Pope Francis had begun a series of audience talks about prayer in May but interrupted them for nine weeks to explain the principles of Catholic social teaching and how their application could heal a world suffering from the COVID-19 pandemic, inequality, violence, social tension and despair."The proving ground for prayer is concrete love for one's neighbor," the pope said Oct. 7 at his weekly general audience.
The audience began with a reading of the story of the Lord telling a forlorn Elijah he would pass by. "There was a strong and violent wind rending the mountains and crushing rocks before the Lord, but the Lord was not in the wind; after the wind, an earthquake, but the Lord was not in the earthquake; after the earthquake, fire, but the Lord was not in the fire; after the fire, a light silent sound." And that was where God was."Believers act in the world after first having been quiet and having prayed," he said. "Otherwise, their action is impulsive; it is lacking discernment; it is breathlessly running without a goal. Believers who behave like that commit many injustices because they did not go first to the Lord to pray, to discern what must be done."
"Even if we made some mistake or we feel threatened and afraid, turning to God in prayer, serenity and peace will return almost miraculously," the pope said. "This is what Elijah's example teaches us.""This happened to Elijah, but it seems like it was written for each of us," the pope said. "Some evenings we might feel alone and useless. That is when prayer comes and knocks on the door of our heart."