Pope at World Mission Day Mass:
Life as mission and as gift
Pope Francis during the Mass for World Mission Sunday |
Pope Francis celebrates Mass on World Mission Sunday. In his
homily, he challenges us to reflect on the meaning of our mission.
By Vatican News
In 1926, Pope Pius XI decided the Church needed a special
day on which to pray for missionaries, and to renew her commitment to the
missions. Today, World Mission Day is celebrated on the penultimate Sunday in
October, all around the globe, as a sign of support and solidarity for missions
and missionaries everywhere.
A noun, a verb and an adjective
In his homily during Mass for World Mission Day, Pope
Francis chose to reflect on three words taken from this Sunday’s readings: “a
noun, a verb and an adjective”. The noun he selected is “the mountain”. It
appears in the first reading from Isaiah, and again in the Gospel, “when Jesus,
after His resurrection, tells His disciples to meet Him on the mount of
Galilee”. It seems, said Pope Francis, “that the mountain is God’s favourite
place for encountering humanity”.
The Pope recalled other mountains in the Scriptures: Mount
Sinai and Mount Carmel, Jesus’ Sermon on the Mount, His transfiguration on
Mount Tabor, His crucifixion on Mount Calvary, and His ascension into heaven
from the Mount of Olives. “The mountain is also the place where Jesus spent
several hours in prayer to unite heaven and earth”, said the Pope, “and to
unite us, His brothers and sisters, with the Father”.
The noun: “mountain”
The mountain tells us we are called “to draw near to God and
to others”, continued Pope Francis, “in silence and in prayer, avoiding the
rumours and gossip that diminish us”. We see things in a different perspective
from the mountain, he continued: “The mountain unites God and our brothers and
sisters in a single embrace of prayer”. It draws us up and away from transient
things, and summons us to rediscover what is essential and lasting: God and our
brothers and sisters”.
“Mission begins on the mountain”, affirmed Pope Francis,
“there we discover what really counts”. Which prompts the question: what really
does count in my life? “To what peaks do I want to ascend?”, he asked.
The verb: “to go up”
Pope Francis continued his reflection identifying the word
that accompanies the noun “mountain”: the verb “to go up”. We were not born to
remain on the ground, said the Pope, “we were born to reach the heights and
there to meet God and our brothers and sisters”. This means we have “to go up”,
he said, “to resist the force of gravity caused by our self-centredness”. Going
up takes effort, he added, “but it is the only way to get a better view of
everything”, as any mountain-climber knows.
The Pope developed the metaphor of mountain climbing, saying
we cannot risk being weighed down, “so in life we must rid ourselves of things
that are useless”. This, he said, “is also the secret of mission: to go,
you have to leave something behind, to proclaim, you must first renounce”.
A credible proclamation, said Pope Francis, is accompanied by an exemplary
life: “a life of service that is capable of rejecting all those material things
that shrink the heart and make people indifferent and inward-looking”. Again,
the Pope asked a question: what efforts are we making “to go up”? Are we able
to reject the “useless baggage of worldliness in order to climb the mountain of
the Lord”?
The adjective: “all”
“The mountain reminds us of what matters”, said Pope
Francis. The verb “to go up tells us how to get there”. But there
is a third, even more important, word: the adjective “all”.
“All” reappears constantly in this Sunday’s readings: Isaiah
speaks of “all peoples”, which is repeated in the Psalm; God desires “all to be
saved”, writes Saint Paul; “Go and make disciples of all nations”, says Jesus
in the Gospel. “The Lord knows we are always using the words ‘my’ and ‘our’”,
explained Pope Francis, but He uses the word “all”: because “no one is excluded
from His heart; because everyone is a precious treasure, and the meaning of
life is found only in giving this treasure to others”. This is our mission,
said the Pope: “to go up the mountain to pray for everyone and to come down
from the mountain to be a gift to all”.
“The Christian is always on the move”, always
“outward-bound”, said the Pope. “Everyone expects things from others, but
the Christian goes to others”, he said. “Those who bear witness to Jesus go out
to all”, he added, “not just to their own acquaintances or their little group”.
Instructions for mission
Pope Francis reminded us of the instructions the Lord gives
us “for going forth to others”. There is only one, and it is very simple, he
said: “make disciples”, not our own, but “His disciples”. A disciple
“follows the Master daily and shares the joy of discipleship with others. Not
by conquering, mandating, proselytizing, but by witnessing”, said Pope Francis.
Our mission is “to give pure and fresh air to those immersed
in the pollution of our world”, said the Pope. Our mission is “to witness,
bless, console, raise up, and radiate the beauty of Jesus”.
“Your life is a precious mission”, concluded Pope Francis,
“it is not a burden to be borne, but a gift to offer. So, have courage! Let us
fearlessly go forth to all!”
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