Pope at Mass: have courage to let go of grudges and
complaints
(Vatican
Radio) At his morning Mass at Santa Marta on Monday, Pope Francis said we must
learn to let ourselves be consoled by the Lord, leaving behind our grudges and
complaints.
Reflecting on the day’s first reading from the prophet
Isaiah, he said the Lord has come to console us. Just as the first disciples
could hardly believe the joy of the Resurrection, we often find it hard to let
ourselves be consoled by the miracles that God performs in our lives.
It is easier for us to console others, than to let ourselves
be consoled, the pope said. So often, we are attached to the negative sins and
scars in our hearts and we prefer to remain there on our sick bed, like the
paralised man in St Luke’s Gospel, not wanting to hear Jesus telling us to ‘Get
up and walk!’
We prefer to stew in our own juice
Pope Francis continued by explaining that we prefer to bear
grudges and to stew in our own juice because in that way we are masters of our
own hard hearts. Like the paralised man, we prefer the ‘bitter root’ of
original sin than the sweetness of God’s consolation.
Such bitterness always leads us to complain, the pope said,
with a constant whining as the soundtrack to our lives. He described the
prophet Job as the Nobel prize winner of whiners, who complained about
everything that God did.
Have courage to let go of complaints
Pope Francis also recalled an elderly priest he knew who
complained so much that his companions joked about what he would say to St
Peter, upon arriving in heaven. They said his first thoughts would be to ask
about hell and to complain that there were too few people denied salvation.
Faced with such bitterness, anger and complaining, the pope
said, the Church repeats that we must have courage, just like the friends of
the paralised man, who didn’t think about the reaction of the scribes, but only
about helping their friend in need.
Let ourselves be consoled by the Lord
The message of today’s liturgy, Pope Francis concluded, is
to let ourselves be consoled by the Lord, to be stripped of all our bitter
egoisms and complaints. Let us examine our consciences and look into our
hearts, he urged, asking if there is any sadness or bitterness there. Do we
praise God, or do we always have something to complain about? Let us pray for
the grace of courage, he said, asking the Lord to come and console us.
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