Pope Francis: rigidity, worldliness a disaster for
priests
(Vatican Radio) Pope Francis celebrated Mass in the chapel
of the Casa Santa Marta on Friday morning, focusing his remarks following the
readings of the day on the need for priests to serve as authentic mediators of
God’s love, rather than as intermediaries – “go-betweens” or “middle-men” –
concerned only with advancing their own interests.
No to “go-between” priests, yest to priests who are
mediators of God’s love
The role of the mediator is not that of the intermediary –
and priests are called to be the former for their flock:
“The mediator gives himself (lit. perde se stesso)
to unite the parties, he gives his life. That is the price: his life – he pays
with his life, his fatigue, his work, so many things, but – in this case the
pastor - to unite the flock, to unite people, to bring them to Jesus. The logic
of Jesus as mediator is the logic of annihilating oneself. St. Paul in his
Letter to the Philippians is clear on this: ‘He annihilated himself, emptied
himself, and to achieve this union, [he did so] even unto death, death on a
cross. That is the logic: to empty oneself, to annihilate oneself.”
The priest who abandons the task of being a mediator and
instead prefers to be an intermediary si unhappy, and soon becomes sad – and he
will seek happiness in vaunting himself and making his “authority” felt.
Rigidity brings us to push away people who seek
consolation
Jesus had a powerful message for the “go-betweens” of his
day, who enjoyed to stroll the squares to be seen:
“But to make themselves important, intermediary priests must
take the path of rigidity: often disconnected from the people, they do not know
what human suffering is; they forget what they had learned at home, with dad’s
work, with mom’s, grandfather’s, grandmother’s, his brothers’ ... They lose
these things. They are rigid, [they are] those rigid ones that load upon the
faithful so many things that they do not carry [themselves], as Jesus said to
the intermediaries of his time: rigidity. [They face] the people of God with a
switch in their hand: ‘This cannot be, this cannot be ...’. And so many people
approaching, looking for a bit of consolation, a little understanding, are
chased away with this rigidity.”
When a rigid, worldly priest becomes a functionary, he
ends up making himself ridiculous
Rigidity – which wrecks one’s interior life and even psychic
balance – goes hand-in-glove with worldliness:
“About rigidity and worldliness, it was some time ago that
an elderly monsignor of the curia came to me, who works, a normal man, a good
man, in love with Jesus – and he told me that he had gone to buy a couple of
shirts at Euroclero [the clerical clothing store] and saw a young fellow - he
thinks he had not more than 25 years, or a young priest or about to become a
priest - before the mirror, with a cape, large, wide, velvet, with a silver
chain. He then took the Saturno [wide-brimmed clerical headgear], he put it on
and looked himself over. A rigid and worldly one. And that priest – he is wise,
that monsignor, very wise - was able to overcome the pain, with a line of
healthy humor and added: ‘And it is said that the Church does not allow women
priests!’. Thus, does the work that the priest does when he becomes a
functionary ends in the ridiculous, always.”
You can recognize a good priest by whether he knows how
to play with children
“In the examination of conscience,” Pope Francis said, “consider
this: today was I a functionary or a mediator? Did I look after myself, did I
look to my own comfort, my own comfort, or did I spend the day in the service
of others?” The Pope went on to say, “Once, a person told me how he knew what
kind of priest a man was by the attitude they had with children: if they knew
how to caress a child, to smile at a child, to play with a child ... It is
interesting, that, because it means that they know this means lowering oneself,
getting close to the little things.” Rather, said Pope Francis, “the go-between
is sad, always with that sad face or the too serious, dark face. The
intermediary has the dark eyes, very dark! The mediator is open: the smile, the
warmth, the understanding, the caresses.”
St. Polycarp, St. Francis Xavier, St. Paul: three icons
of the mediator-priest
In the final part of the homily the Pope then brought three
“icons” of “mediator-priests and not intermediaries.” The first is the great
Polycarp, who “does not negotiate his vocation and is brave all the way to the
pyre, and when the fire is around him, the faithful who were there, they
smelled the aroma of bread.”
“This,” he said, is how a mediator makes his end: as a piece
of bread for his faithful.” Another icon is St. Francis Xavier, who died young
on the beach of Shangchuan, “looking toward China” where he wanted to go but
could not because the Lord took him to Himself. And then, the last icon: the
elderly St. Paul at the Three Fountains. “Early that morning,” Pope Francis
reminded those gathered for Mass, “the soldiers went to him, they got him, and
he walked bent over.” He knew that that was because of the treachery of some in
the Christian community but he had struggled so much, so much in his life, that
he offered himself to the Lord as a sacrifice.”
“Three icons,” he concluded, “that can help us. Look there: how I want to end my life as a priest? As a functionary, as an intermediary, or as a mediator, that is, on the cross?”
“Three icons,” he concluded, “that can help us. Look there: how I want to end my life as a priest? As a functionary, as an intermediary, or as a mediator, that is, on the cross?”
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