Pope
Francis: The astonishment at the encounter with Jesus
(Vatican
Radio) The capacity to recognize ourselves as sinners opens us to the
astonishment at the encounter with Jesus: that was the message of Pope Francis
Thursday morning during Mass for the feast of Saint Gregory the Great, Pope and
Doctor of the Church.
Pope
Francis’ homily focused on the day’s Gospel reading which tells the story of
the miraculous catch of fish. After working throughout the night without
catching anything, Peter, trusting in Jesus, cast his nets into the sea. The
Holy Father used this story to speak about faith as an encounter with the Lord.
First of all, he said, it pleases me to consider the fact that Jesus spent the
greater part of His time in the street, with the people; then, later in
evening, He went away by Himself to pray – but He encountered the people, He
sought the people.” For our part, we have two ways of encountering the Lord.
The first is that of Peter, of the Apostles, of the people:
“The
Gospel uses the same word for these people, for the people, for the Apostles,
for Peter: they were ‘astonished.’ ‘Astonishment, in fact, seized him, and all
those with him.’ When this feeling of astonishment comes… And the people heard
Jesus and what He said and felt this astonishment: ‘But this one speaks with
authority. A man has never spoken with this [authority].’ Another group that
encounters Jesus did not allow this astonishment to enter into their hearts.
The doctors of the law heard Jesus, they made their calculations: “Well, he is
intelligent, he is a man who says true things, but we do not agree with these
things, no!’ They made their calculations, they kept their distance.”
The
demons themselves, the Pope said, confessed – that is, they proclaimed – that
Jesus was the “Son of God,” but like the doctors of the law and the wicked
Pharisees, “they did not have the capacity for astonishment, they were closed
up in their sufficiency, in their pride.” Peter recognized that Jesus is the
Messiah, but confesses that he himself is a sinner:
“The
demons arrive to tell the truth about Him, but say nothing about themselves.
They cannot: their pride is so great it prevents them from saying it. The
doctors of the law say: ‘But this is an intelligent man, a capable rabbi, he
does miracles, eh!’ But they do not say: ‘We are proud, we are not sufficient,
we are sinners. The inability to recognize ourselves as sinners keeps us far
away from the true confession of Jesus Christ. And this is the difference.”
It
is the difference between the humility of the publican who recognizes that he
is a sinner and the pride of the Pharisee who speaks well of himself:
This
ability to say that we are sinners opens us to the astonishment of the
encounter with Jesus Christ, the true encounter. Even in our parishes, in our
societies, even among consecrated persons: How many people are capable of
saying that Jesus is the Lord? So many! But how difficult it is to say
sincerely: ‘I am a sinner.’ It’s easier to say it of others, eh? When one is
gossiping, eh? ‘This, that, the other thing…’ We’re all doctors in that, aren’t
we? To come to a true encounter with Christ the two-fold confession is
necessary: ‘You are the Son of God, and I am a sinner’ – but not theoretically:
‘[I am a sinner] because of this, because of this, because of this, and because
of this.’”
Peter,
the Pope emphasized, then forgot the astonishment at the encounter and denied
the Lord. But since “he was humble, he was permitted to encounter the Lord, and
when their eyes met, he wept, he returned to the confession, ‘I am a sinner.’”
Pope Francis concluded, “May the Lord grant us the grace to encounter Him, but
also to allow ourselves to encounter Him. May He grant us the grace, which is
so beautiful, of this astonishment at the encounter. And may He give us the
grace of having in our life the two-fold confession: ‘You are the Son of living
God; I believe it. And I am a sinner; I believe it.”
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