Pope:
Church is called to serve, not to be served
(Vatican
Radio) In his homily during Mass on Friday morning, Pope Francis said the
Church is called to serve, not to be concerned solely with business affairs;
and that Bishops and priests must overcome the temptation to live a “double
life.” He warned, too, about “climbers,” those who are attached to money.
Pope
Francis developed his homily based on two images of servants presented in the
readings from the day’s liturgy. First, he presented the figure of Saint Paul
“who gave himself completely to service, always” such that he ended up in Rome
betrayed by those who were close to him, and “condemned.” Where did this
greatness of the Apostles come from? the Pope asked. It came from Jesus Christ,
and Saint Paul “boasts of serving Him, of being chosen, of having the strength
of the Holy Spirit.”
The
Christian is called to serve, not to be served
He
was the servant who served, the Pope said, “he ministered, laying the
foundation, that is, announcing Jesus Christ” and “he never stopped to take
advantage of his position, of his authority, of being served. He was a
minister, a servant in order to serve, not to be served.”
“I
tell you how much joy I have,” Pope Francis said, “what moves me, when in this
Mass some priests come up and greet me: ‘O Father, I have come here to find my
own people, because for forty years I have been a missionary in the Amazon.’ Or
a sister who says, ‘No, I have worked for thirty years in a hospital in
Africa.’ Or when I find a little sister who for thirty, forty years is working
in the department of the hospital with the disabled, always smiling. This is
called ‘serving,’ this is the joy of the Church: going out to others, always;
going out to others and giving life. This is what Paul did: serving.”
“No
to climbers, attached to money, in the Church”
In
the Gospel, the Pope said, the Lord shows us the image of another servant, “who
instead of serving others is served by them.” He continued, “We have read what
this servant did, how he acted with shrewdness, in order to remain in his
position.”
“In
the Church, too, there are these kinds of people, who instead of serving, of
thinking of others, of laying the foundations, are served by the Church:
‘climbers,’ those who are attached to money. And how many priests and Bishops
like this have we seen? It’s sad to speak of it, isn’t it? The radical
character of the Gospel, of the call of Jesus Christ: to serve, to be at the
service [of others], of not stopping for oneself, going out to others always,
being forgetful of oneself. And the comfort of the state: I have reached a
certain state and I live comfortably, without integrity, like those Pharisees
Jesus spoke about, who go out into the public square to be seen by others.”
A
Church that does not serves becomes a business-like Church
The
Pope described “two images of Christians, two images of priests, two images of
sisters.” And Jesus, he said, “makes us see this model in Paul, this Church
that never stops” that “always goes forward and shows us the path.”
“Instead,
when the Church is tepid, closed in on itself, businesslike, it cannot be said
to be a Church that serves, that is at the service [of others], but rather [it
must be said] that it is using others. May the Lord give us the grace He gave
to Paul, that point of pride of always going forward, always, renouncing, time
and again, its own comfort; and may He save us from temptations, from those
temptations which at their base are temptations to a double life: I see myself
as a minister, that is, as one who serves, but at the base I am served by others.”
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