Giuseppe Nespeca è architetto e sacerdote. Cultore della Sacra scrittura è autore della raccolta "Due Fuochi due Vie - Religione e Fede, Vangeli e Tao"; coautore del libro "Dialogo e Solstizio".
Scientists and Lowlies: abstract world and incarnation
(Lk 10:17-24)
Unlike the fruitless action of the Apostles [Lk 9 passim], the return of the new evangelizers is full of joy and results (vv. 17-20). Why?
The leaders looked at religiosity with purposes of interest. Theology professors were used to evaluating every comma starting from their own knowledge, ridiculous but opinionated - unrelated to events.
What remains tied to customs and usual protagonists doesn’t make us dream, it’s not amazing appearance and testimony of Elsewhere; takes away expressive richness from the Announcement and life.
The Lord rejoices in his own experience, which brings a non-epidermal joy and a teaching from the Spirit - about those who are well disposed, and able to understand the depths of the Kingdom, in common things.
In short, after a first moment of enthusiastic crowds, the Christ deepens the issues and finds himself all against, except God and the leasts: the weightlesses, but with a great desire to start from scratch.
Glimpse of the Mystery that lifts history - without making it a possession.
At first even Jesus was amazed by the refusal of those who considered themselves already satisfied and no longer expected anything that could overcome habits.
Then He understands, praises and blesses the Father's plan: the authentic Person is born from below, and possesses «the sense of neighborhood» (FT n.152).
The Creator is Relationship simple: He demystifies the idol of greatness.
The Eternal is not the master of creation: He is Refreshment that reassures us, because makes us feel complete and lovable; He looks for us, pays attention to the language of the heart.
He’s the Tutor of the world, even of the uneducated - of the «infants» (v.21) spontaneously empty of arrogant spirit, that is, of those who do not remain closed in their sufficient belonging.
Thus the Father-Son relationship is communicated to the poor of God: those who are endowed with the attitude of Family members (v.22).
Insignificant and invisible without great external capacities, but who abandon themselves to the proposals of the provident life that Comes, like babies in the arms of their parents.
With a pietas’ Spirit that favors those who allow themselves to be filled with innate wisdom. The only reality that corresponds to us and doesn’t present the "account": it doesn’t proceed along the paths of functional thinking, of calculating initiative.
Sapience that transmits freshness in the willingness to personally receive welcome restore the Truth as a Gift, and the spontaneous enthusiasm itself, capable of realizing it.
A simple blessing prayer, for the simple - this one from Jesus (v.21) - which makes us grow in esteem, fits perfectly with our experience, and gets along well with ourselves.
It does not presuppose the energy of 'models', nor the aggressive power of “bigwigs”.
In the perspective of the Peace-Happiness [Shalom] to be announced, what had always seemed imperfections and defects become preparatory energies, which complete and fulfill us also spiritually.
And instead of only living with the “big” and external, one must live in communion even with the 'small' of oneself, or there is no amiability, no authentic life.
To internalize and live the message:
How do you feel when you hear yourself say: «You don't count»? Does it remain a humiliating contempt or do you consider it a great received Light, as Jesus did?
[Saturday 26th wk. in O.T. October 5, 2024]
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
The Evangelists Matthew and Luke (cf. Mt 11:25-30 and Lk 10:21-22) have handed down to us a “jewel” of Jesus’ prayer that is often called the Cry of Exultation or the Cry of Messianic Exultation. It is a prayer of thanksgiving and praise, as we have heard. In the original Greek of the Gospels the word with which this jubilation begins and which expresses Jesus’ attitude in addressing the Father is exomologoumai, which is often translated with “I praise” (cf. Mt 11:25 and Lk 10:21). However, in the New Testament writings this term indicates mainly two things: the first is “to confess” fully — for example, John the Baptist asked those who went to him to be baptized to recognize their every sin (cf. Mt 3:6); the second thing is “to be in agreement”. Therefore, the words with which Jesus begins his prayer contain his full recognition of the Father’s action and at the same time, his being in total, conscious and joyful agreement with this way of acting, with the Father’s plan. The “Cry of Exultation” is the apex of a journey of prayer in which Jesus’ profound and close communion with the life of the Father in the Holy Spirit clearly emerges and his divine sonship is revealed.
Jesus addresses God by calling him “Father”. This word expresses Jesus’ awareness and certainty of being “the Son” in intimate and constant communion with him, and this is the central focus and source of every one of Jesus’ prayers. We see it clearly in the last part of the hymn which illuminates the entire text. Jesus said: “All things have been delivered to me by my Father; and no one knows who the Son is except the Father, or who the Father is except the Son and any one to whom the Son chooses to reveal him” (Lk 10:22). Jesus was therefore affirming that only “the Son” truly knows the Father.
All the knowledge that people have of each other — we all experience this in our human relationships — entails involvement, a certain inner bond between the one who knows and the one who is known, at a more or less profound level: we cannot know anyone without a communion of being. In the Cry of Exultation — as in all his prayers — Jesus shows that true knowledge of God presupposes communion with him. Only by being in communion with the other can I begin to know him; and so it is with God: only if I am in true contact, if I am in communion with him, can I also know him. True knowledge, therefore, is reserved to the “Son”, the Only Begotten One who is in the bosom of the Father since eternity (cf. Jn 1:18), in perfect unity with him. The Son alone truly knows God, since he is in an intimate communion of being; only the Son can truly reveal who God is.
The name “Father” is followed by a second title, “Lord of heaven and earth”. With these words, Jesus sums up faith in creation and echoes the first words of Sacred Scripture: “In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth” (Gen 1:1).
In praying, he recalls the great biblical narrative of the history of God’s love for man that begins with the act of creation. Jesus fits into this love story, he is its culmination and its fulfilment. Sacred Scripture is illumined through his experience of prayer and lives again in its fullest breadth: the proclamation of the mystery of God and the response of man transformed. Yet, through the expression: “Lord of heaven and earth”, we can also recognize that in Jesus, the Revealer of the Father, the possibility for man to reach God is reopened.
Let us now ask ourselves: to whom does the Son want to reveal God’s mysteries? At the beginning of the Hymn Jesus expresses his joy because the Father’s will is to keep these things hidden from the learned and the wise and to reveal them to little ones (cf. Lk 10:21). Thus in his prayer, Jesus manifests his communion with the Father’s decision to disclose his mysteries to the simple of heart: the Son’s will is one with the Father’s.
Divine revelation is not brought about in accordance with earthly logic, which holds that cultured and powerful people possess important knowledge and pass it on to simpler people, to little ones. God used a quite different approach: those to whom his communication was addressed were, precisely, “babes”. This is the Father’s will, and the Son shares it with him joyfully. The Catechism of the Catholic Church says: “His exclamation, ‘Yes, Father!’ expresses the depth of his heart, his adherence to the Father’s ‘good pleasure,’ echoing his mother’s ‘Fiat’ at the time of his conception and prefiguring what he will say to the Father in his agony. The whole prayer of Jesus is contained in this loving adherence of his human heart to the ‘mystery of the will’ of the Father (Eph 1:9)” (n. 2603).
The invocation that we address to God in the “Our Father” derives from this: “Thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven”: together with Christ and in Christ we too ask to enter into harmony with the Father’s will, thereby also becoming his children. Thus Jesus, in this “Cry of Exultation”, expresses his will to involve in his own filial knowledge of God all those whom the Father wishes to become sharers in it; and those who welcome this gift are the “little ones”.
