Pope at Mass: Hope is living for
the encounter with Jesus
In the homily at the Mass at Casa Santa Marta, Pope Francis
reflects on hope, which is not abstract, but living in expectation of the
concrete encounter with Jesus. And it is wise, the Pope emphasized, to know how
to rejoice in the little encounters of daily life with the Lord.
By Debora Donnini
In his daily Mass at the Casa Santa Marta, Pope Francis
explained “hope” with the image of a pregnant woman waiting for her child to be
born. Hope, he said, is not something abstract. Hope instead means living in
expectation of the concrete encounter with Jesus. And wisdom consists in being
able to rejoice in the “little encounters of the life with Jesus."
Citizenship and inheritance
The Pope began his homily by reflecting on two words from
the days Readings: citizenship and inheritance. The first Reading, taken from
the Letter of St Paul to the Ephesians, speaks about citizenship: “It is a gift
that God has given us, making us citizens.” It consists in having given us an
identity, our “identity papers,” so to speak. God, in Jesus, “has
abolished the law” (cf. 2:15) in order to reconcile us, “putting that enmity to
death by it,” so that “through Him” both Jews and Gentiles might “both have
access in one Spirit to the Father” — and so “you are fellow citizens with the
saints,” in Jesus.
“Our identity lies precisely in this,” Pope Francis said,
“in being healed by the Lord, being built into a community and having the Holy
Spirit within.”
God is leading us on the journey toward the inheritance,
secure in the knowledge that we are fellow citizens, and that God is with us.
The inheritance, Pope Francis explained, “is that which we seek in our journey,
that which we will receive in the end.” But we need to seek it each day; and it
is precisely hope which carries us forward in the journey toward that
inheritance. Hope, he said, is “perhaps the smallest virtue, perhaps the most
difficult to understand.”
If you hope, you’ll never be disappointed
Faith, hope, and charity are one gift. Faith and charity are
easy to understand. “But what is hope?” the Pope asked. It is hoping for
heaven, hoping to encounter the Saints, eternal happiness. “But what,” he
asked, “is heaven for you?”
Living in hope is journeying towards a reward, yes,
toward a happiness that we do not have but we will have there. It is a
difficult virtue to understand. It is a humble virtue, very humble. It is a
virtue that never disappoints: if you hope, you will never be disappointed.
Never, never. It is also a concrete virtue. “But how can it be concrete,” [you
ask,] “if I don’t know heaven, or what awaits me there?” Hope, our inheritance
which is hope directed towards something, is not an idea, it is not being in a good
place… no. It is an encounter. Jesus always emphasizes this part of hope, this
living in expectation, encountering.”
The pregnant woman who lives to meet her Son
In the day’s Gospel, we hear of the encounter of the master
when he returns from a wedding. An encounter is always something concrete. In
order to help us understand, Pope Francis gave a concrete example:
Something comes to mind, when I think of hope, an image:
a pregnant woman, a woman expecting a child. She goes to the doctor, she sees
the ultrasound. [Is she indifferent? Does she say,] “Oh look, a baby. Ok.” No!
She rejoices! And every day she touches her belly to caress that child, in
anticipation of that child, living in anticipation of that son. This image can
help us understand what hope is: living for that encounter. That woman imagines
what her son’s eyes will be like, what his smile will be like, whether he’ll be
blonde or dark-haired… but she imagines meeting her son. She imagines meeting
her son.
Knowing how to rejoice in the little meetings with Jesus
After explaining the image of the pregnant woman, and how it
can help us understand what hope his, the Pope asked another question:
“Do I hope like this, concretely, or is my hope a little
dispersed, a little gnostic?” Hope is concrete, it is an everyday thing,
because it is an encounter. And every time we encounter Jesus in the Eucharist,
in prayer, in the Gospel, in the poor, in the life of the community, every time
we take another step toward this definitive encounter. [This is] the wisdom of
knowing how to rejoice in the little encounters of daily life with Jesus,
preparing for that definitive encounter.
In conclusion, Pope Francis emphasized once more that the
word “identity” refers to our having been made one community; and the inheritance
is the strength of the Holy Spirit that “carries us forward with hope.” He
called on those present to ask themselves how they live out their identity as
Christians, whether they are expecting an inheritance in heaven that is
somewhat abstract – or whether they are really hoping for an encounter with the
Lord.
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