Where many saw sinners and
evildoers, Jesus saw apostles
Pope Francis addresses Priests, Religious, Consecrated Men and Women, Seminarians, and Catechists in the Parish of St Peter (Vatican Media) |
How is the Gospel proclaimed? Starting from the loving gaze
Jesus had for all he encountered. This is how Pope Francis speaks of mission
and inculturation in Thailand.
By Andrea Tornielli
“Where many saw only a sinner, a blasphemer, a tax
collector, an evildoer or even a traitor, Jesus was able to see apostles. Such
is the beauty that his gaze invites us to proclaim, a gaze that transforms and
brings out the best in others.” These words, which become flesh in the witness
borne by so many Christians in every part of the world, are key to
understanding mission as proposed by Francis on his third and final day in
Thailand. The Pope offered this view of mission while speaking to priests,
religious, seminarians and catechists in St. Peter's Parish of Wat
Roman in the village of Tha Kham, not far from Bangkok.
Jesus’ gaze is one that “shatters all determinisms,
fatalisms and standards.” Because, as the Pope said shortly afterwards to Thai
bishops gathered in the Shrine of Blessed Nicholas Bunkerd Kitbamrung, “the
mission, even prior to things to be done or projects to be implemented, demands
the cultivation of a gaze and a sense of smell. The mission calls for a
paternal and maternal concern, because the sheep is only lost when the shepherd
gives it up for lost, and not before”.
The consequence of this positive gaze is inculturation,
which is typical of Christian mission and capable of giving value to everything
that is valuable in the cultures and traditions of different peoples. “The Lord
– the Pope told the religious - did not call us and send us forth into the
world to impose obligations on people, or lay heavier burdens than those they
already have, which are many, but rather to share joy, a beautiful, new and
surprising horizon”. We must not "be afraid to continue inculturating the
Gospel. We need to seek new ways of transmitting the word, ways that are
capable of mobilizing and awakening a desire to know the Lord” letting “the
Gospel be stripped of fine but foreign garb; to let it “sing” with the native
music of this land and inspire the hearts of our brothers and sisters with the
same beauty that set our own hearts on fire.”
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