On Friday afternoon, November 1 at 4:00pm the Holy Father, Pope Francis celebrated Mass in the Roman cemetery of Verano. The Mass was followed by a prayer for the deceased and the blessing of tombs. Also present to concelebrate with the Holy Father were His Eminence, Agostino Vallini, the Cardinal Vicar for the Diocese of Rome; His Excellency, Filippo Iannone, Assistant to the Vicar for the Diocese of Rome; the Auxiliary Bishops of Rome and Father Armando Ambrozi, the Pastor of San Lorenzo fuori le Mura.
Homily of the Holy Father, Pope Francis
for the Mass celebrated in the
Roman Cemetery of Verano
At this hour, before sunset, we recollect
ourselves in this cemetery and think of our future; we think of all those who
have gone from us, who have preceded us in life and are in the Lord.
The vision of Heaven that we heard in the
First Reading is so beautiful: the Lord God, beauty, goodness, truth,
tenderness, and fullness of love. All this awaits us. Those who have preceded
us and died in the Lord are there. They proclaim that they were not saved by their
works – they also did good works – but they were saved by the Lord: Salvation belongs to our God who is
upon the throne, and to the Lamb! (Revelation 7:10).
He it is who saves us, he it is who at the end of our life takes us by the hand
as a father, precisely to that Heaven where our forbearers are. One of the
elders asks a question: Who
are these, clothed in white robes, and whence have they come? (v. 13). Who are these righteous ones,
these saints who are in Heaven? The answer: These
are they who have come out of the great tribulation; they have washed their
robes and made them white in the blood of the Lamb (v. 14).
We can only enter into Heaven thanks to the
blood of the Lamb, thanks to the blood of Christ. It is in fact the blood of
Christ which has justified us, which has opened to us the doors of Heaven. And
if today we remember these brothers and sisters of ours who have preceded us in
life and are in Heaven, it is because they were washed in the blood of Christ.
This is our hope: the hope of the blood of Christ! A hope that does not
disappoint. If we walk in life with the Lord, he never disappoints!
In the Second Reading we heard what the
Apostle John said to his disciples: See
what love the Father has given us, that we should be called children of God;
and so we are. The reason why the world does not know us …. We are God’s
children now; it does not yet appear what we shall be, but we know that when he
appears we shall be like him, for we shall see him as he is (1 John 3:1-2). To
see God, to be like God: this is our hope. And today, precisely in the day of
the Saints and before the day of the Dead, it is necessary to think a bit about
hope: this hope that supports us in life. The first Christians depicted hope
with an anchor, as if life were the anchor thrown onto the shore of Heaven and
all of us walking towards that shore, grasping the cord of the anchor. This is
a beautiful image of hope: to have the heart anchored there, where our
forbearers are, where the Saints are, where Jesus is, where God is. This is the
hope that does not disappoint; today and tomorrow are days of hope.
Hope is a bit like leaven, which enlarges
your soul; there are difficult moments in life, but with hope the soul goes
forward and looks at what awaits us. Today is a day of hope. Our brothers and
sisters are in the presence of God and we also will be there, by pure grace of
the Lord, if we walk in the path of Jesus. The Apostle John concludes: And every one who thus hopes in him
purifies himself as he is pure (v.
3). Hope also purifies us, it enlarges us; this purification in hope in Jesus
Christ makes us go in haste, quickly. In this, today’s pre-sunset, each one of
us can think of the sunset of his/her life: How
will my sunset be? All of us
will have a sunset, all of us! Do I look at it with hope? Do I look at it with
that joy of being received by the Lord? This is a Christian thought, which
gives us peace. Today is a day of joy, but of a serene, tranquil joy, the joy
of peace. We think of the sunset of so many brothers and sisters who have
preceded us, we think of our sunset, when it will happen. And we think of our
heart and ask ourselves: Where
is my heart anchored? If it
is not well anchored, let us anchor it there, on that shore, knowing that hope
does not disappoint because the Lord Jesus does not disappoint.
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