At 8:00am this morning, His Holiness, Pope Francis went to the Church of the Jesu in Rome to celebrate Mass for the Feast of Saint Ignatius, the founder of the Society of Jesus, along with his Jesuit confreres and their friends and co-workers. The Mass began at 8:15am.
Concelebrating with the Holy Father this morning were His
Excellency, Luis Ladaria, Secretary of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the
Faith; Father Adolfo Nicolas, SJ, Father General of the Society of Jesus; and
members of the General Council as well as 200 other Jesuits.
At the conclusion of the Mass, the Pope took a few
moments to pray before the altar of Saint Ignatius and Saint Francis Xavier, in
the Chapel of the Madonna of the Street, and at the tomb of Father Pedro Arupe,
one of the former Fathers General of the Society.
After a brief fraternal encounter with the Father General
and with some of his Jesuit confreres at the end of the Mass, the Pope returned
to the Vatican around 10:00 this morning.
Homily
of the Holy Father, Pope Francis
for the Liturgical Memorial of Saint
Ignatius of Loyola
In this Eucharist in which we celebrate our Father
Ignatius of Loyola, in the light of the readings that we have heard, I would
like to pose three simple thoughts guided by three expressions: placing Christ
and the Church at the Centre; allowing oneself to be conquered by Him to serve;
to feel ashamed of our limits and sins, in order to be humble in front of Him
and our brothers.
The coat of arms of the Jesuits is a monogram, the
acronym of Iesus Hominum Salvator
(IHS). Everyone of you can tell me: we know that very well! But this coat of
arms continuously reminds us of a reality that we should never forget: the
centrality of Christ for every one of us and for the whole Society, which Saint
Ignatius wished that it be called, of Jesus to indicate the point of reference.
Ahead of all else, even in the beginning of the Spiritual Exercises, he places
in first place our Lord Jesus Christ, our Creator and Savior (cfr. EE,6). And
this places us Jesuits and the entire Society a bit off centre, having before
us Christ who is always greater than we, the Deus semper maior, the intimior
intimo meo, which continuously takes us out of ourselves, it takes us to a
certain kenosis, encouraging us to
escape from love of ourselves, our own wants and interests (EE, 189). We cannot
take for granted the question asked of us, of all of us: is Christ the centre
of my life? Do I truly place Christ at the centre of my life? … because there
is always the temptation to think of ourselves as being in the centre. And when
a Jesuit places himself (and not Christ) at the centre, he is mistaken. In the
first reading, Moses repeats with insistence to the people the importance of loving
the Lord, of walking in His ways because He is your life (cfr. Dt. 30, 16.20).
Christ is our life! The centrality of Christ corresponds as well to the
centrality of the Church: they are two flames that cannot be separated; I
cannot follow if I am not in the Church and with the Church. It is also true in
this case that we Jesuits and the entire Society are not in the centre, we are,
so to speak, displaced, we are at the service of Christ and of the Church, the
Spouse of Christ our Lord, which is our Holy Mother, the Hierarchical Church
(cfr EE, 353). To be men rooted and founded in the Church, that is what Jesus
wants of us. There cannot be parallel or isolated paths. Yes, paths of
searching, creative paths, yes, these are important: going to the outskirts,
the vast outskirts. For this, creativity is needed, but always in community, in
the Church, with this affiliation that gives all of us the courage to continue
forward. Serve Christ and love this Church concretely, and serve with
generosity and with a spirit of obedience.
What is the best path to follow, in order to live this
dual centrality? Let us look at the experience of Saint Paul which is also the
experience of Saint Ignatius. The Apostle, in the second reading that we have
listened to, writes: I strive towards the
perfection of Christ for which also I was laid hold on by Christ Jesus.
(Phil.3,12). For Paul this occurred on the road to Damascus, for Ignatius, in
his house in Loyola, but the fundamental point is the same: to let oneself be
conquered by Christ. I search for Christ, I serve Jesus because He searched for
me first, because I have been conquered by Him, and this is the heart of our
experience. But He is first, always. In Spanish there is a very graphic word
that explains this well: El nos primerea.
