Pope Francis: Mass with Cardinals to mark 80th
birthday
(Vatican Radio) Pope Francis was the principal celebrant at
Mass in the Pauline Chapel of the Apostolic Palace in the Vatican on the
morning of December 17th. The Mass was that of the Saturday in the Third Week
of Advent, and the concelebrants were the Cardinals resident in Rome.
The reason for the extraordinary liturgical celebration was
thanksgiving to God for the life of Pope Francis, who was born 80 years ago
this day, on December 17th, 1936.
The liturgy unfolded with the simple penitential settings of
the season, and the readings were those of the day. The Dean of the College of
Cardinals, Cardinal Angelo Sodano, offered words of greeting in the name of all
those present and of all the members of the College, saying, “The risen Jesus
appeared to the disciples and addressed these well-known words to Simon-Peter:
‘Simon son of Jonah, do you love me more than these?’ And the Apostle
immediately replied: ‘Yes, Lord, You know that I love you!’ It is with this
love that Your Holiness today carries out His mission in the world. Then we
know that we are close to you, especially today, on this beautiful day of your
life.
Cardinal Sodano went on to say, “Our prayer shall be with
you always, well mindful as we are of what we repeat in the Holy Mass every
day, and that is: that by communion with the Body and Blood of Christ, may the
Holy Spirit unite us in One Body.”
At the end of the Mass, Pope Francis offered thanks to the
Cardinals present, saying, “For several days now, I’ve been thinking of a word
that can seem ugly – no? – dotage. It is scary: just yesterday, [Office Manager
for the Dept. for Relations with States in the Secretariat of State of the Holy
See] Msgr. [Luigi] Cavaliere gave me [a copy of] Cicero’s De senectute
- right? Really laying it on [It. una goccia in più]. Only, remember what
I said to you on March 15 [2013], in our first meeting: ‘Old age is the seat of
wisdom.’ Hopefully it is for me, right? Let us hope that it is so.”
The Holy Father also recalled a line of the Roman poet,
Ovid: “Tacitu pede lapsa vetustas [with silent steps, old age slips up on one]
It is a blow! But also, when one thinks of it as a stage of life that is to
give joy, wisdom, hope, one begins to live again, right? And I can think of
another poem that I quoted to you that day too [from the German poet,
Hölderlin]: Es ist ruhig, das Alter, und fromm, “Old age is quiet and
religious”.
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