Pope's homily for Jubilee of Prisoners
(Vatican
Radio) Pope Francis on Sunday celebrated Mass for the Jubilee of Prisoners in
St Peter's Basilica, telling those present, "by learning from past
mistakes, you can open a new chapter of your lives."
Below
is the English translation of the Pope's homily
The
message that God’s word wants to bring us today is surely that of hope.
One
of the seven brothers condemned to death by King Antiochus Epiphanes speaks of
“the hope God gives of being raised again by him” (2 Macc 7:14). These
words demonstrate the faith of those martyrs who, despite suffering and
torture, were steadfast in looking to the future. Theirs was a faith
that, in acknowledging God as the source of their hope, reflected the desire to
attain a new life.
In
the Gospel, we have heard how Jesus, with a simple yet complete answer,
demolishes the banal casuistry that the Sadducees had set before him. His
response – “He is not God of the dead, but of the living; for all live to him”
(Lk 20:38) – reveals the true face of God, who desires only life for all his
children. The hope of being born to a new life, then, is what we must
make our own, if we are to be faithful to the teaching of Jesus.
Hope
is a gift of God. It is placed deep within each human heart in order to
shed light on this life, so often troubled and clouded by so many situations
that bring sadness and pain. We need to nourish the roots of our hope so
that they can bear fruit; primarily, the certainty of God’s closeness and
compassion, despite whatever evil we have done. There is no corner of our
heart that cannot be touched by God’s love. Whenever someone makes a mistake,
the Father’s mercy is all the more present, awakening repentance, forgiveness
and reconciliation.
Today
we celebrate the Jubilee of Mercy for you and with you, our brothers and
sisters who are imprisoned. Mercy, as the expression of God’s love, is something
we need to think about more deeply. Certainly, breaking the law involves
paying the price, and losing one’s freedom is the worst part of serving time,
because it affects us so deeply. All the same, hope must not
falter. Paying for the wrong we have done is one thing, but another thing
entirely is the “breath” of hope, which cannot be stifled by anyone or
anything. Our heart always yearns for goodness. We are in debt to
the mercy that
In
his Letter to the Romans, the Apostle Paul speaks of God as “the God of hope”
(15:13). Paul almost seems to tell us that God too hopes. While
this may seem paradoxical, it is true: God hopes! His mercy gives him no
rest. He is like that Father in the parable, who keeps hoping for the return of
his son who has fallen by the wayside (Lk 15:11-32). God does not rest
until he finds the sheep that was lost (Lk 15:5). So if God hopes, then
no one should lose hope. For hope is the strength to keep moving
forward. It is the power to press on towards the future and a changed
life. It is the incentive to look to tomorrow, so that the love we have
known, for all our failings, can show us a new path. In a word, hope is
the proof, lying deep in our hearts, of the power of God’s mercy. That
mercy invites us to keep looking ahead and to overcome our attachment to evil
and sin through faith and abandonment in him.
Dear
friends, today is your Jubilee! Today, in God’s sight, may your hope be
kindled anew. A Jubilee always brings with it a proclamation of freedom
(Lev 25:39-46). It does not depend on me to grant this, but the Church’s
duty, one she cannot renounce, is to awaken within you the desire for true
freedom. Sometimes, a certain hypocrisy leads to people considering you
only as wrongdoers, for whom prison is the sole answer. We don’t think
about the possibility that people can change their lives; we put little trust
in rehabilitation. But in this way we forget that we are all sinners and
often, without being aware of it, we too are prisoners. At times we are locked
up within our own prejudices or enslaved to the idols of a false sense of
wellbeing. At times we get stuck in our own ideologies or absolutize the
laws of the market even as they crush other people. At such times, we
imprison ourselves behind the walls of individualism and self-sufficiency,
deprived of the truth that sets us free. Pointing the finger against
someone who has made mistakes cannot become an alibi for concealing our own
contradictions.
We
know that in God’s eyes no one can consider himself just (cf. Rom
2:1-11). But no one can live without the certainty of finding
forgiveness! The repentant thief, crucified at Jesus’ side, accompanied
him into paradise (cf. Lk 23:43). So may none of you allow yourselves to
be held captive by the past! True enough, even if we wanted to, we can
never rewrite the past. But the history that starts today, and looks to
the future, has yet to be written, by the grace of God and your personal responsibility.
By learning from past mistakes, you can open a new chapter of your lives.
Let us never yield to the temptation of thinking that we cannot be
forgiven. Whatever our hearts may accuse us of, small or great, “God is
greater than our hearts” (1 Jn 3:20). We need but entrust ourselves to
his mercy.
Faith,
even when it is as tiny as a grain of mustard seed, can move mountains (cf. Mt
17:20). How many times has the power of faith enabled us to utter the
word pardon in humanly impossible situations. People who have suffered
violence and abuse, either themselves, or in the person of their loved ones, or
their property… there are some wounds that only God’s power, his mercy,
can heal. But when violence is met with forgiveness, even the hearts of those
who have done wrong can be conquered by the love that triumphs over every form
of evil. In this way, among the victims and among those who wronged them,
God raises up true witnesses and workers of mercy.
Today
we venerate the Blessed Virgin Mary in this statue, which represents her as a
Mother who holds Jesus in her arms, together with a broken chain; it is the
chain of slavery and imprisonment. May Our Lady look upon each of you
with a Mother’s love. May she intercede for you, so that your hearts can
experience the power of hope for a new life, one worthy of being lived in
complete freedom and in service to your neighbour.
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