But what does “being little” and simple mean? What is the “littleness” that opens man to filial intimacy with God so as to receive his will? What must the fundamental attitude of our prayer be? Let us look at “The Sermon on the Mount”, in which Jesus says: “Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God” (Mt 5:8). It is purity of heart that permits us to recognize the face of God in Jesus Christ; it is having a simple heart like the heart of a child, free from the presumption of those who withdraw into themselves, thinking they have no need of anyone, not even God.
It is also interesting to notice the occasion on which Jesus breaks into this hymn to the Father. In Matthew’s Gospel narrative it is joyful because, in spite of opposition and rejection, there are “little ones” who accept his word and open themselves to the gift of faith in him. The “Cry of Exultation” is in fact preceded by the contrast between the praise of John the Baptist — one of the “little ones” who recognized God’s action in Jesus Christ (cf. Mt 11:2-19) — and the reprimand for the disbelief of the lake cities “where most of his mighty works had been performed” (cf. Mt 11:20-24).
Hence Matthew saw the Exultation in relation to the words with which Jesus noted the effectiveness of his word and action: “Go and tell John what you hear and see: the blind receive their sight and the lame walk, lepers are cleansed and the deaf hear, and the dead are raised up, and the poor have good news of the Gospel preached to them. And blessed is he who takes no offence at me” (Mt 11:4-6).
[Pope Benedict, General Audience 7 December 2011]
1. In the previous catechesis, we went over, albeit briefly, the Old Testament testimonies that prepared us to welcome the full revelation, announced by Jesus Christ, of the truth of the mystery of the Fatherhood of God.
Indeed, Christ spoke many times of his Father, presenting his providence and merciful love in various ways.
But his teaching goes further. Let us listen again to the particularly solemn words, recorded by the evangelist Matthew (and paralleled by Luke): 'I bless you, O Father, Lord of heaven and earth, because you have kept these things hidden from the wise and the clever and revealed them to the simple . . ." and later: "Everything has been given to me by my Father, no one knows the Son except the Father, and no one knows the Father except the Son and he to whom the Son wishes to reveal him" (Mt 11:25. 27; cf. Lk 10:2. 11).
So for Jesus, God is not only "the Father of Israel, the Father of men", but "my Father"! "Mine": precisely for this reason the Jews wanted to kill Jesus, because "he called God his Father" (Jn 5:18). "His" in the most literal sense: He whom only the Son knows as Father, and by whom alone he is mutually known. We are now on the same ground from which the prologue of John's Gospel will later arise.
2. My Father' is the Father of Jesus Christ, he who is the origin of his being, of his messianic mission, of his teaching. The evangelist John has abundantly reported the messianic teaching that allows us to fathom in depth the mystery of God the Father and Jesus Christ, his only Son.
Jesus says: "Whoever believes in me does not believe in me, but in him who sent me" (John 12: 44). "I did not speak from me, but the Father who sent me, he himself commanded me what I should say and proclaim" (Jn 12:49). "Verily, verily, I say unto you, the Son of himself can do nothing except what he sees the Father do; what he does, the Son also does" (Jn 5:19). "For as the Father has life in himself, so he has granted the Son to have life in himself" (Jn 5:26). And finally: ". . the Father, who has life, has sent me, and I live for the Father" (Jn 6:57).
The Son lives for the Father first of all because he was begotten by him. There is a very close correlation between fatherhood and sonship precisely because of generation: "You are my Son; today I have begotten you" (Heb 1:5). When at Caesarea Philippi Simon Peter confesses: "You are the Christ, the Son of the living God", Jesus answers him: "Blessed are you . . . for neither flesh nor blood has revealed it to you, but my Father . . ." (Mt 16:16-17), for only "the Father knows the Son" just as only the "Son knows the Father" (Mt 11:27). Only the Son makes the Father known: the visible Son makes the invisible Father seen. "He who has seen me has seen the Father" (Jn 14:9).
3. A careful reading of the Gospels shows that Jesus lives and works in constant and fundamental reference to the Father. He often addresses him with the word full of filial love: "Abba"; even during the prayer in Gethsemane this same word returns to his lips (cf. Mk 14:36). When the disciples ask him to teach them to pray, he teaches them the "Our Father" (cf. Mt 6:9-13). After the resurrection, at the moment of leaving the earth he seems to refer once again to this prayer, when he says: "I ascend to my Father and your Father, my God and your God" (Jn 20, 17).
Thus through the Son (cf. Heb 1:2), God revealed Himself in the fullness of the mystery of His fatherhood. Only the Son could reveal this fullness of the mystery, because only "the Son knows the Father" (Mt 11:27). "God no one has ever seen him: it is the only Son, who is in the bosom of the Father, who has revealed him" (Jn 1:18).
4. Who is the Father? In the light of the definitive witness we have received through the Son, Jesus Christ, we have the full knowledge of faith that the Fatherhood of God belongs first of all to the fundamental mystery of God's intimate life, to the Trinitarian mystery. The Father is the one who eternally begets the Word, the Son consubstantial with him. In union with the Son, the Father eternally "breathes forth" the Holy Spirit, who is the love in which the Father and the Son mutually remain united (cf. Jn 14:10).
Thus the Father is in the Trinitarian mystery the "beginning-without-beginning". "The Father by none is made, nor created, nor begotten" (Quicumque symbol). He alone is the beginning of life, which God has in Himself. This life - that is, the very divinity - the Father possesses in absolute communion with the Son and the Holy Spirit, who are consubstantial with him.
Paul, an apostle of the mystery of Christ, falls in adoration and prayer "before the Father from whom all fatherhood in heaven and on earth takes its name" (Eph 3:15), the beginning and model.For there is "one God the Father of all, who is above all, who acts through all and is present in all" (Eph 4:6).
[Pope John Paul II, General Audience 23 October 1985]
Today’s Gospel passage (cf. Lk 10:1-12, 17-20) presents Jesus who sends 72 disciples on mission, in addition to the 12 Apostles. The number 72 likely refers to all the nations. Indeed, in the Book of Genesis 72 different nations are mentioned (cf. 10:1-32). Thus, this conveyance prefigures the Church’s mission to proclaim the Gospel to all peoples. Jesus says to those disciples: “The harvest is plentiful, but the labourers are few; pray therefore the Lord of the harvest to send out labourers into his harvest!” (Lk 10:2).
This request by Jesus is always valid. We must always pray to the “Lord of the harvest”, namely, God the Father, that he send labourers into his field which is the world. And each of us must do so with an open heart, with a missionary attitude; our prayer must not be limited only to our needs, to our necessities: a prayer is truly Christian if it also has a universal dimension.
In sending out the 72 disciples, Jesus gives them precise instructions which express the characteristics of the mission. The first, as we have already seen, is: pray; the second: go; and then: carry no purse, no bag...; say, ‘Peace be to this house’ ... remain in the same house... do not go from house to house... heal the sick in it and say to them, ‘The kingdom of God has come near to you’”. And if they do not receive you, go out into the streets and take your leave (cf. vv. 2-10). These imperatives show that the mission is based on prayer; that it is itinerant: it is not idle; it is itinerant; that it requires separation and poverty; that it brings peace and healing, signs of the closeness of the Kingdom of God; that it is not proselytism but proclamation and witness; and that it also requires frankness and the evangelical freedom to leave while highlighting the responsibility of having rejected the message of salvation, but without condemnation and cursing.
