Pope
Francis closes World Meeting of Families in Philadelphia with a call to
openness to miracles of love for the sake of families of the world
Pope Francis presided over an open air Holy Mass in Benjamin Franklin
Parkway in Philadelphia on Sunday to close the World Meeting of Families
2015. The two-day meeting brought together thousands of delegates from
different parts of the world who represented families in their countries. In
his homily, Pope Francis encouraged families to build their lives on love,
reminding them also that God's love is for everyone, and warning against
narrowing God's love and works to a selected group of people. Chris
Altieri reports.
Here below is a full text, in English, of the Homily delivered
by Pope Francis
Today the word
of God surprises us with powerful and thought-provoking images. Images
which challenge us, but also stir our enthusiasm.
In the first
reading, Joshua tells Moses that two members of the people are prophesying,
speaking God’s word, without a mandate. In the Gospel, John tells Jesus
that the disciples had stopped someone from casting out evil spirits in the
name of Jesus. Here is the surprise: Moses and Jesus both rebuke those closest
to them for being so narrow! Would that all could be prophets of God’s
word! Would that everyone could work miracles in the Lord’s name!
Jesus
encountered hostility from people who did not accept what he said and
did. For them, his openness to the honest and sincere faith of many men
and women who were not part of God’s chosen people seemed intolerable.
The disciples, for their part, acted in good faith. But the temptation to
be scandalized by the freedom of God, who sends rain on the righteous and the
unrighteous alike (Mt 5:45), bypassing bureaucracy, officialdom and inner
circles, threatens the authenticity of faith. Hence it must be vigorously
rejected.
Once we realize
this, we can understand why Jesus’ words about causing “scandal” are so
harsh. For Jesus, the truly “intolerable” scandal consists in everything
that breaks down and destroys our trust in the working of the Spirit!
Our Father will
not be outdone in generosity and he continues to scatter seeds. He
scatters the seeds of his presence in our world, for “love consists in this,
not that we have loved God but that he loved us” first (1 Jn 4:10). That
love gives us a profound certainty: we are sought by God; he waits for
us. It is this confidence which makes disciples encourage, support and
nurture the good things happening all around them. God wants all his
children to take part in the feast of the Gospel. Jesus says, “Do not
hold back anything that is good, instead help it to grow!” To raise
doubts about the working of the Spirit, to give the impression that it cannot
take place in those who are not “part of our group”, who are not “like us”, is
a dangerous temptation. Not only does it block conversion to the faith;
it is a perversion of faith!
Faith opens a
“window” to the presence and working of the Spirit. It shows us that,
like happiness, holiness is always tied to little gestures. “Whoever gives
you a cup of water in my name will not go unrewarded”, says Jesus (cf. Mk
9:41). These little gestures are those we learn at home, in the family;
they get lost amid all the other things we do, yet they do make each day
different. They are the quiet things done by mothers and grandmothers, by
fathers and grandfathers, by children. They are little signs of
tenderness, affection and compassion. Like the warm supper we look
forward to at night, the early lunch awaiting someone who gets up early to go
to work. Homely gestures. Like a blessing before we go to bed, or a
hug after we return from a hard day’s work. Love is shown by little
things, by attention to small daily signs which make us feel at home.
Faith grows when it is lived and shaped by love. That is why our
families, our homes, are true domestic churches. They are the right place for
faith to become life, and life to become faith.
Jesus tells us
not to hold back these little miracles. Instead, he wants us to encourage
them, to spread them. He asks us to go through life, our everyday life,
encouraging all these little signs of love as signs of his own living and
active presence in our world.
So we might ask
ourselves: How are we trying to live this way in our homes, in our societies?
What kind of world do we want to leave to our children (cf. Laudato Si’,
160)? We cannot answer these questions alone, by ourselves. It is
the Spirit who challenges us to respond as part of the great human
family. Our common house can no longer tolerate sterile divisions. The
urgent challenge of protecting our home includes the effort to bring the entire
human family together in the pursuit of a sustainable and integral development,
for we know that things can change (cf. ibid., 13). May our children find
in us models and incentives to communion! May our children find in us men
and women capable of joining others in bringing to full flower all the good
seeds which the Father has sown!
Pointedly, yet
affectionately, Jesus tells us: “If you, who are evil, know how to give good
gifts to your children, how much more will the heavenly Father give the Holy
Spirit to those who ask him!” (Lk 11:13). How much wisdom there is in
these few words! It is true that, as far as goodness and purity of heart
are concerned, we human beings don’t have much to show! But Jesus knows
that, where children are concerned, we are capable of boundless
generosity. So he reassures us: if only we have faith, the Father will
give us his Spirit.
We Christians,
the Lord’s disciples, ask the families of the world to help us! How many
of us are here at this celebration! This is itself something prophetic, a
kind of miracle in today’s world. Would that we could all be
prophets! Would that all of us could be open to miracles of love for the
sake of all the families of the world, and thus overcome the scandal of a
narrow, petty love, closed in on itself, impatient of others!
And how
beautiful it would be if everywhere, even beyond our borders, we could
appreciate and encourage this prophecy and this miracle! We renew our
faith in the word of the Lord which invites faithful families to this
openness. It invites all those who want to share the prophecy of the
covenant of man and woman, which generates life and reveals God!
Anyone who
wants to bring into this world a family which teaches children to be excited by
every gesture aimed at overcoming evil – a family which shows that the Spirit
is alive and at work – will encounter our gratitude and our appreciation.
Whatever the family, people, region, or religion to which they belong!
May God grant
to all of us, as the Lord’s disciples, the grace to be worthy of this purity of
heart which is not scandalized by the Gospel!
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