Father Cantalamessa: 'God is in our midst'
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| Father Raniero Cantalamessa delivers a sermon in the Vatican's Redemptoris Mater Chapel.(Vatican Media) |
Father Raniero Cantalamessa, the preacher to the pontifical
household, delivered the first in a series of Advent meditations on December 7,
with Pope Francis among the members of the congregation.
By Linda Bordoni
Each year the Vatican schedules a series of Advent
reflections, offered each Friday morning by the papal preacher, Capuchin
Father Raniero Cantalamessa. Delivered in the Redemptoris Mater chapel of
the Apostolic Palace, the meditations are attended by the Pope, the Roman
Curia, and vicar and auxiliary bishops of Rome.
Reflecting on the second verse of Psalm 42: “My soul thirsts
for God, the living God”, Father Cantalamessa said that caught up by daily
tasks and problems to be faced, “we risk losing sight of”, or putting to the
side our personal relationship with God.
This relationship, he explained, is what allows us to face
situations and problems “without losing peace and patience”.
Let us seek God, not aliens from outer space
Describing the living God as “a constant and reassuring
presence”, Cantalamessa pointed out that men and women of our time are
passionate in their search for the existence of aliens and signs of life on
other planets. He said it is a legitimate interest but lamented the fact that
very few “seek and study signs of the living God who created the universe,
entered into its history and lives in it”.
He is in our midst, he continued, and we neglect Him in
order to dedicate ourselves to the search for “hypothetical beings who, in the
best of cases, could do very little for us, certainly not save us from death”.
Cantalamessa explained that all the promises made by the Son
of God are “infallibly kept,” that and he invited believers never to forget
that God is not an abstraction, but a reality.
The search for the face of the living God
Studding his reflection with examples and quotations,
Cantalamessa focused on the stories of converts: men and women, he said, in
whom the “spark” of the intellect has led to “enlightenment”. They are those,
he continued, “to whom the existence of God has suddenly revealed itself, at a
certain point in their lives, “after having tenaciously ignored or denied it”.
Cantalamessa warned however against the temptation to bridle
and constrain the divine in a definition, even though it may be based on the
Bible.
What we can do, he said, is to go beyond the “faint signs of
recognition that men have traced on the surface” and shatter the limitations
posed by “our ideas of God” allowing His perfume to emanate and spread “filling
the house”.
“The divine is an absolutely different category from any
other, which cannot be defined, but only hinted at; it can only be spoken of
through analogies and contrasts. An image that the Bible uses to speak to us of
God is that of a rock” he said.
God is here and that's enough!
Fr Cantalamessa concluded his sermon recalling one of the
moments of darkness and discouragement in the life of Saint Francis of Assisi
following “some of the deviations he saw around him stemming from the primitive
lifestyle of his friars” and said he was reanimated by the certainty that “God
is here, and that is enough”.
“Let us learn, he urged, to repeat these simple words
also when, in the Church or in our lives, we find ourselves in situations that
are similar to those of Francis: God is here and that’s enough”.

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