If lived in these terms, the mission of the Church will be characterized by joy. And how does this passage end? The 72 “returned with joy” (cf. v. 17). It is not an ephemeral joy, which flows from the success of the mission; on the contrary, it is a joy rooted in the promise that — as Jesus says: “your names are written in heaven” (v. 20). With this expression he means inner joy, and the indestructible joy that is born out of the awareness of being called by God to follow his Son. That is, the joy of being his disciples. Today, for example, each of us, here in the Square, can think of the name we received on the day of Baptism: that name is “written in heaven”, in the heart of God the Father. And it is the joy of his gift that makes a missionary of every disciple, those who walk in the company of the Lord Jesus, who learn from him to unsparingly expend themselves for others, free of oneself and of one’s possessions.
Together let us invoke the maternal protection of Mary Most Holy, that she support the mission of Christ’s disciples in every place; the mission to proclaim to all that God loves us, wants to save us, and calls us to join his Kingdom.
[Pope Francis, Angelus 7 July 2019]
XXV Sunday in Ordinary Time B (22 September 2024)
1. Every page of the gospel, indeed every word of Jesus produces different resonances in the listener because it is not like reading or listening to a piece of news closed in time, but receiving a personalised message that is always new: in short, through the gospel, Jesus speaks in the concrete context in which you find yourself according to the openness and expectation of your heart. Try therefore to ask yourself what the Gospel says to you today (Mk 9:30-37). We have already heard the Apostle Peter being scandalised by the announcement of his Master's death on the cross and receiving a harsh rebuke right after his profession of faith. Peter,' Jesus intimated with authority, 'turn back "Satan", take your place and let me clear up the ideas that do not correspond to God's plans. Today the same thing happens with all the disciples who on the road to Capernaum argue among themselves about who will be the most important when the Messiah establishes his kingdom. Of course they are a long way from reality if Jesus has to repeat what he had said before. And indeed the evangelist specifies that "he taught his disciples and said to them: the Son of Man is delivered into the hands of men, and they will kill him; but once he is killed, he will rise again after three days". It is worth dwelling on the expression "The Son of Man delivered into the hands of men". The mystery of a God the Son of Man who delivers himself into the hands of man is the heart of all revelation. But where does the expression 'Son of Man' originate? In truth, it is a title with different shades of meaning in the Old and New Testaments. The expression 'Son of Man' appears in the Old Testament, mainly in the book of the prophet Ezekiel and the book of Daniel. In Ezekiel, God addresses the prophet by calling him 'son of man' more than 90 times and the term seems to simply refer to a human being whose frailty and mortality it highlights. In the book of the prophet Daniel, however, we find the key passage for the messianic meaning of the expression 'Son of Man'. In a vision, the prophet sees "coming with the clouds of heaven one resembling a son of man; he came as far as the Watchman and was presented to him. He was given power, glory, and kingdom; all peoples, nations, and languages served him; his power is an everlasting power, which never fades, and his kingdom is such that it will never be destroyed" (7:13-14). Here, the 'Son of Man' is not just a human being, but a heavenly figure on whom eternal and universal dominion is conferred. Here is the Messiah, the one sent by God to establish his kingdom, advancing on clouds of glory: a description that recalls divinity and final judgement. In the gospels Jesus uses the expression 'Son of Man' attributing it to himself more than 80 times and this title has at least three main meanings. By calling himself the 'Son of Man', he identifies himself as a real human being and is to say that, although the Messiah is the Son of God, he is man and shares our human condition. When he then refers to the prophet Daniel's vision, he wants to indicate his messianic role. For example, the "Son of Man" who comes "with the clouds of heaven" (Mt 24:30), is identified with the glorious and divine figure of Daniel and this title emphasises his definitive appearance as judge and universal ruler. But Christ also uses the term 'Son of Man' to speak of his passion and death, predicting that he will be handed over to men and be killed, but on the third day he will rise again. Thus the connection between the Son of Man and suffering (which was not present in Daniel) is a unique aspect of the way Jesus interprets his mission. Ultimately, the expression "Son of Man" Jesus attributes it to himself, combining the idea of his humanity with his role as the glorious Messiah and his redemptive mission through suffering and passion. In the moments of the passion, the verb "deliver" = to betray is striking: Judas delivers him to the leaders and soldiers (Mk 14:10, 44), the leaders to Pilate (Mk 15:1) and Pilate to the crucifiers (Mk 15:15), but the heart of it all, which constitutes the paradox, is that God himself delivers him and Jesus in turn delivers himself to us. In this handing himself over/giving himself to all, even to those who reject, deny and betray him, the revelation of God as love is shown to be total, unconditional, definitive and forever.
2. Let us return to today's Gospel text where the disciples "did not understand and were afraid to question him". Three of them, Peter James and John, had seen him transfigured, as the evangelist narrates just before at the beginning of this very chapter, and they were already dreaming of entering into glory with the Messiah blazing with light. The other apostles, to the account that the three make of their experience on Tabor, react by competing over "who was the greatest" to occupy the first place in the kingdom that the Messiah is about to establish. Jesus disconcerts them: "If anyone wants to be first, let him be last of all and servant of all" and taking a child he adds: "whoever receives one of these children in my name receives me; and whoever receives me does not receive me, but he who sent me". Just imagine the confusion in the disciples' heads as they fail to reconcile the glory of the messianic triumph with the scandal of the cross, and for the three disciples who witnessed Jesus' transfiguration, this seems even more unacceptable and unlikely. The splendour of the transfiguration remains in them, their ears have heard that Jesus is the beloved Son, the one who must be heard, how can they admit what he now announces: betrayal and hatred of men, suffering and death on the cross, and this in a certain and ineluctable manner? In the thinking of the apostles as well as their contemporaries, and probably also in us, glory and cross are not a happy pair. There is also a further contradiction: first he says that he will be killed and treated as refuse by men, then that resurrected he will triumph: so not only are glory and the cross inseparable, but to reach glory one must pass through the cross. An unknown 17th century monk and theologian writes: 'Sic decet per crucem ad gloriam, per angusta ad augusta penetrare, et per aspera ad astra' (J. Heidfeld [†1624]).
3. As if this were not enough, Jesus confuses the apostles even more because, first he states that 'if anyone wants to be first, let him be last of all and servant of all', then, taking a child in his arms (only here in Mark's gospel does he make this gesture), he shows as a model to imitate precisely the child, a vulnerable and defenceless human being in need of care. At that moment, the disciples do not die from the desire to be last, and even Jesus' gesture of pointing to the child as a model to be considered puts them in turmoil because they are in the midst of the power rivalry problem of which St James speaks in today's second reading (Jas 3:16-4:3). In short, it is The World Upside Down: no wonder the disciples struggle to understand this because it also puts us in crisis. Jesus, however, is patient and in truth he does not say that it is a bad thing to aspire to be first, indeed he even offers the means to get there, that is, to make oneself last. And so in this text we go from one marvel to another because the only way to become first is simple for Jesus and is within the reach of anyone: whoever wants to be first should put himself in last place and serve everyone as one would a child. This is not enough: only by doing so does one accept Jesus and add him: also "he who sent me". Our model is therefore Jesus washing the disciples' feet in the cenacle, as recounted in John's gospel, and we let his words resound in our hearts: 'Do you understand what I have done for you? You call me the Master and the Lord, and rightly so, for I am. If therefore I, the Lord and the Master, have washed your feet, you too must wash one another's feet. For I have given you an example, that you also should do as I have done to you" (13:12-15).
+Giovanni D'Ercole Good Sunday to you all
Abstract world and incarnation
(Mt 11:25-30)
The leaders looked at religiosity with a view to interest. Professors of theology were accustomed to evaluate every comma on the basis of their own knowledge, ridiculous but supponent - unrelated to real events.
