Pope says new Saints show us how to say 'yes' to God's
love
Vatican Radio) Inviting all faithful to practice Christian
love every day, Pope Francis on Sunday canonized 35
new saints, nearly all of them martyrs, holding them up as models who
“point the way”.
To the over 35,000 pilgrims gathered in St. Peter’s Square
for the Canonization Mass, the Pope said “They did not say a fleeting ‘yes’ to
love, they said ‘yes’ (to God's love) with their lives and to the very
end”.
Those canonized included thirty martyrs, both priests and
lay persons, who suffered anti-Catholic persecution in 1645 at the hands of
Dutch Calvinists in Brazil, while three indigenous children in 16th century
Mexico were martyred for refusing to renounce their Catholic faith and return
to their ancient traditions. The other two new saints are a 20th-century priest
from Spain and an Italian priest who died in 1739.
The Lord's desire for a true communion of life with us
The Pope’s homily inspired
by the Parable of the Wedding Banquet speaks of the Lord’s desire for a true
communion of life with us, a relationship based on dialogue, trust and
forgiveness.
“Such, he said, is the Christian life: a love story
with God.
We are all invited, Francis said, and no one has a better
seat than anyone else.
“At least once a day, he continued, we should tell the Lord
that we love him” because once love is lost, the Christian life becomes
empty. It becomes a body without a soul, an impossible ethic, a
collection of rules and laws to obey for no good reason.
Every day is a wonderful opportunity to say 'yes'
“We are the beloved, the guests at the wedding, and our life
is a gift, because every day is a wonderful opportunity to respond to God’s
invitation” he said.
But he added, the Gospel warns us that the invitation can be
refused. Many of the invited guests said no, because they were caught up
in their own affairs.
"They were more interested in having something, he
explained, rather than in risking something, as love demands: this is how
love grows cold, not out of malice but out of a preference for what is our own:
our security, our self-affirmation, our comfort…"
The temptation of settling into the easy chair of profits
And the Pope warned Christians against the temptation of
“settling into the easy chair of profits, pleasures, or a hobby that brings us
some happiness. And we end up aging badly and quickly, because we grow
old inside. When our hearts do not expand, they become closed in on
themselves”.
God never closes the door
He said the Gospel asks us then where we stand: “with
ourselves or with God? Because God is the opposite of selfishness, of
self-absorption. The Gospel tells us that, even before constant rejection
and indifference on the part of those whom he invites, God does not cancel the
wedding feast. He does not give up, but continues to invite. When he hears
a “no”, he does not close the door, but broadens the invitation. In the
face of wrongs, he responds with an even greater love”.
Love is the only way to defeat evil
This is what love does, the Pope said, because this is the
only way that evil is defeated.
And inviting us all to live in true love and “practice” love
every day, Francis said “the Saints who were canonized today, and especially
the many martyrs, point the way: They did not say a fleeting ‘yes’ to love;
they said they ‘yes’ with their lives and to the very end”.
At Baptism, he concluded, we received a white robe, the
wedding garment for God: Let us ask him, through the intercession of the
saints, our brothers and sisters, for the grace to decide daily to put on this
garment and to keep it spotless” by approaching the Lord fearlessly in order to
receive his forgiveness”.
“This is the one step that counts, for entering into the
wedding hall to celebrate with him the feast of love” he said.
Who the new saints are
The newly-declared saints include 30 so-called “Martyrs of
Natal,” who were killed in 1645 in a wave of anti-Catholic persecution by Dutch
Calvinists in Natal, Brazil.
Also from Latin America was a group of three indigenous
martyrs from Mexico - Cristobal, Antonio and Juan - known as the “Child Martyrs
of Tlaxcala.” Aged between 12 and 13, they were among the first indigenous
Catholics of Mexico, murdered between 1527 and 1529 for refusing to renounce
their faith and return to their ancient traditions.
And then there are Father Faustino Miguez, a Spanish priest
who lived in the 19th and 20th centuries, and Father Angelo d‘Acri, an Italian
itinerant preacher who died in 1739 after serving in some of the most remote
areas of southern Italy.
Announcement of Special Assembly of Synod of Bishops for
the Amazon
After the Mass, Pope Francis recited the Angelus prayer and
announced a Special
Assembly of the Synod of Bishops for the Pan-Amazon regionm to take
place in October 2019.
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