Pope at Mass: Preserve the memory
of what the Lord has done
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| Mass at Casa Santa Marta (Vatican Media) |
Preserving the memory of the history of salvation: When you
“turn away” your heart, you risk having a “heart without a compass”. That was
the message of Pope Francis at the morning Mass at the Casa Santa Marta.
By Debora Donnini
Pope Francis’ homily focused on three key expressions from
the day’s first Reading, taken from the book of Deuteronomy. To prepare them to
enter the Promised Land, Moses places before them a challenge, which is also a
choice between life and death. “It is an appeal to our liberty”, Pope Francis
explained, as he focused on three key expressions used by Moses: “if you turn
away your hearts”; if you “will not listen”; and “are led astray and adore and
serve other gods”:
When your heart is turned away, when you take the road
that is not right – either going the wrong way or taking a different road, but
not going along the right road – you lose your sense of direction, you lose
your compass, with which you should go forward. And a heart without a compass
is a public danger: it’s a danger for the person himself, and for others. And a
heart takes this wrong path when it does not listen, when it allows itself to
go astray, carried away by [other] gods, when it becomes an idolater.
Often, though, we are not capable of listening, the Pope
said. Many people are “deaf in the soul” – and “we, too, at various times
become deaf in the soul, we do not hear the Lord.” Pope Francis warned against
the “fireworks” that call us back, “the false gods” that call us to idolatry.
This is the danger we face along the path “towards the land that was promised
to us: the land of the encounter with the risen Christ”. Lent “helps us to go
along this path”, the Pope said.
The second word, “not listening to the Lord” – and the
promises He has made us – means losing our memory. The Pope said that when we
lose memory “of the great things the Lord has done in our lives, that He has
done in the Church, in His people”, we then get used to going on alone, with our
own strength, with our self-sufficiency. For this reason, Pope Francis calls on
us to begin Lent by asking for “the grace of memory”. This, he says, is what
Moses exhorted the Israelites to do in the first reading, to remember all that
the Lord had done for them along the way. On the other hand, when all is well,
when we are doing spiritually well, there is the danger of losing “the memory
of the journey”:
Well-being, even spiritual well-being, has this danger:
the danger of a certain amnesia, a lack of memory. I feel good like that, and I
forget what the Lord has done in my life, all the graces He has given us, and I
believe that it is my own merit, and I go on like that. And then the heart
begins to turn away, because it doesn’t listen to the voice of the heart
itself: memory. The grace of memory.
Pope Francis recalls a similar passage, from the Letter to
the Hebrews, which exhorts us to remember “the former days”. “Losing memory is
very common”, the Pope said; “even the people of Israel lost their memory”.
This kind of memory loss is selective, he explained: “I remember what is
convenient to me now, and I don’t remember something that threatens me”. For
example, the Israelites in the desert remembered that God had saved them; they
“could not forget Him”. But they began to complain about the lack of water and
meat, and “to think about the things they’d had in Egypt”. The Pope notes that
this is a selective memory, because they forgot that the good things they had
in Egypt were eaten at “the table of slavery”. In order to go forward, we must
remember, we must not “lose history: the history of salvation, the history of
my life, the history of Jesus with me”. The Pope said we must not stop, we must
not turn back, we must not let ourselves be carried away by idols”.
Pope Francis insisted that idolatry does not just mean
“going to a pagan temple and worshipping a statue”:
Idolatry is an attitude of the heart, when you prefer to
do something because it is more comfortable for me, instead of the Lord –
precisely because we have forgotten the Lord. At the beginning of Lent, it
would be good for all of us to ask for the grace to preserve memory, to
preserve the memory of everything the Lord has done in my life: how he loved me
so much, how he loved me. And from that memory, to go forward. And it would
also do us good continually to repeat the advice of Paul to Timothy, his
beloved disciple: “Remember Jesus Christ, risen from the dead”. I repeat:
“Remember Jesus Christ, risen from the dead”. Remember Jesus, Jesus who has
accompanied me up to now, and will accompany me until the moment when I must
appear before Him in glory. May the Lord give us the grace to preserve memory”.

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