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Pope Francis: Are you ready for your final goodbye?

Pope Francis in St. Peter's Square before the Wednesday general audience on April 22 2015. / Bohumil Petrik/CNA.

In his homily Tuesday Pope Francis focused on many different "goodbyes" that happen during life, and asked whether attendees were ready for the final, most important farewell before going to the Father.

"Am I prepared to entrust to God all that I have? To entrust myself to God? To say that word which is the word of the son entrusting himself to his Father?" the Pope asked May 19.

"I'm thinking of the great farewell, my great farewell, not when I must say 'see you then,' 'see you later,' 'bye for now,' but 'farewell.'"

Pope Francis spoke to those present in the Vatican's Saint Martha guesthouse for his daily Mass. He took his inspiration from the day's readings where Jesus says farewell to the disciples before his Passion and death, and when St. Paul bids farewell before going to Jerusalem, and weeps on the beach with those who came to say goodbye to him.

He noted how both readings use the word "addio," meaning "farewell" in the final sense. Paul, he noted, entrusts everything he has to the Lord while Jesus entrusts his disciples to God.

"We only say 'addio' at a time of final farewells, be they of this life or be they our final farewell," he said, and spoke of the various types of small goodbyes we say in our lives.

There is the goodbye of a mother who hugs her son before he leaves for war, and every day she wakes up with fear that someone will come and to thank her for the generosity of her child in giving his life for his nation, Francis said.

He spoke of the goodbye of the "poor Rohingya from Myanmar," who fled persecution in their homeland and are now stranded at sea.

These people, he noted, have "been in boats for months over there. They arrive in a town where people give them water and food and tell them to go away. That's a farewell."

Rohingya people are an Indo-Aryan ethnic group largely from the Rakhine state of Burma, in west Myanmar. Since clashes began in 2012 between the state's Buddhist community and the long-oppressed Rohingya Muslim minority, more than 100,000 Rohingya's have fled Myanmar by sea, according to the U.N.

In order to escape forced segregation from the rest of the population inside rural ghettos, many of the Rohingya – who are not recognized by the government as a legitimate ethnic group or as citizens of Myanmar – have made the perilous journey at sea in hopes of evading persecution.

Currently a number of Rohingya people – estimated to be in the thousands – remain stranded at sea in boats with dwindling supplies while Southeastern nations such as Thailand, Indonesia and Malaysia refuse to take them in.

In his homily, Pope Francis also spoke of the "great existential farewell is taking place in our times," particularly for the Christian and Yazidi populations in Iraq who have been "chased out of their homes" and believe that they can never come back.

"This is happening now," he said.

He then turned his thoughts to the final farewell each person will make before leaving this world. Francis encouraged attendees to do an examination of conscience, asking themselves: "What will I leave behind?"

Saint Paul himself makes an examination of conscience when he speaks of the things he has done during his life and the uncertainty that faces him in Jerusalem, the Pope observed.

He said that it is good for each person to imagine their final farewell, saying that "We don't know when it will happen, but it will be that moment when expressions like 'see you later,' 'see you soon,' 'see you tomorrow,' 'goodbye for now,' will become 'farewell.'"

The Pope concluded his homily by praying that the Holy Spirit would teach each person how to say "farewell" and how to truly entrust themselves to God at the end of their lives.

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