That which remains tied to customs and the usual protagonists does not make one dream, it’s not an apparition and astonishing testimony of Elsewhere; it detracts expressive richness of the announcement and life.
The Lord rejoices in his own experience, which brings a non-epidermal joy and a teaching from the Spirit - about those who are well disposed, and able to understand the depths of the Kingdom, in ordinary things.
In short, after an initial moment of enthusiastic crowds, the Christ delves deeper into the themes and finds himself all against, except God and the least ones: the weightlesses, but eager to start from scratch.
Glimpse of the Mystery that leavens history - without making it a possession.
At first even Jesus is stunned by the rejection of those who considered themselves already satisfied and no longer expected anything that could overcome habits.
Then He understands, praises and blesses the Father's plan: the authentic Person is born from the gutter, and possesses «the sense of neighborhood» (FT n.152).
The Creator is simple Relationship: He demystifies the idol of greatness.
The Eternal One is not the master of creation: He is Refreshment that reassures, because makes us feel complete and lovable. He seeks us out, He pays attention to the language of the heart.
He is Custodian of the world, even of the unlearned ones - of the «infants» (v.25) spontaneously empty of boastful spirit, that is, of those who do not remain closed in their sufficient belonging.
Thus the Father-Son bond is communicated to God’s poor: those who are endowed with the attitude of family members (v.27).
Insignificant and invisible without great external capacities, but who abandon themselves to the proposals of the provident life that comes, like babies in the arms of parents.
In this way, with a pietas’ Spirit that favours those who allow themselves to be filled with innate wisdom.
The only reality that corresponds to us and does not present the "bill": it doesn’t proceed along the paths of functional thinking, of calculating initiative.
Sapience that transmits freshness in the readiness to personally receive, welcome, re-temper the Truth as a Gift, and the spontaneous enthusiasm itself, capable of realizing it.
A simple blessing prayer, for the simple ones - this of Jesus (v.25) - which makes us grow in esteem, fits perfectly with our experience, and gets along well with ourselves.
The new ones, the nullities, the voiceless and invisible do not think in terms of doctrine and laws [vv.29-30: unbearable "yoke" that crushes people, and concrete, particular vocations] but in terms of life and humanity.
Thus they enrich the fundamental and spontaneous experience of Faith-Love, satisfying, fulfilling it without mannerisms or intimate forcing.
While the exteriority of the pyramidal world, the distrust of those who want “to count", the anxiety of a competitive society, impoverish the gaze and contaminate the vital wave.
We, too, do not appreciate too much the energy of the 'models', nor the aggressive power of the “big guys”.
Rather than only with the “big” and external, we wish to live by Communion - even with the 'small' self, or there will be no loveliness, no authentic Life.
To internalize and live the message:
What do you feel when you are told: «You don't count»?
Does it remain a humiliating contempt or do you consider it a great Light received, as Jesus did?
[St Francis of Assisi, October 4, 2024]
(Mt 11:25-30)
Abstract world and Incarnation
(Mt 11:25-27)
"The world gives credit to the "wise" and the "learned", while God prefers the "little ones". The general teaching that follows from this is that there are two dimensions of reality: one deeper, true and eternal, the other marked by finiteness, impermanence and appearance" [Pope Benedict].
God's broad Reason is not according to 'fortune', or 'measure'
In commenting on the Tao Tê Ching (iv) Master Ho-shang Kung writes:
"Human desires are sharp and subtle, striving to appropriate merit and glory. When they are blunted, man masters them, and in imitation of the Way, does not fill himself'.
The leaders looked at religiosity with an interest. Professors of theology were accustomed to evaluate every comma on the basis of their own ludicrous but supponent knowledge - unrelated to real events.
Jesus finds himself against even his own family. Under the cloak and blackmail of customary social conventions, they too were subjected to the preconception of the opinion of the 'great' and the evasive oral tradition, which did not convey nourishment to the concrete fabric of human time.
The Lord observes: even the Apostles are not free people; that is why they do not emancipate anyone and even prevent any breakthrough (cf. Luke 9).
Their way of being is so grounded in standard attitudes and obligatory behaviour that they result in impermeable mental armour.
Their predictability is too limiting: it gives no breathing space to the path of those who instead want to reactivate themselves, discover and value surprises behind the secret sides of reality and personality.
That which remains bound to ancient customs [or abstractions] and usual protagonists [or sophisticated pseudo-teachers] does not make one dream, is not an apparition and astonishing testimony of the Other; it takes away expressive richness from the Announcement and from life.
The Master rejoices in his own experience, which brings a non-epidermal joy and a teaching from the Spirit - on those who are well disposed, and able to understand the depths of the Kingdom, in ordinary things.
[At a certain point in the spiritual journey, one realises in Christ that one must detach oneself from the idolatry of deference: it stifles and mocks life.
Faith proceeds on the track of the Happiness of the concrete woman and man, conversely made into puppets by a false piety that is all exhibitionist or disembodied].
In short, after an initial moment of enthusiastic crowds, the Master delves deeper into the themes and finds everyone against him, except God and the least: the weightless, but with a great desire to start from scratch.
Gleam of the Mystery that leavens history - without making it a possession.
At the conclusion of the encyclical Fratelli Tutti, Pope Francis cites the figure and experience of Charles de Foucauld, who - subverting everything - "only by identifying himself with the least came to be a brother to all" (no.287).
At first, even Jesus was stunned by the rejection of those who were already satisfied with the official religious structure and no longer expected anything that could oust the beaten track, arousing habits (or fantasies) and profit.
Then he overcomes the initial surprise: he fully grasps, praises and blesses the Father's plan, making it his own, holding it close to him.
He brings to full and proper knowledge his Secret: that the Root of the transformation of being into the Unforeseeable of God is concealment, "tapinōsis" [(tapeínōsis, "lowering"), from ταπεινός (tapeinós, "low") [v.29; Lk 1:48].
Here the Son knows and understands the nucleus of the Expectations and Promises of the Covenant, and its protagonists - on the contrary: the trustworthy Person is born precisely from the lowly, not from the class of elites.
In short, Christ intuits the all-round authenticity precisely of the underdog - the profound impulse, motive, motor, quintessence and unique energy of salvation history.
Transparency of the Eternal, which comes from another elaboration.
Genesis itself that upsets the established religious relationship, which has sometimes become inert and 'reassuring' - never profound nor decisive for human destiny.
God is Simple Relationship: it demythologises the idol of greatness.
The Eternal One is no longer the master of creation [He who manifested Himself strong and peremptory; in His action, still in the ancient Covenant illustrated through the irrepressible powers of nature].
Quite the contrary. In this way, reflexively, and also on the spiritual path, the Father does not lead us to alienation, to the hysteria of forcings we do not want, to inner dissociations.
He is Friend and Refreshment that refreshes, because He makes us feel complete and lovable; He seeks us by Name, He is attentive to the language of the heart.
He is Keeper of the world, even of the unlearned - of the "infants" (v.25) spontaneously empty of boastful spirit, that is, of those who do not remain closed in their sufficient belonging.
As it is, 'perfect' in order to their mission in the world. Not empty glasses, only to be re-educated in institutional function.
No longer souls to be chiselled according to models.
If anything, hearts to be guided to total awareness; souls to be completed in the sense of complete self-discovery, in the opposites of character and vocational essence.
In this way, the Father-Son relationship is communicated to the poor of God: those endowed with a family-like attitude (v.27).
Capable of co-existence, yet more autonomous than the identified and well-integrated... totally committed to the tracing, in order to be recognised.
The poor remain genuine: what they are; not outsiders.
Insignificant and invisible, lacking great gifts, but strangely always filled with an Other 'power'.
