Peru Journey Mass at Las Palmas
airbase Lima Full Text
Crowds at Las Palmas Airbase in Lima.- AFP |
Pope Francis' homily at the Las Palmas airbase in Lima
“Arise, go to Nineveh, that great city, and proclaim to it
the message that I tell you” (Jon 3:2). With these words the
Lord spoke to Jonah and directed him to set out towards that great city, which
was about to be destroyed for its many evils. In the Gospel, we also see
Jesus setting out towards Galilee to preach the Good News (cf. Mk 1:14).
Both readings reveal a God who turns his gaze towards cities past and present.
The Lord sets out on a journey: to Nineveh, to Galilee, to Lima, to Trujillo
and Puerto Maldonado… the Lord comes here. He sets out to enter into our
individual, concrete histories. We celebrated this not long ago: he is
Emmanuel, the God who wants to be with us always. Yes, here
in Lima, or wherever you are living, in the routine of your daily life and
work, in the education to hope that you impart to your children, amid your
aspirations and anxieties; within the privacy of the home and the deafening
noise of our streets. It is there, along the dusty paths of history, that
the Lord comes to meet each of you.
Sometimes
what happened to Jonah can happen to us. Our cities, with their daily
situations of pain and injustice, can leave us tempted to flee, to hide, to run
away. Jonah, and we, have plenty of excuses to do so. Looking at
the city, we can start by saying that there are “citizens who find adequate
means to develop their personal and family life – and that pleases us – yet the
problem is the many “non-citizens”, “the half-citizens” or “urban
remnants”[1]. They are found along our roadsides, living on the fringes
of our cities, and lacking the conditions needed for a dignified
existence. It is painful to realize that among these “urban remnants” all
too often we see the faces of children and adolescents. We look at the
face of the future.
Seeing
these things in our cities and our neighbourhoods – which should be places of
encounter, solidarity and joy – we end up with what we might call the Jonah
syndrome: we lose heart and want to flee (cf. Jon 1:3).
We become indifferent, and as a result, anonymous and deaf to others, cold and
hard of heart. When this happens, we wound the soul of our people. As
Benedict XVI pointed out, “the true measure of humanity is essentially
determined in relationship to suffering and to the sufferer… A society
unable to accept its suffering members and incapable of helping to share their
suffering and to bear it inwardly through ‘com-passion’ is a cruel and inhuman
society”.[2]
After they
arrested John, Jesus set out to Galilee to proclaim the Gospel of God.
Unlike Jonah, Jesus reacted to the distressing and unjust news of John’s arrest
by entering the city; he entered Galilee and from its small towns he began to
sow the seeds of a great hope: that the Kingdom of God is at hand, that God is
among us. The Gospel itself shows us the joy and the rippling effect that
this brought about: it started with Simon and Andrew, then James and John
(cf. Mk 1:14-20). It then passed through Saint Rose de
Lima, Saint Turibius, Saint Martin de Porres, Saint Juan Macías, Saint
Francisco Solano, down to us, proclaimed by that cloud of witnesses that have
believed in him. It has come to us in order to act once more as a timely
antidote to the globalization of indifference. In the face of that Love,
one cannot remain indifferent.
Jesus
invites his disciples to experience in the present a taste of eternity: the
love of God and neighbour. He does this the only way he can, God’s way,
by awakening tenderness and love of mercy, by awakening compassion and opening
their eyes to see reality as God does. He invites them to generate new
bonds, new covenants rich in eternal life.
Jesus walks
through the city with his disciples and begins to see, to hear, to
notice those who have given up in the face of indifference, laid low by the
grave sin of corruption. He begins to bring to light many situations that
had killed the hope of his people and to awaken a new hope. He calls his
disciples and invites them to set out with him. He calls them to walk
through to the city, but at a different pace; he teaches them to notice what
they had previously overlooked, and he points out new and pressing needs.
Repent, he tells them. The Kingdom of Heaven means finding in Jesus
a God who gets involved with the lives of his people. He gets involved
and involves others not to be afraid to make of our history a history of
salvation (cf. Mk 1:15, 21).
Jesus
continues to walk on our streets. He knocks today, as he did yesterday,
on our doors and hearts, in order to rekindle the flame of hope and the
aspiration that breakdown can be overcome by fraternity, injustice defeated by
solidarity, violence silenced by the weapons of peace. Jesus continues to
call us; he wants to anoint us with his Spirit so that we too can go out to
anoint others with the oil capable of healing wounded hopes and renewing our
way of seeing things.
Jesus
continues to walk and to awaken hope, a hope that frees us from
empty associations and impersonal analyses. He encourages us to enter
like leaven into where we are, where we live, into every corner of our daily
life. The kingdom of heaven is among you, he tells us. It is there
wherever we strive to show a little tenderness and compassion, wherever we are
unafraid to create spaces for the blind to see, the paralyzed to walk, lepers
to be cleansed and the deaf to hear (cf. Lk 7:22), so that all
those we had given up for lost can enjoy the resurrection. God will never
tire of setting out to meet his children. How will we enkindle hope if
prophets are lacking? How will we face the future if unity is
lacking? How will Jesus reach all those corners if daring and courageous
witnesses are lacking?
Today the
Lord calls each of you to walk with him in the city, in your city. He
invites you to become his missionary disciple, so that you can become part of
that great whisper that wants to keep echoing in the different corners of our lives:
Rejoice, the Lord is with you!
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