Pope at Mass: Christians are
called to be 'couriers of hope'
Pope Francis celebrates Holy Mass in Molfetta.(Vatican Media) |
On Friday Pope Francis travelled to the southern Italian
town of Molfetta to mark the 25th anniversary of Don Tonino Bello. During the
homily he held up the figure of Don Tonino as a true witness of Jesus who goes
forth into the world bringing the Gospel message of hope and mercy into the
most difficult "tabernacles of misery, pain and solitude".
By Linda Bordoni
Pope Francis has urged Christians to be
“couriers of hope,” “genuine witnesses of Jesus in the world”.
The Pope’s exhortation to leave the Lord’s table after the
Eucharist and to be active in bringing His message of peace and mercy into the
world, came during the homily at Holy Mass in the southern Italian town
of Molfettawhere he travelled to pay tribute to Fr.
Tonino Bello who was known as “the pastor of mercy” and the bishop of
“the last ones.
Addressing the crowds gathered for Mass in the port area of
the coastal town, Pope Francis commented on the liturgical readings of the day
which focus on two central elements for Christian life: Bread and the Word.
The Bread of Life and of Peace
Pointing out that bread is the essential food for living and
Jesus in the Gospel offers himself to us as the Bread of Life, the Pope said
the Eucharist is not just a beautiful rite, but a communion of love that calls
on each Christian to be nourished by the Lord in order to then give him or
herself to others.
“As Don Tonino Bello recalled, works of charity are not
enough, if the charity of works is lacking, if the love in which the works are
conceived is lacking, if the starting point which is the Eucharist is lacking,
every pastoral commitment is only a merry-go-round” he said.
Living for others is the trademark of a Christian
And remarking on the fact that living for others is the
“trademark” of a Christian, the Pope said “One could post a warning outside
every church: ‘After Mass one no longer lives for oneself, but for others’.
Don Tonino lived like this, he said, amongst his people he
was a Bishop-Servant, a Pastor whom, before the Tabernacle, “learned to be
eaten by the people”.
“He dreamed of a Church that is hungry for Jesus and
intolerant to worldliness, a Church that sees the body of Christ in the
uncomfortable tabernacles of misery, suffering and loneliness”.
And reiterating that the “Eucharist cannot stand
sedentariness” Francis invited the faithful to ask themselves whether they
‘like to be served at table by the Lord, or do they get up and serve like the
Lord?’ ‘Do they give back in life what they receive at Mass?’
“And as Church we could ask ourselves: after so many
Communions, have we become people of communion?” he said.
The Bread of Life, the Pope continued is also the Bread of
Peace, and as Don Tonino maintained, peace comes with conviviality, in “eating
bread together with others”, because conflict and war, he said, are rooted in
not knowing the other.
“We, who share this Bread of unity and peace, are called to
love every face, to heal every tear; to be, always and everywhere, builders of
peace” he said.
The Word that saves
Turning to the theme of the “Word”, the Pope said there is
nothing to be gained by just “discussing the words of Jesus.”
The Word of Jesus, he continued, “is to walk in life, not to
sit down and talk about what goes and what does not go”.
Don Tonino, he said, urged his people to move from words to
deeds, encouraging and supporting those who did not have the courage to change.
Reflecting on the first Reading in which the risen Jesus
addresses Saul and asks him to put his life at stake saying “Get up and go into
the city and you will be told what you must do”, the Pope said the first thing
to avoid is to ‘not get up’, to submit oneself to life, to be gripped by fear”.
Don Tonino, he said, used to say “Stand up!” Because one must stand before the
Risen One: “one must stand up and look up because an apostle of Jesus cannot
just get by in life with small satisfactions”.
The Lord, the Pope said, asks each of us to go forth, to
have the courage to leave our comfort zones and to take risks.
'Couriers of hope'
“A Christian life must be invested for Jesus and spent for
others” he said.
As Don Tonino used to say, he continued, “Whatever situation
we find ourselves in, we are called to be bearers of Easter hope, servants –
not employees - of the world”.
It is nice to be "couriers of hope", simple and
joyful distributors of the Easter alleluia” he said.
Finally Pope Francis invited those present to be humble,
because humility does not mean being shy or resigned, but docile to God, and
empty of oneself.
And once we are stripped of presumption and pride he said,
the Word of God frees us, it allows us to move forward, “humble and courageous
at the same time”, it does not make us protagonists or champions of our own
skills, but genuine witnesses of Jesus in the world.
“Dear brothers and sisters, the Pope concluded, at every
Mass we nourish ourselves with the Bread of life and with the saving Word: let
us put into practice what we celebrate! So, like Don Tonino, we will be sources
of hope, joy and peace”.
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