Vatican
City, 24 April 2013
(VIS) – In the Pauline Chapel of the Vatican yesterday, the feast
of St. George, the Holy Father presided at Mass with the cardinals
resident in Rome, thanking them for their presence: “Thank you,”
he said, “because I feel very well welcomed. I feel good with you
and that pleases me.”
In
the homily, Francis commented on the first reading of the day's
liturgy that narrates the story of the first Christians who escaped
persecution in Jerusalem, travelling to Phoenicia, Cyprus, and
Antioch, where they began to spread the Good News, among the Greeks
as well. “At that moment when persecution breaks out,” the Pope
said, “the Church's missionary activity breaks out.”
But
in Jerusalem, they didn't understand how it was possible to preach to
non-Jews. “A little nervous, they sent an Apostolic Visit, they
sent Barnabas. Perhaps, a bit humorously,” Pope Francis explained,
“we can say that this was the theological beginning of the
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, this Apostolic Visit by
Barnabas. He observed and he saw that things were going well. The
Church thus is more a Mother: a Mother of more children, of many
children. She becomes … more and more a Mother: a Mother who gives
us faith, a Mother who gives us our identity. But our Christian
identity is not an ID card. Christian identity is a belonging to the
Church because all of these belonged to the Church, the Mother
Church, because finding Jesus outside of the Church is not possible.
The great Paul VI said: it is an absurd dichotomy to want to live
with Jesus but outside of the Church. And that Mother church who
gives us Jesus gives us an identity that is not merely a seal; it is
a belonging. Identity means belonging.”
The
Pope then spoke of the three ideas that the story brought to his
mind: the first was of the beginning of the mission, the second the
Church as Mother, and the third the joy of the evangelizer that
Barnabas feels when he see the immense crowd listening to the
preaching. “Thus the Church advances … among the world's
persecutions and the Lord's consolation. … If we want to travel the
path or worldliness, negotiating with the world … we will never
have the Lord's consolation. And, if we only seek his consolation, it
will be a superficial one, … a human consolation. The Church always
goes between the Cross and the Resurrection … This is the path.
Whoever travels by this path will not be mistaken.”
“Let
us think today of the Church's missionary activity: in those
disciples … who have the courage to proclaim Jesus to the Greeks,
something almost scandalous at that time. Let us think of the Mother
church who grows, grows with new children to whom she fives the
identity of faith because one cannot believe in Jesus without the
Church. … and let us think of the consolation that Barnabas had,
'the sweet and consoling joy of evangelizing'. And let us ask the
Lord … for this apostolic fervour, that urges us to go forward, as
brothers and sisters, all of us: forward!. Let us go forward bearing
Jesus' name at the heart of the Holy Mother Church.”
After
the Eucharistic celebration, the Swiss Guard Musical Band offered the
Pope a short concert in the Saint Damasus Courtyard, to wish him a
happy saint's day.
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