Pope at Mass: Christians must
provide credible witness with their lives
On the Feast of St Andrew Pope Francis addressed believers
at Mass in the Casa Santa Marta urging them to be close to the Church of Constantinople,
of which Saint Andrew the Apostle is the patron.
By Linda Bordoni
Pope Francis has invited the faithful to “leave
everything in order to go forward in proclamation and witness, just as Peter
and Andrew did”.
Speaking during the homily at morning Mass on
the Feast of St Andrew the Apostle, the Pope also invited Christians to be
close to the Church of Constantinople and he prayed for unity between the
Churches.
Be coherent in proclaiming Christ
The Pope focused his reflection on announcing the Gospel
urging believers to put aside “that attitude, that sin, that vice” that each of
us has “within” in order to be “more coherent” and to be able to be credible in
proclaiming Jesus with our own witness.
Taking his cue from the First Reading in which Saint Paul
explains how faith comes from what is heard,
and what is heard comes through the word of Christ, the Pope highlighted the importance of the proclamation of the Gospel,” the proclamation that Christ died and was resurrected to save us.
and what is heard comes through the word of Christ, the Pope highlighted the importance of the proclamation of the Gospel,” the proclamation that Christ died and was resurrected to save us.
To proclaim Jesus Christ, he said, is not just bringing
“simple news” but “the only great Good News” he said.
He underscored the fact that it has nothing to do with
advertising a good person who has done good, has healed many people and taught
us beautiful things: “No, it's not advertising. It's not proselytizing (…) it
is not what a preacher does according to the logic of marketing.”
Announcing Christ, the Pope continued, is neither
proselytism nor advertising nor marketing: it goes well beyond.
Thus, he reflected on the mission of the apostle who puts
his own life on the line and he recalled an Argentinean saying that uses the
image of “putting one’s own flesh on the grill:” that is, really putting
oneself at stake.
He specified that “this journey to announce the Gospel by
putting my life on the line” is a one-way journey: “There is no return ticket”
the Pope said, “turning back would be apostasy” while testimony means “putting
one’s life on the line” and “doing what I say I do”.
Martyrs
To be able to proclaim the Word we must be witness, the Pope
reiterated and he lamented the “scandal” brought about by those who proclaim to
be Christians and then live “as pagans, as non-believers”, as if they did not
have “faith”.
He called for coherence in life which is what gives
credibility to witness and described those who “put their lives on the line to
the end” as martyrs.
He recalled how God the Father "to make himself
known" sent "his Son in the flesh who gave his own life” and said
this is fact that “continues to scandalize” because God became “one of us on a
one-way journey”.
He pointed out that the devil tried to convince Jesus to
take another path, but He lived in accordance with the will of the Father until
the end.
The proclamation of Jesus, the Pope said, must follow the
same path: the path of testimony, because He was the witness of the Father made
flesh.
The Pope upheld the witness of martyrs whom, he said, are
those who show the proclamation is true.
He spoke of men and women who have given their lives - the
apostles gave their lives – but also of the many unseen men and women in our
society and in our families, who bear witness every day, in silence, with their
lives and their coherence to Jesus Christ.
A fruitful proclamation
All of us, the Pope concluded, take on “the mission of
proclaiming Christ” and of living as Jesus “taught us to live (…) in harmony
with what we preach” when we are baptized, otherwise the result is scandal and
that does “so much harm to the people of God”.
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