Pope at Angelus: Love is always demanding
Pope Francis says that in order to be saved we must love God
and our neighbour – "and this is not comfortable."
By Christopher Wells
At the Angelus on Sunday, Pope Francis reflected on the
day’s Gospel reading, in which Jesus is asked, “Lord, will only a few people be
saved?” In Jesus’ time, this was a much debated point. “Jesus, however, turned
the question around,” the Pope said. Instead of dwelling on the number of the
saved, whether few or many, the Lord “places the answer on the plane of
responsibility, inviting us to use the present time well.”
"Strive to enter through the narrow gate"
Jesus calls everyone “to enter through the narrow gate,”
showing that it is not a question of numbers, but of “going through the right
passage, which is there for everyone.” Pope Francis explained that “Jesus does
not want to deceive us” with promises of “a beautiful highway, and at the end a
wide door.” Rather, the passage is narrow, in the sense of demanding. In order
to be saved, the Pope said, we must love God and our neighbour – and this is
not “comfortable.” It is demanding, and requires us to “strive,” which the Pope
said means having a “decisive and persevering will to live according to the
Gospel.”
Recalling the parable Jesus tells in the Gospel, of those
left outside when the master of the house closes and locks the door, Pope
Francis said that the Lord will not recognize us on account of our titles, but
only on account of “a humble life, a good life, a life of faith that results in
works.”
Spending our lives for the good of our brothers and sisters
For Christians, the Pope said, that means “that we are
called to restore a true communion with Jesus, praying, going to Church,
approaching the Sacraments and nourishing ourselves on His Word. This maintains
us in faith, nourishes our hope, revives charity.”
In this way, the Pope said, “with the grace of God, we can
and must spend our life for the good of our brothers and sisters, struggling
against every form of evil and of injustice.”
Finally, Pope Francis pointed to the Blessed Virgin Mary,
who has already “passed through the narrow gate that is Jesus.” For this
reason, he said, “Let us invoke her as the Gate of Heaven… a gate that follows
exactly the form of Jesus: the gate of the heart of God, a heart that is demanding,
but open to all.”
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