Pope at Mass: Learn to point the
finger at yourself, to be freed of hypocrisy
Reflecting on the reading during his daily Mass at the Casa
Santa Marta, Pope Francis says that hypocrisy kills, and that learning to
accuse ourselves and to open up to the Lord can cure us of it.
By Francesca Merlo
In his homily at Mass on Tuesday, Pope Francis says that
Jesus does not tolerate hypocrisy. “We must be cured of hypocrisy,” he said,
“and the medicine is knowing how to point the finger at ourselves before God”,
since whoever is unable to do so is “not a good Christian”.
One way to another
In the Gospel reading, Jesus is invited to lunch by a
Pharisee and is highly criticised by the master of the house because he does
not perform ritual ablution before sitting at the table to eat.
Pope Francis explains that this behavior is not tolerated
and is hypocritical because the Pharisees invited Jesus to lunch “to judge him,
not to befriend him”. This is exactly what hypocrisy is, he says, “appearing
one way but acting in another”.
The truth
Jesus often calls hypocritical Pharisees “whitened
sepulchers”. This is not an insult, says the Pope, “it is the truth”. He goes
on to explain that “a hypocritical attitude stems from the great liar, the
devil”. The Pope says the devil is the “great hypocrite”, adding that all other
hypocrites are his “heirs”.
Jesus, continues the Pope, likes to “unmask” hypocrites who
use the devil’s language, as he knows that this is the attitude that will lead
to his death.
Hypocrisy kills
Pope Francis goes on to say that anyone who may think “this
form of hypocrisy does not exist” is mistaken. Though it is not “normal”, he
says, it is “common” to “appear in one way but be another”. An example of this,
says the Pope, is in the fight for power. Jealousy makes you act in a certain
way, with poison within, poison to kill, he says, because hypocrisy “always
kills”.
Open up to the Lord
The cure for this hypocrisy, continues the Pope, is in
learning to “point the finger at ourselves. We must open up before God and
release what we have inside us. This spiritual exercise, he says, is not
common, “but we must try to do it”. We must see the hypocrisy and evil that we
have in our heart, because the devil does sow evil. But whoever is unable to
point the finger at themselves, is “not a good Christian”, he says.
Concluding his homily, Pope Francis recalls Peter’s prayer
in which he tells the Lord “Depart from me, for I am a sinful man, O Lord”,
reminding the faithful of the importance of acknowledging our wrongs.

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