Pope at Mass: ‘May God give us the grace to proclaim
an end to wars in world’
(Vatican Radio) War begins in a person’s heart, for
this reason we are all responsible for caring for peace. This was Pope Francis’
message during his morning Mass at the Casa Santa Marta.
Pope Francis at Mass spoke about the sufferings of so many
people whose lives are upset by wars waged by the powerful and arms
traffickers.
The dove, the rainbow, and the Covenant. The Holy Father
spoke about these three images, present in the day’s First Reading from the
Book of Genesis, in which Noah releases a dove after the flood. This dove,
which returns with an olive branch, is “a sign of what God desired after the
flood: peace, that is, that all would live in peace.” He said, “The dove and
the rainbow are fragile. The rainbow is beautiful after a storm, but then a
cloud comes and it disappears.” Even the dove, he added, is fragile. The Pope
said he was reminded of when at a Sunday Angelus two years ago a seagull
swooped in and killed the two doves he and two children had just released from
a window of the Apostolic Palace.
People die in wars promoted by the powerful and arms
traffickers
Pope Francis said, “The Covenant which God makes is strong,
but we accept it in weakness. God makes peace with us but it is not easy to
care for peace. It is a daily task, because within each of us is that seed of
original sin, that is, the spirit of Cain which – for envy, jealousy, greed,
and the desire to dominate – leads to war.” In this way, the Holy Father
observed that, when speaking of the Covenant between God and humanity,
reference is made to “blood”. As the First Reading states, “For your own
lifeblood, too, I will demand an accounting: from every animal I will demand
it, and from one man in regard to his fellow man.” We, the Pope said, “are our
brothers’ keeper, and when there is blood spilt, there is sin, and God will
demand an accounting.”
“In today’s world there is blood being spilt. Today the
world is at war. Many brothers and sisters are dying, even innocent people,
because the great and powerful want a larger slice of the earth; they want a
little more power, or they want to make a little more money on arms
trafficking. And the Word of the Lord is clear: ‘For your own lifeblood, that
is for your life, I will demand an accounting: from every animal I will demand
it, and from one man in regard to his fellow man.’ Even of us –it seems
peaceful here – the Lord will demand an accounting of the blood of our brothers
and sisters who are suffering war.”
Both caring for peace and a declaration of war begins
within each of us
“How do I care for the dove?”, Pope Francis asked himself,
“What do I do so that the rainbow is always a guide? What do I do so that more
blood is not spilt in the world?” All of us, he said, “we are involved in
this.” Prayer for peace “is not a formality; work towards peace is not a
formality.” He noted with bitterness that “war begins in the heart of a person;
it begins at home, in the family, among friends and then goes out into the
whole world.” What do I do, he asked, “when I feel that something enters my
heart that wants to destroy peace?”
“War begins in here and finishes out there. The news we see
in the papers or on television… Today so many people die, and that seed of war,
which breeds envy, jealousy, and greed in my heart, is the same – grown up,
become a tree – as the bomb which falls on a hospital, on a school, and kills
children. It is the same. The declaration of war begins in here, in each of us.
For this reason the question arises: ‘How do I care for peace in my heart, in
my interior, and in my family?’. Care for peace; not only care for it but make
it with your hands every day. Just so will we succeed in spreading it
throughout the whole world.”
The Pope’s childhood memory of the end of the war
Pope Francis said, “The blood of Christ is that which makes
peace, but not that blood which I make with my brother or which arms
traffickers make, or that of the earth’s powerful in the great wars.”
The Pope then recalled an anecdote from his childhood about
peace.
“As I recall, the alarm at the Fire Brigade began to sound,
and then those on the television and the city… This usually happened to draw
attention to a tragedy or something else. And immediately I heard our neighbor
call my mother: ‘Mrs. Regina, come here, come here, come here!’ My mother went
out a little afraid: ‘What’s happened?” And the lady from the other side of the
garden told her: ‘The war is over!’ and she cried.”
Francis then recalled the hug the two women shared, their
crying and joy because the war had ended. “May the Lord,” he concluded, “give
us the grace to say: ‘War is finished, crying. War is finished in my heart; war
is finished in my family; war is finished in my neighborhood; war is finished
in my workplace; war is finished in the world.’ In this way shall the dove,
rainbow, and Covenant be strengthened.”
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