Pope at General Audience:
‘Commandments open heart to God’
Pope Francis speaks at the Wednesday General Audience.- ANSA |
In his catechesis at the General Audience, Pope Francis says
the Ten Commandments help us open our hearts to receive the mercy of God and to
show compassion to others.
By Devin Watkins
Pope Francis turned his attention to the Ninth and Tenth
Commandments at the Wednesday General Audience.
The Holy Father said the injunctions – “You shall not covet
your neighbour’s wife… You shall not covet your neighbour’s goods” – are more
than the last Commandments. “They are the fulfillment of the journey through
the Decalogue, and arrive at the heart of everything which is delivered to us
therein.”
Noting that they are already contained in the Commandments
on adultery and stealing, Pope Francis said the Ninth and Tenth indicate “the
confines of life, the limit over which a person destroys themself and their
neighbor, spoiling their relationship with God.”
Evil desires
The Pope said the last two Commandments are united by the
common root of “evil desires” that lurk in the human heart.
Jesus, he said, teaches that all sin is ultimately born of
covetousness (cf. Mk 7:23). He said the Decalogue similarly points out that the
heart must be free. “God’s precepts can be reduced to the beautiful façade of a
life that remains a slave’s existence and not one of sons and daughters.”
Pope Francis said the Ten Commandments teach us how to live
rightly with one another and with God, and show us our need for a change of
heart. “We must let our mask be taken off by these commandments about desire,
because they show us our poverty so as to bring us to a life of holy humility.”
He said we need Holy Spirit to help us.
“It is futile to think of purifying our heart through a
titanic effort of the will. We must open ourselves to a relationship with God,
in freedom and in truth.”
Law opens heart to God
The purpose of the Biblical Law, the Pope said, is “to bring
one to their truth, that is, to their poverty, which becomes an authentic and
personal openness to the mercy of God that transforms and renews us.”
Pope Francis said the Commandments enable us to live
righteously in the sight of the Father, redeemed by the Son, and taught by the
Holy Spirit.
“The last words of the Decalogue teach us to recognize
ourselves as beggars, and help us to face the disorder of our hearts, so as to
stop living selfishly and to become poor in spirit.”
Finally, Pope Francis said those who live the Commandments
with humble, open hearts will be blessed.
“It is they who know how to show compassion and mercy to
others, because they have felt it within themselves.”
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