At 9:00am local time today, the Holy Father, Pope Francis left the Vatican and travelled by car to Castel Gandolfo, where he immediately went to visit the cloistered Monastery of the Poor Clares, located within the property of the Pontifical Villas.
At 10:30, the Pope presided at the celebration of the
Mass for the Solemnity of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary in Liberty
Square, where he was joined by the faithful of the Pontifical parish of Saint
Thomas of Villanova.
Homily
of the Holy Father, Pope Francis
for the Mass celebrated in honour of the
Solemnity of the Assumption of the Blessed
Virgin Mary
Liberty Square, Castel Gandolfo
Dear Brothers and Sisters!
At the end of its Constitution on the Church, the Second
Vatican Council left us a very beautiful meditation on Mary Most Holy. Let me
just recall the words referring to the mystery we celebrate today: the immaculate Virgin preserved free from
all stain of original sin, was taken up body and soul into heavenly glory, when
her earthly life was over, and exalted by the Lord as Queen over all things
(no. 59). Then towards the end, there is: the Mother of Jesus in the glory which she possesses in body and soul
in heaven is the image and the beginning of the church as it is to be perfected
in the world to come. Likewise, she shines forth on earth, until the day of the
Lord shall come (no. 68). In the light of this most beautiful image of our
Mother, we are able to see the message of the biblical readings that we have
just heard. We can focus on three key words: struggle, resurrection, hope.
The passage from Revelation presents the vision of the struggle
between the woman and the dragon. The figure of the woman, representing the
Church, is, on the one hand, glorious and triumphant and yet, on the other,
still in travail. And the Church is like that: if in heaven she is already
associated in some way with the glory of her Lord, in history she continually
lives through the trials and challenges which the conflict between God and the
evil one, the perennial enemy, brings. And in the struggle which the disciples
must confront – all of us, all the disciples of Jesus, we must face this
struggle - Mary does not leave them alone: the Mother of Christ and of the
Church is always with us. She walks with us always, she is with us. And in a
way, Mary shares this dual condition. She has of course already entered, once
and for all, into heavenly glory. But this does not mean that she is distant or
detached from us; rather Mary accompanies us, struggles with us, sustains
Christians in their fight against the forces of evil. Prayer with Mary,
especially the rosary – but listen carefully: the Rosary. Do you pray the
Rosary every day? But I’m not sure you do… [the people shout
"Yes!"] Really? Well, prayer with Mary, especially the Rosary,
has this suffering dimension, that is
of struggle, a sustaining prayer in the battle against the evil one and his
accomplices. The Rosary also sustains us in the battle.
The second reading speaks to us of resurrection.
The Apostle Paul, writing to the Corinthians, insists that being Christian
means believing that Christ is truly risen from the dead. Our whole faith is
based upon this fundamental truth which is not an idea but an event. Even the
mystery of Mary’s Assumption, body and soul, is fully inscribed in the
resurrection of Christ. The Mother’s humanity is attracted by the Son in his own passage from death to life. Once
and for all, Jesus entered into eternal life with all the humanity he had drawn
from Mary; and she, the Mother, who followed him faithfully throughout her
life, followed him with her heart, and entered with him into eternal life which
we also call heaven, paradise, the Father’s house.
Mary also experienced the martyrdom of the Cross: the martyrdom of her heart, the martyrdom of her soul. She lived her Son’s Passion to the depths of her soul. She was fully united to him in his death, and so she was given the gift of resurrection. Christ is the first fruits from the dead and Mary is the first of the redeemed, the first of those who are in Christ. She is our Mother, but we can also say that she is our representative, our sister, our eldest sister, she is the first of the redeemed, who has arrived in heaven.
The Gospel suggests to us the third word: hope.
Hope is the virtue of those who, experiencing conflict – the struggle between
life and death, good and evil – believe in the resurrection of Christ, in the
victory of love. We heard the Song of Mary, the Magnificat: it is the
song of hope, it is the song of the People of God walking through history. It
is the song of many saints, men and women, some famous, and very many others
unknown to us but known to God: mums, dads, catechists, missionaries, priests,
sisters, young people, even children and grandparents. These have faced the
struggle of life while carrying in their heart the hope of the little and the
humble. Mary says: My soul glorifies the
Lord – today, the Church too sings this in every part of the world. This
song is particularly strong in places where the Body of Christ is suffering the
Passion. For us Christians, wherever the Cross is, there is hope, always. If
there is no hope, we are not Christian. That is why I like to say: do not allow
yourselves to be robbed of hope. May we not be robbed of hope, because this
strength is a grace, a gift from God which carries us forward with our eyes
fixed on heaven. And Mary is always there, near to those communities, our
brothers and sisters, she accompanies them, suffers with them, and sings the Magnificat
of hope with them.
Dear Brothers and Sisters, with all our heart let us too
unite ourselves to this song of patience and victory, of struggle and joy, that
unites the triumphant Church with the pilgrim one, earth with heaven, and that
joins our lives to the eternity towards which we journey. Amen.
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