Pope:
God’s love for his people is manifest in Jesus’ death on the Cross
(Vatican Radio)
Pope Francis on Monday said that after rejection and death comes the glory of
resurrection.
Reflecting on
the Gospel reading of the day during morning Mass at the Casa Santa Marta, the
Pope said the stone that the builders rejected became the cornerstone; the
scandalous executioner’s block that appeared to put an end to the story of
hope, marked the beginning of man’s salvation.
And highlighting
how the Scriptures speak to us today, the Pope said God builds upon weakness
and waste; he said God’s love for mankind is manifested in the apparent
“failure” of the Cross.
Taking his cue
from the Gospel reading which tells the story of the wicked tenants, Pope
Francis pointed out that this parable richly conveys some important truths
about God and the way he deals with his people with patience and with justice.
But above all -
the Pope said - the story tells us of how Jesus’s death led to his ultimate
triumph.
Let us not
forget the cross – he said – because it is here that the logic of “failure” is
turned upside down.
Jesus – Pope
Francis said – reminds the chief priests, the scribes and the elders that
although we can expect trials and rejection, in the end we will see triumph and
he quotes the Scriptures: “The stone that the builders rejected has become the
cornerstone”.
“The prophets,
the men of God who spoke to the people, who were not listened to, who were
rejected, will be His glory. The Son, His last envoy, was seized, killed and
thrown out. He became the cornerstone” he said.
“This story that
begins with a dream of love, that seems to be a love story, but ends up looking
like a story of failures, ends with the great love of God who offers Salvation
through the rejection of his Son who saves us all”.
And speaking to
those present, the Pope said “the path of our redemption is a path marked by
failure”.
But that is
exactly where love triumphs. “We must never forget that our path is a difficult
one” he said.
If each of us –
Pope Francis continued – makes an examination of conscience, we will have to
admit that often we have rejected the prophets: “how many times have we said to
Jesus ‘Go away!’ How many times have we wanted to save ourselves thinking we
were in the right”?
The Pope
concluded his homily inviting the faithful never to forget that it is in the
death on the Cross of the Son that the love of God for his people is manifest.
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