Pope Francis: homily for Mass on Feast
of Mother of God
(Vatican
Radio) Pope Francis delivered the homily at Mass on New Year's Day, the
Solemnity of the Mother of God, in St. Peter's Basilica. Below, please find the
full text of the official English translation of his prepared remarks.
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Homily
of His Holiness Pope Francis on the Solemnity of Mary, Mother of God
World
Day of Peace, 1 January 2016
We
have heard the words of the Apostle Paul: “When the fullness of time had come,
God sent his Son, born of a woman” (Gal 4:4).
What
does it mean to say that Jesus was born in “the fullness of time”? If we
consider that particular moment of history, we might quickly be deluded.
Rome had subjugated a great part of the known world by her military
might. The Emperor Augustus had come to power after five civil
wars. Israel itself had been conquered by the Roman Empire and the Chosen
People had lost their freedom. For Jesus’ contemporaries, it was
certainly not the best of times. To define the fullness of time, then, we
should not look to the geopolitical sphere.
Another
interpretation is needed, one which views that fullness from God’s
standpoint. It is when God decided that the time had come to fulfil
his promise, that the fullness of time came for humanity. History does
not determine the birth of Christ; rather, his coming into the world
enables history to attain its fullness. For this reason, the birth of
the Son of God inaugurates a new era, a new computation of time, the era which
witnesses the fulfilment of the ancient promise. As the author of the
Letter to the Hebrews writes: “God spoke to our ancestors in many and various
ways by the prophets, but in these last days he has spoken to us by a Son, whom
he appointed heir of all things, through whom he also created the world.
He is the reflection of God’s glory and the exact imprint of God’s very being,
and he sustains all things by his powerful word” (1:1-3). The fullness of
time, then, is the presence of God himself in our history. Now we can see
his glory, which shines forth in the poverty of a stable; we can be encouraged
and sustained by his Word, made “little” in a baby. Thanks to him, our
time can find its fullness.
Nonetheless,
this mystery constantly clashes with the dramatic experience of human
history. Each day, as we seek to be sustained by the signs of God’s
presence, we encounter new signs to the contrary, negative signs which tend to
make us think instead that he is absent. The fullness of time seems to
fade before the countless forms of injustice and violence which daily wound our
human family. Sometimes we ask ourselves how it is possible that human
injustice persists unabated, and that the arrogance of the powerful continues
to demean the weak, relegating them to the most squalid outskirts of our world.
We ask how long human evil will continue to sow violence and hatred in our
world, reaping innocent victims. How can the fullness of time have come
when we are witnessing hordes of men, women and children fleeing war, hunger
and persecution, ready to risk their lives simply to encounter respect for
their fundamental rights? A torrent of misery, swollen by sin, seems to
contradict the fullness of time brought by Christ.
And
yet this swollen torrent is powerless before the ocean of mercy which
floods our world. All of us are called to immerse ourselves in this
ocean, to let ourselves be reborn, to overcome the indifference which blocks
solidarity, and to leave behind the false neutrality which prevents
sharing. The grace of Christ, which brings our hope of salvation to
fulfilment, leads us to cooperate with him in building an ever more just and
fraternal world, a world in which every person and every creature can dwell in
peace, in the harmony of God’s original creation.
At
the beginning of a new year, the Church invites us to contemplate Mary’s divine
maternity as an icon of peace. In her, the ancient promise finds
fulfilment. She believed in the words of the angel, conceived her Son and
thus became the Mother of the Lord. Through her, through her “yes”, the
fullness of time came about. The Gospel we have just heard tells us that the
Virgin Mary “treasured all these words and pondered them in her heart” (Lk 2:19).
She appears to us as a vessel filled to the brim with the memory of Jesus, as
the Seat of Wisdom to whom we can have recourse to understand his teaching
aright. Today Mary makes it possible for us to grasp the meaning of
events which affect us personally, events which also affect our families, our
countries and the entire world. Where philosophical reason and political
negotiation cannot reach, there the power of faith, which brings the grace of
Christ’s Gospel, can reach, opening ever new pathways to reason and to
negotiation.
Blessed
are you, Mary, for you gave the Son of God to our world. But even more
blessed are you for having believed in him. Full of faith, you conceived
Jesus first in your heart and then in your womb, and thus became the Mother of
all believers (cf. Saint Augustine, Sermo 215,4). Send
us your blessing on this day consecrated to your honour. Show us the face
of Jesus your Son, who bestows upon the entire world mercy and peace.
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