Pope: Christians with hardened hearts are like orphans
(Vatican Radio) Christians
who harden their hearts and refuse to be drawn towards Christ are like orphans,
without a father. That was Pope Francis message on Tuesday as he reflected on
the daily readings during his homily at Mass in the Vatican’s Santa Marta
chapel.
Pope Francis began his sermon
by recalling the question that the skeptical Jews kept asking Jesus every time
he performed a miracle, preached in the temple or pointed the way to the
Father:
“How long are you going
to keep us in suspense? If you are the Christ, tell us plainly.”
That question, which the Pope
said the Scribes and Pharisees repeat in many different ways, springs from a
heart that is closed and blind to the faith. As Jesus explains in today’s
Gospel reading, “you do not believe, because you are not among my sheep”. Being
part of God’s flock, he said, is a grace which requires an open heart.
“My sheep hear my voice”,
Jesus says in that reading, “I know them, and they follow me. I give them
eternal life, and they shall never perish. No one can take them out of my
hand”. Have these sheep studied how to follow Jesus and then believed, the Pope
asked? No, he said, citing the words from St John’s Gospel, “My Father, who has
given them to me, is greater than all”. It is the Father who gives the sheep to
the shepherd. It is the Father who draws our hearts to Jesus.
The hardness of the Scribes
and Pharisees’ hearts, is a drama which continues all the way to Calvary, the
Pope said. They see the works that Jesus performs but they refuse to believe he
is the Messiah. Even after the Resurrection, the Pope recalled, this drama
continues as the soldiers guarding the tomb are told to say they’d fallen
asleep in order to give credit to the story that the disciples had stolen the
body of Christ. Not even the witness of those who saw the Risen Christ was able
to reach those who refused to believe. And this has its consequences, the Pope
said, because they are orphans who have denied their Father.
These doctors of the law, he
went on, had closed hearts, they thought they were their own masters but in
fact they were orphans because they had no relationship with the Father. They
talked about their fathers, Abraham and the patriarchs, but these were distant
figures and in their hearts they were orphans because they would not let
themselves be drawn to the Father.
On the contrary, the Pope
said, reflecting on the first reading for the day, the news that reached
Jerusalem of the many pagans who heard the disciples preaching in Phoenicia,
Cyprus and Antioch and turned to the faith, shows what it means to have a heart
open to God. Like Barnabas, he said, who is sent to Antioch to confirm these
rumours and is not scandalized by the conversion of the pagans but accepts this
novelty and lets himself be drawn by the Father to Jesus.
Pope Francis concluded by
saying Jesus invites us to be his disciples but to be so, we must let ourselves
be drawn by the Father towards Him. The humble prayer we can say is: ‘Father,
lead me to Jesus, help me to know Jesus’ and the Father will send the Spirit to
open our hearts and lead us to Him. A Christian who doesn’t allow himself to be
led by the Father is an orphan, but we have a Father who can lead us to Jesus.
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