Pope:
Jesuits 'brave and expert rowers' in barque of Peter
(Vatican Radio) Pope Francis celebrated a special liturgy of
thanksgiving in the Church of the Gesù in Rome on Saturday, to mark the
200th anniversary of the restoration of the Society of Jesus. Please find,
below, Vatican Radio's English translation of the prepared text of the Holy
Father's homily for the occasion.
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Dear brothers
and friends in the Lord,
The Society
under the name of Jesus has lived difficult times of persecution. During the
leadership of Fr Lorenzo Ricci, “enemies of the Church succeeded in obtaining
the suppression of the Society” (John Paul II, Message to Fr Kolvenbach, July
31, 1990) by my predecessor Clement XIV. Today, remembering its restoration, we
are called to recover our memory, calling to mind the benefits received and the
particular gifts (cf. Spiritual Exercises, 234). Today, I want to do that here
with you.
In times of
trial and tribulation, dust clouds of doubt and suffering are always raised and
it is not easy to move forward, to continue the journey. Many temptations come,
especially in difficult times and in crises: to stop to discuss ideas, to allow
oneself to be carried away by the desolation, to focus on the fact of being
persecuted, and not to see the other. Reading the letters of Fr Ricci, one
thing struck me: his ability to avoid being harnessed by these temptations and
to propose to the Jesuits, in a time of trouble, a vision of the things that
rooted them even more in the spirituality of the Society.
Father General
Ricci, who wrote to the Jesuits at the time, watching the clouds thickening on
the horizon, strengthened them in their membership in the body of the Society
and its mission. Here it is: in a time of confusion and turmoil he discerned.
He did not waste time discussing ideas and complaining, but he took on the
charge of the vocation of the Society.
And this
attitude led the Jesuits to experience the death and resurrection of the Lord.
Faced with the loss of everything, even of their public identity, they did not
resist the will of God, they did not resist the conflict, trying to save
themselves. The Society – and this is beautiful – lived the conflict to the end,
without minimizing it. It lived humiliation along with the humiliated
Christ; it obeyed. You never save yourself from conflict with cunning and with
strategies of resistance. In the confusion and humiliation, the Society
preferred to live the discernment of God's will, without seeking a way out of
the conflict in a seemingly quiet manner.
It is never
apparent tranquility that satisfies our hearts, but true peace that is a gift
from God. One should never seek the easy "compromise" nor practice
facile “irenicism.” Only discernment saves us from real uprooting, from true
"suppression" of the heart, which is selfishness, worldliness, the
loss of our horizon. Our hope, is Jesus; it is only Jesus. Thus Fr Ricci and
the Society during the suppression privileged history rather than a gray
“little tale”, knowing that love judges history and that hope - even in
darkness - is greater than our expectations.
Discernment
must be done with right intention, with a simple eye. For this reason, Fr Ricci
comes, precisely in this time of confusion and bewilderment, to speak about the
sins of the Jesuits. He does not defend himself, feeling like a victim of
history, but he recognizes himself as a sinner. Looking at oneself and
recognizing oneself as a sinner avoids being in a position of considering
oneself a victim before an executioner. Recognizing oneself as a sinner, really
recognizing oneself as a sinner, means putting oneself in the correct attitude
to receive consolation.
We can review
briefly this process of discernment and service that this Father General
indicated to the Society. When in 1759, the decrees of Pombal destroyed the
Portuguese provinces of the Society, Fr Ricci lived the conflict, not
complaining and letting himself fall into desolation, but inviting prayers to
ask for the good spirit, the true supernatural spirit of vocation, the perfect
docility to God's grace. When in 1761, the storm advanced in France, the Father
General asked that all trust be placed in God. He wanted that they take
advantage of the hardships toward a greater inner purification; they lead us to
God and can serve for his greater glory. Then, he recommended prayer, holiness
of life, humility and the spirit of obedience. In 1760, after the expulsion of
the Spanish Jesuits, he continued to call for prayer. And finally, on February
21, 1773, just six months before the signing of the Brief Dominus ac Redemptor, with
the utter lack of human help, he sees the hand of God's mercy, which invites
those, who submit to the test, not to confide in anyone but God. Trust must
grow precisely when circumstances throw us to the ground. Of importance for Fr
Ricci is that the Society, until the last, is true to the spirit of its
vocation, which is for the greater glory of God and the salvation of souls.
