Pope addresses the “illnesses” of
the Diocese of Rome
Meeting with the Diocese of Rome on Monday, Pope Francis
focused on a series of spiritual illnesses and their possible cures.
Conducted mostly in the form of a question and answer
session, a style preferred by Pope Francis, the meeting in the Basilica of St
John Lateran began with a litany of the ills suffered by the Church in the
Pope’s own Diocese.
Where does it hurt?
It was left to a Professor at the Pontifical Lateran
University, Don Paolo Asolan, to present the Pope with the results of a
Diocesan Commission which outlined the challenges facing the Church in Rome.
The list includes concern over increasingly self-referential attitudes, a
deceasing sense of communion among Christians, and the rush to engage in too
many pastoral initiatives, leaving no time to reflect. The role of the poor,
according to the Commission, is also underestimated and under-addressed.
Jesus the Healer
Pope Francis responded to these challenges by indicating Our
Lord as the Great Healer. We should not think we can heal ourselves, he said.
We need someone to help us and, first and foremost, “this is the Lord”. We
should then seek comfort, he continued, in those who have the charism of “spiritual
accompaniment”: this could be a priest or a layperson, an elderly person or a
young person. Finally, the Pope suggested we find something to read that helps
us and encourages us to look ahead. “Talking with Jesus, talking with another
person, talking with the Church…this is the first step”, he said. “Pray, talk
to another person, read something...but, remember, the only one who can heal is
the Lord”.
Beware of navel-gazing
Addressing the danger of becoming too self-referential, Pope
Francis warned against “navel-gazing”, and being so “fascinated by novelties”
that we become distracted from what really matters. Sometimes we need a slap,
he said, to bring us back to reality. And in response to the issue of becoming
too involved in too many pastoral activities, the Pope emphasized the need to
seek harmony in all things, suggesting we look to the Holy Spirit for
inspiration. The Holy Spirit is responsible for harmony, he said, “not as
something static”, but as something dynamic, something that is part of the
journey.
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