Homily for Mass at Ecatepec Study Centre: Full text
(Vatican Radio)
Pope Francis celebrated Holy Mass on Sunday near the Study Centre of Ecatepec,
in the suburbs of Mexico City.
In his homily
for the Mass, the Holy Father spoke about three temptations of Christ, which
are also temptations for Christians: the temptation to wealth, to vanity, and
to pride. The penitential season of Lent, he said, is an invitation to
conversion, to turn ourselves to Christ, who is waiting for us and wants to
heal our hearts of all that tears us down.
Below,
please find the official translation of the prepared text of Pope Francis’
homily for Mass for the First Sunday of Lent:
Homily of
Pope Francis
Holy Mass at
the Ecatepec Study Centre
Sunday 14
February 2016
Last Wednesday
we began the liturgical season of Lent, during which the Church invites us to
prepare ourselves to celebrate the great feast of Easter. This is a special
time for recalling the gift of our baptism, when we became children of God. The
Church invites us to renew the gift she has given us, to not let this gift lie
dormant as if it were something from the past or locked away in some “memory
chest”. Lent is a good time to recover the joy and hope that make us feel
beloved sons and daughters of the Father. The Father who waits for us in order
to cast off our garments of exhaustion, of apathy, of mistrust, and so clothe
us with the dignity which only a true father or mother knows how to give their
children, with the garments born of tenderness and love.
Our Father, he
is the Father of a great family; he is our Father. He knows that he has a
unique love, but he does not know how to bear or raise an “only child”. He is
the God of the home, of brotherhood, of bread broken and shared. He is the God
who is “Our Father”, not “my father” or “your stepfather”.
God’s dream
makes its home and lives in each one of us so that at every Easter, in every
Eucharist we celebrate, we may be the children of God. It is a dream which so
many of our brothers and sisters have had through history. A dream witnessed to
by the blood of so many martyrs, both from long ago and from now.
Lent is a time
of conversion, of daily experiencing in our lives of how this dream is
continually threatened by the father of lies, by the one who tries to separate
us, making a divided and fractious society. A society of the few, and for the
few. How often we experience in our own lives, or in our own families, among
our friends or neighbours, the pain which arises when the dignity we carry
within is not recognized. How many times have we had to cry and regret on realizing
that we have not acknowledged this dignity in others. How often – and it pains
me to say it – have we been blind and impervious in failing to recognize our
own and others’ dignity.
Lent is a time
for reconsidering our feelings, for letting our eyes be opened to the frequent
injustices which stand in direct opposition to the dream and the plan of God.
It is a time to unmask three great temptations that wear down and fracture the
image which God wanted to form in us:
There are three
temptations of Christ… three temptations for the Christian, which seek to
destroy what we have been called to be; three temptations which try to corrode
us and tear us down.
Wealth: seizing
hold of goods destined for all, and using them only for “my own people”. That
is, taking the “bread” based on the toil of others, or even at the expense of
their very lives. That wealth which tastes of pain, bitterness and suffering.
This is the bread that a corrupt family or society gives its own children.
Vanity: the
pursuit of prestige based on continuous, relentless exclusion of those who “are
not like me”. The futile chasing of those five minutes of fame which do not
forgive the “reputation” of others. “Making firewood from a felled tree” gives
way to the third temptation:
Pride: or rather,
putting oneself on a higher level than one truly is on, feeling that one does
not share the life of “mere mortals”, and yet being one who prays every day: “I
thank you Lord that you have not made me like those others…”.
Three
temptations of Christ… Three temptations which the Christian is faced with
daily. Three temptations which seek to corrode, destroy and extinguish the joy
and freshness of the Gospel. Three temptations which lock us into a cycle of
destruction and sin.
And so it is
worth asking ourselves:
To what degree
are we aware of these temptations in our lives, in our very selves?
How much have
we become accustomed to a lifestyle where we think that our source and life
force lies only in wealth?
To what point
do we feel that caring about others, our concern and work for bread, for the
good name and dignity of others, are wellsprings of happiness and hope?
We have chosen
Jesus, not the evil one; we want to follow in his footsteps, even though we
know that this is not easy. We know what it means to be seduced by money, fame
and power. For this reason, the Church gives us the gift of this Lenten season,
invites us to conversion, offering but one certainty: he is waiting for us and
wants to heal our hearts of all that tears us down. He is the God who has a
name: Mercy. His name is our wealth, his name is what makes us famous, his name
is our power and in his name we say once more with the Psalm: “You are my God
and in you I trust”. Let us repeat these words together: “You are my God and in
you I trust”.
In this
Eucharist, may the Holy Spirit renew in us the certainty that his name is
Mercy, and may he let us experience each day that “the Gospel fills the hearts
and lives of all who encounter Jesus...”, knowing that “with Christ and in
Christ joy is constantly born anew” (cf. Evangelii Gaudium, 1).
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