He is always first. When we arrive, he arrives first and waits for us. And it
is here that I wish to recall the meditation on the Kingdom in the Second Week
of the Exercises. Christ our Lord, Eternal King, calls each and every one of us
saying he who wishes to come with me must work with me, because following me in
suffering, you will follow me also in glory (EE,95): To be conquered by Christ,
to offer to this King all that we are and all our labours (cfr. EE, 96); to
tell the Lord that you wish to do everything for his greater service and
praise, to imitate Him in bearing even insults, rejection, poverty (cfr EE,
98). I think of our brother in Syria at this time. To let oneself be conquered
by Christ means to always reach out to those in front of me, towards the other
half of Christ (cfr. Phil. 3,14) and to ask yourself with truth and sincerity:
What have I done for Christ? What do I do for Christ (cfr. Phil. 3,14) What
should I do for Christ? (cfr. EE, 53)
And I come to the final point. In the Gospel, Jesus tells
us, For whosoever would save his life
shall lose it; but whosoever shall lose his life for my sake, the same shall
save it....He who is ashamed of me.... (Lk. 9,23). And so on. The shame of
the Jesuit. The invitation that Jesus makes is to not be ashamed of Him, but to
follow him with total devotion, trusting and relying on Him. But looking at
Jesus, as Saint Ignatius teaches us in the First Week of the Exercises, above
all looking at Christ crucified, we feel that very human and very noble feeling
that is the shame of not being at that height; we look at the wisdom of Christ
and our own ignorance, at his omnipotence and our own weakness, at his justice
and our own iniquity, at his goodness and our wickedness (cfr. EE, 59). Ask for
the grace of shame, shame that comes from the continuous discussion of mercy
with Him; shame that makes us blush in front of Jesus Christ; shame that places
us in tune with the heart of Christ who has made himself sin for us; shame that
places our hearts in harmony through tears and accompanies us in the daily
sequence of our Lord. And this takes us, individually and as a Society, towards
humility, to live this great virtue. Humility that makes us aware every day
that it is not us that constructs the Kingdom of God, but it is always the
grace of the Lord that acts in us; humility that urges us to place all of
ourselves not at the service of ourselves or our ideas, but to the service of
Christ and to the Church, like earthen vessels, fragile, inadequate,
insufficient, but in which there is an immense treasure that we carry and make
known (2 Cor 4, 7).
It is always pleasing for me to think about the sunset of
the Jesuit, when a Jesuit finishes his life, when the sun sets. There are two
icons of this sunset of the Jesuit that come to mind: one classic, that of
Saint Francis Xavier, looking towards China. Art has always depicted many times
this sunset, this ending of Xaver. Even in literature, in that beautiful piece
by Pemán. In the end, with nothing, but in front of the Lord; this does me good,
to think of this. The other sunset, the other icon that comes to mind as an
example, is that of Father Arrupe in the last discussion in the refugee camp,
when he tells us - this is how he himself would say it - this I say as if it
were my swan song: pray. Prayer, the
union with Jesus. And, after saying that, he boarded his plane, and arrived in
Rome with a stroke, which began that long and exemplary sunset. Two sunsets,
two icons that will do us well to look at, and return to these two. And ask for
the grace that our sunset will be like their’s.
Dear brothers, let us turn to Our Lady. She who carried
Christ in her womb and accompanied the first steps of the Church, may she help
us to place Christ and his Church always at the centre of our life and our
ministry; She who was the first and the most perfect disciple of her Son, may
help us to let ourselves be conquered by Christ to follow and serve Him in
every situation. She who responded to the announcement of the Angel with the
most profound humility: Behold the
servant of the Lord, be it done to me according to your word (Lk. 1:38). May she make us taste the shame of our
inadequateness before the treasure that has been entrusted to us, to live
humbly before God. May the paternal intercession of Saint Ignatius and of all the
Holy Jesuits accompany us on this path, may they continue to teach us to do all
with humility, ad maiorem Dei gloriam.