Pope Francis: 3 steps for the
journey of faith
Pope Francis greets a young auditor of the Synod of Bishops during the closing Mass. (Vatican Media) |
Pope Francis focused his homily during the closing Mass of
the Synod of Bishops on the Gospel saying that Jesus models a person who
listens, is a neighbour and bears witness.
By Sr Bernadette Mary Reis, fsp
Jesus models to his disciples three “fundamental steps on
the journey of faith”, Pope Francissaid during his homily,
which picked up threads from the Gospel story of Jesus healing the blind
Bartimaeus. This Gospel connected well with the liturgy celebrating the closing
on Sunday of the XV Ordinary General Assembly of the Synod of Bishops
on Young People.
Listening
Jesus reacts to Bartimaeus’ plea differently than the
disciples, Pope Francis says. Even though it is obvious what a blind man would
want, Jesus “goes to him; he lets him speak”. Furthermore, Jesus takes time to
listen. Pope Francis continued:
“This is the first step in helping the journey of faith:
listening. It is the apostolate of the ear: listening before speaking”.
Children of the Father
Disciples who follow their own plans instead of that of the
Lord find people like Bartimaeus to be nuisances, Pope Francis said. He called
this a risk that we must constantly watch out for. Disciples who are truly the
Father’s children approach the same people differently.
“They listen patiently and lovingly, just as God does to
us and to our prayers, however repetitive they may be. God never grows
tired; he is always happy when we seek him. May we too ask for the grace
of a heart that listens.”
Pope Francis then asked forgiveness of young people in the
name of all adults.
“Forgive us if often we have not listened to you, if,
instead of opening our hearts, we have filled your ears.”
Being neighbours
The second step in this journey of faith is to become a
neighbour to the person asking for help. Jesus did not delegate the task to
someone else, Pope Francis noted. He personally went to Bartimaeus and asked
him what he wanted so that his response would respond to Bartimaeus’ need. This
how God works, the Pope said.
“Let us look at the cross, start from there and remember
that God became my neighbour in sin and death. He became my neighbour: it
all starts from there. And when, out of love of him, we too become
neighbours, we become bearers of new life.”
Bearing witness
Obeying Jesus, the disciples approach Bartimaeus. They don’t
throw him a coin, but they say to him words that only Jesus has said prior this
episode: “Take heart”, and “get up”.
“In the Gospel, Jesus alone says, “Get up”, and heals in
spirit and body. Jesus alone calls, transforming the lives of those who
follow him, helping raise up the fallen, bringing God’s light to the darkness
of life.”
Faith begins with need to be saved
The conclusion of the Gospel account is surprising, the Pope
ended. Without a profession of faith or any good work, Bartimaeus hears Jesus
say, “Go your way; your faith has saved you”. His need for salvation was the
beginning of his faith, Pope Francis pointed out.
“The faith that saved Bartimaeus did not have to do with
his having clear ideas about God, but in his seeking him and longing to
encounter him. Faith has to do with encounter, not theory. In
encounter, Jesus passes by; in encounter, the heart of the Church beats.
Then, not our preaching, but our witness of life will prove effective.”
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