Pope at Mass: ‘Indifference is
opposed to God’s love’
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| Pope Francis delivers the homily at Mass in the Casa Santa Marta. (Vatican Media) |
In his homily at Mass in the Casa Santa Marta on Tuesday,
Pope Francis says God takes the first step towards us and loves us because He
is compassionate and merciful, despite our indifference.
By Alessandro Di Bussolo
Pope Francis offered Tuesday’s Mass for the eternal rest of
Archbishop Giorgio Zur, who died late Monday night. He lived in the Casa Santa
Marta with the Pope and once served as Apostolic Nuncio to Austria.
In his homily, Pope Francis reflected on the day’s Gospel
(Mk 6:34-44) about the multiplication of the loaves and fishes, and on the
First Reading, taken from the First Letter of John (4:7-10).
God loved us first
The Holy Father said the Apostle John explains “how God
manifests His love in us.” “Let us love one another, because love is of God,”
John writes.
Pope Francis called this the mystery of love: “God loved us
first. He took the first step.” God loved us, he said, even though we “don’t
know how to love” and “need God’s caresses in order to love.”
“This first step God takes is His Son. He sent Him to
save us and to give meaning to our lives and to renew and recreate us.”
Jesus has compassion on crowd
Reflecting on the multiplication of the loaves and fishes,
Pope Francis said Jesus fed the crowd out of compassion.
“God’s heart, Jesus’ heart, was moved when he saw these
people, and he could not remain indifferent. Love is restless. Love does not
tolerate indifference; love is compassionate. But love means putting your heart
on the line for others; it means [showing] mercy.”
Give them food yourselves
Then Pope Francis described the scene as the disciples went
in search of food. He said Jesus taught them and the people many things, but
they grew bored, “because Jesus always said the same things.”
As Jesus teaches “with love and compassion”, the Pope said,
maybe they began “to talk amongst themselves.” They start to check their
watches, saying “It’s getting late.”
The Holy Father then quoted Mark: “But Master, this is a
deserted place and it is already very late. Dismiss them so that they can go to
the surrounding farms and villages and buy themselves something to eat.” The
Pope said they basically wanted the people to work it out themselves. “But we
can be sure,” he said, “that they surely had enough bread for themselves, and
they wanted to keep it. This is indifference.”
“The disciples were not interested in the people. Jesus
was interested, because he cared for them. They weren’t evil, just indifferent.
They didn’t know what it meant to love. They didn’t know how to show
compassion. They didn’t know what indifference was. They had to sin, betray the
Master, and abandon him in order to understand the core of compassion and
mercy. And Jesus’ response cuts deep: ‘Give them some food yourselves.’ Take
their plight upon yourselves. This is the struggle between the compassion of
Jesus and indifference, which is always repeated throughout history. Many
people who are good, but don’t understand the needs of others, are incapable of
compassion. They are good people, maybe because the love of God has not entered
into their heart or they have not let it enter.”
Homeless woman in Rome
Pope Francis then described a photo hung on the wall of the
Office of Papal Charities. He said it was a picture taken by a local man who offered
it to the Papal Almoner. Daniel Garofani, now a photographer for the
Osservatore Romano, took the photo after distributing food with Cardinal
Krajewski to homeless people. Pope Francis said it shows well-dressed people
leaving a restaurant in Rome as a homeless woman lifts her hand to beg for
alms. He said the picture was taken “just as the people looked away, so that
their gaze would not meet” that of the homeless woman. This, the Pope said, “is
the culture of indifference. That’s what the Apostles did.”
Indifference is the opposite of love
Pope Francis said God’s love always comes first and is
compassionate and merciful. He said it is true that the opposite of love is
hate, but that many people are not aware of “a conscious hate”.
“The more-common opposite of the love of God – of God’s
compassion – is indifference. ‘I’m satisfied; I lack nothing. I have
everything. I’ve assured my place in this life and the next, since I go to Mass
every Sunday. I’m a good Christian. But leaving the restaurant, I look the
other way.’ Let’s reflect on this: Confronted with God who takes the first
step, is compassionate, and is merciful, many times our attitude is
indifference. Let us pray to the Lord that He heal humanity, starting with us.
May my heart be healed from the sickness of the culture of indifference.”
80th Birthday greetings to Kiko Argüello
At the end of Mass, Pope Francis sent warm greetings to Kiko
Argüello, co-initiator of the Neocatechumenal Way, for his 80th birthday on
January 9th. The Pope also thanked him “for the apostolic zeal with which he
works for the Church.”

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