Pope at Mass prays for artists:
‘without beauty we cannot understand the Gospel’
Pope Francis celebrates Thursday morning Mass at the Casa
Santa Marta with special prayers for artists and an invitation to Christians
never to forget they are part of the chosen people of God.
By Linda Bordoni
Pope Francis presides over Mass on Thursday of the Fourth
Week of Easter. During his introduction he turns his thoughts to artists saying
that yesterday he received a letter from a group of them thanking him for his
prayers:
“I would like to ask the Lord to bless them because through
artists we understand beauty, and without beauty we cannot understand the
Gospel,” he said.
At the end of his General Audience on Wednesday on the theme
of prayer, the Pope said, “It is artists who often interpret this silent groan
which weighs on every creature and is expressed above all in the heart of men
and women, for “man is a beggar before God.”
The history of the People of God
In his homily the Pope commented on the passage from the
Acts of the Apostles (Acts 13, 13-25). In it, Paul, having arrived in Antioch
in Pisidia, goes to the synagogue and tells the history of the people of Israel
and proclaims Jesus, our Saviour.
“When Paul explains the new doctrine, he speaks of the
history of salvation,” he said.
That’s because, the Pope continued, preceding Jesus there is
a history of grace, of election, there is the Covenant.
“The Lord chose Abraham and walked with His people,” he
said, highlighting a long history of God with his people.
Paul, the Pope said, does not begin with Jesus, he begins
with history, because “Christianity is not only a doctrine, but a history that
leads to this doctrine.”
Christianity is more than ethics and moral principles
He explained that Christianity is not just made up of
ethical and moral principles, and that one is not a Christian just for his or
her ethical vision: “Christianity is more.”
The Pope also commented at length on the fact that
Christians are not an élite and said that “being Christian means belonging to a
people ‘freely’ chosen by God.”
If we do not have this awareness, this consciousness of
belonging to a people, he said, we will be ideological Christians, but not true
Christians.
‘Never lose your sense of belonging to God’s people’
Pope Francis lamented the fact that many times we fall into
these partialities. He decried the “elitist” dimension that he said is so
hurtful to Christians leading them to lose their sense of belonging to God's
people.
The Pope then invited the faithful to always be aware of
being part of a people, to transmit the history of our salvation, to preserve
the memory of the people of God.
“Remember your ancestors,” says the author of the Letter to
the Hebrews, he said. “The most dangerous deviation of Christians is lack of
memory of belonging to a people”; and he noted that this is where dogmatism,
moralism, elitist movements come from.
The People of God walk behind a promise, a covenant, that
they did not make but that they are aware of Pope Francis concluded. “We are
the faithful, holy People of God, who in its totality have a sense of the faith
and is infallible in its belief.”
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