It is the 'virtue' of the infirm, who abandon themselves to the proposals of the providential life that comes, like children in the arms of parents.
With a spirit of 'pietas' - which favours those who allow themselves to be filled with innate wisdom.
The only reality that corresponds to us and does not present the 'bill': it does not proceed along the paths of functional thinking, of calculating initiative.
Wisdom that conveys freshness in the readiness to receive, welcome, personally re-fill the Truth as a Gift - and the spontaneous enthusiasm itself, capable of realising it.
A simple prayer of blessing, for the simple - this of Jesus (v.25) - that makes us grow in esteem, fits perfectly with our experience, and agrees with ourselves; starting from the intimate.
But which, strangely enough, the scholars on the ground who do not live 'the spirit of the neighbourhood' (FT no.152) but on the ground claim positions and always play smart, have never wanted to convey to us.
The new, the voiceless and invisible do not reason in terms of doctrine and laws - vv.29-30: unbearable "yoke" that crushes people and concrete, particular vocations - but of life and humanity.
Thus they enrich the fundamental and spontaneous experience of Faith-Love, fulfilling it without mannerisms or intimate forcing that then pulls us out of ourselves.
Because the exteriority of the pyramidal world, the distrust of those who want to "count", the anxiety of the competitive and epidermic society, impoverish the gaze; they contaminate the vital wave.
For God, it is better to 'count' little.
He does not force us into the energy of models, nor does He propose as an ideal the aggressive power of the 'big shots'.
In this way, his intimates, instead of only with the 'big' and external, will live of Communion even with the 'small' in themselves; or they will not enjoy amiability, nor authentic life.
To internalise and live the message:
What do you feel when you are told: 'You do not count'?
Does it remain a humiliating contempt or do you consider it a great Light received, as Jesus did?
The Yoke on the Little Ones
Religion turned into obsession (for "held back")
(Mt 11:28-30)
The rabbis chose disciples from among those who had greater intellectual and ascetic abilities. Jesus, on the other hand, goes looking for the outcasts, the "infants" (v.25) who did not even have self-esteem.
Even for today's rebirth, Christ has no need of fake phenomena; on the contrary, it is He who frees from external constraints; He unleashes inner strength (and heals the brain too).
Into the intimacy of the Mystery of divine life enters he who knows how to receive everything and lets go - but remains himself.
God is not distant, but very close; he is not great, but small: the effective itinerary for becoming intimate with the Father is not to make oneself subordinate with effort, but to know how to be dissolved family members.
Only here can we grasp him in the centre of his unveiling: wise power, succouring, united; for us, as we are.
The pundits of official religion - overflowing with self-love and a sense of election - preached a God to be persuaded with confident attitudes and contrived, edgy, imperious actions.
They allowed neither being nor becoming. Their intransigence was a sign that they did not know the Father.
The Eternal One transformed into the Controller had become a source of discrimination and obsession for the intimate lives of minute people, harassed by the insecurity of distinguish-avoid-observe, and by doubts of conscience.
Discouraged from experiencing first-hand (and as a class) the conversion they preached to others, the professors did not realise that they had to empty themselves of absurd presumptions and become - they - pupils of ordinary people.
In short, as children we are incessantly invited to build a multifaceted Family, where we are not always on the alert.
We are not the subordinates of a frowning and all-distant - but manipulative - Lord.
Rather, we are called to a paradoxical, personal and class choice: without forcing ourselves, to recognise and stand alongside the humiliated and harassed.
This while provincial false piety continues to drag burdens - precisely those of the thwarted and weary, of existence made more hesitant rather than free; obsessed and heavy, rather than light.
Why? Without mincing words, the Encyclical Fratelli Tutti would answer:
"The best way to dominate and advance without limits is to sow hopelessness and arouse constant distrust, albeit masked by the defence of certain values" (no.15).
As if to say: when the authorities and the leaders have little credibility, only the sowing of fear produces significant conditioning in the people, and puts them on a leash.
In the widespread Church, only a few decades ago we overcame the cliché of moralistic and terroristic preaching, (e.g. even at Advent time) divorced from a meridian sense of humanisation.
The excluded, dejected and exhausted by meaningless fulfilments have nevertheless continued to meet the Saviour frankly, finding rest of soul, conviction, peace, balance, hope.
Instinctively, they were able to carve out what no pyramid religion had ever been able to provide and deploy.
In fact, the new, the voiceless, the inadequate and invisible do not know how to calculate in terms of doctrine and laws, norm and code - unbearable ancient 'yoke' (vv.29-30), which crushes people and concrete vocations; particular autonomies or communions.
In short, no 'patriarch' is empowered by God to pack up our souls, force directions and keep a maniacal, perfectionist, meticulous eye on us.
Exacerbating failures, across the board.
Everyone has an innate way of being in the world, all their own - even if it is habitual. It is an opportunity of impulse and richness for everyone.
We ourselves do not want to exacerbate events by regulating every detail, even 'spiritual' ones, from irritating patterns of vigilance that do not belong to us.
We prefer to let personal ways of dealing with reality flow; thus tracing its essential and spontaneous energies.
We reason according to codes of life and humanisation: temperament, unrepeatable history, cultural influences, broad friendships. We do not live to prevent.
Only in this way can we enrich the fundamental experience: Love - which does not come from judgements, cuts and separations, but from the Father-Son relationship. The only one that does not stigmatise.
The root of the transformation of being in God's unpredictable is precisely concealment, "tapinōsis" [(tapeínōsis, "lowering"), from ταπεινός (tapeinós, "low") [v.29 Greek text; Lk 1:48].
Only those who love strength start from the too far from themselves.
To internalise and live the message:
Do you find yourself more or less free and serene in community?
Does your Calling gain breath or do you feel the burden of others' doubts, judgements, prohibitions and prescriptions?
Do you suffer from some guide or from yourself a kind of controller complex?
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
The Lord's words that we have just heard in the Gospel passage challenge us as theologians or, perhaps better, invite us to make an examination of conscience. What is theology? What is our role as theologians? How can theology be done well? We have heard that our Lord praises the Father because he concealed the great mystery of the Son the Trinitarian mystery, the Christological mystery from the wise and the learned, from those who did not recognize him. Instead he revealed it to children, the nèpioi, to those who are not learned, who are not very cultured. It was to them that this great mystery was revealed.
With these words the Lord describes in simple terms an episode in his life that already began at the time of his birth, when the Magi from the East ask those who are competent the scribes, the exegetes where the birthplace of the Saviour, of the King of Israel, is located. The scribes know because they are great specialists; they can say immediately where the Messiah is born: in Bethlehem! But they do not feel it concerns them. For them it remains academic knowledge that does not affect their lives; they stay away. They can provide information, but they do not assimilate it and it has no part in the formation of their own lives.
Then throughout the Lord's public life we encounter the same thing. It is beyond the learned to comprehend that this man, a Galilean who is not educated, can truly be the Son of God. It is unacceptable to them that God the great, the one, the God of Heaven and earth could be present in this man. They know everything, they know all of the great prophecies; they even know Isaiah 53, but the mystery remains hidden to them. Instead it is revealed to the lowly, starting from Our Lady to the fishermen of the Sea of Galilee. They know, just as the Roman centurion beneath the Cross knew: this is the Son of God.
