At 10:30 this morning in Saint Peter's Square in Rome, the Holy Father, Pope Francis celebrated the Mass for the Day of Catechists, part of the celebrations of the Year of Faith. There were more than six hundred priests in attendance, concelebratng the Mass today.
Also in attendance at the Eucharistic celebration was His Beatitude, Youhanna X, Greek Orthodox Patriarch of Antioch and all the East.
Also in attendance at the Eucharistic celebration was His Beatitude, Youhanna X, Greek Orthodox Patriarch of Antioch and all the East.
Homily of the Holy Father, Pope Francis
for the Mass on the Day of Catechists
Woe to the complacent in Zion, to those who feel
secure … lying upon beds of ivory! (Am 6:1,4). They eat, they
drink, they sing, they play and they care nothing about other people’s
troubles.
These are harsh words which the prophet Amos speaks, yet
they warn us about a danger that all of us face. What is it that this messenger
of God denounces; what does he want his contemporaries, and ourselves today, to
realize? The danger of complacency, comfort, worldliness in our lifestyles and
in our hearts, of making our well-being the most important thing in our lives.
This was the case of the rich man in the Gospel, who dressed in fine garments
and daily indulged in sumptuous banquets; this was what was important for him.
And the poor man at his doorstep who had nothing to relieve his hunger? That
was none of his business, it didn’t concern him. Whenever material things,
money, worldliness, become the centre of our lives, they take hold of us, they
possess us; we lose our very identity as human beings. Think of it: the rich
man in the Gospel has no name, he is simply a rich man. Material
things, his possessions, are his face; he has nothing else.
Let’s try to think: How does something like this happen? How
do some people, perhaps ourselves included, end up becoming self-absorbed and
finding security in material things which ultimately rob us of our face, our
human face? This is what happens when we become complacent, when we no longer
remember God. Woe to the complacent in Zion, says the prophet. If
we don’t think about God, everything ends up flat, everything ends up being
about me and my own comfort. Life, the world, other people, all of
these become unreal, they no longer matter, everything boils down to one thing:
having. When we no longer remember God, we too become unreal, we too become
empty; like the rich man in the Gospel, we no longer have a face! Those who run
after nothing become nothing – as another great prophet Jeremiah, observed (cf. Jer 2:5).
We are made in God’s image and likeness, not the image and likeness of material
objects, of idols!
So, as I look out at you, I think: Who are catechists?
They are people who keep the memory of God alive; they keep it alive in
themselves and they are able to revive it in others. This is something
beautiful: to remember God, like the Virgin Mary, who sees God’s wondrous works
in her life but doesn’t think about honour, prestige or wealth; she doesn’t
become self-absorbed. Instead, after receiving the message of the angel and
conceiving the Son of God, what does she do? She sets out, she goes to assist her
elderly kinswoman Elizabeth, who was also pregnant. And the first thing she
does upon meeting Elizabeth is to recall God’s work, God’s fidelity, in her own
life, in the history of her people, in our history: My soul magnifies the
Lord … For he has looked on the lowliness of his servant … His mercy is from
generation to generation (Lk 1:46, 48, 50). Mary remembers
God.
This canticle of Mary also contains the remembrance of her
personal history, God’s history with her, her own experience of faith. And this
is true too for each one of us and for every Christian: faith contains our own
memory of God’s history with us, the memory of our encountering God who always
takes the first step, who creates, saves and transforms us. Faith is
remembrance of his word which warms our heart, and of his saving work which
gives life, purifies us, cares for and nourishes us. A catechist is a Christian
who puts this remembrance at the service of proclamation, not to seem
important, not to talk about himself or herself, but to talk about God, about
his love and his fidelity. To talk about and to pass down all that God has
revealed, his teaching in its totality, neither trimming it down nor adding on
to it.
Saint Paul recommends one thing in particular to his
disciple and co-worker Timothy: Remember, remember Jesus Christ, raised from
the dead, whom I proclaim and for whom I suffer (cf. 2 Tim 2:8-9).
The Apostle can say this because he too remembered Christ, who called him when
he was persecuting Christians, who touched him and transformed him by his
grace.
The catechist, then, is a Christian who is mindful of God,
who is guided by the memory of God in his or her entire life and who is able to
awaken that memory in the hearts of others. This is not easy! It engages our
entire existence! What is the Catechism itself, if not the memory of God, the
memory of his works in history and his drawing near to us in Christ present in
his word, in the sacraments, in his Church, in his love? Dear catechists, I ask
you: Are we in fact the memory of God? Are we really like sentinels who awaken
in others the memory of God which warms the heart?
Woe to the complacent in Zion! says the
prophet. What must we do in order not to be complacent – people who
find their security in themselves and in material things – but men and woman of
the memory of God? In the second reading, Saint Paul, once more writing to
Timothy, gives some indications which can also be guideposts for us in our work
as catechists: pursue righteousness, godliness, faith, love, endurance,
gentleness (cf. 1 Tim 6:11).
Catechists are men and women of the memory of God if they
have a constant, living relationship with him and with their neighbour; if they
are men and women of faith who truly trust in God and put their security in him;
if they are men and women of charity, love, who see others as brothers and
sisters; if they are men and women of "hypomoné", endurance
and perseverance, able to face difficulties, trials and failures with serenity
and hope in the Lord; if they are gentle, capable of understanding and mercy.
Let us ask the Lord that we may all be men and women who
keep the memory of God alive in ourselves, and are able to awaken it in the
hearts of others. Amen.
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