Pope
Francis in Santiago: Learn to serve like Mary
(Vatican
Radio) Pope Francis has been presiding over Mass at the Sanctuary of Our
Lady of Charity of El Cobre, Tuesday in Santiago. In his Homily, the Holy
Father returned to the theme of “serving others” recalling the exemplary
model of Our Lady, who the Pope said, “left her house and went out to serve.”
He
also underlined how this land of Cuba has been “visited by her maternal presence.
The Cuban homeland was born and grew, warmed by devotion to Our Lady of
Charity.”
The
Pope said the greatest legacy and treasure the Church can give is “to learn
like Mary to leave home and set out on the path of visitation.”
Find
below Pope the Homily of Pope Francis at Sanctuary of Our Lady of Charity of El
Cobre, Santiago.
The
Gospel we have just heard tells us about something the Lord does every time he
visits us: he calls us out of our house. These are images which we are
asked to contemplate over and over again. God’s presence in our lives
never leaves us tranquil: it always pushes to do something. When God
comes, he always calls us out of our house. We are visited so that we can
visit others; we are encountered so as to encounter others; we receive love in
order to give love.
In
the Gospel we see Mary, the first disciple. A young woman of perhaps
between fifteen and seventeen years of age who, in a small village of
Palestine, was visited by the Lord, who told her that she was to be the mother
of the Savior. Mary was far from “thinking it was all about her”, or
thinking that everyone had to come and wait upon her; she left her house and
went out to serve. First she goes to help her cousin Elizabeth. The
joy which blossoms when we know that God is with us, with our people, gets our
heart beating, gets our legs moving and “draws us out of ourselves”. It
leads us to take the joy we have received and to share it in service, in those
“pregnant” situations which our neighbors or families may be experiencing.
The Gospel tells us that Mary went in haste, slowly but surely, with a steady
pace, neither too fast nor so slow as never to get there. Neither anxious
nor distracted, Mary goes with haste to accompany her cousin who conceived in her
old age. Henceforth this was always to be her way. She has always
been the woman who visits men and women, children, the elderly and the
young. She has visited and accompanied many of our peoples in the drama
of their birth; she has watched over the struggles of those who fought to
defend the rights of their children. And now, she continues to bring us
the Word of Life, her Son, our Lord.
These
lands have also been visited by her maternal presence. The Cuban homeland
was born and grew, warmed by devotion to Our Lady of Charity. As the
bishops of this country have written: “In a special and unique way she has
molded the Cuban soul, inspiring the highest ideals of love of God, the family
and the nation in the heart of the Cuban people”.
This
was what your fellow citizens also stated a hundred years ago, when they asked
Pope Benedict XV to declare Our Lady of Charity the Patroness of Cuba.
They wrote that “neither disgrace nor poverty were ever able to crush the faith
and the love which our Catholic people profess for the Virgin of Charity, for
whom, in all their trials, when death was imminent or desperation was at the
door, there arose, like a light scattering the darkness of every peril, like a
comforting dew…, the vision of that Blessed Virgin, utterly Cuban and loved as
such by our cherished mothers, blessed as such by our wives.”
In
this shrine, which keeps alive the memory of God’s holy and faithful pilgrim
people in Cuba, Mary is venerated as the Mother of Charity. From here she
protects our roots, our identity, so that we may never stray to paths of
despair. The soul of the Cuban people, as we have just heard, was forged
amid suffering and privation which could not suppress the faith, that faith
which was kept alive thanks to all those grandmothers who fostered, in the
daily life of their homes, the living presence of God, the presence of the
Father who liberates, strengthens, heals, grants courage and serves as a sure
refuge and the sign of a new resurrection. Grandmothers, mothers, and so
many others who with tenderness and love were signs of visitation, valor and
faith for their grandchildren, in their families. They kept open a tiny
space, small as a mustard seed, through which the Holy Spirit continued to
accompany the heartbeat of this people.
“Whenever
we look to Mary, we come to believe once again in the revolutionary nature of
love and tenderness” (Evangelii Gaudium, 288).
Generation
after generation, day after day, we are asked to renew our faith. We are
asked to live the revolution of tenderness as Mary, our Mother of Charity,
did. We are invited to “leave home” and to open our eyes and hearts to
others. Our revolution comes about through tenderness, through the joy
which always becomes closeness and compassion, and leads us to get involved in,
and to serve, the life of others. Our faith makes us leave our homes and
go forth to encounter others, to share their joys, their hopes and their
frustrations. Our faith, “calls us out of our house”, to visit the sick,
the prisoner and to those who mourn. It makes us able to laugh with those
who laugh, and rejoice with our neighbors who rejoice. Like Mary, we want
to be a Church which serves, which leaves home and goes forth, which goes forth
from its chapels, its sacristies, in order to accompany life, to sustain hope,
to be a sign of unity. Like Mary, Mother of Charity, we want to be a
Church which goes forth to build bridges, to break down walls, to sow seeds of
reconciliation. Like Mary, we want to be a Church which can accompany all
those “pregnant” situations of our people, committed to life, to culture, to
society, not washing our hands but rather walking with our brothers and
sisters.
This
is our most valuable treasure (cobre), this is our greatest wealth and the best
legacy we can give: to learn like Mary to leave home and set out on the path of
visitation. And to learn to pray with Mary, for her prayer is one of
remembrance and gratitude; it is the canticle of the People of God on their
pilgrimage through history. It is the living reminder that God passes
through our midst; the perennial memory that God has looked upon the lowliness
of his people, he has come the aid of his servant, even as promised to our
forebears and their children for ever.
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