20/05/2026
READ: Complete Text of the Homily of Pope John Paul II at the beatification Mass of Saint Pier Giorgio Frassati, 20 May 1990
HIS LIFE: MODERN YET SPIRIT-FILLED
โI will ask the Father, and he will send you another Advocate to be with you always, the Spirit of truthโ (Jn 14:16). During the Easter season, as we progressively draw near to Pentecost, these words become more and more timely.
They were spoken by Jesus in the Upper Room the day before his Passion, as he took leave of his Apostles. His departureโthe departure of the Beloved Master through his death and resurrectionโprepares the way for another Advocate (Jn 16:7). The Paraclete will come; he will come precisely because of Christโs redemptive departure which makes possible and inaugurates Godโs new merciful presence among people.
The Spirit of Truth, whom the world neither sees nor knows, however, makes itself known by the Apostles, because โit remains with them and will be in themโ (cf. Jn 14:17). And everyone will become witnesses to this on the day of Pentecost.
Pentecost, however, is only the beginning, because the Spirit of Truth comes to remain with the Church for ever (cf. Jn 14:16), endlessly renewing itself in future generations. Therefore the words of the Apostle Peter are addressed not only to the people of his day, but also to all of us and our contemporaries.
โSanctify Christ as Lord in your hearts. Always be ready to give an explanation to anyone who asks you for a reason for your hopeโ (1 Peter 3:15).
In our century, Pier Giorgio Frassati, whom I have the joy of declaring Blessed today in the name of the Church, incarnated these words of St. Peter in his own life. The power of the Spirit of Truth, united to Christ, made him a modern witness to the hope which springs from the Gospel and to the grace of salvation which works in human hearts.
Thus he became a living witness and courageous defender of this hope in the name of Christian youth of the twentieth century.
Faith and charity, the true driving forces of his existence, made him active and diligent in the milieu in which he lived, in his family and school, in the university and society; they transformed him into a joyful, enthusiastic apostle of Christ, a passionate follower of his message and charity.
The secret of his apostolic zeal and holiness is to be sought in the ascetical and spiritual journey which he traveled; in prayer, in persevering adoration, even at night, of the Blessed Sacrament, in his thirst for the Word of God, which he sought in Biblical texts; in the peaceful acceptance of lifeโs difficulties, in family life as well; in chastity lived as a cheerful, uncompromising discipline; in his daily love of silence and lifeโs โordinariness.โ
It is precisely in these factors that we are given to understand the deep well-spring of his spiritual vitality.
Indeed, it is through the Eucharist that Christ communicates his Spirit; it is through listening to the word that the readiness to welcome others grows, and it is also through prayerful abandonment to Godโs will that lifeโs great decisions mature. Only by adoring God who is present in his or her own heart can the baptized Christian respond to the person who โasks you for a reason for your hopeโ (1 Pt 3:15). And the young Frassati knew it, felt it, lived it. In his life, faith was fused with charity: firm in faith and active in charity, because without works, faith is dead (cf. James 2:20).
Certainly, at a superficial glance, Pier Giorgio Frassatiโs lifestyle, that of a modern young man who was full of life, does not present anything out of the ordinary. This, however, is the originality of his virtue, which invites us to reflect upon it and impels us to imitate it.
In him faith and daily events are harmoniously fused, so that adherence to the Gospel is translated into loving care for the poor and the needy in a continual crescendo until the very last days of the sickness which led to his death. His love for beauty and art, his passion for sports and mountains, his attention to societyโs problems did not inhibit his constant relationship with the Absolute.
Entirely immersed in the mystery of God and totally dedicated to the constant service of his neighbor: thus we can sum up his earthly life!
He fulfilled his vocation as a lay Christian in many associative and political involvements in a society in ferment, a society which was indifferent and sometimes even hostile to the Church. In this spirit, Pier Giorgio succeeded in giving new impulse to various Catholic movements, which he enthusiastically joined, but especially to Catholic Action, as well as to FUCI [Federation of Italian Catholic University Students], in which he found the true gymnasium of his Christian training and the right fields of his apostolate. In Catholic Action he joyfully and proudly lived his Christian vocation and strove to love Jesus and to see in him the brothers and sisters whom he met on his way or whom he actively sought in their places of suffering, marginalization and isolation, in order to help them feel the warmth of his human solidarity and the supernatural comfort of faith in Christ.
He died young, at the end of a short life, but one which was extraordinarily filled with spiritual fruits, setting out for his โtrue homeland and singing Godโs praises.โ
Todayโs celebration invites all of us to receive the message which Pier Giorgio Frassati is sending to the men and women of our day, but especially to you young people, who want to make a concrete contribution to the spiritual renewal of our world, which sometimes seems to be falling apart and wasting away because of a lack of ideals.
By his example he proclaims that a life lived in Christโs Spirit, the Spirit of the Beatitudes, is โblessedโ, and that only the person who becomes a โman or woman of the Beatitudesโ can succeed in communicating love and peace to others. He repeats that it is really worth giving up everything to serve the Lord. He testifies that holiness is possible for everyone, and that only the revolution of charity can enkindle the hope of a better future in the hearts of people.
Yes, โtremendous are the deeds of the Lordโฆ. Shout joyfully to God all you on earthโ (Ps 66:1-3).
The verse of the Psalm resound in this Sunday liturgy as a living echo of young Frassatiโs soul. Indeed, we all know how much he loved the world God created!
โCome and see the works of Godโ (Ps 65/66:5): this is also an invitation which we receive from his young soul and which is particularly addressed to young people.
Come and see Godโs โtremendous deeds among menโ (ibid.).
Tremendous deeds among men and women! Human eyesโyoung, sensitive eyesโmust be able to admire Godโs work in the external, visible world. The eyes of the spirit must be able to turn from this external, visible world to the inner, invisible one: thus they can reveal to others the realm of the spirit in which the light of the Word that enlightens every person is reflected (cf. Jn 1:9).
In this light the Spirit of Truth acts.
This is the โinnerโ person. This is how Pier Giorgio appears to us. Indeed, his entire life seems to sum up Christโs words which we find in Johnโs Gospel: โWhoever loves me will keep my word, and my Father will love him, and we will come and make our dwelling with himโ (Jn 14:23).
This is the โinnerโ person loved by the Father, loved because he or she has loved much!
Is love not possibly what is most needed in our twentieth century, at its beginning, as well as at its end? Is it perhaps not true that the only thing that lasts, without ever losing its validity, is the fact that a person โhas lovedโ?
He left this world rather young, but he made a mark upon our entire century, and not only on our century.
He left this world, but in the Easter power of his Baptism, he can say to everyone, especially to the young generations of today and tomorrow:
โYou will see me, because I live and you will liveโ (Jn 14:19).
These words were spoken by Jesus Christ when he took leave of his Apostles before undergoing his Passion. I like to think of them as forming on the lips of our new Blessed himself as a persuasive invitation to live from Christ and in Christ. This invitation is still valid, it is valid today as well, especially for todayโs young people, valid for everyone. It is a valid invitation which Pier Giorgio Frassati has left for us. Amen.
Taken from:
LโOsservatore Romano
Weekly Edition in English
28 May 1990, page 9
LโOsservatore Romano is the newspaper of the Holy See.
The Weekly Edition in English is published for the US by:
The Cathedral Foundation
LโOsservatore Romano English Edition