The Society,
even faced with its own demise, remained true to the purpose for which it was
founded. To this, Ricci concludes with an exhortation to keep alive the spirit
of charity, unity, obedience, patience, evangelical simplicity, true friendship
with God. Everything else is worldliness. The flame of the greater glory of God
even today flows through us, burning every complacency and enveloping us in a
flame, which we have within, which focuses us and expands us, makes us grow and
makes us shrink.
In this way,
the Society experienced the supreme test of the sacrifice unjustly asked of it,
taking up the prayer of Tobit, who with a soul struck by grief, sighs, cries
and then prays: “You are righteous, O Lord, and all your deeds are just;
all your ways are mercy and truth; you judge the world. And now, O Lord,
remember me and look favorably upon me. Do not punish me for my sins and for my
unwitting offenses and those that my ancestors committed before you. They
sinned against you, and disobeyed your commandments. So you gave us over
to plunder, exile, and death, to become the talk, the byword, and an object of
reproach among all the nations among whom you have dispersed us.” It concludes
with the most important request: “Do not, O Lord, turn your face away from me.
(Tb 3,1-4.6d).
And the Lord
answered by sending Raphael to remove the white spots from Tobit’s eyes, so
that he could once again see the light of God. God is merciful, God crowns with
mercy. God loves us and saves us. Sometimes the path that leads to life is
narrow and cramped, but the tribulation, if lived in the light of mercy,
purifies us like fire, it gives us much consolation and inflames our hearts,
endearing prayer to it. Our brother Jesuits in the suppression were fervent in
the spirit and in the service of the Lord, rejoicing in hope, constant in
tribulation, perseverant in prayer (cf. Rom 12:13). And that gave honour to the
Society, but certainly not the praise of its merits. It will always be this
way.
Let us
remember our history: the Society “was given the grace not only to believe in
the Lord, but also to suffer for His sake” (Philippians 1:29). We do well to
remember this.
The ship of
the Society has been tossed around by the waves and there is nothing surprising
in this. Even the boat of Peter can be tossed about today. The night and the
powers of darkness are always near. It is tiring to row. The Jesuits must be
“brave and expert rowers”(Pius VII, Sollecitudo
omnium ecclesiarum): row then! Row, be strong, even with the
headwind! We row in the service of the Church. We row together! But while we
row - we all row, even the Pope rows in the boat of Peter - we must pray a lot,
"Lord, save us! Lord save your people." The Lord, even if we are men
of little faith, will save us. Let us hope in the Lord! Let us hope always in
the Lord!
The Society,
restored by my predecessor Pius VII, was made up of men, who were brave
and humble in their witness of hope, love and apostolic creativity, that of the
Spirit. Pius VII wrote of wanting to restore the Society to "support
himself in an adequate way for the spiritual needs of the Christian world,
without the difference of peoples and nations" (ibid). For this, he gave
permission to the Jesuits, which still existed here and there, thanks to a
Lutheran monarch and an Orthodox monarch, "to remain united in one
body." That the Society may remain united in one body!
And the
Society was immediately missionary and made itself available to the Apostolic
See, committing generously "under the banner of the cross for the Lord and
His Vicar on earth" (Formula of the Institute, 1). The Society resumed its
apostolic activity of preaching and teaching, spiritual ministries, scientific
research and social action, the missions and care for the poor, the suffering
and the marginalized.
Today, the
Society also deals with the tragic problem of refugees and displaced persons
with intelligence and industriousness; and it strives with discernment to
integrate service to faith and the promotion of justice in conformity with the
Gospel. I confirm today what Paul VI told us at our 32nd General Congregation
and which I heard with my own ears: "Wherever in the Church, even in the
most difficult and extreme situations, in the crossroads of ideologies, in the
social trenches, where there has been and there is confrontation between the
deepest desires of man and the perennial message of the Gospel, there you have
been and there are Jesuits. "
In 1814, at
the time of the restoration, the Jesuits had a small flock, a "small
Society," but which knew how to invest, after the test of the cross, in
the great mission of bringing the light of the Gospel to the ends of the earth.
This is how we must feel today therefore: outbound, in mission. The Jesuit
identity is that of a man who loves God and loves and serves his brothers,
showing by example not only that in which he believes, but also that in which
he hopes, and who is the One in whom he has put his trust (cf. 2 Tim 1:12). The
Jesuit wants to be a companion of Jesus, one who has the same feelings of
Jesus.
The bull of
Pius VII that restored the Society was signed on August 7, 1814, at the
Basilica of Saint Mary Major, where our holy father Ignatius celebrated his
first Mass on Christmas Eve of 1538. Mary, Our Lady, Mother of the Society,
will be touched by our efforts to be at the service of her Son. May she watch
over us and protects us always.
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