Pope Mass: The three forms of
poverty
This morning in his homily during Mass at the Casa Santa
Marta, Pope Francis dwells on the three ways of living poverty in the life of
the Christian and reflects that even today there are many Christians persecuted
for the Gospel.
In this morning's Mass at the Casa Santa Marta, the Pope
speaks of the three forms of poverty to which the disciple is called: the first
is to renounce riches, with a heart detached from money, the second is to
accept persecution, large or small, even slander, because of the Gospel, and
the third is the poverty of loneliness, to feel alone at the end of life. His
reflection begins with the Collect Prayer, which emphasizes that through Saint
Luke, the Lord wanted to reveal his predilection for the poor. The Gospel (Lk
10:1-9) then speaks of the sending of the 72 disciples into poverty - "do
not carry a purse, bag or sandals" - because the Lord wants the disciple's
path to be a poor one. The disciple attached to money or wealth is not a true
disciple.
The poor disciple with a heart detached from wealth
Pope Francis' entire homily is, therefore, marked by
the "three stages" of poverty in the life of the disciples, the three
ways of living it. The first, in fact, is that of being detached from money and
wealth and is "the condition for beginning the path of discipleship".
It consists in having a "poor heart", so much so that "if in the
apostolic work there is a need for structures or organizations that seem to be
a sign of wealth, use them well - but be detached", the Pope warns. The rich
young man of the Gospel, in fact, moved the heart of Jesus but was then unable
to follow the Lord because he had "his heart attached to riches".
"If you want to follow the Lord, choose the path of poverty and if you
have riches because the Lord gave them to you, to serve others, your need to
be, detached from them. The disciple must not be afraid of poverty, on the
contrary: he must be poor", Pope Francis states clearly.
The poverty of persecution because of the Gospel
The second form of poverty is that of persecution. Always in
the passage of today's Gospel, in fact, the Lord sends the disciples "like
lambs in the midst of wolves". And even today there are many Christians
persecuted and slanderedfor the Gospel:
Yesterday, in the Synod Hall a bishop from one of these
countries where there is persecution spoke about a Catholic boy taken by a
group of boys who hated the Church, fundamentalists; he was beaten and then
thrown into a cistern with mud thrown on him until it came up to his neck.:
"Say for the last time: do you give up Jesus Christ? - "No!".
They threw a stone and killed him. We have all heard it. And this is not from
the first centuries: this is from two months ago! It's an example. How many
Christians today suffer physical persecution: "Oh, that's blasphemy! To
the gallows!".
Pope Francis then recalled that there are also other forms
of persecution: There is the persecution of slander, of rumours, and the
Christian tolerates this "poverty" in silence. Sometimes it is
necessary to defend oneself so as not to cause scandal... The small
persecutions in the neighbourhood, in the parish... small, but they are the
proof: the proof of poverty. It is the second form of poverty that the Lord
asks of us. The first, to leave riches, not to be have ones heart attached to
riches; the second, to accept humbly persecution, to tolerate persecution. This
is a form of poverty.
The poverty of feeling abandoned
There is, then, a third form of poverty: that of solitude,
of abandonment. An example of this is today’s First Reading , taken from the
Second Letter to Timothy, in which the "great Paul", "who was
not afraid of anything", says that in his first defence in court, no one
assisted him: "everyone has abandoned me". But he adds that the Lord
was close to him and gave him strength. Pope Francis dwells, therefore, on the
abandonment of the disciple: how can it happen to a boy or a girl of 17 or 20
years old, who with enthusiasm leaves riches to follow Jesus, then "with
strength and fidelity" tolerate "slander, daily persecution,
jealousies", "small or large persecutions", and in the end the
Lord can also ask of them "the final solitude ":
I think of the greatest man in humanity, and this definition comes from the mouth of Jesus: John the Baptist; the greatest man born of a woman. Great preacher: people went to him to be baptized. How did it end? Alone; in prison. Just think, what of a cell and what were the cells of that time like, because if they are now like that, think of those ... Alone, forgotten, slaughtered for the weakness of a king, the hatred of an adulteress and the whim of a girl: that’s how it ended for the greatest man in history. And without going that far, many times in old people's homes where there are priests or nuns who have spent their lives preaching, they feel alone, only with the Lord, no one else to remember them.
I think of the greatest man in humanity, and this definition comes from the mouth of Jesus: John the Baptist; the greatest man born of a woman. Great preacher: people went to him to be baptized. How did it end? Alone; in prison. Just think, what of a cell and what were the cells of that time like, because if they are now like that, think of those ... Alone, forgotten, slaughtered for the weakness of a king, the hatred of an adulteress and the whim of a girl: that’s how it ended for the greatest man in history. And without going that far, many times in old people's homes where there are priests or nuns who have spent their lives preaching, they feel alone, only with the Lord, no one else to remember them.
All disciples know how to walk the path of poverty
There is a form of poverty that Jesus promised to Peter
himself, telling him: "When you were a boy, you went where you wanted;
when you are old, they will take you where you do not want to go. " The
disciple is, therefore, poor, in the sense that he is not attached to riches
and this is the first step. He is then poor because "he is patient before
small or large persecutions", and - third step - he is poor because he
enters into that state of mind of feeling abandoned at the end of life. In
fact, Jesus' own path ends with that prayer to the Father: "Father,
Father, why have you forsaken me?". The Pope's concluding invitation is,
therefore, to pray for all the disciples, "priests, nuns, bishops, popes,
laity", so that they "may know how to walk the path of poverty as is
required by the Lord ".
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