Pope commissions Missionaries of Mercy on Ash
Wednesday
(Vatican Radio) Pope Francis
commissioned hundreds of “Missionaries of Mercy” during Mass on Ash Wednesday
at Saint Peter’s Basilica in Rome.
In his Bull announcing the
Jubilee Year of Mercy, the Holy Father said the Missionaries of Mercy “would be
a sign of the Church’s maternal solicitude for the People of God, enabling them
to enter the profound richness of this mystery so fundamental to the faith.”
Priests chosen to be Missionaries of Mercy have also been given the authority
to pardon “even those sins reserved to the Holy See.” Above all, the Pope said,
they will be “living signs of the Father’s readiness to welcome those in search
of his pardon.”
During Ash Wednesday Mass,
the Pope focused on the theme of mercy as we begin the season of Lent.
In his homily during the
Mass, Pope Francis said the day’s readings present two invitations: First, to
be reconciled to God. In order to do so, he said, we must first recognize that
we are in need of mercy: “This is the first step in the Christian journey; it
comes in through the open door that is Christ, where He Himself awaits us, the
Saviour, and He offers us a new and joyful life.”
The Pope noted a number of
obstacles that “close the doors of our hearts” and make reconciliation with God
difficult. The Missionaries of Mercy, he said, have a mandate “to be signs and
instruments of the forgiveness of God,” called to help their brothers and
sisters to “open the doors of their heart, overcome shame, and not flee from
the light.”
The second invitation, the
Pope said, is heard in the reading from the prophet Joel. God says to His
people, “Return to me with your whole heart.” Sin keeps us far from God, but
Jesus has offered a “story of salvation” that enables us return to Him. The
Gospel for the beginning of Lent, he says, offers us three remedies for sin:
prayer, charity, and fasting.
But these three remedies are
not merely external acts, the Pope said. Rather, they must come “from the
depths of our very being.” During Lent, Christ calls us to live out our acts of
prayer, charity, and penance “with coherence and authenticity, overcoming
hypocrisy.”
Pope Francis concluded, “Let
us set out on this journey together, as a Church, receiving the ashes and
keeping our gaze fixed on the Crucified One. Loving us, He invites us to be
reconciled with God, and to return to Him, in order to rediscover ourselves.”
Below, please find Vatican
Radio’s unofficial translation of Pope Francis’ prepared homily for Mass for
Ash Wednesday 2016:
The Word of God, at the
beginning of our Lenten journey, offers two invitations to the Church and to
each one of us.
The first is that of Saint
Paul: “Be reconciled to God.” It is not simply good paternal advice, much less
merely a suggestion; it is a true and proper plea in the name of Christ: “We
implore you on behalf of Christ, be reconciled to God.” Why so solemn and
heartfelt an appeal? Because Christ know how fragile we are, that we are
sinners, He knows the weakness of our heart; He sees the wounds of the wrongs
we have committed and suffered; He knows how much we need forgiveness; He knows
how much we need to feel loved in order to do good. By ourselves we are not up
to it: that’s why the Apostle doesn’t tell us, “do something,” but rather, “to
be reconciled to God,” to allow Him to forgive us, with confidence, because
“God is greater than our hearts.” He overcomes sin and lifts us from our
misery, if we trust in Him. It is for us to recognize that we are in need
of mercy: It is the first step of the Christian journey; it comes in
through the open door that is Christ, where He Himself awaits us, the Saviour,
and He offers us a new and joyful life.
There can be some obstacles
that close the doors of the heart. There is the temptation to bolt the
doors, that is, to live with our own proper sins, minimizing them, always
justifying ourselves, thinking we are no worse than others; so, then, the locks
of the soul are closed, and we remain closed within, prisoners of evil. Another
obstacle is the shame in opening the secret door of the heart.
Shame, in reality, is a good symptom, because it indicates we want to break
away from evil; above all we must never transform it into fear or dread. And
there is a third trap, that of moving away from the door: this
happens when we dwell on our miseries, when we brood over them continually, to
the point where we plunge ourselves into the darkest cellars of the soul. Then
we become even more familiar with the sadness we don’t want, we grow
discouraged, and are weaker in the face of temptations. This happens because we
remain alone with ourselves, closing in on ourselves and fleeing from the
light; while it is only the grace of the Lord that frees us. Let us allow
ourselves, then, to “be reconciled,” let us listen to Jesus who says to the
tired and oppressed “Come to me!” (Mt 11:28). Do not remain in ourselves, but
go to Him! There we will find refreshment and peace.
At this celebration the Missionaries
of Mercy are present, to receive the mandate to be signs and
instruments of the forgiveness of God. Dear brothers, you will be able to help
open the doors of the heart, to overcome shame, to not flee from the light. May
your hands bless and lift up your brothers and sisters with paternity; that
through you the gaze and the hands of the Father might rest on His sons and
cure their wounds!
There is a second invitation
from God, who says, by way of the prophet Joel, “Return to me with your whole
heart” (2:12). If we need to return it is because we are far away. It is the
mystery of sin: we are far from God, from others, even from ourselves.
It is not difficult to understand: we all see how we struggle to truly have
confidence in God, to trust in Him as a Father, without fear; how difficult it
is to love others, instead of thinking ill of them; how much it costs us to
work for our own true good, while we are attracted to and seduced by so many
material realities that fade away, and in the end, leave us impoverished.
Beside this story of sin, Christ has inaugurated a story of salvation. The
Gospel that opens Lent invites us to be the protagonists of this story,
embracing three remedies, three medicines that heal us from sin (cf. Mt 6:1-6;
16-18).
In the first place is prayer,
an expression of openness to and confidence in the Lord: it is the personal
encounter with Him, which shortens the distance created by sin. To pray is to
say “I am not self-sufficient, I need you, You are my life and
my salvation.” In the second place is charity, to overcome estrangement
in our relations with others. True love, in fact, is not an exterior act, it is
not giving something in a paternalistic way to quiet our conscience, but
accepting the one who needs our time, our friendship, our help. It is living
out an attitude of service, overcoming the temptation to satisfy ourselves. In
the third place is fasting, penance, to free ourselves from
dependence in our relationship to what is passing, and to train ourselves to be
more sensitive and merciful. It is an invitation to simplicity and to sharing:
taking something away from our table and from our goods, to rediscover the true
good of freedom.
“Return to me,” the Lord
says, “with your whole heart”: not only with some external act, but from the
depths of your very being. In fact, Jesus calls us to live out prayer, charity,
and penance with coherence and authenticity, conquering hypocrisy. Lent should
be a time of beneficial “pruning away” of falsehood, worldliness, indifference:
in order not to think that everything is ok as long as I’m ok; to understand
that what counts is not the approval of others, or search for success or
consensus, but cleanness in one’s heart and in one’s life; in order to
rediscover the Christian identity – that is, the love that serves, not
the selfishness that is served. Let us set out on this journey together, as
the Church, receiving the Ashes and keeping our gaze fixed on the Crucified
One. Loving us, He invites us to be reconciled with God and to return to Him,
in order to rediscover ourselves.

Không có nhận xét nào:
Đăng nhận xét