Pope
Francis: true love works, communicates
(Vatican
Radio) Pope Francis celebrated Mass in the chapel of the Santa Marta residence
in the Vatican on Thursday. In remarks following the readings of the day, the
Holy Father focused on the concrete and communicative character of authentic
love.
True
love is real and constant
In
the Gospel reading, from the Gospel according to St. John (15:9-11), Our Lord
asks us to abide in His love. “There are two criteria,” said Pope Francis,
“which will help us to distinguish the true love, from that which is not true.”
The first criterion is that love is, “more in deeds than in words,” it is not,
“a soap opera tale,” or “a fantasy,” stories that “make our hearts beat a
little faster, but nothing more.” True love is, “in hard facts.” Jesus
warned his disciples “‘Not everyone who says to me, ‘Lord,
Lord,’ will enter the kingdom of heaven, but only the one who does the
will of my Father in heaven.’”:
“In
other words, true love is real, it is in the works it does, it is a constant
love. It is not a mere enthusiasm. Also, many times, love is a painful thing:
the love we think of Jesus carrying the Cross. But the works of love are what
Jesus teaches us in the passage from the 25th chapter of St. Matthew. He, who
loves, does these things – the things for which we shall be judged: I was
hungry, and you gave me to eat, and so on. Concreteness: even the Beatitudes,
which are Jesus ‘pastoral plan’, are concrete.”
Pope
Francis went on to note that one of the first heresies in Christianity was that
of Gnosticism, which spoke of a “distant God” to whom there was no substance.
The love of God the Father, on the other hand, “was concrete: He sent His
incarnate Son to save us.”
Monks
and nuns communicate ... and so
The
second criterion of love, he continued, is that it communicates, it does not
remain isolated. Love gives itself and receives, it is the communication
between the Father and the Son, a communication that ‘is’ the Holy Spirit”:
“There
is no love without communicating, there is no isolate love. Some of you may
wonder, though: ‘But Father, monks and nuns are isolated.’ But they communicate
... and they do a lot of it: with the Lord, even with those who go to find a
word of God ... True love cannot isolate itself. If it is isolated, it is not
love. To abide closed in on oneself is a spiritualist form of selfishness, of
seeking its own profit ... it is selfishness.’
Simple,
but not easy because egoism attracts us
So,
says Pope Francis, “To abide in the love of Jesus means doing things,” it is,
“an ability to communicate, to dialogue, both with the Lord and with our
brothers and sisters.”:
“It
is as simple as that: but it is not easy. Because selfishness, self-interest,
attracts us, and draws us to do nothing, draws us to not communicate. What does
the Lord say of those who will abide in his love? ‘I have told you this so that
my joy may be in you and that your joy may be complete.’ The Lord who abides in
the love of the Father is joyful, ‘and if you abide in my love, your joy shall
be full’ – a joy that often comes along with the Cross. But that joy – Jesus
himself told us – no one may take from you.”
The
Pope concluded his homily with this prayer: “That the Lord might give us the
grace of joy, that joy, which the world cannot give.”
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