Pope at Mass: Consumerism is a
virus that attacks the faith
Pope Francis celebrates Mass with Rome's Congolese community (Vatican Media) |
Pope Francis celebrates Mass in St. Peter’s Basilica on
Sunday for the Congolese community of Rome, praying for peace in the Democratic
Republic of Congo and denouncing those who enrich themselves through the arms
trade.
By Vatican News
The first Congolese Catholic Chaplaincy was established in
Rome exactly 25 years ago. To mark this anniversary, Pope Francis celebrated
Holy Mass, according to the Congolese rite, at the Altar of the Chair in St
Peter’s Basilica, on Sunday morning. Members of the Congolese Community from
Rome and beyond animated the celebration with their singing.
The meaning of Advent
This Sunday is also the first Sunday of Advent. In his
homily, the Pope highlighted the verb that recurs three times in this week’s
First Reading, and again in the Gospel: the verb “to come”.
Advent means coming, said Pope Francis: “The Lord is coming.
This is the root of our hope: the certainty that God’s consolation comes to us
in the midst of the troubles of the world. Not a consolation of words, but of
His presence among us.”
God’s invitation
“Today the verb to come is not only for God but also for
us”, continued the Pope. Turning to the First Reading from Isaiah, he indicated
how the prophet offers a wonderful vision of people coming together to the
mountain of the Lord. Isaiah sends us an invitation from God to come to His
home.
"Come”, says God, “because in my home there is room for
everyone. Come, because in my heart there is not just one people, but
everyone."
Never strangers to God
Addressing the Congolese Community directly, the Pope
recognized how they have come from far away: many have left their homes and
their loved ones. He acknowledged the difficulties they have had to face.
“However, with God you are always welcome”, he said. “For Him we are never
strangers.”
Refusing God’s invitation
The Lord comes and invites us to go to Him, continued Pope
Francis, but some say “no” to His invitation. It is the “no” about which Jesus
warns us in the Gospel, urging us not to do as in the "days of Noah".
All people could think about then was eating and drinking.
In other words, said the Pope, “they reduced their lives to their needs, they
were content with a flat, horizontal life, without momentum.” They were content
to consume.
The virus of consumerism
Pope Francis described consumerism as “a virus that attacks
the faith at the roots”, because it makes us believe that life depends only on
what we have, so we forget about God. “Even if the Lord comes, you just follow
the appetites that come to you”, he said. The real danger is that which
anesthetizes the heart, added the Pope, letting ourselves be burdened and
dissipated by our needs.
Things are never enough
Things are never enough, said Pope Francis. “Our houses are
filled with things but empty of children”, he said. “This is the demographic
winter we are suffering”, he added. We have no time for God or for others. Our
greed grows and others become obstacles, so we end up feeling threatened,
always dissatisfied and angry, raising the level of hatred.
“We see it today where consumerism reigns”, said Pope
Francis: “The world is full of weapons that cause death, yet we do not realise
that we too continue to arm our hearts with anger.”
The verb “to watch”
Jesus wants to awaken us, continued the Pope, with the verb
"to watch". In order to keep watch, we must have hope that the night
will not last forever, that dawn will soon come.
“We must overcome the temptation that the meaning of life is
accumulation”, he said. We must “resist the dazzling lights of consumption,
which will shine everywhere this month.” Prayer and charity, he added, are
truly “the greatest of treasures.”
The gift of peace
When we open our hearts to the Lord and to our brothers and
sisters, said Pope Francis, we gain the most precious gift that material things
can never give us. The gift Isaiah announces in the First Reading: peace. This
makes us think of your homeland (the Democratic Republic of Congo), said Pope
Francis.
“Today we pray for peace which is seriously threatened in
the east of the country”, especially in the territories ridden by conflicts
that are fueled from outside, “and with the complicit silence of many”, said
the Pope. “Conflicts that are fueled by those who enrich themselves selling
arms”, he added.
A prayer for peace
The Pope concluded by recalling Blessed Marie-Clémentine
Anuarite Nengapeta who, like Jesus, forgave her executioner.
Through her intercession, said Pope Francis, we pray for
combatants to give up their weapons, for a future that no longer puts one
against another, but one together with another. We pray for conversion from an
economy that makes use of war, to an economy that serves peace.
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