Pope Francis says Mass for Vatican City's Corps of
Gendarmes
A officer of the Gendarmerie Corps of Vatican City State during the Feast of St. Michael the Archangel at Vatican City, 26 September 2013.- ANSA |
(Vatican Radio) Pope Francis said Mass for
the Corps of Gendarmes – the Vatican police
force – in the Lourdes Grotto of the Vatican on
Sunday to mark the 201st anniversary of the founding of the
Corps.
In remarks following the Readings of the Day, Pope
Francis focused especially on the 1st Reading, from
the Book of the Prophet Isaiah, saying, “In the first Reading, the
prophet Isaiah urges us to seek the Lord, to convert: ‘Seek ye the Lord, while
he may be found: call upon him, while he is near. Let the wicked forsake
his way, and the unjust man his thoughts.’ (55: 6-7).
Conversion and God's search for us
“Conversion,” he went on to say, “is a [real] thing:
[Isaiah] tells us that this is the way: to seek the Lord, to change one’s life,
to convert – and that is true. Nevertheless, Jesus changes the logic and goes
beyond, with a logic that no one could understand: it is the logic of God’s
love. True, you must seek the Lord and do everything to find Him; but the
important thing is that He is looking for you. More important than
seeking the Lord, is to realize that He is looking for [you
and] me.”
The Father always ready to embrace us
Reflecting then on the Gospel parable of
the Prodigal Son, Pope Francis said, “[God] goes out of
Himself to look for us, so much has he gone out of Himself, that He has sent
His Son to find us. Our God always has His gaze fixed on us. We think of the
father of the prodigal son: the Gospel says that he saw him coming from far
(cf. Lk 15:20). But why did he see him? Because every day, and perhaps several
times a day, he went up to the terrace to see whether the son was approaching,
whether the son was coming back. This is the heart of our God: it always waits
for us – and when someone says, ‘I've found God,’ he is mistaken. God finally
found you and has carried you with Him. It is He who makes the first step. He
does not tire of going out, ever out [in search] ... He respects the freedom of
every man, but there He is, waiting for us to open a door to Him.”
Open the door to God's merciful love
The Holy Father concluded his reflections with an expression
of hope and an exhortation.
“May the Lord, in this day that is so joyful for you, grant
you this grace – to me, as well, and to everyone: the grace of being sure that
He is always at the door, awaiting that I should open it [even] a little bit,
in order that he should enter. Also, have no fear: when the prodigal son met
the father, the father descended from the terrace and went to meet his son.
That old man hurried, and the Gospel tells us that, when the son began to say,
‘Father, I have sinned,” the father did not let him speak; he embraced him, he
kissed him. (Lk 15:20-21)”
“This,” said Pope Francis, “is what awaits us if
only we should open the door a little bit: the embrace of the Father.”
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