Pope:
wealth that is not shared generates corruption
(Vatican
Radio) If you are wealthy, you should make sure your riches serve the
"common good." An abundance of things lived selfishly is
"sad", steals "hope," and is the origin "of all kinds
of corruption," large or small. That was Pope Francis’ reflection in his
Homily at this morning’s Mass celebrated in the chapel of the Casa Santa Marta.
In
his Homily, Pope Francis reflects on one of the most famous passages of the
Gospel: Jesus meets the rich young man who enthusiastically asks to follow Him
and assures Him he will always live by the commandments. But when Jesus
tells him one last thing is needed - to sell his things, give everything to the
poor and then follow Him - the young man’s attitude and willingness swiftly
change. Suddenly, "the joy and hope" in the rich young man vanish,
because he does not want to give up his riches.
"The
attachment to riches is the beginning of all kinds of corruption, everywhere:
personal corruption, corruption in business, even small commercial bribery, the
kind that shortchanges you at the counter, political corruption, corruption in
education ... Why? Because those who live attached to their own power, their
own wealth, they believe they’re in heaven. They are closed; they have no
horizon, no hope. Eventually they will have to leave everything."
Rich
and sterile
"There
is a mystery in the possession of wealth," says Francis. "Riches have
the ability to seduce, to take us to a seduction and make us believe that we
are in a paradise on earth." Instead, says the Pope, that earthly paradise
is a place without "horizon", similar to that neighborhood the
pontiff remembers seeing in the seventies, inhabited by wealthy people
who had built walls and fences to defend their property from thieves:
"And
living without horizons is a sterile life; living without hope is a sad life.
The attachment to wealth makes us sad and makes us sterile. I say 'attachment,'
I am not saying 'good administration of one’s riches', because riches are for
the common good, for everyone. And if the Lord gives them to one person it is
so that they are used for the good of all, not for oneself, not so they are
closed in one’s heart, which then becomes corrupt and sad."
Open
your hand and your horizons
Wealth
without generosity, insists Pope Francis, "makes us believe that we are
powerful like God. And in the end it takes away the best: hope." But
Jesus, he concludes, indicates in the Gospel the right way to live.
"The
first Beatitude: 'Blessed are the poor in spirit,' or the stripping off of this
attachment and making sure that the riches that the Lord has given one are for
the common good. It’s the only way. Open your hand, open your heart, open up
the horizon. But if you have a closed hand, your heart is closed as the man’s
who threw banquets and wore expensive clothes; you have no horizons, you
do not see others who are in need and you'll end up like that man: far from
God. "
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