Pope Francis: Life is a
constant call to go forth
Pope Francis celebrates Mass for Deceased Cardinals and Bishops.(Vatican Media) |
Pope Francis celebrates Mass at the Altar of the Chair in St
Peter's Basilica for those Cardinals and Bishops who have died in the past
year, saying that "life is a constant call to go forth".
We provide here the full text of the homily pronounced by
Pope Francis during the Mass celebrated for Deceased Cardinals and Bishops.
In the parable of today’s Gospel, we heard that the
bridesmaids, all ten of them, “went forth to meet the bridegroom” (Mt 25:1).
For all of us, life is a constant call to go forth: from our
mother’s womb, from the house where we are born, from infancy to youth, from
youth to adulthood, all the way to our going forth from this world. For
ministers of the Gospel too, life is in constant movement, as we go forth from
our family home to wherever the Church sends us, from one variety of service to
another. We are always on the move, until we make our final journey.
The Gospel shows us the meaning of this constant wayfaring
that is life: it is a going forth to meet the Bridegroom.
This is what life is meant to be lived for: the call that resounds in the
night, according to the Gospel, and which we will hear at the hour of our
death: “Here is the Bridegroom! Come out to meet him!” (v. 6). The
encounter with Jesus, the Bridegroom who “loved the Church and gave himself up
for her” (Eph 5:25), gives meaning and direction to our lives.
That and nothing more. It is the finale that illuminates everything
that preceded it. Just as the seeding is judged by the harvest, so the
journey of life is shaped by its ultimate goal.
If our life is a journey to meet the Bridegroom, it is also
the time we have been granted to grow in love. Every day of
our lives is a preparation for the wedding banquet, a great period of
betrothal. Let us ask ourselves: do I live like someone preparing to meet
the Bridegroom? In the ministry, amid all our meetings, activities and
paperwork, we must never lose sight of the one thread that holds the entire
fabric together: our expectation of the Bridegroom. The centre of it all
can only be a heart in love with the Lord. Only in this way will the
visible body of our ministry be sustained by an invisible soul. Here we
begin to realize what the Apostle tells us in the second reading: “We look not
at what can be seen but at what cannot be seen; for what can be seen is
temporary, but what cannot be seen is eternal” (2 Cor 4:18).
Let us not keep our gaze fixed on earthly affairs, but look beyond them.
It is true when they say that the really important things are invisible to our
eyes. The really important thing in life is hearing the voice of the
Bridegroom. That voice asks us daily to catch sight of the Lord who
comes, and to make our every activity a means of preparation for his wedding
banquet.
We are reminded of this by what the Gospel tells is the one
essential thing for the bridesmaids awaiting the wedding banquet. It is
not their gowns, or their lamps, but rather the oil kept in
small jars.
Here we see a first feature of oil: it is not
impressive. It remains hidden; it does not appear, yet without it
there is no light. What does this suggest to us? That in the Lord’s
eyes what matters is not appearances but the heart (cf. 1 Sam 16:7).
Everything that the world runs after and then parades – honours, power,
appearances, glory – passes away and leaves nothing behind. Detachment
from worldly appearances is essential to our preparation for heaven. We
need to say no to the “cosmetic culture” that tells us to worry about how we
look. Instead of our outward appearance that passes away, we should
purify and keep custody of our heart, our inner self, which is precious in the
eyes of God.
Along with this first feature – not to be flashy but
essential – there is another aspect of oil: it exists in order to be
consumed. Only when it is burned does it spread light.
Our lives are like that: they radiate light only if they are consumed, if they
spend themselves in service. The secret to live is to live to
serve. Service is the ticket to be presented at the door of the eternal
wedding banquet. Whatever will remain of life, at the doorstep of
eternity, is not what we gained but what we gave away (cf. Mt 6:19-21; 1
Cor 13:8). The meaning of life is found in our response to God’s
offer of love. And that response is made up of true love, self-giving and
service. Serving others involved a cost, since it involves spending
ourselves, letting ourselves be consumed. In our ministry, those who do
not live to serve do not de-serve to live. Those who hold on too tightly
to their lives will lose them.
A third feature of oil is clearly present in the
Gospel: it must be prepared. Oil has to be stored up ahead of
time and carried with one (cf. vv. 4, 7). Love is certainly spontaneous,
but it is not impromptu. It was precisely by their lack of preparation
that the bridesmaids excluded from the wedding banquet showed their
foolishness. Now is the time for preparation: here and now, day by day,
love has to be stored up and fostered. Let us ask for grace to renew
daily our first love with the Lord (cf. Rev 2:4), lest its
flame die out. It is a great temptation to sink into a life without love,
which ends up being like an empty vase, a snuffed lamp. If we do not
invest in love, life will stifle it. Those called to God’s wedding feast
cannot be content with a sedentary, flat and humdrum life that plods on without
enthusiasm, seeking petty satisfactions and pursuing fleeting rewards. A
dreary and predictable life, content to carry out its duties without giving of
itself, is unworthy of the Bridegroom.
As we pray for the Cardinals and Bishops who have passed
away in this last year, let us beg the intercession of all those who lived
unassuming lives, content to prepare daily to meet the Lord. Following
the example of these witnesses, who praise God are all around us in great
numbers, let us not be content with a quick glance at this day and nothing
else. Instead, let us desire to look farther ahead, to the wedding
banquet that awaits us. A life burning with desire for God and trained by
love will be prepared to enter the chamber of the Bridegroom, for all eternity.
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