Pope Palm Sunday Mass: Sing out
loud "Hosanna"
Pope Francis celebrates Mass on Palm Sunday.- AFP |
Reflecting on the Liturgy of Palm Sunday, Pope Francis
contrasted the joy of the people who celebrated Jesus’ entry into Jerusalem
with the cries of those who want to silence him.
By Sr Bernadette Mary Reis, fsp
Pope Francis invites us all to see ourselves in the Palm
Sunday liturgy. He says that the liturgy “expresses the contradictory feelings
that we too, … experience”: love and hatred, self-sacrifice and “washing our
hands”, loyalty and betrayal.
Sounds of joy
The Pope says that we can imagine that among those in the
crowd who sang and shouted as Jesus entered Jerusalem would have been such
people as the prodigal son, the healed leper, “those who had followed Jesus
because they felt his compassion for their pain and misery.” Their “outcry is
the song and the spontaneous joy of all those left behind and overlooked, who,
having been touched by Jesus, can now shout: ‘Blessed is he who comes in the
name of the Lord.’ ” These people cannot but help to praise the person
responsible for restoring their dignity and their hope, making it possible for
them to trust again, the Pope says.
Joy suppressed
But there is another group present as well. The joy of those
who have been touched by God’s mercy is unbearable and intolerable for others
Pope Francis points out. “How hard it is for the comfortable and the
self-righteous to understand the joy and the celebration of God’s mercy!”
This prompts another kind of shouting, Pope Francis
observes. It comes from those wishing to “twist reality,” “invent stories,”
“gain power,” “silence dissonant voices,” “spin facts,” defend themselves, and
discredit the defenseless. In the end, “they disfigure the face of Jesus and
turn him into a ‘criminal,’ ” Pope Francis says.
“And so the celebration of the people ends up being stifled.
Hope is demolished, dreams are killed, joy is suppressed; the heart is shielded
and charity grows cold.”
The joy of the young
The conclusion of Pope Francis’ homily was directed to the
young. He pleaded with them not to succumb to the attempts of their elders to
silence them.
“Dear young people, the joy that Jesus awakens in you is a
source of anger and irritation to some, since a joyful young person is hard to
manipulate,” he says.
Pope Francis recalls the words of Jesus to the Pharisees who
wanted to silence his disciples. To “Teacher, rebuke your disciples,” Jesus
replied, “I tell you, if these were silent, the very stones would cry out” (Lk
19:39-40).
Pope Francis begs young people to choose to sing Hosanna and
not to keep quiet: “Please, make that choice, before the stones themselves cry
out.”
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