Pope Francis' homily for Deceased Cardinals and
Bishops
Vatican Radio) Pope Francis on Friday
celebrated Mass in St. Peter’s Basilica for deceased Cardinals and
Bishops.
During his homily the Pope reflected on the reality of death
reminding us that “the faith we profess in the resurrection makes us men and
woman of hope, not despair, men and women of life, not death, for we are
comforted by the promise of eternal life, grounded in our union with the risen
Christ”.
Please find below the full text of the Pope’s homily:
Today’s celebration once more sets before us the reality of
death. It renews our sorrow for the loss of those who were dear and good
to us. Yet, more importantly, the liturgy increases our hope for them and
for ourselves.
The first reading expresses a powerful hope in the
resurrection of the just: “Many of those who sleep in the dust of the earth
shall awake, some to everlasting life, and some to shame and everlasting
contempt” (Dan 12:2). Those who sleep in the dust of the earth are
obviously the dead. Yet awakening from death is not in itself a return to
life: some will awake for eternal life, others for everlasting shame.
Death makes definitive the “crossroads” which even now, in this world, stands
before us: the way of life, with God, or the way of death, far from him.
The “many” who will rise for eternal life are to be understood as the “many”
for whom the blood of Christ was shed. They are the multitude that,
thanks to the goodness and mercy of God, can experience the life that does not
pass away, the complete victory over death brought by the resurrection.
In the Gospel, Jesus strengthens our hope by saying: “I am
the living bread that came down from heaven. Whoever eats of this bread
will live forever” (Jn 6:51). These words evoke Christ’s sacrifice on the
cross. He accepted death in order to save those whom the Father had given
him, who were dead in the slavery of sin. Jesus became our brother and
shared our human condition even unto death. By his love, he shattered the
yoke of death and opened to us the doors of life. By partaking of his
body and blood, we are united to his faithful love, which embraces his
definitive victory of good over evil, suffering and death. By virtue of
this divine bond of Christ’s charity, we know that our fellowship with the dead
is not merely a desire or an illusion, but a reality.
The faith we profess in the resurrection makes us men and
woman of hope, not despair, men and women of life, not death, for we are
comforted by the promise of eternal life, grounded in our union with the risen
Christ.
This hope, rekindled in us by the word of God, helps us to
be trusting in the face of death. Jesus has shown us that death is not
the last word; rather, the merciful love of the Father transfigures us and
makes us live in eternal communion with him. A fundamental mark of the
Christian is a sense of anxious expectation of our final encounter with
God. We reaffirmed it just now in the responsorial psalm: “My soul
thirsts for God, for the living God. When shall I come and behold the
face of God?” (Ps 42:2). These poetic words poignantly convey our
watchful and expectant yearning for God’s love, beauty, happiness, and wisdom.
These same words of the psalm were impressed on the souls of
our brother cardinals and bishops whom we remember today. They left us
after having served the Church and the people entrusted to them in the prospect
of eternity. As we now give thanks for their generous service to the
Gospel and the Church, we seem to hear them repeat with the apostle: “Hope does
not disappoint” (Rom 5:5). Truly, it does not disappoint! God is
faithful and our hope in him is not vain. Let us invoke for them the
maternal intercession of Mary Most Holy, that they may share in the eternal
banquet of which, with faith and love, they had a foretaste in the course of
their earthly pilgrimage.
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