A bit of catching up is in order, so you will please excuse
the tardiness. I'll try to get caught up as soon as possible.
On Sunday morning (just past), at 8:30am local time, the
Holy Father left the Vatican and traveled by helicopter to the parish of Saints
Elizabeth and Zachary in Valle Muricana (Prima Porta), in the
northern sector of Rome, where he conducted his very first pastoral visit.
Since the Holy Father is the Bishop of Rome, like all other Bishops, a
part of his pastoral responsibility is to visit the parishes within his
Diocese.
Upon his arrival at the parish, the Holy Father met
with families, children who were baptized during the preceding year, and with
the sick. After this initial meeting, he heard the confessions of some of
the faithful.
At 9:30am, he presided at the Eucharistic Celebration, which
was introduced by a word of welcome from the Pastor, Father Benoni Ambarus.
During the liturgy, the Holy Father gave the Eucharist to 16 children who
had never received the Eucharist before, and also to 28 other children who had
received their First Communion in the preceding Sundays.
Before returning to the Vatican for the recitation of the Angelus,
the Holy Father greeted the other parish ministers and collaborators who were
present for the celebration of the Mass.
At the beginning of the Eucharistic celebration, having heard the words of greeting offered to him by the Pastor of the parish, the Holy Father improvised the following:
Dear first sentinel, dear second sentinel, dear sentinels, I
am pleased by the words of welcome which you offered: which at first glace
carry a negative meaning, but which also have a positive sense. Do you
know why? Because when all is said and done, the truth of the situation
is found somewhere between the two senses. It is better understood.
In fact, that which you have said, also becomes a sentinel, does it not?
I thank you for your duty, for the work of being sentinels.
I thank you also for your welcome today, the feast of the Trinity.
Today there are some priests present who are well known to you, but they
are also the two secretaries of the Pope, the Pope who is in the Vatican,
right? Today, the Bishop has come here. And these two priests do
good work. But one of them, Father Alfred, is celebrating today his 29th
anniversary of priestly ordination. Let us applaud him! Let us pray
for him and ask that he might persist for at least another 29 years. Now,
let us begin the Mass, in a spirit of piety, in silence, praying together for
one another.
For his pastoral visit to the parish of
Saint Elizabeth and Saint Zachary, Valle Muricana
Dear brothers and sisters,
The pastor’s words made me think of a beautiful thing about
Our Lady. When Our Lady, just having received the announcement that she would
be the mother of Jesus, and the announcement that her cousin Elizabeth was
expecting, the Gospel says, she set out in haste; she did not wait. She did not
say to herself, But I’m pregnant now, so I had better look after my health. My
cousin will have friends who perhaps will help her. She heard something and
she set out in haste. It is lovely to think about these actions of Our Lady,
our Mother, who sets out in haste, because it tells us about helping. She goes
to help, she does not go to boast and say to her cousin: Now listen, I’m in
charge now because I am God’s mamma! No she did not do that. She went to help!
And Our Lady is always like this. She is our Mother, who always comes in haste
when we need help. It would be nice to add to the litanies of Our Lady one that
says Our Lady who sets out in haste, pray for us! This is beautiful, isn’t it?
Because she always goes in haste she does not forget her children. And when her
children are in difficulty, have a need and they call upon her, she goes in
haste. And this makes us safe, the safety of always having our mother near, at
our side. We go, we travel better in life when we have our mamma near. Let us
think about this grace of Our Lady, this grace that she gives us: of being with
us, but without making us wait. Always! She is – we have confidence in this –
there to help us. Our Lady who always goes in haste, for us.
Our Lady also helps us to understand God well, to
understand the life of Jesus, the life of God, to understand well what the Lord
is, how the Lord is, who is God. I ask you, children: Who knows who God is? Raise your hand, tell me. Okay! Creator of the earth. And how many Gods are
there? 1? But they told me that there are 3: the Father, the Son and the Holy
Spirit! How do we explain this? Is there 1 or is there 3? 1? 1? And how do we
explain that one is the Father, the other the Son and the other Holy Spirit?
Louder, louder! Good answer. They are 3 in 1, 3 persons in 1. And what does the
Father do? The Father is the origin, the Father, who created everything, created
us. What does the Son do? What does Jesus do? Who knows how to say what Jesus
does? He loves us? And what else? What did Jesus do on the earth? He saved us!
And Jesus came to give his life for us. The Father creates the world; Jesus
saves us. And the Holy Spirit, what does he do? He loves us! He gives you love!
All the children together: the Father creates everything, he creates the world,
Jesus saves us; and the Holy Spirit? He loves us! And this is the Christian
life: talking to the Father, talking to the Son, talking to the Holy Spirit.
Jesus saved us, but he also walks with us in life. Is this true? And how does
he walk? What does he do when he walks with us in life? This is hard. The one
who answers it wins! What does Jesus do when he walks with us? Louder! The
first one: he helps us. He guides us! Very good! He walks with us, he helps us,
he guides us and he teaches us how to go forward. And Jesus also gives us the
strength to walk. Is that right? He supports us! Good! In difficulties, right?
And even in school work! He supports us, he helps us, he guides us, he supports
us. Okay! Jesus is always with us. Good. But listen, Jesus gives us strength.
How does Jesus give us strength? You know how he gives us strength! Louder, I
can’t hear you! In Communion he gives us strength, the way he helps us is by
giving us strength. He comes to us. But when you say He gives us Communion, a
piece of bread gives you so much strength? It’s not bread? It’s bread? This is
bread but what is on the altar, is it bread or not? It looks like bread! It’s
not really bread. What is it? It is the body of Jesus. Jesus comes into our
heart. Well, let’s all think about this: the Father gave us life; Jesus gave us
salvation, he accompanies us, he guides us, he supports us, he teaches us; and
the Holy Spirit? What does the Holy Spirit give us? He loves us! He gives us
love. Let us think about God like this and ask Our Lady, Our Lady who is our
Mother, always quick to help us, that she help us always to understand well how
God is: how the Father is, how the Son is and how the Holy Spirit is. Amen.
No comments:
Post a Comment