Pope presides at ecumenical
Vespers service
Pope Francis presided at Vespers for the Feast of the
Conversion of St Paul at the conclusion of the Week of Prayer for Christian
Unity.
By Christopher Wells
As is traditional, Pope Francis presided over an ecumenical
Vespers service at the Basilica of Saint Paul’s Outside the Walls for the
conclusion of the annual Week of Prayer for Christian Unity. The end of the
Week coincides with the Feast of the Conversion of Saint Paul.
The Song of Moses and Miriam
During the liturgical service, a cantor proclaimed a reading
from the Book of Exodus, the “Song of Moses and Miriam,” which Pope Francis
took as the starting point for his homily. The hymn was sung by the Israelites
after they had been saved from the Egyptians by God, an event that many of the
Church Fathers saw as an image of Baptism. “All of us Christians,” the Pope
said, have passed through the waters of Baptism; and the grace of the Sacrament
has destroyed our enemies, sin and death.” Precisely for this reason, he
continued, together we are able to sing God’s praise.
Called to community
But, the Pope said, as with Moses, “our individual
experiences bind us to an even greater story, that of the salvation of the
people of God.” Saint Paul, he said, whose conversion is celebrated in this
liturgical feast, likewise had a “powerful experience of grace,” and this
experience led him “to seek out communion with other Christians.” This, the
Pope said, is also our experience as believers: “As soon as we grow in the
spiritual life, we understand ever better that grace reaches us together with
others, and is to be shared with others.”
The Pope explained that in recognizing the Baptisms of
Christians of other traditions, we acknowledge that they too have received
forgiveness, and that God’s grace is at work in them too. “And even when
divergences separate us,” he said, “we recognize that we pertain to the same
people of the redeemed, to the same family of brothers and sisters loved by the
only Father.”
United in suffering
Our growth in the spiritual life, however, is often a
difficult one, the Pope said, and pointed to the suffering of Christians
endured for the Name of Jesus. The Holy Father argued that “when their blood is
shed, even if they belong to different [Christian] Confessions, together they
become witnesses of the faith, martyrs, united in the bond of baptismal grace.”
Even with other religious traditions, the Pope said,
“Christians today confront the challenges that demean human dignity: flying
from situations of conflict and misery they are victims of human trafficking
and other forms of modern slavery; they suffer hardships and hunger, in a world
that is ever more rich in means and poor in love, where inequality continues to
grow.” But, he said, Christians are called to remember the history of what God
has done for us, and to help and support one another, and “to face every
challenge with courage and hope, armed only with Jesus and the sweet power of His
Gospel.”
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