Vatican City, 17 May 2015 (VIS) - “Each
one of Christ’s followers is called to become a witness to His
resurrection, above all in those human settings where forgetfulness
of God and human disorientation are most evident”, said the Pope in
the homily he pronounced during the Mass for the canonisation of four
new saints: Jeanne-Emilie de Villeneuve (1811-1854), French nun and
founder of the Congregation of the Sisters of the Immaculate
Conception of Castres; Maria Cristina of the Immaculate Conception
(nee Maria Cristina Brando, 1856-1906), Italian nun and founder of
the Oblation Sisters of the Holy Sacrament; Marie-Alphonsine Danil
Ghattas (nee Maryam Sultanah, 1843-1927), Palestinian co-founder of
the Congregation of the Sisters of the Holy Rosary of Jerusalem; and
Mary of Jesus Crucified (nee Maryam Baouardy 1846-1878) Palestinian
nun of the Order of Discalced Carmelites. The solemn ceremony, which
took place in a packed St. Peter's Square, was attended by more than
two thousand Christians from the Middle East, the Palestinian
president Mahmoud Abbas, the Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem Fouad Twal,
and an Israeli delegation whom the Pope greeted at the end of the
celebration.
In his homily, the Holy Father, citing
the Acts of the Apostles, recalls that their mission of announcing
Jesus, of whose resurrection they were eyewitnesses, was a community
rather than an individual undertaking. Thanks to the witness of the
Twelve, many people came to believe; from faith in the risen Lord,
Christian communities were born and are born continually. “We too,
today, base our faith in the risen Lord on the witness of the
Apostles, which has come down to us through the mission of the
Church”, he said. “Our faith is firmly linked to their testimony,
as to an unbroken chain which spans the centuries, made up not only
by the successors of the Apostles, but also by succeeding generations
of Christians. Like the Apostles, each one of Christ’s followers is
called to become a witness to His resurrection, above all in those
human settings where forgetfulness of God and human disorientation
are most evident”.
For this to happen, “we need to abide
in the risen Christ and in His love, ... like Sister Jeanne Emilie de
Villeneuve, who consecrated her life to God and to the poor, the
sick, the imprisoned and the exploited, becoming for them and for all
a concrete sign of the Lord’s merciful love”. This same love
conquered another of the new saints, Sister Maria Cristina Brando,
who “from prayer and her intimate encounter with the risen Jesus
present in the Eucharist received strength to endure suffering and to
give herself, as bread which is broken, to many people who had
wandered far from God and yet hungered for authentic love”.
Another essential aspect of witness to
the risen Lord is unity among His disciples, in the image of His own
unity with the Father. “From this eternal love between the Father
and the Son, poured into our hearts through the Holy Spirit, our
mission and our fraternal communion draw strength; this love is the
ever-flowing source of our joy in following the Lord along the path
of His poverty, His virginity and His obedience; and this same love
calls us to cultivate contemplative prayer”. This was the love that
Sister Mariam Baouardy experienced: “poor and uneducated, she was
able to counsel others and provide theological explanations with
extreme clarity, the fruit of her constant dialogue with the Holy
Spirit. Her docility to the Holy Spirit also made her a means of
encounter and fellowship with the Muslim world”. So too, Sister
Marie-Alphonsine Danil Ghattas “came to understand clearly what it
means to radiate the love of God in the apostolate, and to be a
witness to meekness and unity. She shows us the importance of
becoming responsible for one another, of living lives of service one
to another”.
The “luminous example” of the four
new saints, who abide in God and in His love, inspires us, in our
lives as Christians, “to proclaim by our words and our lives the
resurrection of Jesus, to live in unity with one another and with
charity towards all”, concluded Pope Francis.
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