'Prayer opens the door to closed hearts', Pope says at
Mass
(Vatican Radio) On Wednesday,
Pope Francis celebrated Mass in Saint Peter’s Basilica for the solemnity of
Saints Peter and Paul, during which he said prayer is the “way out” when we
become closed in on ourselves.
Pope Francis centred his June
29 homily on the day’s Gospel reading, and reflected on the themes of
being opened and closed, as demonstrated by the lives of Saints Peter and Paul.
Drawing from examples from
the life of Peter, such as when he was imprisoned, the Holy Father said “prayer
appears as the main way out. It is a way out for the community, which risks
closing in on itself out of persecution and fear.”
“Prayer, as humble
entrustment to God and his holy will, is always the way out of our becoming
'closed', as individuals and as a community.”
Likewise, this theme of going
out in service of the Gospel is seen in the writings of St Paul.
“Paul’s life was utterly
projected forward, in bringing Christ to those who did not know him, and then
in rushing, as it were, into Christ’s arms, to be “saved for his heavenly
kingdom,” the Pope said.
Turning back to Peter, Pope
Francis reflected on how he was set free by Christ’s “compassionate gaze” which
“pierces the heart and brings tears of repentance.”
The Pope referenced the scene
in the Gospels in which Peter encounters Jesus after having denied him three
times.
“At that moment, Simon Peter
was set free from the prison of his selfish pride and fear, and overcame the
temptation of closing his heart to Jesus’s call to follow him along the way of
the cross.”
Pope Francis also spoke of
the “constant temptation for the Church” of “closing in on herself in the face
of danger.”
“Prayer enable grace to open
a way out from closure to openness, from fear to courage, from sadness to
joy. And we can add: from division to unity.”
During the Mass, the Pope
conferred the Pallium to twenty-five prelates from eleven countries who were
named metropolitan archbishops over the past year. Included among them were US
Archbishop Bernard Anthony Hebda of Saint Paul and Minneapolis, MN, Archbishop
Adam Szal of Przemyśl, Poland, and Archbishop Basilio Athaei of Taunggyi,
Myanmar.
The pallium is a woolen
vestment conferred on a new archbishop by the Pope, traditionally on the
solemnity of Saints Peter and Paul.
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