The Word of God is to be welcomed with humility because it
is the word of love: thus – and only thus – may it penetrate hearts and change
lives. This was the essence of the remarks Pope Francis made at Mass in the Domus Sanctae Marthae chapel on Friday
morning, in the presence of employees and staff members from the Vatican
Typography – the printing press – and the L'Osservatore
Romano newspaper.
The account of the Conversion of St. Paul and the discourse of Jesus in the
synagogue of Capernaum were the biblical readings of the day, and were at the
centre of the Pope’s homily, which focused on Jesus as He speaks: speaking to
Saul who had been persecuting Him; to Ananias, called to accept Saul; to the
teachers of the law, saying that anyone who does not eat His flesh and drink
His blood will not be saved. The Pope said Jesus’ voice, passes through our mind and goes to the heart, for Jesus seeks our
conversion. Paul and Ananias respond
with puzzlement, but with an open heart. The teachers of the law respond in a
variety of other ways, arguing among themselves and challenging the hard words
of Jesus:
Paul and Ananias respond after the manner of] the great
[figures] in salvation history, like Jeremiah [and] Isaiah. Even Moses had his
difficulties [as when he said]: ‘But, Lord, I do not know how to speak, how am
I going to go to the Egyptians and [deliver your message]?’ And Mary, [who
said]: ‘But, Lord, I'm not married!’. It is the response of humility, of one
who welcomes the Word of God with one’s heart. Instead, the Doctors of the Law
answered only with their heads. They do not know that the Word of God goes to
the heart, do not know of conversion.
The Pope explained who are the ones that respond only with the head: They are the great ideologues. The Word of Jesus goes to the heart because it is the Word of love. It is a beautiful word and brings love, makes us love. These ideologues cut off the road of love, and also that of beauty – and they began to argue sharply among themselves, ‘How can this man give us his flesh to eat?’. All a matter of intellect! And when ideology enters into the Church, when ideology enters into our understanding of the Gospel, no [authentic] comprehen[sion] is [possible].
The Pope explained who are the ones that respond only with the head: They are the great ideologues. The Word of Jesus goes to the heart because it is the Word of love. It is a beautiful word and brings love, makes us love. These ideologues cut off the road of love, and also that of beauty – and they began to argue sharply among themselves, ‘How can this man give us his flesh to eat?’. All a matter of intellect! And when ideology enters into the Church, when ideology enters into our understanding of the Gospel, no [authentic] comprehen[sion] is [possible].
They are the ones who walk only on the path of duty: theirs
is the moralis[tic outlook] of those who pretend to understand the Gospel with
their heads alone. They are not on the road to conversion, that conversion to
which Jesus calls us.
And these, on the road of duty, load everything on the
shoulders of the faithful. The ideologues falsify the gospel. Every ideological
interpretation, wherever it comes from – from [whatever side] – is a
falsification of the Gospel. And these ideologues – as we have seen in the
history of the Church – end up being intellectuals without talent, ethicists
without goodness – and let us not so much as mention beauty, of which they
understand nothing.
Rather, said Pope Francis, the path of love, the way
of the Gospel, is simple: it is the road that the Saints understood: The saints are those who lead the Church
forward! The road of conversion, the way of humility, of love, of the heart,
the way of beauty ... Today let us pray to the Lord for the Church: that the
Lord might free her from any ideological interpretation and open the heart of
the Church, our Mother Church, to the simple Gospel, to that pure Gospel that
speaks to us of love, which brings love, and is so beautiful! It also makes us
beautiful, with the beauty of holiness. Today let us pray for the Church.
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