Pope Francis at Mass: ‘Generosity
enlarges the heart’
Pope Francis delivers the homily at Mass in the Casa Santa Marta. (Vatican Media) |
In his homily at Mass in the Casa Santa Marta on Monday,
Pope Francis says Christians need to be generous towards the poor, and warns
against the “disease of consumerism”.
Pope Francis invited Christians to be generous towards the
poor, saying a charitable attitude opens the heart and helps us to be kinder.
He also warned that the enemy of generosity is consumerism, where we buy more
than we need.
The Holy Father said there are many places in the Gospels in
which Jesus contrasts the rich and the poor. He said we can think of Jesus’
comment to the rich young man: “It will be hard for one who is rich to enter
the kingdom of heaven” (Mt 19:23).
Pope Francis said some would call Christ “a communist”. “The
Lord, when he said these things, knew that behind riches there always lurks the
evil spirit: the spirit of the world,” he said. But, the Pope noted, Jesus also
said: “No one can serve two masters” (Mt 6:24).
Generosity comes from faith in God
In the day’s Gospel (Lk 21:1-4), the wealthy “who were
putting their offerings in the treasury” are contrasted with the poor widow
“who put in two small coins”.
Pope Francis said the rich in this episode “are not evil”
but “are good people who go to the Temple and make their offering.”
“Widows, orphans, migrants, and foreigners were the poorest
people in Israel,” he said. The widow “had offered her whole livelihood”,
because she trusted in the Lord. “She gives everything,” the Pope said,
“because the Lord is greater than all else. The message of this Gospel passage
is an invitation to generosity.”
Try to do good
Turning to statistics about the amount of poverty in today’s
world, Pope Francis said the many children who die of hunger or lack medicine
are an invitation to ask ourselves: “But how can I resolve this situation?”
This question, he said, comes from the desire to do good.
“An appeal to generosity. Generosity belongs to everyday
life; it’s something we should think: ‘How can I be more generous, with the
poor, the needy… How can I help more?’ ‘But Father, you know that we can barely
get through the month.’ ‘But surely you have at least a couple of coins left
over? Think about it: you can be generous with those…’ Consider the little
things. For example, look through your room or your wardrobe. How many pairs of
shoes do I have? One, two, three, four, fifteen, twenty… Each of us knows.
Maybe too many… I knew a monsignor who had 40… But if you have many pairs of
shoes, give away half. How many clothes do I not use or use only once a year?
This is one way to be generous, to give what we have, and to share.”
Disease of consumerism
Pope Francis then told a story about a lady he met who, when
she went grocery shopping, spent 10% on buying food for the poor. He said she
gave her “tithe” to the poor.
“We can do miracles through generosity. Generosity in
little things. Maybe we don’t do it because we just don’t think about it. The
Gospel message makes us reflect: How can I be more generous? Just a little
more, not much… ‘It’s true, Father, you’re right but… I don’t know why, but I’m
always afraid…’ But nowadays there is another disease, which works against
generosity: The disease of consumerism.”
Pope Francis said consumerism consists in always buying
things. He recalled that, when he lived in Buenos Aires, “every weekend there
was a TV show about retail-tourism”. They would hop on an airplane on Friday
evening, fly to a country about 10 hours away, and then spend all Saturday
shopping before returning home on Sunday.
“It’s a terrible disease nowadays, consumerism. I’m not
saying all of us do it, no. But consumerism – excessive spending to buy more
than we need – is a lack of austerity in life. This is the enemy of generosity.
And material generosity – thinking about the poor: ‘I can give this so that
they can eat or have clothes’ – has an ulterior result: It enlarges the heart
and helps us be magnanimous.”
Generosity makes us magnanimous
Pope Francis said we need to have a magnanimous heart, where
all can enter. “Those wealthy people who gave money were good; that elderly
lady was a saint,” the Pope said.
Finally, the Holy Father invited us to be generous and to
start by inspecting our houses to discover “what we don’t need and could be
useful for someone else.” We should ask God, he said, “to free us” from that
dangerous disease of consumerism, which makes us slaves and creates dependence
on spending money. “Let us ask the Lord for the grace of being generous, so
that our hearts may be opened and we may become kinder.”
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