Pope at Mass: Be careful around
rigid Christians
“Salvation is a gift from God,” He gives us “the spirit of
liberty.” In his homily during the daily Mass at Casa Santa Marta, Pope Francis
warns us to watch out for hypocrites, whose hearts are not open to grace.
By Adriana Masotti
Pope Francis based his homily on the day’s Gospel, which
tells how Jesus did not observe the prescribed cleansing when He was invited to
dine at the home of a Pharisee. The Gospel relates the harsh response of Jesus
at the “amazement” of the Pharisees.
Doctors of the Law scandalized by Jesus
The Pope emphasized the difference between the love of the
people for Jesus, who loved Him because He touched their hearts, and a little
bit because of their own interest; and the hatred of the doctors of the Law,
the scribes, the Sadducees, the Pharisees, who followed Him in order to catch
Him in an error. They were the “pure”:
They were truly an example of formality. But they lacked
life. They were, so to speak, “starched.” They were rigid. And Jesus knew their
soul. This scandalizes us, because they were scandalized by the things Jesus
did when He forgave sins, when He healed on the Sabbath. They rent their
garments: “Oh! What a scandal! This is not from God, because He should
have done this” [instead]. The people didn’t matter to them: the Law
mattered to them, the prescriptions, the rubrics.”
Whitened sepulchres
Jesus, though, accepts the invitation of the Pharisee –
because He is free – and He goes to him. The Pharisee was scandalized by His
behaviour which went beyond the rules. But Jesus says to him, “You Pharisees
cleanse the outside of the cup and the dish, [but] inside you are filled with
plunder and evil.”
They are not beautiful words, eh? Jesus spoke clearly, He
was not a hypocrite. He spoke clearly. And he said to them, “But why do you
look at what is external? Look at what is within.” Another time He said to
them, “You are whitened sepulchres.” Nice compliment, eh? Beautiful on the
outside, all perfect… all perfect… but within, full of rottenness, therefore of
greed, of wickedness, He says. Jesus distinguishes between appearances and
internal reality. These lords are “doctors of appearances”: always perfect,
always. But within, what is there?
Hypocrites interested only in appearances
Pope Francis recalled other passages in the Gospel when
Jesus condemned such people, as He did in the parable of the Good Samaritan, or
when He denounced their ostentatious manner of fasting and almsgiving. This, he
said, is because they were interested only in appearances. “Jesus describes
these people with one word: ‘hypocrites’.” They are people with greedy souls,
capable of killing: “capable of paying to kill or calumniate, as happens every
day. It happens today: they are paid to give bad news, news that smears
others.”
Behind rigidity there are grave problems
In a word, Pope Francis continued, the Pharisees and doctors
of the Law were rigid people, not disposed to change. “But always, under or
behind rigidity, there are problems, grave problems,” the Pope said. We intend
to have the appearance of being a good Christian; we intend to appear a certain
way, we put make-up on our souls. However, Pope Francis said, behind these
appearances, “there are problems. Jesus is not there. The spirit of the world
is there.”
Do I open my heart?
Jesus calls them “foolish” and advises them to open their
souls to love in order for grace to enter. Because “grace is a freely-given
gift from God. No one saves himself, no one. No one saves himself, even with
the practices of these people.”
Finally, the Pope warns us,
Be careful around those who are rigid. Be careful around
Christians – be they laity, priests, bishops – who present themselves as so
“perfect,” rigid. Be careful. There’s no Spirit of God there. They lack the
spirit of liberty. And let us be careful with ourselves, because this should
lead us to consider our own life. Do I seek to look only at appearance, and not
change my heart? Do I not open my heart to prayer, to the liberty of prayer,
the liberty of almsgiving, the liberty of works of mercy?
Không có nhận xét nào:
Đăng nhận xét