Pope Francis' homily at Easter
Vigil Mass: Full text
POpe Francis celebrates the Easter Vigil (Vatican Media) |
Pope Francis celebrates the Easter Vigil Mass in St. Peter's
Basilica. The full text of his homily is below:
Homily of Pope Francis at the Easter Vigil
20 April 2019
1. The women bring
spices to the tomb, but they fear that their journey is in vain, since a large
stone bars the entrance to the sepulcher. The journey of those women is also
our own journey; it resembles the journey of salvation that we have made this
evening. At times, it seems that everything comes up against a stone: the
beauty of creation against the tragedy of sin; liberation from slavery against
infidelity to the covenant; the promises of the prophets against the listless
indifference of the people. So too, in the history of the Church and in
our own personal history. It seems that the steps we take never take us
to the goal. We can be tempted to think that dashed hope is the bleak law
of life.
Today
however we see that our journey is not in vain; it does not come up against a
tombstone. A single phrase astounds the woman and changes history: “Why
do you seek the living among the dead?” (Lk 24:5). Why do you
think that everything is hopeless, that no one can take away your own
tombstones? Why do you give into resignation and failure? Easter is
the feast of tombstones taken away, rocks rolled aside. God takes away
even the hardest stones against which our hopes and expectations crash: death,
sin, fear, worldliness. Human history does not end before a tombstone,
because today it encounters the “living stone” (cf. 1 Pet 2:4),
the risen Jesus. We, as Church, are built on him, and, even when we grow
disheartened and tempted to judge everything in the light of our failures, he
comes to make all things new, tooverturn our every disappointment. Each
of us is calledtonight to rediscover in the Risen Christ the one who rolls back
from our heart the heaviest of stones. So let us first ask:What is the
stone that I need to remove, what is its name?
Often what blocks hope is the stone ofdiscouragement.Once
we start thinking that everything is going badly and that things can’t get
worse, we lose heart and come to believe that death is stronger than
life. We become cynical, negative and despondent. Stone upon stone,
we build within ourselves a monument to our own dissatisfaction:the
sepulcher of hope. Life becomes a succession of complaints and we grow
sick in spirit. A kind of tomb psychology takes over:
everything ends there, with no hope of emerging alive. Butat that moment,
we hear once more the insistent question of Easter:Why do you seek the
living among the dead?The Lord is not to be found in resignation. He
is risen; he is not there. Don’t seek him where you will never find him:
he is not the God of the dead but of the living (cf. Mk 22:32).
Do not bury hope!
There
is another stone that often seals the heart shut: the stone of sin.
Sin seduces; it promises things easy and quick, prosperity and success, but
then leaves behind only solitude and death. Sin is looking for life among
the dead, for the meaning of life in things that pass away. Why
do you seek the living among the dead? Why not make up your mind
to abandon that sin which, like a stone before the entrance to your heart,
keeps God’s light from entering in? Why not prefer Jesus, the true light
(cf. Jn1:9), to the glitter of wealth, career, pride and
pleasure? Why not tell the empty things of this world that you no longer
live for them, but for the Lord of life?
2. Let us return to the
women who went to Jesus’ tomb. They halted in amazement before the stone
that was takenaway. Seeing the angels, they stood there, the Gospel tells
us, “frightened, and bowed their faces to the ground” (Lk 24:5).
They did not have the courage to look up. How often do we do the same
thing? We preferto remain huddled within our shortcomings, cowering in our
fears. It is odd, but why do we do this? Not infrequently
because, glum and closed up within ourselves, we feel in control, for it is
easier to remain alone in the darkness of our heart than to open ourselves to
the Lord. Yet only he can raise us up. A poet once wrote: “We never
know how high we are. Till we are called to rise” (E. Dickinson).
The Lord calls us to get up, to rise at his word, to look up and to realize
that we were made for heaven, not for earth, for the heights of life and not
for the depths of death: Why do you seek the living among the dead?
God
asks us to view life as he views it, for in each of us he never ceases to see
an irrepressible kernel of beauty. In sin, he sees sons and daughters to
be restored; in death, brothers and sisters to be reborn; in desolation, hearts
to be revived. Do not fear, then: the Lord loves your life, even when you
are afraid to look at it and take it in hand. In Easter he shows you how
much he loves that life: even to the point of living it completely,
experiencing anguish, abandonment, death and hell, in order to emerge
triumphant to tell you: “You are not alone; put your trust in me!”.
Jesus
is a specialist at turning our deaths into life, our mourning into dancing
(cf. Ps 30:11). With him, we too can experience a Pasch,
that is, a Passover– from self-centredness to communion, from desolation to
consolation, from fear to confidence. Let us not keep our faces bowed to
the ground in fear, but raise our eyes to the risen Jesus. His gaze fills
us with hope, for it tells us that we are loved unfailingly, and that however
much we make a mess of things, his love remains unchanged. This is the
one, non-negotiable certitude we have in life: his love does not change.
Let us ask ourselves:In my life, where am I looking?Am I gazing at
graveyards, or looking for the Living One?
3. Why do you
seek the living among the dead? The women hear the
words of the angels, who go on to say: “Remember what he told you while he was
still in Galilee” (Lk 24:6). Those woman had lost hope,
because they could notrecall the words of Jesus, his call that took place
inGalilee. Having lost the living memory of Jesus, they kept looking at
the tomb. Faith always needs to go back to Galilee, to reawaken its first
love for Jesus and his call: to remember him, to turn back
to him with all ourmind and all our heart. To return to a lively love
of the Lord is essential. Otherwise, ours is a “museum” faith, not an
Easter faith. Jesus is not a personage from the past; he is a person
living today. We do not know him from history books; we encounter him in
life. Today, let us remember how Jesus first called us, how he overcame
our darkness, our resistance, our sins, and how he touched our hearts with his
word.
The
women, remembering Jesus, left the tomb. Easter teaches us that
believersdo not linger at graveyards, for they are called to go forth to meet
the Living One. Let us ask ourselves:In my life, where am I going?
Sometimes we go only in the direction of our problems, of which there are
plenty, and go to the Lord only for help. But then, it is our own needs,
not Jesus, to guide our steps. We keep seeking the Living Oneamong the
dead. Or again, how many times, once we have encountered the Lord, do we
return to the dead, digging up regrets, reproaches, hurts and dissatisfactions,
without letting the Risen One change us?
Dear
brothers and sisters: let us put the Living Oneat the centre of our lives. Let
us ask for the grace not to be carried by the current, the sea of our
problems;the grace not to run aground on the shoals of sin or crash on the
reefs of discouragement and fear. Let us seek him in all things and above
all things. With him, we will rise again.
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