Let us always remain
meek and humble, that we might defeat the empty promises and the hatred of the
world. This was the message of Pope Francis on
Saturday morning during the homily at Mass in the chapel of the Domus Sanctae Marthae. Humility and
meekness are the weapons we have to defend ourselves from the hatred of the
world. This was the focus of Pope Francis during his homily, which centered on
the struggle between the love of Christ and the hatred of the prince of this
world.
The Lord, he said,
tells us to be not afraid when the world
hates us as it hated Him. The way of
the Christians is the way of Jesus, he said. If we want to be followers of Jesus, there is no other way: none other
than that which He indicated to us - and one of the consequences of this is
hatred – it is the hatred of the world, and also the prince of this world. The
world would love that which belongs to it. [But Jesus tells us], ‘I have chosen
you, from the world’: it was precisely He, who rescued us from the world, who
chose us - pure grace! With His death, His resurrection, He redeemed us from
the power of the world, from the power of the devil, from the power of the
prince of this world. The origin of the hate [we experience], then is this:
that we are saved. It is that prince who does not want that we should have been
saved, who hates.
Here then is the reason that the hatred and persecution
continue from the early days of the Church even unto the present day. There
are, many persecuted Christian
communities in the world, said Pope Francis, noting with bitterness, indeed there are more persecuted communities
in this time than in the early days: today, right now, in this day and in this
hour. Asking himself why this is the case, the Pope said, because the spirit of the world hates.
From this comes a perennially valid admonishment: There can be no dialogue with the prince
of this world: let this be clear! Today, dialogue is necessary among us humans,
it is necessary for peace. Dialogue is a habit, it is an attitude that we must
have among us to feel and understand each other…and that [dialogue] must be
maintained forever. Dialogue comes from charity, from love. But with that
prince, it is impossible to dialogue: one can only respond with the Word of God
who defends us, for the world hates us – and just as he did with Jesus, so will
he do with us. ‘Only look,’ he will say, ‘just do this one small little scam…it
is a small matter, nothing really – and so he begins to lead us on a road that
is slightly off. This is a pious lie: ‘Do it, do it, do it: there is no
problem,' and it begins little by little, always, no? Then [he says]: ‘But ...
you're good, you're a good person: You [get away with] it.’ It is flattering –
and he softens us by flattery: and then, we fall into the trap.
Pope Francis went on to say that the Lord asks us to remain
sheep, because if one decides to quit the fold, then he does not have, a shepherd to defend him and he falls into
the clutches of these wolves.
You may ask the question, continued
Pope Francis, ‘Father, what is the weapon
to defend against these seductions, from these blandishments, these enticements
that the prince of this world offers?’. The weapon is the same weapon of Jesus,
the Word of God - not dialogue - but always the Word of God, and then humility
and meekness. We think of Jesus, when they give that slap: what humility! What
meekness! He could have insulted him, no? One question, meek and humble. We
think of Jesus in His Passion. His Prophet says: ‘As a sheep going to the
slaughter.’ He does not cry out, not at all: humility. Humility and meekness.
These are the weapons that the prince and spirit of this world does not
tolerate, for his proposals are proposals for worldly power, proposals of
vanity, proposals for ill-gotten riches.
Today, continued
Pope Francis, Jesus reminds us of this
hatred that the world has against us, against the followers of Jesus. The world
hates us, he repeated, because He has
saved us, redeemed us. Recalling the weapons
to defend ourselves he added that we must remain sheep, because sheep are meek and humble, [and when we are sheep] we have a
shepherd. The Pope concluded with an invocation to the Virgin Mary, asking
her, to help us become meek and humble in
the way of Jesus.
The Mass on Saturday morning was concelebrated by the
Secretary of the Congregation for Bishops, Archbishop Lorenzo Baldisseri, with
a contingent of the Pontifical Swiss Guard in attendance. Pope Francis offered the soldiers a greeting
of affection and gratitude. The Church, he
said, loves you so much, and, so do I.
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