At 9:30 this morning, in the Vatican Basilica, the Holy Father, Pope Francis celebrated Mass for the Day of Seminarians, Novices and those discerning a vocation, one of the celebrations taking place within the context of the Year of Faith.
Homily of the Holy Father, Pope Francis
For the Mass celebrated with
Seminarians, Novices and those discerning a vocation
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
Yesterday I had the pleasure of meeting you, and today
our joy is even greater, because we have gathered for the Eucharist on the
Lord’s Day. You are seminarians, novices, young people on a vocational journey,
from every part of the world. You represent the Church’s youth! If the Church
is the Bride of Christ, you in a certain sense represent the moment of
betrothal, the Springtime of vocation, the season of discovery, assessment,
formation. And it is a very beautiful season, in which foundations are laid for
the future. Thank you for coming!
Today the word of God speaks to us of mission. Where does
mission originate? The answer is simple: it originates from a call, the Lord’s
call, and when he calls people, he does so with a view to sending them out. How
is the one sent out meant to live? What are the reference points of Christian
mission? The readings we have heard suggest three: the joy of consolation, the
Cross and prayer.
The first element: the joy of consolation. The
prophet Isaiah is addressing a people that has been through a dark period of
exile, a very difficult trial. But now the time of consolation has come for
Jerusalem; sadness and fear must give way to joy: Rejoice ... be glad ... rejoice with her in joy, says the prophet
(66:10). It is a great invitation to joy. Why? What is the reason for this
invitation to joy? Because the Lord is going to pour out over the Holy City and
its inhabitants a cascade of
consolation, a veritable overflow of consolation – such that it will be
overcome – a cascade of maternal tenderness: You shall be carried upon her hip and dandled upon her knees (vv.
12). As when a mother takes her child upon her knee and caresses him or her: so
the Lord will do and does with us. This is the cascade of tenderness which
gives us much consolation. As one whom
his mother comforts, so I will comfort you (v. 13). Every Christian, and
especially you and I, is called to be a bearer of this message of hope that
gives serenity and joy: God’s consolation, his tenderness towards all. But if
we first experience the joy of being consoled by him, of being loved by him,
then we can bring that joy to others. This is important if our mission is to be
fruitful: to feel God’s consolation and to pass it on to others! I have
occasionally met consecrated persons who are afraid of the consolations of God,
and … the poor things, they were tormented, because they are afraid of this
divine tenderness. But be not afraid. Do not be afraid, because the Lord is the
Lord of consolation, he is the Lord of tenderness. The Lord is a Father and he
says that he will be for us like a mother with her baby, with a mother’s
tenderness. Do not be afraid of the consolations of the Lord. Isaiah’s invitation
must resound in our hearts: Comfort,
comfort my people (40:1) and this must lead to mission. We must find the
Lord who consoles us and go to console the people of God. This is the mission.
People today certainly need words, but most of all they need us to bear witness
to the mercy and tenderness of the Lord, which warms the heart, rekindles hope,
and attracts people towards the good. What a joy it is to bring God’s
consolation to others!
The second reference point of mission is the Cross of
Christ. Saint Paul, writing to the Galatians, says: Far be it from me to glory except in the Cross of our Lord Jesus Christ
(6:14). And he speaks of the marks of
Jesus, that is, the wounds of the crucified Lord, as a countersign, as the
distinctive mark of his life as an Apostle of the Gospel. In his ministry Paul
experienced suffering, weakness and defeat, but also joy and consolation. This
is the Paschal mystery of Jesus: the mystery of death and resurrection. And it
was precisely by letting himself be conformed to the death of Jesus that Saint
Paul became a sharer in his resurrection, in his victory. In the hour of
darkness, in the hour of trial, the dawn of light and salvation is already
present and operative. The Paschal mystery is the beating heart of the Church’s
mission! And if we remain within this mystery, we are sheltered both from a
worldly and triumphalistic view of mission and from the discouragement that can
result from trials and failures. Pastoral fruitfulness, the fruitfulness of the
Gospel proclamation is measured neither by success nor by failure according to
the criteria of human evaluation, but by becoming conformed to the logic of the
Cross of Jesus, which is the logic of stepping outside oneself and spending oneself,
the logic of love. It is the Cross – always the Cross that is present with
Christ, because at times we are offered the Cross without Christ: this has no
purpose! – it is the Cross, and always the Cross with Christ, which guarantees
the fruitfulness of our mission. And it is from the Cross, the supreme act of
mercy and love, that we are reborn as a new
creation (Gal 6:15).
Finally the third element: prayer. In the Gospel we
heard: Pray therefore the Lord of the
harvest, to send out labourers into his harvest (Lk 10:2). The
labourers for the harvest are not chosen through advertising campaigns or
appeals of service and generosity, but they are chosen and sent by God.
It is he who chooses, it is he who sends, it is the Lord who sends, it is he
who gives the mission. For this, prayer is important. The Church, as Benedict
XVI has often reiterated, is not ours, but God’s; and how many times do we,
consecrated men and women, think that the Church is ours! We make of it…
something that we invent in our minds. But it is not ours! It is God’s. The
field to be cultivated is his. The mission is grace. And if the Apostle is born
of prayer, he finds in prayer the light and strength of his action. Our mission
ceases to bear fruit, indeed, it is extinguished the moment the link with its
source, with the Lord, is interrupted.
Dear seminarians, dear novices, dear young people
discerning your vocations, one of you, one of your formators said to me the
other day, evangeliser, on le fait à
genoux - evangeization is done on one’s knees. Listen well: evangelization is done on one’s knees.
Without a constant relationship with God, the mission becomes a job. But for
what do you work? As a tailor, a cook, a priest, is your job being a priest,
being a sister? No. It is not a job, but rather something else. The risk of
activism, of relying too much on structures, is an ever-present danger. If we
look towards Jesus, we see that prior to any important decision or event he
recollected himself in intense and prolonged prayer. Let us cultivate the
contemplative dimension, even amid the whirlwind of more urgent and heavy
duties. And the more the mission calls you to go out to the margins of
existence, let your heart be the more closely united to Christ’s heart, full of
mercy and love. Herein lies the secret of pastoral fruitfulness, of the
fruitfulness of a disciple of the Lord!
Jesus sends his followers out with no purse, no bag, no sandals (Lk
10:4). The spread of the Gospel is not guaranteed either by the number of
persons, or by the prestige of the institution, or by the quantity of available
resources. What counts is to be permeated by the love of Christ, to let oneself
be led by the Holy Spirit and to graft one’s own life onto the tree of life,
which is the Lord’s Cross.
Dear friends, with great confidence I entrust you to the
intercession of Mary Most Holy. She is the Mother who helps us to make life
decisions freely and without fear. May she help you to bear witness to the joy
of God’s consolation, without being afraid of joy, she will help you to conform
yourselves to the logic of love of the Cross, to grow in ever deeper union with
the Lord in prayer. Then your lives will be rich and fruitful! Amen.
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