The basic events of Jesus' life do not only belong to the past but are also present in various ways to all generations. And thus also in our time in the past 200 years we see the same thing. There have been great scholars, great experts, great theologians, teachers of faith who have taught us many things. They have gone into the details of Sacred Scripture, of the history of salvation but have been unable to see the mystery itself, its central nucleus: that Jesus was really the Son of God, that at a given moment in history the Trinitarian God entered our history, as a man like us. The essential has remained hidden! One could easily mention the great names in the history of theology over the past 200 years from whom we have learned much; but the eyes of their hearts were not open to the mystery.
On the other hand, in our time there have also been "little ones" who have understood this mystery. Let us think of St Bernadette Soubirous; of St Thérèse of Lisieux, with her new interpretation of the Bible that is "non-scientific" but goes to the heart of Sacred Scripture; of the saints and blessed of our time: St Josephine Bakhita, Bl. Teresa of Calcutta and St Damien de Veuster. We could list so many!
But from all this the question arises: "Why should this be so?". Is Christianity the religion of the foolish, of people with no culture or who are uneducated? Is faith extinguished where reason is kindled? How can this be explained? Perhaps we should take another look at history. What Jesus said, what can be noted in all the centuries, is true. Nevertheless, there is a "type" of lowly person who is also learned. Our Lady stood beneath the Cross, the humble handmaid of the Lord and the great woman illumined by God. And John was there too, a fisherman from the Sea of Galilee. He is the John whom the Church was rightly to call "the theologian", for he was really able to see the mystery of God and proclaim it: eagled-eyed he entered into the inaccessible light of the divine mystery. So it was too that after his Resurrection, the Lord, on the road to Damascus, touches the heart of Saul, one of those learned people who cannot see. He himself, in his First Letter to Timothy, writes that he was "acting ignorantly" at that time, despite his knowledge. But the Risen One touches him: he is blinded. Yet at the same time, he truly gains sight; he begins to see. The great scholar becomes a "little one" and for this very reason perceives the folly of God as wisdom, a wisdom far greater than all human wisdom.
We could continue to interpret the holy story in this way. Just one more observation. These erudite terms, sofòi and sinetòi, in the First Reading are used in a different way. Here sofia and sìnesis are gifts of the Holy Spirit which descend upon the Messiah, upon Christ. What does this mean? It turns out that there is a dual use of reason and a dual way of being either wise or little. In the whole range of sciences, starting with the natural sciences, where a suitable method for the research of matter is universalized, there is a way of using reason that is autonomous, that places itself above God. God has no part in this method, so God does not exist. And, in the end, this is so in theology too: one fishes in the waters of Sacred Scripture using a net in which only fish of a certain size may be caught. Therefore a fish exceeding this size is too big for the net and hence cannot exist. It is in this way that the great mystery of Jesus, the Son made Man, is reduced to a historical Jesus: a tragic figure; a ghost, not of flesh and blood; a man who stays in the tomb, whose body is corrupt and who is truly dead. The method is able to "catch" certain fish but the great mystery eludes it, because the human being himself established the measure. He takes pride in this which is the same time great foolishness, because it renders absolute certain methods that are unsuitable for treating the great realities. He enters into this academic spirit that we have seen in the scribes, who answered the Magi Kings: it does not concern me. I remain closed into my own life that will not be affected. It is a specialization that sees all the details but can no longer discern the whole.
Then there is the other way of using reason, of being wise that of the man who recognizes who he is; he recognizes the proper measure and greatness of God, opening himself in humility to the newness of God's action. It is in this way, precisely by accepting his own smallness, making himself little as he really is, that he arrives at the truth. Thus reason too can express all its possibilities; it is not extinguished but rather grows and becomes greater. Sofìaand sìnesis in this context do not exclude one from the mystery that is real communion with the Lord, in whom reside wisdom and knowledge and their truth.
Let us now pray that the Lord will give us true humility. May he give us the grace of being little in order to be truly wise; may he illumine us, enable us to see his mystery in the joy of the Holy Spirit. May he help us to be true theologians who can proclaim his mystery because we are touched in the depths of our hearts, of our very existence. Amen.
[Pope Benedict, homily to the members of the International Theological Commission, 1 December 2009]
1. "Bless you, O Father, Lord of heaven and earth, for you have kept these things hidden from the wise and the learned and revealed them to babes" (Mt 11:25).
We come here, dear brothers, to repeat with Christ the Lord these words, to "bless the Father".
- We come to bless him because of what he revealed, eight centuries ago, to a "Little One", to the Poverello of Assisi;
- the things in heaven and on earth, which the philosophers "had not even dreamed of";
- the things hidden from those who are only humanly "wise", and only humanly "intelligent";
- these "things" the Father, the Lord of heaven and earth, has revealed to Francis and through Francis.
Through Francis of Pietro di Bernardone, that is, the son of a rich merchant of Assisi, who abandoned all the inheritance of his earthly father and married "Lady Poverty", the inheritance of the heavenly Father offered to him in Christ crucified and risen.
The primary purpose of our pilgrimage to Assisi this year is to give glory to God.
In a spirit of veneration, let us also celebrate the Eucharist together, all of us, Pastors of the Church in Italy with the Bishop of Rome, successor of Peter.
2. "Yes, O Father, for it pleased thee" (Mt 11:26).
After eight centuries, relics and memories remain. The whole of Assisi is a living relic and a testimony of man. Of man alone? Of the unusual man alone?
- It is the testimony of a particular delight that the Heavenly Father, through his Only-Begotten Son, had in this man, in this "little one", in the "Poverello", in Francis who - like very few throughout the history of the Church and of humanity - learned from Christ to be meek and humble of heart.
Yes, Father, such was your contentment. So many men come here to follow in the footsteps of your complacency. Today we come, Bishops of Italy.
We have come to close and, at the same time, crown in this Jubilee Year of St Francis of Assisi the work carried out during the entire year of the visit "ad limina Apostolorum" to which the tradition and the law of the Church have invited our episcopate at this time.
3. We find ourselves in the presence of the Saint, who at the same time is the patron saint of Italy, hence the one who, among the many canonised and beatified sons and daughters of this land, unites Italy with the Church in a special way. In fact, the Church's task is to proclaim and realise in every nation that vocation to holiness that we have from the Father in the Holy Spirit through the work of Christ crucified and risen; of this Christ, whose wounds St Francis of Assisi bore in his body: 'For I bear the stigmata of Jesus in my body' (Gal 6:17).
So we stand in his presence and meditate on the words of the Gospel, sentence after sentence:
"Everything has been given to me by my Father; no one knows the Son except the Father, and no one knows the Father except the Son and he to whom the Son wishes to reveal him" (Mt 11:27).
Here, we find ourselves before a man, to whom the Son of God wished to reveal, in a particular measure and with particular abundance, what has been given to him by the Father for all men, for all times. Certainly, Francis was sent with the Gospel of Christ especially in his own time, in the transition from the 12th to the 13th century, in the midst of the Italian Middle Ages, which was a splendid and at the same time difficult period: but every age has retained something of it. However, the Franciscan mission did not end then; it continues to this day.
And here we, Bishops and Pastors of the Church, to whom are entrusted the Gospel and the Church of our times - how apparently splendid, how far removed from the Middle Ages according to the measure of earthly progress! and at the same time how, how difficult! - we Bishops and Pastors of the Church in this same Italy, pray above all for one thing. Let us pray that the same words of our Master, which were fulfilled on Saint Francis, be fulfilled upon us; that we be the sure depositories of the Revelation of the Son! That we be the faithful stewards of what the Father Himself handed down to the Only-Begotten Son, born of the Virgin Mary by the power of the Holy Spirit. That we are stewards of this truth and this love, of this word and this salvation, which all mankind and every man and every nation have in him and from him; for "no one knows the Son except the Father, and no one knows the Father except the Son and he to whom the Son wills to reveal him" (Matthew 11: 27).
