Pope Francis at Chrism Mass: 'God
is close to his people'
In his Chrism Mass homily, Pope Francis says that God’s
closeness, which is expressed in Jesus’ and Mary’s interactions with others, is
key for priestly ministry.
By Sr Bernadette Mary Reis, fsp
Pope Francis said that the readings from the Chrism Mass
made him think of the passage from Deuteronomy: “For what great nation is there
that has a god so near to it as the Lord our God is to us, whenever we call on
him?” (4:7)
God is close
The Pope observes that the Servant presented in Isaiah (61:
1-3, 6, 8-9), and King David presented in Psalm 88 are illustrations of how God
draws near. Revelation 1:5-8 tells us that “the Lord always comes to us.” And
the Gospel (Luke 4:16-21) shows us that, although Jesus could have chosen to be
a scribe, “he wanted to be an ‘evangelizer,’ a street preacher,” Pope Francis
says. “This is God’s great choice: the Lord chose to be close to his people.”
Closeness is key for evangelization
Closeness is “an attitude that engages the whole person, our
way of relating, our way of being attentive both to ourselves and others,” the
Pope continues. People use the term “he is close to us” when describing a
priest who is present to them and knows how to speak to everyone.
“Closeness is crucial for an evangelizer because it is a key
attitude in the Gospel,” Pope Francis explains. It is the key to mercy as well
as the key to truth because it shortens distances—as demonstrated in the
parable of the Good Samaritan. Can distances “be shortened where truth is
concerned?” the Pope asks. Yes, he answers, because truth is not only
objective, but is also fidelity. “It makes you name people with their real
name, as the Lord names them, before categorizing them or defining ‘their
situation.’ ” Making truth an idol “distances ordinary people from the healing
closeness of the word and the sacraments of Jesus.”
Mary, “Our Lady of Closeness”
As a mother, Mary is near to us. She “sets out ‘with haste,’
to serve”, and she was near enough to others’ situations that she knew what
their needs were. “At the right moment in Cana, the tone with which she says to
the servant, ‘Do whatever he tells you,’ will make those words the maternal
model of all ecclesial language,” Pope Francis says.
3 areas of priestly closeness
Pope Francis proposes three areas where the “same motherly
tone” of Mary needs to be heard by those to whom priests minister.
* Closeness in spiritual conversation: like Jesus’
conversation with the Samaritan woman in which Jesus first teaches, then
“gently helps her to acknowledge her sin,” and then “infects her with his
missionary spirit.”
* Closeness in Confession: like Jesus’ interaction
with the woman caught in adultery where Jesus says, “Go and sin no more” only
after he has knelt down with the woman, risen to his feet and said, “Neither do
I condemn you.” Pope Francis says that the words “Go and sin no more” “need to
be spoken with the tone of truth as fidelity, to enable the sinner to look
ahead and not behind.”
* Closeness in preaching: like Peter’s preaching on
the day of Pentecost which “cut his listeners to the heart,” leading them to
ask, “What shall we do?” (Acts 2:37). This is “a question (…) we must always
raise and answer in a Marian and ecclesial tone,” Pope Francis continues.
Being close to the people brings the priest close to God
In conclusion, Pope Francis urges priests to “draw nearer to
your people,” and to “approach the Lord in his Word” when they feel far away
from God and from people. He encourages them to walk with their people as a
shepherd—sometimes in front, sometimes in their midst, sometimes behind. More
than just appreciating priests like this, people “feel that there is something
special about him: something they only feel in the presence of Jesus.”
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