Pope Francis: Homily for Mass of Palm Sunday
(Vatican Radio) Pope
Francis on Sunday presided at the Procession and Mass for Palm Sunday, as the
Church enters into the celebration of Holy Week.
Palm Sunday commemorates the
triumphal entry of Jesus into Jerusalem one week before His Passion, Death, and
Resurrection. The crowds in Jerusalem joyfully welcomed Jesus, the Pope said in
his homily, and "we have made that enthusiasm our own: by waving our olive
and palm branches we have expressed our praise and our joy, our desire to
receive Jesus who comes to us."
The Holy Father continued,
"Nothing could dampen their enthusiasm for Jesus’ entry. May nothing
prevent us from finding in him the source of our joy, true joy, which abides
and brings peace; for it is Jesus alone who saves us from the snares of sin,
death, fear and sadness."
Pope Francis' homily focused
on the redemptive Passion of Jesus, who emptied Himself, dying on
the Cross for our sake. Even "at the height of His annihilation, revelas
the true face of God, which is mercy."
"If the mystery of evil
is unfathomable," the Pope continued, "then the reality of Love
poured out through him is infinite, reaching even to the tomb and to
hell. He takes upon himself all our pain that he may redeem it, bringing
light to darkness, life to death, love to hatred."
God's way of acting, Pope
Francis said, may seem very different from our own; nonetheless, we are called
to "we are called to choose His way: the way of service, of giving, of
forgetfulness of ourselves." Jesus, he concluded, "invites us to walk
on his path. Let us turn our faces to him, let us ask for the grace to
understand something of the mystery of his obliteration for our sake; and then,
in silence, let us contemplate the mystery of this Week."
Below, please find the
full text of Pope Francis' prepared homily for Palm Sunday 2016:
Homily of His Holiness
Pope Francis
Palm Sunday
Palm Sunday
20 March 2016
“Blessed is He who comes in
the name of the Lord!” (cf. Lk 19:38), the crowd of Jerusalem
exclaimed joyfully as they welcomed Jesus. We have made that enthusiasm our
own: by waving our olive and palm branches we have expressed our praise and our
joy, our desire to receive Jesus who comes to us. Just as He entered Jerusalem,
so He desires to enter our cities and our lives. As He did in the Gospel,
riding on a donkey, so too He comes to us in humility; He comes “in the name of
the Lord”. Through the power of His divine love He forgives our sins and
reconciles us to the Father and with ourselves.
Jesus is pleased with the crowd’s showing their affection for Him. When the
Pharisees ask Him to silence the children and the others who are acclaiming
Him, He responds: “I tell you, if these were silent, the very stones would cry
out” (Lk 19:40). Nothing could dampen their enthusiasm for Jesus’
entry. May nothing prevent us from finding in Him the source of our joy, true
joy, which abides and brings peace; for it is Jesus alone who saves us from the
snares of sin, death, fear and sadness.
Today’s liturgy teaches us that the Lord has not saved us by His triumphal
entry or by means of powerful miracles. The Apostle Paul, in the second
reading, epitomizes in two verbs the path of redemption: Jesus “emptied” and
“humbled” Himself (Phil 2:7-8). These two verbs show the
boundlessness of God’s love for us. Jesus emptied Himself: He did
not cling to the glory that was His as the Son of God, but became the Son of
man in order to be in solidarity with us sinners in all things; yet He was
without sin. Even more, He lived among us in “the condition of a servant”
(v. 7); not of a king or a prince, but of a servant. Therefore He humbled
Himself, and the abyss of His humiliation, as Holy Week shows us, seems to be
bottomless.
The first sign of this love “without end” (Jn 13:1) is the washing
of the feet. “The Lord and Master” (Jn 13:14) stoops to His
disciples’ feet, as only servants would have done. He shows us by example that
we need to allow His love to reach us, a love which bends down to us; we cannot
do any less, we cannot love without letting ourselves be loved by Him first,
without experiencing His surprising tenderness and without accepting that true
love consists in concrete service.
But this is only the beginning. The humiliation of Jesus reaches its utmost in
the Passion: He is sold for thirty pieces of silver and betrayed by the kiss of
a disciple whom He had chosen and called His friend. Nearly all the others flee
and abandon Him; Peter denies Him three times in the courtyard of the temple.
Humiliated in His spirit by mockery, insults and spitting, He suffers in His
body terrible brutality: the blows, the scourging and the crown of thorns make
His face unrecognizable. He also experiences shame and disgraceful condemnation
by religious and political authorities: He is made into sin andconsidered
to be unjust. Pilate then sends Him to Herod, who in turn sends Him to the
Roman governor. Even as every form of justice is denied to Him, Jesus also
experiences in His own flesh indifference, since no one wishes to take
responsibility for His fate. The crowd, who just a little earlier had acclaimed
Him, now changes their praise into a cry of accusation, even to the point of
preferring that a murderer be released in His place. And so the hour of death
on the cross arrives, that most painful form of shame reserved for traitors,
slaves and the worst kind of criminals. But isolation, defamation and pain are
not yet the full extent of His deprivation. To be totally in solidarity with
us, He also experiences on the Cross the mysterious abandonment of the Father.
In His abandonment, however, He prays and entrusts Himself: “Father, into your
hands I commit my spirit” (Lk 23:47). Hanging from the wood of the
cross, beside derision He now confronts the last temptation: to come down from
the Cross, to conquer evil by might and to show the face of a powerful and
invincible God. Jesus, however, even here at the height of His annihilation,
reveals the true face of God, which is mercy. He forgives
those who are crucifying Him, He opens the gates of paradise to the repentant
thief and He touches the heart of the centurion. If the mystery of evil is
unfathomable, then the reality of Love poured out through Him is infinite,
reaching even to the tomb and to hell. He takes upon Himself all our pain that
He may redeem it, bringing light to darkness, life to death, love to hatred.
God’s way of acting may seem so far removed from our own, that He was
annihilated for our sake, while it seems difficult for us to even forget ourselves
a little. He comes to save us; we are called to choose His way: the way of
service, of giving, of forgetfulness of ourselves. Let us walk this path,
pausing in these days to gaze upon the Crucifix, the “royal seat of God”, to
learn about the humble love which saves and gives life, so that we may give up
all selfishness, and the seeking of power and fame. By humbling Himself, Jesus
invites us to walk on His path. Let us turn our faces to Him, let us ask for
the grace to understand something of the mystery of His obliteration for our
sake; and then, in silence, let us contemplate the mystery of this Week.
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