Pope
Francis: why do good things happen to bad people?
(Vatican
Radio) God does not abandon the righteous, while those who sow evil are like
strangers, whose names heaven remembers not. This is the lesson Pope Francis
drew from the readings of the day at Mass Thursday morning in the chapel of the
Casa Santa Marta in the Vatican.
A
courageous young mother with a husband and three children – and a tumor – “one
of the ugly ones” – that keeps her nailed to her bed. “Why?” An elderly woman,
prayerfully pious in her heart, whose son was murdered by the Mafia.
Why
do good things happen to bad people?
Pope
Francis on Thursday used this perennial query of the heart that loves good and
desires to know God’s plan, as the way into the mystery of iniquity and its
relation to God’s providence, justice and mercy. Drawing on the reading from
the prophet, Malachi, in which the Lord rebukes the people, saying, “You have
defied me in word, says the LORD, yet you ask, ‘What have we spoken against
you?’ You have said, ‘It is vain to serve God, and what do we profit by keeping
his command, and going about in penitential dress in awe of the LORD of hosts?
Rather must we call the proud blessed; for indeed evildoers prosper, and even
tempt God with impunity,’” Pope Francis said:
“How
many times do we see this reality in bad people, in people who do evil, and
seem to do well in life: they are happy, they have everything they want, they
want for nothing. Why Lord? This is one of the many questions we have. Why does
this brazen evildoer who cares nothing for God nor for neighbor, who is an
unjust person – even mean – and things go well in his whole life, he has
everything he wants, while we, who want to do good, have so many problems?”
The
Lord watches over the righteous
Pope
Francis discovered the answer in the responsorial Psalm – Psalm 1 – which
proclaims, “Blessed the man who follows not the counsel of the wicked Nor walks
in the way of sinners, nor sits in the company of the insolent, But delights in
the law of the LORD.” Pope Francis went on to say:
“Now
we do not see the fruits of this suffering people, this people carrying the
cross, as on that Good Friday and Holy Saturday the fruits of the
crucified Son of God, the fruits of His sufferings were yet to be seen: and
whatever He does, turns out well; and what does the Psalm say of the wicked, of
those for whom we think everything is going fine? ‘Not so the wicked, not so;
they are like chaff which the wind drives away. For the LORD watches over the
way of the just, but the way of the wicked vanishes.’”
Only
an adjective
This
ruin, this scattering and oblivion, which is the end of the wicked, is one Pope
Francis found dramatically and emphatically stressed in the Gospel parable of
Lazarus – the symbol of misery with no escape, to whom the rich reveler refused
even the scraps from his table:
“It
is curious: that [rich] man’s name is never spoken. He is just an adjective: he
is a rich man (It. ricco, Gr. πλούσιος). Of the wicked, in God’s
record book, there is no name: he is an evil one, a con man, a pimp ... They
have no name. They only have adjectives. All those, who try to go on the way of
the Lord, will rather be with His Son, who has the name: Jesus Saviour. It is a
name that is difficult to understand, inexplicable for the trial of the Cross
and for all that He suffered for us.”

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