Full text of Pope Francis' homily for the Consistory
(Vatican Radio) Pope Francis, in his homily at the Consistory
which took place in St Peter’s Basilica on Saturday, reflected on the Lord’s
“Sermon on the Plain,” found in the Gospel of St Luke.
The Holy Father said that, by taking the Apostles down from
the mountaintop and setting them in the midst of the people on the plain, our
Lord “shows the Apostles, and ourselves, that the true heights are reached on
the plain, while the plain reminds us that the heights are found in a gaze and
above all in a call: ‘Be merciful as the Father is merciful’.”
Speaking to the newly created Cardinals, Pope Francis said,
“Today each of you, dear brothers, is asked to cherish in your own heart, and
in the heart, this summons to be merciful like the Father.”
Read the full text of the Pope’s homily, as prepared:
Homily of His Holiness Pope Francis
Consistory for the Creation of New Cardinals
Consistory for the Creation of New Cardinals
19 November 2016
The Gospel passage we have just heard (cf. Lk 6:27-36)
is often referred to as the “Sermon on the Plain”. After choosing the
Twelve, Jesus came down with his disciples to a great multitude of people who
were waiting to hear him and to be healed. The call of the Apostles is
linked to this “setting out”, descending to the plain to encounter the
multitudes who, as the Gospel says, were “troubled” (cf. v. 18).
Instead of keeping the Apostles at the top of the mountain, their being chosen
leads them to the heart of the crowd; it sets them in the midst of those who
are troubled, on the “plain” of their daily lives. The Lord thus shows
the Apostles, and ourselves, that the true heights are reached on the plain,
while the plain reminds us that the heights are found in a gaze and above all
in a call: “Be merciful, even as your Father is merciful” (v. 36).
This call is accompanied by four commands or exhortations,
which the Lord gives as a way of moulding the Apostles’ vocation through real,
everyday situations. They are four actions that will shape, embody and
make tangible the path of discipleship. We could say that they represent
four stages of a mystagogy of mercy: love, do good, bless and pray.
I think we can all agree on these, and see them as something reasonable.
They are four things we can easily do for our friends and for those more or
less close to us, people we like, people whose tastes and habits are similar to
our own.
The problem comes when Jesus tells us for whom we
have do these things. Here he is very clear. He minces no words, he
uses no euphemisms. He tells us: love your enemies; do good to
those who hate you; bless those who curse you; pray for those
who mistreat you (cf. vv. 27-28).
These are not things we spontaneously do in dealing with
people we consider our opponents or enemies. Our first instinctive
reaction in such cases is to dismiss, discredit or curse them. Often we
try to “demonize” them, so as to have a “sacred” justification for dismissing
them. Jesus tells us to do exactly the opposite with our enemies, those
who hate us, those who curse us or slander us. We are to love them, to do
good to them, to bless them and to pray for them.
Here we find ourselves confronted with one of the very
hallmarks of Jesus’ message, where its power and secret are concealed.
Here too is the source of our joy, the power of our mission and our preaching
of the Good News. My enemy is someone I must love. In God’s heart
there are no enemies. God only has sons and daughters. We are the
ones who raise walls, build barriers and label people. God has sons and
daughters, precisely so that no one will be turned away. God’s love has
the flavour of fidelity towards everyone, for it is a visceral love, a parental
love that never abandons us, even when we go astray. Our Father does not
wait for us to be good before he loves the world, he does not wait for us to be
a little bit better or more perfect before he loves us; he loves us because he
chose to love us, he loves us because he has made us his sons and
daughters. He loved us even when we were enemies (cf. Rom5:10).
The Father’s unconditional love for all people was, and is, the true
prerequisite for the conversion of our pitiful hearts that tend to judge,
divide, oppose and condemn. To know that God continues to love even those
who reject him is a boundless source of confidence and an impetus for our
mission. No matter how sullied our hands may be, God cannot be stopped
from placing in those hands the Life he wishes to bestow on us.
Ours is an age of grave global problems and issues. We
live at a time in which polarization and exclusion are burgeoning and
considered the only way to resolve conflicts. We see, for example, how
quickly those among us with the status of a stranger, an immigrant, or a
refugee, become a threat, take on the status of an enemy. An enemy
because they come from a distant country or have different customs. An
enemy because of the colour of their skin, their language or their social
class. An enemy because they think differently or even have a different
faith. An enemy because… And, without our realizing it, this way of
thinking becomes part of the way we live and act. Everything and everyone
then begins to savour of animosity. Little by little, our differences
turn into symptoms of hostility, threats and violence. How many wounds
grow deeper due to this epidemic of animosity and violence, which leaves its
mark on the flesh of many of the defenceless, because their voice is weak and
silenced by this pathology of indifference! How many situations of uncertainty
and suffering are sown by this growing animosity between peoples, between
us! Yes, between us, within our communities, our priests, our
meetings. The virus of polarization and animosity permeates our way of
thinking, feeling and acting. We are not immune from this and we need to
take care lest such attitudes find a place in our hearts, because this would be
contrary to the richness and universality of the Church, which is tangibly
evident in the College of Cardinals. We come from distant lands; we have
different traditions, skin colour, languages and social backgrounds; we think
differently and we celebrate our faith in a variety of rites. None of
this makes us enemies; instead, it is one of our greatest riches.
Dear brothers and sisters, Jesus never stops “coming down
from the mountain”. He constantly desires to enter the crossroads of our
history to proclaim the Gospel of Mercy. Jesus continues to call us and
to send us to the “plain” where our people dwell. He continues to invite
us to spend our lives sustaining our people in hope, so that they can be signs
of reconciliation. As the Church, we are constantly being asked to open
our eyes to see the wounds of so many of our brothers and sisters deprived of
their dignity, deprived in their dignity.
My dear brothers, newly created Cardinals, the journey
towards heaven begins in the plains, in a daily life broken and shared, spent
and given. In the quiet daily gift of all that we are. Our
mountaintop is this quality of love; our goal and aspiration
is to strive, on life’s plain, together with the People of God, to become
persons capable of forgiveness and reconciliation.
Today each of you, dear brothers, is asked to cherish in
your own heart, and in the heart of the Church, this summons to be merciful like
the Father. And to realize that “if something should rightly disturb us
and trouble our consciences, it is the fact that so many of our brothers and
sisters are living without the strength, light and consolation born of
friendship with Jesus Christ, without a community of faith to support them,
without meaning and a goal in life” (Evangelii Gaudium, 49).
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