Pope: There is always resistance in the Church to
surprises of the Spirit
(Vatican Radio) There is
always resistance to the surprises of the Spirit, but it’s the Spirit who
continues to lead the Church forward. That was Pope Francis’ message at Mass on
Thursday at the Santa Marta chapel as he reflected on the reading about division
and resistance within the early Church in Jerusalem.
Commenting on today’s reading
from Acts about the Council of Jerusalem, Pope Francis said the protagonist in
the Church is always the Holy Spirit. It’s the Spirit who, from the very
beginning, gives strength to the apostles to proclaim the Gospel and it’s the
Spirit who carries the Church forward despite its problems.
Even when there is an
outbreak of persecution, the Pope said, it’s the Spirit who gives believers the
strength to stand firm in the faith, even if they face resistance and anger
from the doctors of the law. In the passage from Acts, the Pope noted, there
was a double resistance to the Spirit, from those who believed that Jesus came
only for the chosen people and from those who wanted to impose the law of
Moses, including the practice of circumcision, on those who had converted.
There was great confusion
over all this, the Pope said, but the Spirit led their hearts in a new
direction. The apostles were surprised by the Spirit, he said, as they found
themselves in new and unthinkable situations. But how were they to manage these
circumstances? Pope Francis said the passage begins by noting that ‘much debate
had taken place’: no doubt heated debate, because on the one hand they were
pushed on and on by the Spirit, but on the other, they were facing new
situations that they had never seen or even imagined, such as pagans receiving
the Holy Spirit.
The disciples were holding a
‘hot potato’ in their hands and didn’t know what to do, the Pope said. Thus
they called a meeting in Jerusalem where each one could recount their
experiences of how the Holy Spirit had been received by the Gentiles. And in
the end they came to an agreement. But first , the Pope noted, “The whole
assembly fell silent, and they listened while Paul and Barnabas described the
signs and wonders God had worked among the Gentiles through them.” Never be
afraid to listen with humility, the Pope said. When you are afraid to listen,
you don’t have the Spirit in your heart. When the apostles had listened, they
decided to send several of the disciples to the Greeks, the pagan communities,
that had become Christians to reassure them.
Those who converted, the Pope
continued, were not obliged to be circumcised. The decision was communicated to
them in a letter in which the disciples say that “The Holy Spirit and we have
decided….” This is the way of the Church when faced with novelties, the Pope
said. Not the worldly novelties of fashion, but the novelties of the Spirit who
always surprises us. How does the Church resolve these problems? Through
meetings and discussions, listening and praying, before making a final
decision. This is the way of the Church when the Spirit surprises us, Pope
Francis said, recalling the resistance that emerged in recent times during the
Second Vatican Council.
That resistance continues
today in one way or another, he said, yet the Spirit moves ahead. And the way
the Church expresses its communion is through synodality, by meeting,
listening, debating, praying and deciding. The Spirit is always the protagonist
and the Lord asks us not to be afraid when the Spirit calls us. Just as the
Spirit stopped St Paul and set him on the right road, so the Spirit will give
us the courage and the patience to win over adversity and stand firm in the
face of martyrdom. Let us ask the Lord for grace, the Pope concluded, to
understand how the Church can face the surprises of the Spirit, to be docile
and to follow the path which Christ wants for us and for the whole Church.
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