrated persons and laity committed to the new evangelization, faithful to
Christ and his Gospel, have proclaimed God's kingdom in your land for almost five
centuries.
3.
Mexico is a great country whose roots are sunk deep in a past enriched by its Christian
faith and open to the future with its clear vocation in America and the world. Passing
along the roads of the Federal District, remembering the states that constitute this
nation, I have again felt the beat of this noble people, who received me with such great
affection on my first apostolic journey outside Rome at the beginning of my Petrine
ministry. I see in your welcome the faithful reflection of a reality that is making
headway in Mexican life: that of a new climate, through respectful, stable and
constructive relations between the State and the Church, which are overcoming other times
whose lights and shadows are already history. May this new climate foster ever greater
collaboration for the benefit of the Mexican people.
4. At the end of my Pastoral Visit, I would like to reaffirm my full confidence in the
future of this people, a future in which Mexico, ever more evangelized and Christian, can
become a reference-point in America and the world; a country where democracy, stronger and
more deeply rooted, clearer and more effective each day, with the joyous and peaceful
coexistence of her peoples, may always live under the tender gaze of her Queen and Mother,
Our Lady of Guadalupe.
My last gaze and greeting are directed to her, before I leave this blessed land of
Mexico for the fourth time. To her I entrust each and every one of her Mexican children,
whose memory I cherish in my heart. Our Lady of Guadalupe, watch over Mexico! Watch over
the whole beloved American continent!
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