HOMILY OF HIS HOLINESS POPE FRANCIS
Saint Peter's Square
29th Sunday in Ordinary Time, 18 October 2015
29th Sunday in Ordinary Time, 18 October 2015
HOLY
MASS AND CANONIZATION OF THE BLESSEDS:
-
VINCENZO GROSSI
-
MARY OF THE IMMACULATE CONCEPTION
-
LUDOVICO MARTIN AND MARIA AZELIA GUÉRIN
Today’s biblical readings
present the theme of service. They call us to follow Jesus on the path of
humility and the cross.
The prophet Isaiah depicts the
Servant of the Lord (53:10-11) and his mission of salvation. The Servant is not
someone of illustrious lineage; he is despised, shunned by all, a man of
sorrows. He does not do great things or make memorable speeches; instead, he
fulfils God’s plan through his humble, quiet presence and his suffering. His
mission is carried out in suffering, and this enables him to understand those
who suffer, to shoulder the guilt of others and to make atonement for it. The
abandonment and sufferings of the Servant of the Lord, even unto death, prove
so fruitful that they bring redemption and salvation to many.
Jesus is the Servant of the
Lord. His life and death, marked by an attitude of utter service (cf. Phil 2:7),
were the cause of our salvation and the reconciliation of mankind with God. The
kerygma, the heart of the Gospel, testifies that his death and resurrection
fulfilled the prophecies of the Servant of the Lord. Saint Mark tells us how
Jesus confronted the disciples James and John. Urged on by their mother, they
wanted to sit at his right and left in God’s Kingdom (cf. Mk 10:37),
claiming places of honour in accordance with their own hierarchical vision of
the Kingdom. Their horizon was still clouded by illusions of earthly
fulfilment. Jesus then gives a first “jolt” to their notions by speaking of his
own earthly journey: “The cup that I drink you will drink… but to sit at my
right hand or at my left is not mine to grant, but it is for those for whom it
has been prepared” (vv. 39-40). With the image of the cup, he assures the two
that they can fully partake of his destiny of suffering, without, however,
promising their sought-after places of honour. His response is to invite them
to follow him along the path of love and service, and to reject the worldly
temptation of seeking the first place and commanding others.
Faced with people who seek
power and success in order to be noticed, who want their achievements and
efforts to be acknowledged, the disciples are called to do the opposite. Jesus
warns them: “You know that among the Gentiles those whom they recognize as
their rulers lord it over them, and their great ones are tyrants over them. But
it is not so among you; but whoever wishes to become great among you must be
your servant” (vv. 42-44). These words show us that service is the way for authority
to be exercised in the Christian community. Those who serve others and lack
real prestige exercise genuine authority in the Church. Jesus calls us to see
things differently, to pass from the thirst for power to the joy of quiet
service, to suppress our instinctive desire to exercise power over others, and
instead to exercise the virtue of humility.
After proposing a model not to
imitate, Jesus then offers himself as the ideal to be followed. By imitating
the Master, the community gains a new outlook on life: “The Son of Man came not
to be served but to serve, and to give his life as a ransom for many” (v. 45).
In the biblical tradition, the Son of Man is the one who receives from God
“dominion, glory and kingship” (Dan 7:14). Jesus fills this image with
new meaning. He shows us that he enjoys dominion because he is a servant, glory
because he is capable of abasement, kingship because he is fully prepared to
lay down his life. By his passion and death, he takes the lowest place, attains
the heights of grandeur in service, and bestows this upon his Church.
There can be no compatibility
between a worldly understanding of power and the humble service which must
characterize authority according to Jesus’ teaching and example. Ambition and
careerism are incompatible with Christian discipleship; honour, success, fame
and worldly triumphs are incompatible with the logic of Christ crucified.
Instead, compatibility exists between Jesus, “the man of sorrows”, and our
suffering. The Letter to the Hebrews makes this clear by presenting Jesus as
the high priest who completely shares our human condition, with the exception
of sin: “We do not have a high priest who is unable to sympathize with our
weaknesses, but we have one who in every respect has been tested as we are, yet
without sin” (4:15). Jesus exercises a true priesthood of mercy and compassion.
He knows our difficulties at first hand, he knows from within our human
condition; the fact that he is without sin does not prevent him from
understanding sinners. His glory is not that born of ambition or the thirst for
power; it is is the glory of one who loves men and women, who accepts them and
shares in their weakness, who offers them the grace which heals and restores,
and accompanies them with infinite tenderness amid their tribulations.
Each of us, through baptism,
share in our own way in Christ’s priesthood: the lay faithful in the common
priesthood, priests in the ministerial priesthood. Consequently, all of us can
receive the charity which flows from his open heart, for ourselves but also for
others, and become “channels” of his love and compassion, especially for those
who are suffering, discouraged and alone.
The men and women canonized
today unfailingly served their brothers and sisters with outstanding humility
and charity, in imitation of the divine Master. Saint Vincent Grossi was a
zealous parish priest, ever attentive to the needs of his people, especially
those of the young. For all he was concerned to break the bread of God’s word,
and thus became a Good Samaritan to those in greatest need.
Saint Mary of the Immaculate
Conception, drawing from the springs of prayer and contemplation, devoted her
life, with great humility, to serving the least of our brothers and sisters,
especially the children of the poor and the sick.
The holy spouses Louis Martin
and Marie-Azélie Guérin practised Christian service in the family, creating day
by day an environment of faith and love which nurtured the vocations of their
daughters, among whom was Saint Therese of the Child Jesus.
The radiant witness of these
new saints inspires us to persevere in joyful service to our brothers and
sisters, trusting in the help of God and the maternal protection of Mary. From
heaven may they now watch over us and sustain us by their powerful
intercession.
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