Pope: Religious life means seeing
what really matters
Pope Francis presides of Vigil Mass for World Day for Consecrated life |
Pope Francis celebrates a Vigil Mass on the Feast of the
Presentation of the Lord, which is observed as the World Day of Consecrated
Life. In his homily, the Pope says that religious life means “seeing what
really matters in life”.
By Christopher Wells
At the Mass for the Presentation of the Lord, Pope Francis
focused on the words of Simeon when he encountered Christ in the Temple: “My
eyes have seen your salvation” (Lk 2:30).
Speaking directly to consecrated men and women, present for
the World Day of Consecrated Life, the Pope said that they, like Simeon, “are
simple men and women who caught sight of the treasure worth more than any
worldly good”. The ability to recognize Jesus, to see “what really matters in
life”, is at the heart of religious life, he said.
This vision, he explained, begins with “knowing how to see
grace”, especially by seeing how God works in our lives, “not only in life’s
grand moments, but also in our fragility and weakness. He warned that “seeing
things in a worldly way” is a great temptation in religious life, which can
lead to a loss of passion, sadness, distrust. Being able “to perceive God’s
grace for us, like Simeon”, on the other hand, gives meaning to the gift of
voluntary poverty, chastity, and obedience.
Continuing his reflection on the figure of Simeon, Pope
Francis said that he “sees Jesus as small, humble, the one who has come to
serve, not to be served, and defines Himself as servant”. Seeing
Jesus in this way, and being able to see things as He does, will teach us how
“to live in order to serve”. The Pope said “we need to have a gaze that seeks
out our neighbour”; and religious are called to bring that gaze into our world.
Finally, Pope Francis said “the eyes of Simeon saw salvation
because they were expecting it. They were eyes that were waiting, full of
hope”. Like Simeon and Anna in the Temple, religious must have hope. The secret,
he said, is “never to alienate oneself from the Lord, who is the source of
hope”.
The Holy Father concluded his homily with the exhortation,
“Dear brothers and sisters, let us thank God for the gift of the consecrated
life and ask of him a new way of looking, that knows how to see grace, how to
look for one’s neighbour, how to hope”. “Then”, he said, “our eyes too
will see salvation”.
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