Homily for Mass at the Shrine of St. John Paul II:
Full text
(Vatican Radio) On Saturday
morning, at the Sanctuary of St John Paul II in Krakow, Pope Francis offered
the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass for priests, religious men and women,
consecrated persons, and seminarians.
Below, please find the
prepared text of the Pope's homily for the Mass:
Homily of His Holiness
Pope Francis
Mass with Priests,
Religious, Consecrated Persons and Seminarians
Krakow, 30 July 2016
The words of the Gospel we
have just heard (cf. Jn 20:19-31) speak to us of a
place, a disciple and a book.
The place is
where the disciples gathered on the evening of Easter; we read only that its
doors were closed (cf. v. 19). Eight days later, the disciples were once
more gathered there, and the doors were still shut (cf. v. 26). Jesus
enters, stands in their midst and brings them his peace, the
Holy Spirit and the forgiveness of sins: in a word, God’s mercy. Behind
those closed doors there resounds Jesus’ call to his followers: “As the Father
has sent me, so I send you” (v. 21).
Jesus sends.
From the beginning, he wants his to be a Church on the move, a Church thatgoes
out into the world. And he wants it to do this just as he
did. He was not sent into the world by the Father to wield power, but to
take the form of a slave (cf. Phil 2:7); he came not “to
be served, but to serve” (Mk 10:45) and to bring the Good
News (cf. Lk 4:18). In the same way, his followers are
sent forth in every age. The contrast is striking: whereas the disciples
had closed the doors out of fear, Jesus sends them out on mission. He
wants them to open the doors and go out to spread God’s pardon and peace, with
the power of the Holy Spirit.
This call is also addressed
to us. How can we fail to hear its echo in the great appeal of Saint John
Paul II: “Open the doors”? Yet, in our lives as priests and consecrated
persons, we can often be tempted to remain enclosed, out of fear or
convenience, within ourselves and in our surroundings. But Jesus directs
us to a one-way street: that of going forth from ourselves. It is a
one-way trip, with no return ticket. It involves making an exodus from
ourselves, losing our lives for his sake (cf. Mk 8:35) and
setting out on the path of self-gift. Nor does Jesus like journeys made
halfway, doors half-closed, lives lived on two tracks. He asks us to pack
lightly for the journey, to set out renouncing our own security, with him alone
as our strength.
In other words, the life of
Jesus’ closest disciples, which is what we are called to be, is shaped by concrete
love, a love, in other words, marked by service and availability.
It is a life that has no closed spaces or private property for our own
use. Those who choose to model their entire life on Jesus no longer
choose their own places; they go where they are sent, in ready response to the
one who calls. They do not even choose their own times. The house
where they live does not belong to them, because the Church and the world are
the open spaces of their mission. Their wealth is to put the Lord in
the midst of their lives and to seek nothing else for themselves.
So they flee the satisfaction of being at the centre of things; they do not
build on the shaky foundations of worldly power, or settle into the comforts
that compromise evangelization. They do not waste time planning a secure
future, lest they risk becoming isolated and gloomy, enclosed within the narrow
walls of a joyless and desperate self-centredness. Finding their
happiness in the Lord, they are not content with a life of mediocrity, but burn
with the desire to bear witness and reach out to others. They love to
take risks and to set out, not limited to trails already blazed, but open and
faithful to the paths pointed out by the Spirit. Rather than just getting
by, they rejoice to evangelize.
Secondly, today’s Gospel
presents us with the one disciple who is named: Thomas.
In his hesitation and his efforts to understand, this disciple, albeit somewhat
stubborn, is a bit like us and we find him likeable. Without knowing it,
he gives us a great gift: he brings us closer to God, because God does not hide
from those who seek him. Jesus shows Thomas his glorious wounds; he makes
him touch with his hand the infinite tenderness of God, the vivid signs of how
much he suffered out of love for humanity.
For us who are disciples, it
is important to put our humanity in contact with the flesh of the Lord, to
bring to him, with complete trust and utter sincerity, our whole being.
As Jesus told Saint Faustina, he is happy when we tell him everything: he is
not bored with our lives, which he already knows; he waits for us to tell him
even about the events of our day (cf. Diary, 6 September
1937). That is the way to seek God: through prayer that is transparent
and unafraid to hand over to him our troubles, our struggles and our
resistance. Jesus’ heart is won over by sincere openness, by hearts
capable of acknowledging and grieving over their weakness, yet trusting that
precisely there God’s mercy will be active.
What does Jesus ask of
us? He desires hearts that are truly consecrated, hearts that draw life
from his forgiveness in order to pour it out with compassion on our brothers
and sisters. Jesus wants hearts that are open and tender towards the
weak, never hearts that are hardened. He wants docile and transparent
hearts that do not dissimulate before those whom the Church appoints as our
guides. Disciples do not hesitate to ask questions, they have the courage
to face their misgivings and bring them to the Lord, to their formators and
superiors, without calculations or reticence. A faithful disciple engages
in constant watchful discernment, knowing that the heart must be trained daily,
beginning with the affections, to flee every form of duplicity in attitudes and
in life.
The Apostle Thomas, at the
conclusion of his impassioned quest, not only came to believe in the
resurrection, but found in Jesus his life’s greatest treasure, his Lord.
He says to Jesus: “My Lord and my God!” (v. 28). We would do well each
day to pray these magnificent words, and to say to the Lord: You are my one treasure,
the path I must follow, the core of my life, my all.
The final verse of today’s
Gospel speaks of a book: it is the Gospel that, we are told, does
not contain all the many other signs that Jesus worked (v. 30). After the
great sign of his mercy, we could say that there is no longer a need to add
another. Yet one challenge does remain. There is room left for the
signs needing to be worked by us, who have received the Spirit of love and are
called to spread mercy. It might be said that the Gospel, the living book
of God’s mercy that must be continually read and reread, still has many blank
pages left. It remains an open book that we are called to write in the
same style, by the works of mercy we practise. Let me ask you this: What
are the pages of your books like? Are they blank? May the Mother of
God help us in this. May she, who fully welcomed the word of God into her
life (cf. Lk 8:20-21), give us the grace to be living
writers of the Gospel. May our Mother of Mercy teach us how to take
concrete care of the wounds of Jesus in our brothers and sisters in need, those
close at hand and those far away, the sick and the migrant, because by serving
those who suffer we honour the flesh of Christ. May the Virgin Mary help
us to spend ourselves completely for the good of the faithful entrusted to us,
and to show concern for one another as true brothers and sisters in the
communion of the Church, our holy Mother.
Dear brothers and sisters,
each of us holds in his or her heart a very personal page of the book of God’s
mercy. It is the story of our own calling, the voice of the love that
attracted us and transformed our life, leading us to leave everything at his
word and to follow him (cf. Lk 5:11). Today let us
gratefully rekindle the memory of his call, which is stronger than any
resistance and weariness on our part. As we continue this celebration of
the Eucharist, the centre of our lives, let us thank the Lord for having
entered through our closed doors with his mercy, for calling us, like Thomas,
by name, and for giving us the grace to continue writing his Gospel of
love.
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