Pope at Mass: Advent is a time
for purifying the faith
Mass at the Casa Santa Marta.(Vatican Media) |
At the daily Mass at the Casa Santa Marta, Pope Francis
describes Advent as a good opportunity to understand more fully the birth of
Jesus in Bethlehem, and to cultivate a personal relationship with the Son of
God.
By Vatican News
The time of Advent has three dimensions: the past, the
future, and the present. In his homily, Pope Francis recalled that Advent,
which began on Sunday, is a good time “for purifying the spirit, for making the
faith grow with this purification.” The Pope was reflecting on the day’s Gospel
reading (Mt 8:5-11), which recounts the meeting at Capernaum between Jesus and
the centurion who asked him to heal his servant. Even today, he explained, it
can happen that faith can become a habit for us; we can get used to it,
forgetting its “liveliness.” When the faith becomes a habit, he said, “we lose
that strength of the faith, that newness of the faith that is always renewed.”
Christmas must not become worldly
Pope Francis emphasised that the first dimension of Advent
is the past, “the purification of memory”: We have to remember that Christmas
is not about the birth of a Christmas tree, but about the birth of Jesus
Christ:
The Lord is born, the Redeemer who has come to save us.
Yes, it is a celebration… [but] we always face the danger, we will always have
within us the temptation to make Christmas mondane, worldly… When the
celebration stops being about contemplation—a beautiful family celebration with
Jesus at the centre—it begins to be a worldly celebration: all about shopping,
presents, this and that… and the Lord remains there, forgotten. Even in our own
life: yes, He is born, at Bethlehem, but [then what?]… Advent is [a time] for
purifying the memory of this time past, of that dimension.
Purifying hope
The Pope continued, saying Advent also serves to “purify
hope,” preparing us “for the definitive encounter with the Lord”:
Because the Lord who came then will return! He will
return! He will return to ask us: “How did your life go?” It will be a personal
encounter. We have a personal encounter with the Lord, today, in the Eucharist;
we cannot have such a personal with the Christmas of 2000 years ago: we have
the memorial of that. But when He will return, we will have that personal
encounter. It is purifying hope.
The Lord knocks at our heart
Finally, Pope Francis invited everyone to cultivate the
daily dimension of the faith, despite so many cares and worries, taking
“custody” of our own “interior home.” Our God, in fact, is the “God of
surprises,” and Christians must constantly discern what the heavenly Father is
saying to us today:
The third dimension is more daily: purifying our
watchfulness. Vigilance and prayer are two words for Advent: Because
historically the Lord came in Bethlehem; and He will come, at the end of the
world and also at the end of our individual lives. But every day, every moment,
He comes into our hearts, with the inspiration of the Holy Spirit.
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