Pope: Clericalism distances the people from the Church
(Vatican Radio) The spirit of clericalism is an evil that is
present in the Church today, Pope Francis said, and the victim of this spirit
is the people, who feel discarded and abused. That was the Pope’s message in
the homily at the morning Mass at the Casa Santa Marta.
Among those taking part in the Mass were the members of the
Council of cardinals, who are meeting with the Pope this week in Rome.
In his homily, Pope Francis warned pastors of the dangers of
becoming “intellectuals of religion” with a morality far from the Revelation of
God.
The poor and humble people who have faith in the Lord are
the victims of the “intellectuals of religion,” those who are “seduced by
clericalism,” who will be preceded in the Kingdom of Heaven by repentant
sinners.
The law of the high priests is far from Revelation
The Pope directed his attention to Jesus, who in the day’s
Gospel turns to the chief priests and the elders of the people, and focuses
precisely on their role. “They had juridical, moral, religious authority,” he
said. “They decided everything.” Annas and Caiaphas, for example, “judged
Jesus,” they were the high priests who “decided to kill Lazarus”; Judas, too,
went to them to “bargain,” and thus “Jesus was sold.” They arrived at this
state of “arrogance and tyranny towards the people,” the Pope said, by
instrumentalizing the law:
But a law that they have remade many times: so many
times, to the point that they had arrived at 500 commandments. Everything was
regulated, everything! A law scientifically constructed, because this people
was wise, they understood well. They made all these nuances, no? But it was a
law without memory: they had forgotten the First Commandment, which God had
given to our father Abraham: “Walk in my presence and be blameless.” They did
not walk: they always stopped in their own convictions. They were not blameless!
The people discarded by the intellectuals of religion
And so, the Pope said, they had forgotten the Ten
Commandments of Moses”: “With the law they themselves had made –
intellectualistic, sophisticated, casuistic – they cancelled the law the Lord had
made, they lacked the memory that connects the current moment with Revelation.”
In the past their victim was Jesus; in a similar way, now their victim is “the
humble and poor people who trust in the Lord,” “those who are discarded,” those
who understand repentance even if they do not fulfill the law, and suffer these
injustices. They feel “condemned,” and “abused,” the Pope said, by those who
are vain, proud, arrogant.” And one who was cast aside by these people, Pope
Francis observed, was Judas:
Judas was a traitor, he sinned gravely, eh! He sinned
forcefully. But then the Gospel says, “He repented, and went to them to return
the money.” And what did they do? “But you were our associate. Be calm… We have
the power to forgive you for everything!” No! “Make whatever arrangement you
can!” [they said.] “It’s your problem!” And they left him alone:
discarded! The poor Judas, a traitor and repentant, was not welcomed by the
pastors. Because these people had forgotten what it was to be a pastor. They
were the intellectuals of religion, those who had the power, who advanced the
catechesis of the people with a morality composed by their own intelligence and
not by the revelation.
The evil of clericalism can still be found in the Church
today
“A humble people, discarded and beaten by these
people.” Even today, the Pope observed, this sometimes happens in the Church.
“There is that spirit of clericalism,” he explained: “Clerics feel they are
superior, they are far from the people”; they have no time to hear the poor,
the suffering, prisoners, the sick”:
The evil of clericalism is a very ugly thing! It is a new
edition of these people. And the victim is the same: the poor and humble people
that awaits the Lord. The Father has always sought to be close to us: He sent
His Son. We are waiting, waiting in joyful expectation, exulting. But the Son
didn’t join the game of these people: The Son went with the sick, the poor, the
discarded, the publicans, the sinners – and that is scandalous – the
prostitutes. Today, too, Jesus says to all of us, and even to those who are
seduced by clericalism: “The sinners and the prostitutes will go before you
into the Kingdom of Heaven.”
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