Such is the pastoral and apostolic purpose of our pilgrimage today.
4. And behold, Francis seems to address us and speak to us with the accents of Paul the Apostle: "The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with your spirit, brothers" (Gal 6:18)!
Thank you, holy Poverello, for these good wishes with which you are receiving us!Looking with the eyes of the spirit
your figure
and meditating on the words of the letter to the Galatians
with which today's liturgy speaks to us,
we wish to learn from you
this 'belonging to Jesus
of which your whole life constitutes
such a perfect example and model.
"As for me...
let there be no other boast than in the cross
of our Lord Jesus Christ,
through whom the world for me
was crucified as I for the world" (Gal 6:14).
Let us hear Paul's words,
which are also, Francis,
your words.
Your spirit is expressed in them.
Jesus Christ has allowed you,
just as he once
had allowed that Apostle
who became a "chosen instrument" (Acts 9:15),
to "boast", solely and exclusively,
in the Cross of our Redemption.
In this way you have arrived at the very heart
of the knowledge of the truth about God
about the world and man;
truth that can only be seen
only with the eyes of love.
Now that we stand before you
as successors of the Apostles
sent to the men of our time
with the same Gospel of the Cross of Christ,
we ask: teach us, just as the Apostle Paul
taught you
to have "no other boast than
in the Cross of our Lord Jesus Christ".
May each one of us,
with all the insight of the gift of fear,
of wisdom and fortitude
know how to penetrate the truth
of these words about the Cross
in which the "new creature" begins,
about the Cross that constantly brings
to humanity "peace and mercy".
Through the Cross, God has expressed himself to the end in human history; God who is "rich in mercy" (Eph 2:4). In the Cross, the glory of Love willing to do everything is revealed. Only with the Cross in his hand - like an open book - can man learn to the full about himself and his dignity.
He must finally, fixing his eyes on the Cross, ask himself: 'who am I', man, in the eyes of God, if he pays such a price for me and my love!
"The Cross on Calvary," I wrote in the encyclical "Redemptor Hominis", "by which Jesus Christ - man, son of the Virgin Mary, putative son of Joseph of Nazareth - 'leaves' this world, is at the same time a new manifestation of the eternal fatherhood of God, who in him draws near once again to humanity, to every man, giving him the thrice holy 'Spirit of Truth' (cf. Jn 16:13)... His is love that does not recoil from anything that in Himself demands justice.
And for this reason the Son
"who had known no sin,
God treated him as sin for our sake" (2 Cor 5:21; cf. Gal 3:13).
If he "dealt from sin"
He who was absolutely
without any sin,
he did so to reveal the love
which is always greater
than all creation,
the love that is himself,
for 'God is love' (1 Jn 4:8, 16)" (John Paul II, Redemptor Hominis, 9).
This is exactly how you looked at things
you, Francis.
They called you the "Poor Man of Assisi",
and you were and remained
one of the men who gave
most generously to others.
You had therefore an enormous wealth,
a great treasure.
And the secret of your wealth
was hidden in the Cross of Christ.
Teach us,
Bishops and Pastors of the 20th century
which is drawing to an end,
to boast similarly in the Cross,
teach us this wealth in poverty
and this giving in abundance.
5. The first reading from the book of Sirach recalls the words about the high priest Simon, son of Onias, who "in his life repaired the temple and in his days strengthened the sanctuary" (Sir 50:1).
The liturgy refers these words to Francis of Assisi. He remained in tradition, literature and art as the one who 'repaired the temple... and fortified the sanctuary'. As the one who "caring to prevent the fall of his people, fortified the city against a siege (Sir 50:4).
The reading goes on to speak of Simon, son of Onias, and we relate these words to Francis, son of Peter of Bernardone. We also apply these comparisons to him:
"Like a morning star among the clouds, / like the moon in the days when it is full, / like the sun blazing over the temple of the Most High, / like the shining rainbow among clouds of glory" (Sir 50, 6-7).
6. We gladly borrow these words from the book of Sirach to venerate, after eight hundred years, Francis of Assisi, the patron saint of Italy.
That is why we have all come here, Bishops and Pastors of the Church that is in all of Italy together with the Bishop of Rome, the successor of Peter.
However, the purpose of our pilgrimage is particularly apostolic and pastoral.
When we hear Christ's words about the yoke that is sweet and the burden that is light, (cf. Mt 11:30) we think of our mission as Bishops and pastoral service.
And let us repeat with confidence and joy the words of the Responsorial Psalm: "I said to God: 'You are my Lord, /Without you I have no good. / The Lord is my inheritance and my cup: / in your hands is my life. / I bless the Lord who has given me counsel.... / I always place before me the Lord, / he stands at my right hand, I cannot waver" (Ps 15 [16]).
With joy we have accepted the invitation to come here to Assisi, heard in a certain way in the words of our Lord and Master: "Come to me, all you who labour and are overburdened, and I will give you rest" (Mt 11:28). Let us hope that they will be fulfilled on us all, as well as the further words: "Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, who am meek and humble of heart, and you will find rest for your souls" (Mt 11:29).
So we wish, Christ! Thus we desire! With such a thought we have come to Assisi today. We thank you for the holy "burden" of priesthood and episcopacy. We thank you for Saint Francis, who did not feel worthy to accept priestly ordination. Yet to him you entrusted, in such an exceptional way, your Church.
7. And behold, as we look towards Francis, who "poor and humble, enters richly into heaven, honoured with heavenly hymns" (Cant. ad Evang.), we would still like to apply to him the words of the book of Sirach, which summarise his famous vision so well: "Francis, take care to prevent the fall of your people"!
Francis! As in your life, so also now, repair the temple! Fortify the sanctuary!
For this we pray, we Pastors of the Church, who at the school of the Second Vatican Council have learned anew to surround the Church, Italy and the contemporary world with a common solicitude.
And with our beloved people we repeat:
"The Lord is my inheritance and my cup: / in your hands is my life; / I bless the Lord who has given me counsel;... / I always place before me the Lord'.
Yes, brothers and sisters, always! And so be it.
[Pope John Paul II, homily Assisi 12 March 1982]
“I give you thanks, Father, Lord of heaven and earth, for you have hidden these things from the wise and understanding, and revealed them to babes” (Mt 11:25).
Peace and all good to each and every one of you! With this Franciscan greeting I thank you for being here, in this Square so full of history and faith, to pray together.
Today, I too have come, like countless other pilgrims, to give thanks to the Father for all that he wished to reveal to one of the “little ones” mentioned in today’s Gospel: Francis, the son of a wealthy merchant of Assisi. His encounter with Jesus led him to strip himself of an easy and carefree life in order to espouse “Lady Poverty” and to live as a true son of our heavenly Father. This decision of Saint Francis was a radical way of imitating Christ: he clothed himself anew, putting on Christ, who, though he was rich, became poor in order to make us rich by his poverty (cf. 2 Cor 8:9). In all of Francis’ life, love for the poor and the imitation of Christ in his poverty were inseparably united, like the two sides of the same coin.
What does Saint Francis’s witness tell us today? What does he have to say to us, not merely with words – that is easy enough – but by his life?
1. The first thing he tells us is this: that being a Christian means having a living relationship with the person of Jesus; it means putting on Christ, being conformed to him.
