Vatican
City, 8 April 2013
(VIS) – At 5:30pm in the Basilica of St. John Lateran yesterday,
Divine Mercy Sunday, Pope Francis celebrated Mass, during which he
officially took possession of the Cathedra of the Bishop of Rome. At
the taking of possession, there was an act of obedience carried out
by a representation of Rome's ecclesial community. Just as at the
Mass inaugurating his Petrine ministry—when six cardinals, two from
each of the three orders: bishop, priest, and deacon, represented the
entire College of Cardinals—representatives from the Diocese of
Rome made the act of obedience: Cardinal Agostino Vallini, vicar
general of Rome; the vice gerent and an auxiliary bishop of the
diocese; a pastor and assistant pastor; a deacon, male religious, and
female religious; as well as a family and a young lay man and lay
woman.
The
Pope dedicated his homily to God's “patience”, referring to the
Gospel reading of the day in which the Apostle Thomas experiences
God's mercy, “which has a concrete face … that of the risen
Jesus. Thomas doesn't trust what the other Apostles tell him ... He
wants to see .. and what is Jesus' reaction? Patience: Jesus doesn't
abandon stubborn-headed Thomas to his disbelief. He gives him a
week’s time. He doesn't close the door but waits. And Thomas
recognizes his own poverty, his little faith. 'My Lord and my God!':
with this simple yet faith-filled supplication, he responds to Jesus’
patience. He lets himself be enveloped by divine mercy, sees it in
front of him, in Christ's wounds on his hands and feet ... and he
rediscovers his trust. He is a new man: no longer an unbeliever, but
a believer.”
Even
Peter denied Jesus three times, “precisely when he should have been
closest to him. And when he hits bottom he encounters the gaze of
Jesus who patiently, wordlessly, says to him: 'Peter, don’t be
afraid of your weakness. Trust in me.' And Peter understands. He
feels Jesus' loving gaze and he weeps. How beautiful is this gaze of
Jesus – how much tenderness there is in it! Brothers and sisters,
let us never lose trust in God's patient mercy!”
The
story is repeated with the two disciples on the road to Emmaus who
have, “sad faces and an empty and hopeless journey. But Jesus does
not abandon them. He walks the path with them and not only that!
Patiently He explains the Scriptures referring to him and He stops to
share a meal with them. This is God’s way of doing things. He is
not impatient like us, who often want everything and right away, even
from others. God is patient with us because He loves us and those who
love are able to understand, to hope, ... They don't burn bridges but
know how to forgive. Let's remember this in our lives as Christians:
God always waits for us, even when we have drawn away from him! He is
never far from us and, if we return to him, He is ready to embrace
us.”
Continuing,
the pontiff observed that rereading the parable of the merciful
Father always makes a strong impression upon him. “It strikes me,”
he said, “because it always gives me great hope. Think of that
younger son living in his Father’s house: he was loved and yet he
wants his part of the inheritance. He goes off, spends everything,
and hits rock bottom. [Then] he misses the warmth of his Father’s
house and returns home. And the Father? Had he forgotten his son? No,
never. ... with patience and love, with hope and mercy, he had never
stopped thinking about him for a second and, as soon as he sees him
still far off, he runs out to meet him and embraces him with
tenderness, with God's tenderness, without a word of reproach: he has
come back! And that is the Father's joy. All of this joy is in that
embrace of the son: he has come back!”
“God
is always waiting for us. He never grows tired. Jesus shows us God's
merciful patience so that we might regain our confidence and hope,
always! A great German theologian, Romano Guardini, said that God
responds to our weakness with his patience and this is the reason for
our confidence, for our hope.”
Emphasizing
another aspect, the Pope noted that “God’s patience must find in
us the courage to return to him, whatever mistakes and sins there may
be in our lives. Jesus invites Thomas to put his hand in the wounds
of his hands and his feet ... It is precisely in Jesus' wounds that
we are safe; in them lies his heart's immense love. ... Saint Bernard
asks: but what can I count on? On my own merits? But 'my merit is
God’s mercy'. ... This is important: the courage to entrust myself
to Jesus’ mercy, to trust in his patience, to always take refuge in
the wounds of his love. …”
“Perhaps
some of us are thinking: my sin is so great; my distance from God is
like that of the younger son in the parable; my disbelief is like
that of Thomas; I don’t have the courage to go back or to believe
that God might welcome me or that He is waiting just for me. But God
is waiting for you. He only asks of you the courage to go to him. How
many times in my pastoral ministry have I heard it repeated: 'Father,
I have many sins'; and the plea I have always made is: 'Don’t be
afraid. Go to him. He is waiting for you. He will take care of
everything.' ... For God, we are not numbers. We are important;
indeed we are the most important thing to him. Even if we are sinners
we are what is closest to his heart.”
“After
sinning,” the pope explained, “Adam feels ashamed. He feels
naked, sensing the weight of what he has done. And yet God does not
abandon him. If at that moment, through sin, his exile from God
begins, there is already a promise of return, the possibility of
returning to him. ... It is precisely in feeling my sinfulness, in
looking at my sins, that I can see and encounter God’s mercy, his
love, and go to him to receive forgiveness.”
“...
Let us be embraced by God's mercy. Let us trust in his patience,
which always gives us time. Let us find the courage to return to his
house and to dwell in his loving wounds, allowing ourselves be loved
by him and to encounter his mercy in the Sacraments. We will feel his
tenderness, which is so beautiful, we will feel his embrace, and we
too will become more capable of mercy, of patience, of forgiveness,
and of love.”
After
the Mass, Pope Francis appeared at the central balcony of St. John
Lateran's loggia to greet the thousands of persons gathered there to
await him, many of whom participated in the ceremony. He addressed
them saying:
“Brothers
and sisters, good evening! Thank you so much for your company in
today's Mass. I ask that you pray for me: I need it. Don't forget
this. Thank you all! And now let us go forward together, the people
and the bishop, all together, always forward with the joy of Jesus'
Resurrection. He is always at our side. May the Lord bless you.”
After
blessing the faithful, the Pope bid them farewell saying, “thank
you so much. See you soon!”