EUCHARISTIC CONCELEBRATION
WITH THE EMINENT CARDINALS RESIDENT IN ROME
ON THE OCCASION OF THE FEAST OF SAINT GEORGE
WITH THE EMINENT CARDINALS RESIDENT IN ROME
ON THE OCCASION OF THE FEAST OF SAINT GEORGE
HOMILY OF POPE FRANCIS
I thank His Eminence, the Cardinal Dean, for his words: Thank you, Your
Eminence, many thanks. I also thank those of you who came today. Thank you!
Because I feel warmly welcomed by you. Thank you! I feel at home with you, and
that pleases me.
Today’s first reading makes me think that, at the very moment when
persecution broke out, the Church’s missionary nature also "broke
out". These Christians went all the way to Phoenicia, Cyprus and Antioch,
and proclaimed the Word (cf. Acts 11:19). They had this apostolic fervor
in their hearts; and so the faith spread! Some people from Cyprus and Cyrene,
not these but others who had become Christians, came to Antioch and began to
speak also to the Greeks (cf. Acts 11:20). This is yet another step. And
so the Church moves forward. Who took this initiative of speaking to the
Greeks, something unheard of, since they were preaching only to Jews? It was
the Holy Spirit, the one who was pushing them on, on and on, unceasingly.
But
back in Jerusalem, when somebody heard about this, he got a little nervous and
they sent an Apostolic Visitation: they sent Barnabas (cf. Acts
11:22). Perhaps, with a touch of humor, we can say that this was the
theological origin of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith: this Apostolic
Visitation of Barnabas. He took a look and saw that things were going well
(cf. Acts 11:23). And in this way the Church is increasingly a Mother, a
Mother of many, many children: she becomes a Mother, ever more fully a Mother,
a Mother who gives us faith, a Mother who gives us our identity. But Christian
identity is not an identity card. Christian identity means being a member of
the Church, since all these people belonged to the Church, to Mother Church,
for apart from the Church it is not possible to find Jesus. […]
The third idea
which comes to my mind – the first was the outbreak of the Church’s missionary
nature, and second, the Church as Mother – is that, when Barnabas saw that
crowd – the text says: "and a great many people were brought to the
Lord" (Acts 11:24) – when he saw that crowd, he rejoiced. […]This
joy begins with persecution, with great sadness, and ends in joy. And so the
Church moves forward, as a Saint tells us, amid the persecutions of the world
and the consolations of the Lord (cf. Saint Augustine, De Civitate Dei,
18:51,2: PL 41, 614). […] The Church always advances between the cross and the
resurrection, between persecutions and the consolations of the Lord. This is
the path: those who take this path do not go wrong. […]
Let
us think of Mother Church, who is increasing, growing with new children to whom
she gives the identity of faith, for one cannot believe in Jesus without the
Church. Jesus himself says so in the Gospel: but you do not believe because you
do not belong to my sheep (cf. Jn 10:26). Unless we are "Jesus’
sheep", faith does not come; it is a faith which is watered down,
insubstantial. And let us think of the consolation which Barnabas experienced,
which was precisely the "delightful and comforting joy of evangelizing".
Let us ask the Lord for this parrhesia, this apostolic fervour which
impels us to move forward, as brothers and sisters, all of us: forward!
Forward, bearing the name of Jesus in the bosom of holy Mother Church, as Saint
Ignatius said, hierarchical and Catholic. Amen.
(Cited on April 26, 2013 from:
http://www.vatican.va/holy_father/francesco/homilies/2013/documents/papa-francesco_20130423_omelia-san-giorgio_en.html)
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