Where did Francis’s journey to Christ begin? It began with the gaze of the crucified Jesus. With letting Jesus look at us at the very moment that he gives his life for us and draws us to himself. Francis experienced this in a special way in the Church of San Damiano, as he prayed before the cross which I too will have an opportunity to venerate. On that cross, Jesus is depicted not as dead, but alive! Blood is flowing from his wounded hands, feet and side, but that blood speaks of life. Jesus’ eyes are not closed but open, wide open: he looks at us in a way that touches our hearts. The cross does not speak to us about defeat and failure; paradoxically, it speaks to us about a death which is life, a death which gives life, for it speaks to us of love, the love of God incarnate, a love which does not die, but triumphs over evil and death. When we let the crucified Jesus gaze upon us, we are re-created, we become “a new creation”. Everything else starts with this: the experience of transforming grace, the experience of being loved for no merits of our own, in spite of our being sinners. That is why Saint Francis could say with Saint Paul: “Far be it for me to glory except in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ” (Gal 6:14).
We turn to you, Francis, and we ask you: Teach us to remain before the cross, to let the crucified Christ gaze upon us, to let ourselves be forgiven, and recreated by his love.
2. In today’s Gospel we heard these words: “Come to me, all who labour and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am gentle and lowly in heart” (Mt 11:28-29).
This is the second witness that Francis gives us: that everyone who follows Christ receives true peace, the peace that Christ alone can give, a peace which the world cannot give. Many people, when they think of Saint Francis, think of peace; very few people however go deeper. What is the peace which Francis received, experienced and lived, and which he passes on to us? It is the peace of Christ, which is born of the greatest love of all, the love of the cross. It is the peace which the Risen Jesus gave to his disciples when he stood in their midst (cf. Jn 20:19-20).
Franciscan peace is not something saccharine. Hardly! That is not the real Saint Francis! Nor is it a kind of pantheistic harmony with forces of the cosmos… That is not Franciscan either! It is not Franciscan, but a notion that some people have invented! The peace of Saint Francis is the peace of Christ, and it is found by those who “take up” their “yoke”, namely, Christ’s commandment: Love one another as I have loved you (cf. Jn 13:34; 15:12). This yoke cannot be borne with arrogance, presumption or pride, but only with meekness and humbleness of heart.
We turn to you, Francis, and we ask you: Teach us to be “instruments of peace”, of that peace which has its source in God, the peace which Jesus has brought us.
3. Francis began the Canticle of the Creatures with these words: “Praised may you be, Most High, All-powerful God, good Lord… by all your creatures (FF, 1820). Love for all creation, for its harmony. Saint Francis of Assisi bears witness to the need to respect all that God has created and as he created it, without manipulating and destroying creation; rather to help it grow, to become more beautiful and more like what God created it to be. And above all, Saint Francis witnesses to respect for everyone, he testifies that each of us is called to protect our neighbour, that the human person is at the centre of creation, at the place where God – our creator – willed that we should be. Not at the mercy of the idols we have created! Harmony and peace! Francis was a man of harmony and peace. From this City of Peace, I repeat with all the strength and the meekness of love: Let us respect creation, let us not be instruments of destruction! Let us respect each human being. May there be an end to armed conflicts which cover the earth with blood; may the clash of arms be silenced; and everywhere may hatred yield to love, injury to pardon, and discord to unity. Let us listen to the cry of all those who are weeping, who are suffering and who are dying because of violence, terrorism or war, in the Holy Land, so dear to Saint Francis, in Syria, throughout the Middle East and everywhere in the world.
We turn to you, Francis, and we ask you: Obtain for us God’s gift of harmony, peace and respect for creation!
Finally, I cannot forget the fact that today Italy celebrates Saint Francis as her patron saint. I greet all the Italian people, represented by the Head of Government, who is present among us. The traditional offering of oil for the votive lamp, which this year is given by the Region of Umbria, is an expression of this. Let us pray for Italy, that everyone will always work for the common good, and look more to what unites us, rather than what divides us.
I make my own the prayer of Saint Francis for Assisi, for Italy and for the world: “I pray to you, Lord Jesus Christ, Father of mercies: Do not look upon our ingratitude, but always keep in mind the surpassing goodness which you have shown to this City. Grant that it may always be the home of men and women who know you in truth and who glorify your most holy and glorious name, now and for all ages. Amen.” (The Mirror of Perfection, 124: FF, 1824).
[Pope Francis, homily Assisi 4 October 2013]
Jesus has forever interrupted the succession of ferocious empires. He turned the values upside down. And he proposes the singular work - truly priestly - of the journey of Faith: the invitation to question oneself. At the end of his earthly life, the Lord is Silent, because he waits for everyone to pronounce, and choose
Gesù ha interrotto per sempre il susseguirsi degli imperi feroci. Ha capovolto i valori. E propone l’opera singolare - davvero sacerdotale - del cammino di Fede: l’invito a interrogarsi. Al termine della sua vicenda terrena il Signore è Silenzioso, perché attende che ciascuno si pronunci, e scelga
The Sadducees, addressing Jesus for a purely theoretical "case", at the same time attack the Pharisees' primitive conception of life after the resurrection of the bodies; they in fact insinuate that faith in the resurrection of the bodies leads to admitting polyandry, contrary to the law of God (Pope John Paul II)
I Sadducei, rivolgendosi a Gesù per un "caso" puramente teorico, attaccano al tempo stesso la primitiva concezione dei Farisei sulla vita dopo la risurrezione dei corpi; insinuano infatti che la fede nella risurrezione dei corpi conduce ad ammettere la poliandria, contrastante con la legge di Dio (Papa Giovanni Paolo II)
Are we disposed to let ourselves be ceaselessly purified by the Lord, letting Him expel from us and the Church all that is contrary to Him? (Pope Benedict)
Siamo disposti a lasciarci sempre di nuovo purificare dal Signore, permettendoGli di cacciare da noi e dalla Chiesa tutto ciò che Gli è contrario? (Papa Benedetto)
Jesus makes memory and remembers the whole history of the people, of his people. And he recalls the rejection of his people to the love of the Father (Pope Francis)
Gesù fa memoria e ricorda tutta la storia del popolo, del suo popolo. E ricorda il rifiuto del suo popolo all’amore del Padre (Papa Francesco)
Today, as yesterday, the Church needs you and turns to you. The Church tells you with our voice: don’t let such a fruitful alliance break! Do not refuse to put your talents at the service of divine truth! Do not close your spirit to the breath of the Holy Spirit! (Pope Paul VI)
Oggi come ieri la Chiesa ha bisogno di voi e si rivolge a voi. Essa vi dice con la nostra voce: non lasciate che si rompa un’alleanza tanto feconda! Non rifiutate di mettere il vostro talento al servizio della verità divina! Non chiudete il vostro spirito al soffio dello Spirito Santo! (Papa Paolo VI)
Sometimes we try to correct or convert a sinner by scolding him, by pointing out his mistakes and wrongful behaviour. Jesus’ attitude toward Zacchaeus shows us another way: that of showing those who err their value, the value that God continues to see in spite of everything (Pope Francis)
A volte noi cerchiamo di correggere o convertire un peccatore rimproverandolo, rinfacciandogli i suoi sbagli e il suo comportamento ingiusto. L’atteggiamento di Gesù con Zaccheo ci indica un’altra strada: quella di mostrare a chi sbaglia il suo valore, quel valore che continua a vedere malgrado tutto (Papa Francesco)
Deus dilexit mundum! God observes the depths of the human heart, which, even under the surface of sin and disorder, still possesses a wonderful richness of love; Jesus with his gaze draws it out, makes it overflow from the oppressed soul. To Jesus, therefore, nothing escapes of what is in men, of their total reality, in which good and evil are (Pope Paul VI)
don Giuseppe Nespeca
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